Rep. Eric Swalwell, a Democratic frontrunner in the California governor's race, faces fresh accusations that he violated federal immigration and employment law by keeping an illegal immigrant from Brazil on his household payroll, and paying her with donor money during a two-year stretch when she had no valid work authorization, according to a pair of complaints reported by the New York Post.
The allegations land at the worst possible moment for Swalwell, whose gubernatorial campaign was already unraveling Friday after four women came forward with sexual-assault and misconduct claims he denies. Together, the nanny complaints and the misconduct accusations have turned what was supposed to be a triumphant statewide bid into a rolling catalog of liability, with a June 2 open primary fast approaching.
A complaint filed Tuesday with the Department of Labor claims that Eric and Brittany Swalwell lied to federal authorities to keep 33-year-old Amanda Barbosa, their live-in Brazilian nanny, working for them after her temporary work authorization was about to expire in 2022. A separate complaint filed with the Department of Homeland Security in February, dated Feb. 16, accuses Swalwell of paying Barbosa under the table with campaign funds for roughly two years while she lacked legal permission to work.
Federal Election Commission records paint a clear financial picture. The Post reported that Barbosa received $3,914 in campaign funds in 2021, the year Swalwell first hired her to look after his three children. In 2022, that figure ballooned to $46,930. An additional $52,262 in campaign expenses labeled "childcare" were written off to Swalwell himself.
Then the on-the-books payments stopped, right around the time Barbosa's au pair visa expired in December 2022. They did not resume until 2025, when she received $38,905 in campaign funds. The gap matters. Breitbart reported that social-media photos from 2023 and 2024 were cited in the complaints as evidence Barbosa continued performing childcare duties during the very period she allegedly lacked lawful work authorization.
The DHS complaint spells it out:
"Barbosa appears in numerous social media photos with the Swalwell family throughout 2023 and 2024, indicating continued close association and ongoing childcare responsibilities despite the absence of known lawful work authorization."
Those photos, pulled from Barbosa's since-deleted Facebook account, reportedly showed her caring for the Swalwell children at family events, including the annual White House picnic in both 2023 and 2024. In one, she held the youngest child. Another, from Halloween 2024, showed Barbosa taking the kids trick-or-treating while wearing a Brazil soccer shirt.
With Barbosa's au pair visa winding down in December 2022, Swalwell began the process of sponsoring her for a green card, the Post reported, citing a permanent labor certification application the outlet reviewed. The Department of Labor told the Post that the certification was approved in 2024.
But approval of a labor certification does not retroactively authorize employment during the years the application was pending. The complaint's core charge is that Barbosa kept working, and kept getting paid, off the books, throughout 2023 and 2024 while her immigration status left her without valid work authorization. Her LinkedIn page, according to a screenshot included in the complaints, said she worked as a private childcare provider continuously from 2021 to the present.
Swalwell's entanglement with questions about his own transparency is nothing new. He previously threatened legal action over the release of files related to his ties with a suspected Chinese intelligence operative, even as he had spent years demanding full disclosure from political opponents.
Barbosa arrived in the United States from Rio de Janeiro in January 2021 on an au pair visa. Swalwell hired her that fall. The article describes her enrolling at a community college while the green-card process played out, a detail that raises its own questions about whether off-campus employment was permissible under student visa rules.
The nanny payments sit inside a much larger cloud over Swalwell's campaign spending. Joel Gilbert, the California filmmaker and activist who filed the complaints, told the Post that Swalwell is already under FEC investigation for spending more than $200,000 in campaign funds on personal babysitting.
Gilbert did not mince words:
"It's a brazen disregard for the law. He's harboring and employing an illegal."
The FEC issued a 2022 opinion giving Swalwell the green light to use campaign contributions for overnight childcare, but only if the expenses resulted from travel for campaign events. Whether the payments to Barbosa fell within those narrow bounds is exactly what investigators are now examining. There have been no findings of wrongdoing to date.
The Washington Free Beacon previously reported that FEC disclosures showed Swalwell paid about $17,000 to babysitters from Nov. 14, 2022, through the end of that year, including after Election Day. Kendra Arnold, executive director of the Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust, said at the time that using campaign funds for child care after the election "would be a violation if... they were not directly caused by campaign activity."
The broader pattern of donor-funded personal spending, previously scrutinized over luxury hotels and family payments, only sharpens the question of whether Swalwell treated his campaign treasury as a household checkbook. Eric and Brittany Swalwell had more than $400,000 in combined income, the Post noted, raising the obvious question of why campaign donors were footing the nanny bill at all.
Swalwell called the allegations "absolutely false" and vowed to "fight them with everything I have." His campaign did not respond to the Post's request for comment. Barbosa could not be reached.
Fox News reported that the nanny complaints surfaced as Swalwell was already facing the separate sexual assault and misconduct allegations tied to his gubernatorial campaign. In a video posted Friday, Swalwell addressed those claims directly, calling them "flat-out false." A former staffer alleged a 2024 attack that left her "bruised and bleeding," the Post reported.
The twin crises have battered Swalwell's standing. Online betting odds have shifted toward billionaire progressive Tom Steyer in the California governor's race. Swalwell's own legal entanglements continue to multiply, he recently quietly dropped a lawsuit against FHFA Director Pulte over a mortgage fraud referral, raising further questions about his judgment in picking fights he cannot finish.
Several questions hang over the case. What specific immigration and employment statutes does the government believe were violated? Did Barbosa hold any form of interim work authorization during 2023 and 2024, or was she working entirely without legal permission? And did the Swalwells make false statements on the labor certification application, as the Department of Labor complaint alleges?
The complaints have been filed, but no agency has yet announced an investigation or enforcement action based on them. The FEC inquiry into the broader babysitting spending predates these filings. Whether federal investigators treat the nanny payments as a standalone immigration matter, a campaign-finance violation, or both will shape the legal exposure Swalwell faces heading into the primary.
Meanwhile, a separate court filing has challenged Swalwell's eligibility for the governor's race entirely, another front in a campaign that now seems to be collapsing from every direction at once.
For a congressman who built a national profile lecturing others about accountability and the rule of law, the emerging picture is one of a politician who expected the rules to apply to everyone but himself. Voters in California will get their say on June 2.
A federal judge in Washington ruled Thursday that the Pentagon is obstructing journalists and defying an earlier court order that required the Department of Defense to restore access to credentialed reporters, a finding that sets up a direct clash between the judiciary and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's team over how the military handles the press.
U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman ordered Defense officials to comply with his March 20 directive, which had declared the Pentagon's press policy unconstitutional and required the reinstatement of credentials for New York Times reporters and all other journalists who cover the U.S. military from the building. The Hill reported that the Pentagon plans to appeal.
The dispute stretches back to October, when the Pentagon enacted a press policy requiring journalists to sign a pledge not to obtain or use material that wasn't specifically approved by Defense officials, even if the material was unclassified. More than 50 reporters, including from The Hill, refused to sign and were denied press badges as a result.
After Friedman's March 20 ruling struck down that policy, the Pentagon said it would comply. But Hegseth's team then imposed a revised, interim press policy that still kept reporters from working inside the building without an escort. Instead, journalists were directed to a workspace in an annex facility on Pentagon grounds, a facility that, at the time, was not yet prepared.
Attorneys for the New York Times filed a motion challenging the revised rules, calling them an "attempted end-run around this Court's ruling" that "leaves in place provisions that this Court's Order struck."
Friedman agreed. In his Thursday ruling, the judge wrote plainly about what the Pentagon had done:
"The department simply cannot reinstate an unlawful policy under the guise of taking 'new' action and expect the court to look the other way."
He also found that the annex workspace the Pentagon offered reporters was inadequate, describing it as something that "is not even close to as meaningful as the broad access" journalists previously enjoyed inside the building itself.
The broader pattern of leadership changes at the Pentagon under Hegseth has drawn attention for months. He has ordered the removal of the Army's chief spokesman and pushed other senior officials toward the exits as part of a wider institutional overhaul.
Pentagon chief spokesperson Sean Parnell pushed back hard on the ruling in a statement to The Hill's partner NewsNation:
"The Department has at all times complied with the Court's Order, it reinstated the PFACs of every journalist identified in the Order and issued a materially revised policy that addressed every concern the Court identified in its March 20 Opinion. The Department remains committed to press access at the Pentagon while fulfilling its statutory obligation to ensure the safe and secure operation of the Pentagon Reservation."
That framing, compliance while maintaining security, is the Pentagon's core argument. And it's not an unreasonable one on its face. The Pentagon is a sensitive facility. Security protocols are legitimate. No serious person disputes that.
But the judge's finding tells a different story. Friedman concluded that the revised policy didn't merely address security concerns; it effectively reimposed restrictions that his earlier order had already declared unconstitutional. Whether or not the Pentagon technically reinstated credentials, the practical effect, reporters barred from the building, shunted to an unfinished annex, unable to work without escorts, amounted to the same restriction the court struck down.
Hegseth has also moved to oust an Army colonel who served under Gen. Mark Milley, part of a series of personnel decisions that have reshaped the Defense Department's internal leadership structure in recent months.
Friedman grounded his ruling in constitutional terms. He wrote that "a primary purpose of the First Amendment is to enable the press to publish what it will and the public to read what it chooses, free of any official proscription."
Times attorney Theodore Boutrous celebrated the decision:
"This ruling powerfully vindicates both the court's authority and the First Amendment's protections of independent journalism."
Here is where conservatives should think carefully. The instinct to cheer when hostile media outlets get pushed back is understandable. The New York Times is not a neutral actor. Its editorial choices and political leanings are well documented. Many Americans, rightly, distrust its coverage.
But the principle at stake is bigger than the Times. The October policy required all credentialed journalists, not just Times reporters, to sign a pledge restricting what information they could even seek, including unclassified material. More than 50 reporters across multiple outlets refused. That's not a targeted response to biased coverage. That's a blanket restriction on how the press operates inside a public building funded by taxpayers.
The friction at the Pentagon extends well beyond press policy. Hegseth forced the Army chief of staff into immediate retirement as part of an accelerating overhaul that has generated pushback from both sides of the aisle.
Parnell confirmed the Pentagon will appeal. That's its right, and the appellate courts may see the security argument differently than Friedman did. The case could ultimately test how far executive authority extends in managing physical access to a military facility when press freedoms are at stake.
But the timeline matters. The original policy went into effect in October. The Times sued in December. Friedman ruled in March. The Pentagon responded with a revised policy that the court found was still noncompliant. Now, in April, Friedman has ruled again, more firmly, and the Pentagon is heading to an appeals court rather than simply opening the doors.
That's six months of litigation over whether reporters can walk into the Pentagon and do their jobs. Six months during which the Defense Department has been found, twice, to have imposed unconstitutional restrictions on press access.
Some of those personnel battles have drawn bipartisan concern. Republicans rallied behind Gen. Randy George after his forced departure, a sign that not all of Hegseth's moves have landed cleanly even within his own party.
Conservatives who want a leaner, more accountable Pentagon, and there are good reasons to want one, should recognize that restricting press access doesn't advance that goal. It undermines it. A Pentagon that can control what reporters see, where they go, and what information they're allowed to seek is a Pentagon that is harder to hold accountable, not easier.
The Defense Department's budget runs into the hundreds of billions. Waste, fraud, and mismanagement don't get exposed by press offices issuing approved statements. They get exposed by reporters walking hallways, reading documents, and asking uncomfortable questions.
If the Pentagon's legal position is sound, the appeals court will say so. But if the department keeps losing in court while insisting it has complied all along, at some point the gap between the claim and the record becomes its own problem.
Accountability doesn't work when the people doing the accounting need permission slips from the people being watched.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) laid out a governing vision on April 6 built on two pillars: higher taxes on top earners and a racial equity framework that explicitly centers city policy on outcomes for "black and brown New Yorkers." The combination amounts to something familiar in American urban politics, a race-conscious political machine dressed in the language of social justice, funded by other people's money.
Mamdani's remarks, delivered as part of what his office called a "Preliminary Racial Equity Plan," did not mince words about who should pay and who should benefit. The mayor cited a yawning wealth gap, median white household wealth in the city exceeding $200,000 versus less than $20,000 for black households, and cast higher taxes as the obvious remedy.
Breitbart News reported on the mayor's remarks and the broader political dynamics at play. What Mamdani described is not merely a budget proposal. It is a framework for redistributing wealth along racial lines, wrapped in the rhetoric of affordability and corporate competitiveness.
The mayor framed the affordability crisis as universal but its effects as racially targeted. In remarks tied to the release of the equity plan, Mamdani stated:
"We know that these effects are not applied evenly: So often it is black and brown New Yorkers who are hit the hardest. This Preliminary Racial Equity Plan is the first in developing a whole-of-government approach to tackling that reality... to solve decades of neglect and discrimination."
That phrase, "whole-of-government approach", deserves attention. It signals not a single program or pilot but a systematic reorientation of city services, hiring, contracting, and spending around racial categories. Mamdani went further, framing the wealth gap as a matter requiring active government correction.
He told listeners:
"The wealth of a median white household in the city is more than $200,000, while that of a black household is less than $20,000... We are reckoning with the long history of racism here and starting to act upon a framework that puts equity right at the center of it."
The statistics are real enough. But the leap from describing a disparity to building an entire governing apparatus around racial categories is a political choice, not an inevitability. And it is a choice with consequences for every New Yorker who does not fit neatly into the mayor's favored demographic boxes.
On the revenue side, Mamdani made no effort to hide his target. He wants higher earners and profitable businesses to foot the bill for expanded city services, services he frames as necessary to keep working- and middle-class residents from fleeing.
"Amidst being in the wealthiest city in the wealthiest country in the history of the world, we already see an exodus of working and middle-class New Yorkers. So I don't have a hesitation in asking those who make the most amount of money in the city or the most profits in the city, to pay a little bit more so that everyone can actually stay in the city."
Notice the framing. The exodus of the middle class is real, and it accelerated under years of progressive governance, rising crime, pandemic lockdowns, and already-high taxes. Mamdani's answer is not to address the policies that drove people out. It is to tax those who remain even more heavily.
He also made a corporate pitch, arguing that sky-high childcare costs, more than $20,000 a year, by his own figure, make it harder for companies to recruit talent. The pattern of Democratic governance in cities like New York has long followed a familiar loop: taxpayers fund the machine, the machine expands, costs rise, and the next round of tax hikes is justified by the problems the last round failed to solve.
Mamdani put the corporate case this way:
"Is also something, not just about justice or the ability for working-class people to live here., is also actually about ensuring that corporations can continue to attract the top talent to the city because in a city where child care costs more than $20,000 a year, I've heard from corporate leaders about how difficult it is for them to attract individuals who would work at their companies but [also] want to raise a family, because you could be making $300,000 a year, and you will feel that $20,000 a year because of the fact that we have allowed for the absence of affordable child care to become reality here in this city."
The logic is circular. The city's cost of living is crushing. The mayor's solution is more government spending. The spending requires more taxes. The taxes raise the cost of doing business. And the cycle continues.
Mamdani's racial equity framework did not escape federal attention. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon responded directly after the mayor's remarks, posting on X: "Sounds fishy/illegal. Will review!"
That is not an idle comment from a minor official. Dhillon sits at the Department of Justice, and her willingness to flag the plan publicly suggests the administration sees potential legal exposure in a city government organizing policy explicitly around race.
Trump's deputies have set up a task force under Vice President JD Vance, and the administration may file lawsuits if Mamdani's race-based policies cross the line into illegal discrimination. The Supreme Court's 2023 decision striking down race-conscious college admissions has already shifted the legal landscape. A city government openly building a "whole-of-government" racial framework invites the kind of scrutiny that Dhillon signaled.
The broader pattern of Democratic officials directing public resources through politically favored channels is not new. What Mamdani adds is the explicit racial architecture, not as a side program, but as the stated organizing principle of city government.
Mark Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies, told Breitbart News that Mamdani's approach fits a well-worn pattern in American cities where large-scale immigration reshapes the electorate and creates opportunities for ethnic coalition-building.
"When you have large-scale, ongoing immigration, you're going to have this kind of thing. There's no real way around it. No appeal to ethnic neutrality is going to prevent it. You're going to have politicians who are going to appeal to this [ethnic] impulse [because they] see it as a way to build coalitions, and some are going to win elections and do this kind of thing."
Krikorian drew a historical comparison. Tammany Hall dominated New York's Democratic Party from 1854 to 1932. In Boston, Mayor James Curley intermittently ran the city from roughly 1914 to 1950, building a political machine that benefited immigrant Irish voters at the expense of the old Yankee establishment. The mechanics change; the incentive structure does not.
He also noted how the scope of race-based politics has expanded far beyond its original boundaries. When Democratic officials face accountability questions, the defense often leans on identity rather than substance, a pattern Krikorian sees as structurally embedded in the current political landscape.
"Affirmative action, whatever you think of it, was a relatively manageable issue when it applied to 10 percent or so of the population. Now, with the expansion of the 'victim groups,' partly through immigration, and also just sort of [progressive] mission creep, [the race-based politics covers] a large share, certainly in New York City, of the population."
Krikorian offered a counterpoint to the inevitability of ethnic machine politics: assimilation works, but only when immigration pauses long enough to let it happen.
"We have pretty strong assimilationist [cultural] forces that can bring immigrants, and especially their children and grandchildren, into becoming part of the majority population."
He pointed to the period from 1925 to 1965, when Congress sharply restricted immigration and previously distinct ethnic groups, Sicilians, Armenians, and others, gradually became part of mainstream American life. Krikorian noted that his own Armenian cousins in California own houses that still carry old restrictive covenants against selling to Armenians. "They're now seen as Anglos," he said.
The point is not that discrimination was acceptable. It is that time, cultural integration, and reduced immigration flows allowed groups once treated as outsiders to become insiders, not through government-mandated racial frameworks, but through the ordinary process of becoming American. That process is precisely what ethnic machine politics works to prevent, because assimilated voters are harder to organize along racial lines.
Krikorian argued that Trump has shown this dynamic in action, successfully appealing to Hispanic legal immigrants as Americans rather than as members of a separate ethnic bloc. That, he said, is what Democrats fear most, "that the people they pretend to represent will just kind of shrug [off ethnic politics] and become Americans."
What Mamdani is building in New York is not subtle. He has told the city, in plain language, that he intends to organize government around racial categories, raise taxes on high earners to fund the project, and frame the entire effort as a matter of historical justice. The growing scrutiny of Democratic officials who blur the line between public service and political self-dealing makes the timing particularly notable.
The mayor's office released the equity plan through official city channels, with transcripts posted on the NYC Mayor's Office website. This is not back-room dealing. It is announced policy, which makes the legal and political questions all the more pointed.
No specific tax rate or legislative vehicle has been identified. No lawsuits have been filed yet. But the trajectory is clear: a mayor who sees racial categories as the organizing principle of city government, funded by taxpayers who are already leaving, defended by a political coalition built on identity rather than shared civic interest.
Boston's political machine is being rebuilt by Michelle Wu along similar lines, and the pattern extends to Democratic power brokers across the country who use government authority to reward favored constituencies while demanding that everyone else pay the freight.
New Yorkers who still believe in colorblind governance, manageable taxes, and a city that works for everyone, not just the mayor's preferred demographic coalition, should pay close attention. The machine is being assembled in broad daylight. The only question is whether anyone will stop it before the bill comes due.
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday urged members of President Trump's Cabinet to strip him of his powers under the 25th Amendment, citing his remarks about wiping out Iran's civilization. The California Democrat posted her demand on X, escalating a pattern of confrontation she first attempted during Trump's first term, and one that carries no more constitutional plausibility now than it did then.
Pelosi framed the call as a matter of national safety. In a post on her SpeakerPelosi account, she wrote:
"Donald Trump's instability is more clear and dangerous than ever."
She followed that with a second demand aimed at congressional Republicans:
"If the Cabinet is not willing to invoke the 25th Amendment and restore sanity, Republicans must reconvene the Congress to end this war."
The remarks that triggered Pelosi's outburst centered on Trump's threat to wipe out a "whole civilization" if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened. House Democrats had warned that the president's plans to bomb infrastructure in Iran could constitute war crimes if carried out. But Pelosi went further than most of her colleagues, reaching for the most dramatic constitutional remedy available, one that requires the vice president and a majority of the sitting Cabinet to declare a president "unable to discharge" his powers and duties.
The 25th Amendment was designed for genuine incapacity, a president in surgery, in a coma, or otherwise physically unable to govern. Pelosi's use of it as a political weapon is not new. She previously pushed for the same remedy during Trump's first term, touting support from other lawmakers at the time. That effort went nowhere.
This time, the odds are even longer. There are no signs that anything resembling a 25th Amendment effort is underway inside Trump's Cabinet. The vice president would need to agree, and a majority of Cabinet secretaries would need to sign on. Even then, if the president objected, which any functioning president would, Congress would have to vote, and a two-thirds majority in both the House and Senate would be required to sustain the removal of presidential powers.
In a Congress where Republicans hold the majority in both chambers, that threshold is not a long shot. It is a fantasy. Pelosi knows this. The call is not a serious constitutional proposal. It is a messaging exercise, and one that tells voters more about the Democratic opposition's posture than about any genuine threat to the presidency.
Pelosi's recent public appearances have drawn their own share of criticism, but she remains one of the most visible figures in the Democratic caucus and clearly intends to stay that way.
The backdrop to Pelosi's demand is an active and fast-moving standoff with Iran. Trump set an 8 p.m. EDT deadline on Tuesday. Around midday, Pakistan asked for an extension on that deadline. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the president had received Pakistan's proposal and would respond soon.
It was not clear as of Tuesday evening whether Trump would proceed with more intense bombing of Iran. The uncertainty itself has fueled anxiety on Capitol Hill, not just among Democrats, but among some Republican lawmakers as well. GOP members of Congress have been growing more anxious over the Iran conflict, though they appear unlikely to force Trump's hand.
That anxiety is real, and it deserves honest debate. But honest debate is not what Pelosi offered. She offered a constitutional shortcut that does not exist, wrapped in language designed for cable news and social media engagement. The 25th Amendment is not a vote of no confidence. It is not a policy disagreement tool. And treating it as one cheapens the document it comes from.
Pelosi has spent the post-speakership phase of her career positioning herself as a senior party voice willing to make the sharpest possible attacks on the Trump administration. She has endorsed candidates and inserted herself into primaries across the country, maintaining influence even without the gavel.
Her willingness to invoke the 25th Amendment, twice, across two different Trump terms, raises a question about whether the Democratic leadership has any tool in its kit besides escalation. When every policy disagreement becomes an existential crisis, the language of genuine crisis loses its meaning.
She is not alone in the tendency. Some Democrats have openly admitted their party has failed the moment and called for new leadership. Whether Pelosi's approach represents that failure or simply illustrates it is a question her own party will eventually have to answer.
Pelosi's fallback demand, that Republicans reconvene Congress to end the Iran conflict, acknowledges, implicitly, that the 25th Amendment gambit is performative. If she believed the Cabinet would act, she would not need a backup plan in the same sentence.
Republican lawmakers face a genuine tension. Some are uneasy about the scope of military action against Iran. But unease is not the same as opposition, and GOP members have shown little appetite for a public break with the president on foreign policy. Occasional bipartisan friction on national security questions has surfaced in recent months, but it has not translated into the kind of organized congressional pushback Pelosi is demanding.
The two-thirds threshold in both chambers makes Pelosi's ask a nonstarter even if a handful of Republicans broke ranks. She is asking for something she knows will not happen, then blaming Republicans for not delivering it.
Meanwhile, Pelosi continues to shape Democratic primary contests behind the scenes, a reminder that her influence operates on multiple tracks at once, some visible, some less so.
For readers unfamiliar with the mechanics: the 25th Amendment allows the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet to transmit a written declaration to Congress stating that the president is unable to discharge his powers and duties. The vice president then immediately assumes acting presidential authority.
If the president disputes the declaration, which he may do by sending his own written statement to Congress, the vice president and Cabinet have four days to reassert their claim. Congress then has 21 days to vote. A two-thirds majority in both chambers is required to keep the president sidelined. Anything short of that, and the president resumes his powers.
The amendment was ratified in 1967, in the shadow of the Kennedy assassination and concerns about presidential succession. It was not designed as a partisan override mechanism. Pelosi's repeated attempts to repurpose it as one reflect a broader Democratic instinct to treat constitutional tools as political levers when the normal democratic process does not deliver the result they want.
There are legitimate debates to be had about the scope of presidential war powers, the proper role of Congress in authorizing military action, and the strategic wisdom of any given foreign policy. Those debates matter. They deserve serious legislators making serious arguments grounded in law and strategy.
What they do not need is a former Speaker reaching for the constitutional equivalent of a fire alarm every time she disagrees with the commander-in-chief. The 25th Amendment is not a policy tool. Treating it as one does not constrain the president. It only reveals how little the opposition has left to offer.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani on Tuesday opened a 104-bed medical unit at Bellevue Hospital for jail inmates, a facility equipped with a basketball hoop, a library, and what officials called "therapeutic settings", at a cost of $241 million to city taxpayers. The unit, tucked inside a secure wing on Bellevue's second floor in Kips Bay, will begin receiving prisoners transferred from Rikers Island on Wednesday, the New York Post reported.
The mayor framed the opening as the first concrete move toward shuttering Rikers for good. City Hall called it a "major step" in a plan that has already blown past its original deadline and ballooned 57 percent beyond its projected budget.
That plan, born from a 2019 City Council law to close Rikers and replace it with borough-based jails by 2027, now carries an estimated price tag of $13.7 billion. The full project will not be finished until 2032, five years late. The earliest any new jail site is expected to open is a Brooklyn facility in 2029.
The Bellevue unit is designed for inmates with what City Hall described as "complex medical needs." A press release said it will serve patients with "serious conditions such as cancer and congestive heart failure who do not require hospitalization but face heightened risks in a traditional jail setting."
Correctional Health Services clinicians will serve as the primary care providers, "working in close coordination with Bellevue specialists," City Hall said. Officials promised a "full range of specialty services," including oncology, cardiology, and neurology. Clinicians will deliver care on-site "with enhanced monitoring and support in a therapeutic environment designed to improve health outcomes."
The amenities extend beyond clinical care. The facility includes a basketball court and a library, features that may strike ordinary New Yorkers, many of whom struggle to afford basic health coverage, as generous for a jail ward.
Simple math puts the per-bed cost at roughly $2.3 million. For context, that figure exceeds the median home price in most American cities. Whether those dollars translate into meaningfully better outcomes for inmates, or whether they represent another monument to New York's appetite for spending other people's money, remains an open question.
Mamdani did not let the ribbon-cutting pass without a jab at his predecessor. He told reporters the Bellevue unit was completed in 2025 but sat closed for more than fifteen months before his administration moved to open it. He laid the blame squarely on former Mayor Eric Adams.
"The previous administration delayed the construction of borough based jails and dragged their feet on the opening of therapeutic health facilities like this one."
That accusation fits a pattern. Mamdani, a former state assemblyman who has drawn scrutiny for ducking tough media questions, has positioned himself as the mayor who will finally deliver on promises the city has been making since 2019.
City Hall's own press release acknowledged the delay in unusually direct language: "This unit is finally opening after years of delays, reflecting a renewed focus on delivering long-promised improvements to the City's correctional health system."
Yet blaming the Adams era only raises another question: if the facility was ready more than a year ago, why did it take Mamdani's administration this long to flip the switch? The timeline suggests the new mayor was not exactly racing to the finish line either.
The Bellevue opening is one piece of a much larger, and much more expensive, puzzle. The 2019 law envisioned closing Rikers entirely and replacing it with smaller, borough-based jails. That original deadline was 2027. It has already slipped to 2032.
The cost trajectory is even more alarming. At $13.7 billion, the project now runs 57 percent above the original projection. New York taxpayers are funding one of the most expensive correctional overhauls in American history, and the city has not yet opened a single replacement jail.
Mamdani's administration has also announced plans for two additional "outposted therapeutic housing units", one with 144 beds at Woodhull Hospital and another with 92 beds at North Central Bronx Hospitals. Neither has opened yet. Meanwhile, the city intends to close the 500-bed North Infirmary Command at Rikers, which currently houses inmates with acute medical needs.
The infirmary at Bellevue will be moved under the supervision of the Department of City Administrative Services in June, adding another layer of bureaucratic transition to a project already marked by delays.
Mamdani, whose administration has faced questions over his deputy mayor appointments, cast the moment in sweeping terms.
"Today, we are charting a different course, one that diverts from the path of neglect and begins the process of closing Rikers Island once and for all."
The rhetoric from City Hall leans heavily on the language of compassion and progress. But the numbers tell a different story, one of chronic delays, spiraling costs, and a city government that cannot seem to finish what it starts on time or on budget.
Consider the sequence: the City Council passed the Rikers closure law in 2019. The Bellevue unit was finished in 2025. It sat empty for over fifteen months. It opens now, in a city where the earliest replacement jail won't be ready until 2029 and the full project stretches to 2032. The bill has grown by billions.
Mamdani told reporters the opening marks the beginning of closing Rikers "not with promises, but with action." Fair enough. But a $241 million, 104-bed hospital ward with a basketball court, opened more than a year after construction ended, is a peculiar definition of urgency.
The broader pattern of Democratic governance in New York continues to follow a familiar script: grand ambitions, generous spending, missed deadlines, and taxpayers left holding the tab. Even some Democrats have begun acknowledging their party's failures of delivery on the promises that matter most to ordinary citizens.
Mamdani himself has not been immune to political friction. He has struggled to advance his tax agenda and has faced uncomfortable questions about his inner circle. Opening a luxury medical ward for inmates may play well with the progressive base, but it does little to answer the kitchen-table concerns of the New Yorkers footing the bill.
No one disputes that inmates with cancer or heart failure deserve medical care. That is a basic obligation of any government that holds people in custody. The question is whether $241 million for 104 beds, complete with recreational amenities many law-abiding New Yorkers cannot access, reflects sound stewardship or ideological indulgence.
The city's press release emphasized "improved health outcomes." But outcomes are measured over years, not press conferences. And with the Rikers replacement plan already billions over budget and half a decade behind schedule, the track record does not inspire confidence that this investment will be managed any better than the rest.
Revelations about the mayor's personal orbit have only deepened public skepticism. Resurfaced social media posts from Mamdani's wife have raised questions about the judgment and values at the center of this administration, questions that do not vanish when the mayor stands in front of a new building and talks about progress.
New York's taxpayers deserve to know exactly how $13.7 billion in correctional spending will be tracked, audited, and justified. They deserve timelines that mean something. And they deserve leaders who treat public money with the same care they would treat their own.
A basketball court for inmates is a nice touch. Accountability for the people spending a quarter of a billion dollars on it would be nicer.
A body discovered in a remote ravine on Gran Canaria has been identified as Annabella Lovas, a 32-year-old Hungarian reality television star and influencer, after a year-long investigation that relied on dental records and tattoo matching to confirm her identity.
Lovas, who appeared on the fourth season of the Hungarian Bachelor franchise, A Nagy Ő, in 2021, was found on March 6, 2025, at Berriel Ravine, a remote hiking location on the island. She had been found naked from the waist down and without personal belongings or identification. Police were unable to identify her at the time.
The location where Lovas was discovered proved nearly inaccessible to investigators. Police chief Pablo Fernandez Sala told island daily La Provincia that the case had been "hard and intense," and described just how treacherous the site was, according to the Daily Mail:
"Colleagues tried to reach the natural pool to reconstruct her last steps and carry out a visible inspection on the ground but it was impossible."
Sala made clear this was no ordinary hiking trail:
"You would have needed to be a professional climber, not just any hiker, to reach the spot."
With no identification on the body and no way to easily access the scene, investigators were left with almost nothing. Sala noted the only early lead they had:
"All we had to go on initially were some strange tattoos she had on her shoulder and back."
Police ultimately confirmed Lovas's identity by matching those tattoos and cross-referencing dental records. According to Spanish newspaper El Periódico, an autopsy and DNA evidence had initially been inconclusive. A separate autopsy ruled out a violent death, strangulation, and sexual assault. Despite that, police have not determined a cause of death.
A police spokesperson told El Periódico that investigators believe she may not have died where she was found:
"We think she may have died in another area, either from an accident or suicide, and that the floodwaters swept her to El Berriel."
Lovas had moved to Gran Canaria after a battle with cancer, which reportedly affected her mental health. On the Hungarian version of The Bachelor, she was among a cast of women who competed to win over Olympic canoeist Dávid Tóth's heart.
Her disappearance was not sudden. According to Hungarian newspaper Blikk, Lovas first went missing in November 2024. Her family did not know her whereabouts for two weeks. She also wiped her social media accounts during that period. She was eventually found safe in a hotel on the island.
Days later, she was reported missing again by her family. That second disappearance ended with her body being found in Berriel Ravine months later.
There is something particularly haunting about a case where a young woman vanishes twice, in a place far from home, and the answers still don't come, even after the body is found. An autopsy that rules things out but doesn't rule anything in. Terrain so hostile that trained officers couldn't retrace her steps. Floodwaters that may have carried her to where she was ultimately discovered.
What's left is a family that reported her missing twice, and a 32-year-old woman whose final chapter played out on a volcanic island thousands of miles from Hungary. The investigation may have identified the body, but the central question, how Annabella Lovas died, remains unanswered.
Sometimes a story doesn't arrive with a villain or a policy failure or a political angle. Sometimes it's just a life that ended too soon, in a place too remote, with too little left behind to explain why.
Shots rang out near the White House late Saturday night while President Donald Trump was inside the executive mansion for the Easter weekend, prompting the Secret Service to launch an investigation and temporarily lock down several blocks of Northwest D.C.
Officers rushed to the area surrounding Lafayette Park just after midnight on Sunday after reports of gunfire. A sweep of the park and nearby streets turned up no suspect. Investigators are now hunting for a vehicle and a person of interest while coordinating with U.S. Park Police and the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department.
Anthony Guglielmi, the Secret Service's chief of communications, confirmed the investigation in an X post on April 5:
"We are investigating overnight gunfire in the area of Lafayette Park in conjunction with @DCPoliceDept and @usparkpolicepio. Anyone with information is urged to call DC Police at 202-727-9099 or text 50411."
Guglielmi said that security around the executive mansion had been reinforced, but day-to-day operations continued without interruption.
The facts at this hour remain thin, the Daily Caller reported. Several blocks in Northwest D.C., including portions of H Street, I Street, and 16th Street, were temporarily sealed off overnight. Those restrictions were lifted before 8:30 a.m. Police officers responded to the scene the night of April 4 and conducted an extensive canvass of the surrounding blocks, according to WJLA.
No information has been released about who fired the shots, what type of weapon was used, or where exactly the gunfire originated beyond the general vicinity of Lafayette Park. The vehicle and person of interest that investigators are pursuing remain undescribed publicly.
Lafayette Park has been closed behind fencing for weeks, which may account for the absence of bystanders at the time of the incident.
Gunfire within earshot of the White House is not a routine matter. It is an event that activates the full weight of federal law enforcement for a reason. The president of the United States was inside. His family Easter dinner was scheduled for Sunday. The proximity alone demands answers, and the fact that no suspect has been identified hours later demands urgency.
This incident occurs against a backdrop that should concern every American who takes presidential security seriously. The Secret Service has faced intense scrutiny over protection failures in recent years, and the agency's credibility rests on its ability to prevent threats from materializing anywhere near the president. Reinforcing security after the fact is the minimum. Identifying who discharged a firearm from the most protected residence on earth is the standard.
Washington, D.C., meanwhile, continues to grapple with violent crime that city leadership has struggled to contain. The nation's capital recorded gunfire near the seat of executive power on a holiday weekend. That is not a statistic. It is a security environment.
The coordination between the Secret Service, U.S. Park Police, and D.C. Metropolitan Police suggests the investigation is being treated with the seriousness it warrants. The public should expect more information as the canvass of the area and pursuit of the person of interest develop.
For now, the president hosted Easter dinner as planned. Operations at the White House proceeded. That is how it should be. But somewhere in Washington, someone fired a weapon close enough to the White House to trigger a federal investigation, and as of this writing, that person is still unidentified.
The answers matter. Every hour without them says something.
Usha Vance is expecting the couple's fourth child this coming July, a baby boy who will make the Vances the first vice-presidential family to welcome a baby while in office in well over 100 years. The last time it happened was 1870.
In a recent interview with NBC News' Kate Snow, the Second Lady talked about what pregnancy looks like when your home address is the Naval Observatory, how she and J.D. Vance keep life normal for their three young kids, and a new project she's quietly launched that deserves more attention than it will probably get.
Vance was candid about the obvious contrasts between this pregnancy and her previous ones. Her answer was refreshingly human:
"There's some differences obviously. I have to dress up a lot more. My last pregnancy, there were a lot of sweatpants."
It's a small detail, but it says something. The Vances didn't grow up in political dynasties. They arrived in Washington because J.D. Vance wrote a book that told the truth about forgotten America, and voters responded. The sweatpants-to-Second-Lady arc isn't political theater. It's real life, as Parade reports.
When Snow pressed on whether Vance can still do normal things like walk into a grocery store, her response was telling:
"We do that. We have our neighborhood shops and our Costco membership."
A Costco membership. The Second Lady of the United States shops at Costco. That one line communicates more about who this family is than any campaign ad ever could.
Snow noted that Vance stopped working in 2024 when her husband was chosen for the role of Vice President. That's no small thing. Usha Vance is a trained lawyer. She walked away from a professional career to support her husband's service and raise their family during one of the most consequential political chapters in modern history.
Vance acknowledged the adjustment honestly:
"Oh, certainly. It was disorienting at first to lose that…But it was an opportunity. There are things that I really care about and want to do, and when the time comes, I mean, I do intend to work."
There's no grievance in that answer. No performative martyrdom. She made a choice, she's clear-eyed about the tradeoffs, and she plans to return to professional life when the season is right. That kind of grounded pragmatism is vanishingly rare in Washington, where every personal decision gets filtered through ideological scorekeeping.
The cultural left has spent years insisting that a woman's value is measured exclusively by career achievement. Vance's decision to step back, raise her children, and invest in something meaningful on her own terms is the kind of choice feminists claim to support but rarely celebrate when it doesn't fit the approved script.
The most substantive part of the interview was about Vance's new project: a children's podcast called "Storytime with the Second Lady." It already has three episodes, one of which features racecar driver Danica Patrick doing a dramatic reading of a Disney fan favorite.
Vance described it simply as "sort of just an advertisement for reading." But her reasons for launching it go deeper than that:
"I have a long-standing interest in education. It seemed like a really natural fit because we have young children…As I was teaching them to read, I was starting to see some statistics about the decline in literacy rates, and this is a long-term trend and worrisome."
She's right, and this is a cause that should transcend politics but somehow doesn't. Declining literacy rates among American children represent a genuine crisis, one that gets buried under debates about school funding formulas and equity frameworks while kids still can't read at grade level.
Vance isn't proposing a federal program. She isn't demanding new bureaucratic infrastructure. She's reading books to children and encouraging parents to do the same. It is the kind of initiative that starts at the kitchen table, not in a committee hearing room. Conservatives have always understood that culture is upstream of policy. A Second Lady using her platform to promote literacy through something as simple as storytime is exactly the right instinct.
The Vances are raising three kids already: eight-year-old Ewan, six-year-old Vivek, and four-year-old Mirabel. A fourth arrives in July. That's a full house by any standard, and a particularly full one when your daily life includes Secret Service details and state dinners.
What comes through in the interview is a family that treats public life as something they navigate together rather than something that defines them. The Costco runs, the library trips, the hands-on parenting. None of it is revolutionary. All of it is countercultural in a Washington that rewards ambition over presence.
The Vance family is about to make history this summer. Not the loud, contentious kind. The quiet kind, where a baby is born, and a family grows, and the country gets a reminder of what its leaders look like when they live the values they talk about.
A Merrick, New York, father who has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars chasing an experimental cure for his five-year-old son's rare genetic disorder got the break he had been waiting for Friday, when House Speaker Mike Johnson signed the bipartisan Small Business Innovation Research Act and sent it to President Trump's desk.
Andrew Jedlicka, an NYU business professor, has watched his son undergo treatment at a Queens lab for the past five months, treatment for KBG syndrome, a disorder so rare that only about 800 cases are known worldwide. Experts believe the true number is higher because the condition is widely underdiagnosed. The lab in Long Island City is, by Jedlicka's account, the only facility on the planet capable of treating and possibly curing the disorder.
Without renewed federal funding through the Small Business Innovation Research program, that lab's future is in serious doubt. And until Friday, Congress had let the program sit dead for months.
The Small Business Innovation Research program lapsed in October 2025 after Congress failed to reauthorize it. The program channels federal dollars to small businesses and research labs conducting advanced medical research, exactly the kind of work underway at the Long Island City facility where Jedlicka's son receives care.
The total cost of the boy's treatment has already topped $1.2 million. Jedlicka told the New York Post he has personally covered hundreds of thousands of dollars out of pocket. The lab, he said, would need roughly another million dollars just to stay afloat.
That is not a rounding error for a university professor. It is the kind of financial burden that makes a family's survival dependent on whether Washington can get a bipartisan bill across the finish line, a task that, in this case, took half a year longer than it should have.
Jedlicka put the stakes plainly:
"If the lab closes, everything stops, and we don't get the cure."
The Senate passed the reauthorization bill on March 3. The House followed on March 17. But the bill then sat, unsigned by the speaker, for weeks, even as the lab's funding clock kept ticking.
Rep. Laura Gillen, a Long Island Democrat, said she had been urging Johnson to push the legislation to the president. On Wednesday, two days before Johnson finally signed, Gillen wrote to the speaker pleading for him to move the bill along. Johnson's office did not respond to the Post's request for comment.
The delay fits a broader pattern. Johnson has faced repeated pressure from multiple directions over the pace and sequencing of legislation reaching the president's desk. His handling of the recent DHS funding fight drew criticism from Freedom Caucus conservatives who felt he moved too slowly, or in the wrong direction, on homeland security spending.
Gillen framed Friday's signing as a hard-won result:
"I'm proud to have helped push this funding for vital medical research through Congress after months of a partisan stalemate in the Senate and weeks of inaction by the speaker of the House."
She added that every day without reauthorization "threatened to end lifesaving treatment for Long Islanders and others across the country."
The Small Business Innovation Research Act, if signed into law by President Trump, would restore funding to dozens of small businesses and research labs across the country conducting cutting-edge medical work. For Jedlicka, it would mean the Queens lab treating his son could continue operating.
But the bill's arrival on the president's desk does not guarantee a signature. The White House did not respond to the Post's request for comment. And broader budget pressures loom: Trump's 2027 budget proposal includes cuts to federal health and research funding, a reality that could complicate the long-term outlook for programs like this one even if the reauthorization becomes law.
The tension between fiscal discipline and research funding is real, and reasonable people can disagree about where to draw the line. But the specific case of a five-year-old boy with one of the rarest genetic disorders on earth, receiving treatment at the only lab in the world that can provide it, is not an abstraction. It is a concrete test of whether Washington can deliver results for the people who need them most.
Congressional dysfunction over funding has become a recurring theme in recent months. The House passed a DHS funding bill earlier this year on a narrow vote while the Senate stalled, and the broader pattern of legislative gridlock has left agencies and programs in limbo well past their deadlines.
Jedlicka's son was diagnosed with KBG syndrome last year. The condition is genetic, and the family turned to the Long Island City lab for an experimental treatment that has now been underway for five months. Jedlicka has not publicly identified his son, and the specific nature of the experimental therapy has not been disclosed.
What is clear is the financial weight. More than $1.2 million in total treatment costs. Hundreds of thousands from the family's own pockets. And a lab that needs roughly a million more dollars to keep going.
Jedlicka told the Post he was relieved the bill finally reached the president's desk:
"I'm relieved that it finally reached the president's desk, and I hope that it is signed into law very soon so that we can continue the great work we're doing for the KBG community."
Relief is the right word. Not celebration. The program lapsed in October. The Senate acted in March. The House followed two weeks later. And the speaker's signature came only after a public plea from a congresswoman. That is not a system working well. That is a system that nearly let a child's treatment collapse while a bipartisan bill gathered dust.
The broader funding battles in Congress, including Senate Democrats declaring House stopgap measures dead on arrival, have consumed enormous amounts of legislative energy. Partisan stalemates over homeland security, immigration enforcement, and agency budgets have dominated the calendar. Meanwhile, a straightforward reauthorization of a small-business research program sat idle for months.
That is a failure of prioritization, not ideology. The Small Business Innovation Research program is bipartisan. It passed both chambers. No one opposed it on principle. It simply was not important enough to move quickly, until a father's story and a congresswoman's letter forced the issue.
Johnson has faced pressure from all sides on the sequencing of legislation this session. His decision to reject Democratic attempts to strip ICE and Border Patrol funding from DHS bills was the right call on the merits. But the sheer volume of funding fights has created a backlog where even noncontroversial bills can languish.
The Small Business Innovation Research Act awaits either President Trump's signature or a veto. For a Merrick family with a five-year-old son and a treatment that cannot wait, the answer matters more than most things Congress does in a given week.
Earlier this year, Johnson predicted a quick resolution to a government shutdown that dragged on far longer than expected. The pattern is familiar: optimistic timelines, slow execution, and real people left waiting.
When a bipartisan bill that funds lifesaving research for children takes six months to clear a Congress that passed it overwhelmingly, the problem is not partisanship. It is a government that has forgotten who it works for.
The last remaining criminal charge against pro-life journalist David Daleiden was dismissed Wednesday, closing the book on a nearly decade-long California prosecution that targeted the undercover reporters who exposed the abortion industry's trafficking in fetal body parts.
The case against Daleiden and fellow journalist Sandra Merritt, both affiliated with the Center for Medical Progress, has been fully expunged. No prison time. No fines. No penalties.
The state of California walked away with virtually nothing to show for ten years of legal warfare against two people whose actual offense was making powerful institutions uncomfortable.
Breitbart noted that Daleiden confirmed the dismissal on social media, noting that the expungement came after what he described as a last-ditch effort by Planned Parenthood and the National Abortion Federation to reverse the state's agreement:
"As promised, the final charge has been DISMISSED and the case completely expunged — after a couple months' administrative delay, and a truly bizarre last-minute 'April Fool's' attempt by @PPFA and @NatAbortionFed to overturn the State's agreement."
The case originated from undercover recordings Daleiden and Merritt made of abortion industry officials discussing the sale and harvesting of fetal body parts. The recordings were explosive. Rather than investigate the practices the videos revealed, California's Department of Justice turned its sights on the journalists who captured them.
Steve Cooley, Daleiden's defense attorney and a former prosecutor with five decades of legal experience, did not mince words about what the case represented:
"In my five decades as an attorney, 40 years of which were as a prosecutor, I have never seen such a blatant exercise of selective investigation and vindictive prosecution."
Cooley went further, saying the California Attorneys General who initiated and sustained the prosecution for nearly ten years "should be ashamed for weaponizing their office to pursue people who were merely exposing illegality associated with the harvesting and sale of fetal body parts."
That framing matters. The undercover recordings didn't fabricate anything. They captured abortion industry figures, in their own words, discussing practices that shocked the conscience of millions of Americans. The state's response was not to hold the industry accountable. It was to prosecute the messengers.
Sandra Merritt's legal team at Liberty Counsel was equally direct. The organization said the resolution "ends an unjust criminal case by dropping these baseless criminal charges without any prison time, fines, or other penalties." Liberty Counsel also noted that California had never criminally prosecuted undercover journalists "for surreptitious recordings made in the public interest" before this case.
That fact alone tells you everything about the motivation behind the charges. Undercover journalism is a well-established tradition in American media. Hidden cameras have brought down corrupt politicians, exposed nursing home abuse, and revealed food safety violations. Journalists who do this work are typically celebrated. They win awards. They get book deals.
Unless they target the abortion industry.
Mat Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel, put a fine point on it:
"Sandra Merritt did nothing wrong. She did the right thing by exposing the depravity of the abortion industry. This plea agreement ends an unjust criminal case by dropping these baseless criminal charges without any prison time, fines or other penalties. Sandra deserves to be applauded and acclaimed for revealing these horrors and then enduring this selective and vindictive prosecution as a result."
Staver added that the state of California "deserves to walk away virtually empty-handed," which is precisely what happened.
If there were any remaining doubt about whether this prosecution was about law enforcement or politics, California Attorney General Rob Bonta erased it with his own statement. Rather than acknowledge the collapse of a case his office spent years pursuing, Bonta tried to reframe the outcome as a win:
"While the Trump Administration is issuing pardons to individuals convicted of harming reproductive health clinics and providers, my office is securing criminal convictions to ensure that Californians can exercise their constitutional rights to reproductive healthcare."
Read that again carefully. The final charge was dismissed. The case was expunged. There was no prison time and no fines. And Bonta is claiming he "secured criminal convictions." That is a remarkable spin on what amounts to total capitulation.
Bonta then added a warning that his office "will not hesitate to continue taking action against those who threaten access to abortion care — whether by recording confidential conversations or other means." The quiet part is now fully audible: in California, filming abortion industry officials discussing the sale of baby body parts is treated as a threat to "abortion care." The recordings are the crime. The practices they revealed are not.
This case was never really about California's recording consent laws. It was about deterrence. The message was clear from the beginning: investigate the abortion industry, and the state will come after you with everything it has. It doesn't matter if it takes a decade. It doesn't matter if the charges ultimately collapse. The process itself is the punishment.
Daleiden and Merritt spent years of their lives under indictment. They spent untold sums on legal defense. They endured the weight of a state apparatus aligned against them, backed by some of the most powerful and well-funded political organizations in the country. Planned Parenthood and the National Abortion Federation were apparently still trying to keep the case alive even as the state was ready to let it go.
Consider what that reveals about institutional priorities. The videos showed senior abortion industry officials casually discussing the procurement of fetal organs over lunch. They discussed pricing. They discussed logistics. The public reaction was revulsion. Congressional investigations followed. But in California, the only people who faced criminal consequences were the ones who held up the mirror.
The dismissal is a victory, and Daleiden deserves credit for enduring a prosecution designed to break him. His defense team at Steve Cooley & Associates earned this outcome against, as Daleiden put it, "powerful, government-funded special interests." But the broader system that allowed this to happen remains intact. California's attorney general is openly promising more of the same.
Daleiden hinted that the Center for Medical Progress "has been quietly working on a big new project to release soon." Whatever it is, the abortion industry and its allies in state government now know that ten years of prosecution, millions in legal costs, and the full weight of California's justice system were not enough to silence him.
That should worry them far more than any undercover recording.
