The Supreme Court announced Tuesday that it has developed new software to help justices identify potential conflicts of interest, a move that adds automated teeth to the ethics framework the court adopted in 2023.

The new system will run automated recusal checks by comparing party and attorney information against conflict lists maintained by each justice's chamber. Attorneys filing cases before the court will now be required to provide stock ticker symbols of all publicly traded companies involved in their cases. The changes take effect on March 16.

How the System Works

According to Newsmax, The court explained the mechanics in a statement on Tuesday:

"Most of the changes are designed to support operation of newly developed software that will assist in identifying potential conflicts for the justices, and the revisions impose a number of new requirements upon filers to support the software."

The logic is straightforward. Justices maintain individual conflict lists in their chambers. The software cross-references those lists against the parties and attorneys in each case. When a match surfaces, the justice is flagged. The ticker symbol requirement ensures that corporate affiliations, the kind most likely to create a financial conflict, don't slip through under layers of subsidiary names and legal entities.

It's the kind of procedural improvement that sounds boring and matters enormously. Recusal decisions have historically relied on justices' self-policing their own conflicts, a system that works only as well as each justice's memory and diligence. Software doesn't forget a stock holding.

The Ethics Code That Started This

In 2023, the justices adopted a written statement of ethical principles governing their conduct, the first formal Code of Conduct for Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States. That move came after years of heightened scrutiny over justices' financial disclosures, book deals, and relationships with wealthy benefactors who provided luxury travel.

The court's Tuesday statement made clear the software was a direct outgrowth of that code:

"When issuing the Code of Conduct for Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, the justices directed court officers to evaluate whether such software might be useful for the Court."

Critics at the time said the 2023 code lacked an enforcement mechanism. The new software doesn't fully answer that objection, but it does something more practical: it reduces the likelihood that a conflict goes unnoticed in the first place. Prevention is a form of enforcement.

The Recusal Record

Since the start of the current court term in October, justices have recused themselves more than 30 times, according to a review of the court's docket by The Hill. That figure suggests the court already takes conflicts seriously, and it undercuts the narrative that justices blithely ignore their financial entanglements.

Justices traditionally recuse themselves when they have a financial interest in a case, a prior involvement with a party, or some other relationship that could reasonably call their impartiality into question. The new software simply makes the screening process faster and more reliable.

What This Actually Signals

The left has spent years treating Supreme Court ethics as a political weapon, less interested in actual reform than in delegitimizing a conservative court. Every disclosure story, every travel report, every breathless investigative piece served the same purpose: erode public confidence in an institution that progressives can no longer control through appointments.

That campaign makes this announcement particularly significant. The court isn't responding to political pressure with a press conference or a defensive op-ed. It's building infrastructure. Automated systems. Mandatory filing requirements. Concrete procedural changes with a specific implementation date.

This is what institutional self-governance looks like when it's serious. Not a panel discussion. Not a blue-ribbon commission that reports in eighteen months. Software that goes live on March 16.

The same people who demanded ethics reforms will likely find reasons to dismiss this one. It doesn't give Congress oversight authority. It doesn't create an external enforcement body. It doesn't, in other words, hand the left a lever to use against justices whose rulings they dislike. That was always the real ask.

But for anyone genuinely concerned about conflicts of interest rather than court-packing pretexts, this is a serious step. The court identified a weakness in its process, directed its officers to find a solution, and implemented one. The justices policed themselves, and the result is a system that's harder to game, not easier.

Lower federal judges have long been bound by a formal code of conduct. The Supreme Court operated for decades without one, relying on custom and individual judgment. The 2023 code closed that gap on paper. The new software closes it in practice.

That distinction matters more than the critics will admit.

Governor Gavin Newsom signed a memorandum of understanding with U.K. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband on Monday, pledging collaboration on climate change, a deal that includes nearly a billion dollars in California clean tech projects from British energy company Octopus. The announcement landed with a thud among critics who see it as the latest symbolic gesture from a governor presiding over the most expensive energy market in the continental United States.

California drivers are paying an average of $4.58 per gallon for gasoline, the highest in the country. Two major refineries have either closed or are closing. And more than 40% of the state's imported gasoline in November was routed through the Bahamas, a record high. Against that backdrop, Newsom flew abroad to ink a deal with a country whose electricity prices rank among the highest in the world.

The Critics Aren't Buying It

According to the New York Post, Republican gubernatorial candidate Steve Hilton posted a video to social media, tearing into the pact. He connected the dots that Newsom's office apparently would prefer to ignore:

"What a genius idea that is, the UK with the highest electricity prices pretty much in the world teaming up with California the highest electricity prices anywhere in America apart from Hawaii to do more of the insanity of offshore wind that is planned already to destroy our beautiful coastline in California."

Hilton also told The California Post what millions of Californians have been thinking for years:

"We are so sick of Newsom endlessly flying around the world lecturing everyone about climate change while spewing out carbon emissions, all while his insane climate policies give us the highest gas prices in America and the highest electric bills after Hawaii."

The response from Newsom's office was revealing. Director of communications Izzy Gardon replied: "Who is Steve Hilton?" That's the caliber of engagement Californians get from their governor's team when confronted with substantive criticism about energy costs. Not a rebuttal. Not a data point. A dismissal.

The Numbers Tell a Different Story Than the Press Release

The state that consumes the most transportation fuel behind Texas is systematically dismantling its ability to produce it. Phillips 66 shuttered its fuel production in 2025. Valero's refinery in Benicia is phasing out operations and will close early this year. That leaves California with just eight operating oil refineries producing transportation fuel, according to the California Air Resources Board.

Dr. Wayne Winegarden, a senior research fellow at the Pacific Research Institute, told the Post that the situation has been deteriorating for nearly a decade. He pointed to regulations, including low-carbon fuel standards and inventory requirements that are pushing refineries out of the state.

"Over the last eight years it has definitely gotten worse."

Winegarden didn't dismiss the goal of reaching net-zero emissions. He underscored that the path matters as much as the destination, and California has prioritized its climate ambitions over what he called "key aspects of affordability and reliability." His assessment of the state's alternative energy situation was blunt:

"When the conditions are right we have been getting significant power from alternative energy, but when the conditions are wrong, we have lack of stability."

That instability isn't an engineering mystery. It's the predictable result of building an energy grid around sources that depend on weather, while shutting down the sources that don't. Winegarden suggested natural gas as a bridge fuel in the interim, noting that steady emissions reductions over 10, 20, or 30 years would represent meaningful progress. The alternative, as he put it, is a state that governs based on aspiration rather than reality:

"We rely on more of what we want to be true or even what we think could possibly be true in a few years rather than what's true today."

That single sentence could serve as the epitaph for California energy policy.

A State That Chased Out Its Own Energy Supply

Tom Manzo, founder of the California Business and Industrial Alliance, laid the blame squarely on Sacramento. He pointed to Newsom's "overregulation and anti-business climate" for driving up energy costs and pushing companies out of the state entirely.

"The clean energy dream — you know, we have the highest prices in the nation because they chased out the refiners."

Manzo also referenced a solar farm in the Mojave Desert that cost $2.2 billion and is closing after producing only 75% of its capacity. Billions spent, results that fall short, and now the facility is shutting down. That's not a transition. It's a money pit.

His verdict on the UK deal was the simplest and sharpest critique anyone offered:

"You're not helping the state of California by going and making some made up deal with with somebody from from the United Kingdom."

The Real Pattern

Newsom, described as a Democratic presidential hopeful, issued a statement back in early January following Valero's closure announcement. He highlighted laws he signed to combat rising fuel prices, including efforts to boost oil production in Kern County and grant the California Energy Commission regulatory and data transparency tools to ensure a stable fuel supply during the state's energy transition.

Read that again. The governor who has spent years imposing regulations that drove refineries out of California is now touting laws meant to boost oil production and stabilize fuel supply. He broke it, and now he wants credit for attempting a patch.

This is the cycle California has perfected:

  • Impose regulations that make fossil fuel production untenable
  • Watch refineries close, and prices spike
  • Blame the industry for the consequences of your own policies
  • Sign a flashy international agreement and call it leadership
  • Repeat

Meanwhile, the state imports record amounts of gasoline through Caribbean shipping routes, which does nothing for emissions and everything for costs. The carbon isn't eliminated. It's just relocated, along with the jobs and tax revenue that used to stay in California.

Symbolism Over Substance

Nearly a billion dollars in clean tech investment sounds impressive in a press release. But Californians don't live in press releases. They live in a state where filling a gas tank costs more than almost anywhere else in America, where the electrical grid wobbles when conditions aren't ideal, and where the policy response to every failure is more of the same philosophy that caused the failure.

The UK deal is vintage Newsom: global in ambition, disconnected from the kitchen-table reality of the people he governs. He collaborates with foreign energy secretaries while his constituents watch refineries close and prices climb. He speaks the language of the future while Californians pay the price of the present.

Newsom said California is "doing the actual work." The work is costing $4.58 a gallon, and nobody asked for it.

The U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights has opened an investigation into Washington state's Puyallup School District after a 16-year-old female wrestler alleged that a trans-identified male opponent sexually assaulted her during a match. The federal probe centers on whether the district violated Title IX by allowing biological males to compete in girls' sports, granting males access to girls' locker rooms, and failing to properly respond to reports of the assault.

The match took place on December 6. The victim, Kallie Keeler, alleges her opponent put his fingers in her vagina during the bout. Video recorded by her mother reportedly shows Keeler visibly distressed. She ended the match by allowing her opponent to pin her.

She didn't even know what had happened to her — or who she'd been matched against — until after the fact.

"Really shocked."

That's how Keeler described learning that the competitor who allegedly violated her was a biological male.

A district that knew and did nothing

The Department of Education's findings so far suggest this wasn't an isolated failure. According to the National Pulse's reporting of the federal investigation, the problems at Puyallup were neither hidden nor new. The department stated plainly:

"The alleged violations are ongoing and well known to school leaders, with at least a dozen female athletes having complained to administrators about the presence of two males in the girls' locker room."

At least a dozen girls. Two biological males in the girls' locker room. Complaints filed with administrators. And the district's response, by all available evidence, was to do nothing meaningful — until a journalist forced their hand.

Keeler's parents contacted her coaches two days after the match, seeking answers. One of those coaches replied and indicated the matter would be investigated. But the family says they received no further follow-up. The district only acknowledged an investigation after journalist Brandi Kruse obtained video of the match and inquired directly.

That pattern — silence until exposure — tells you everything about the institutional priorities at work here. A dozen complaints from teenage girls didn't move the needle. A reporter's phone call did.

The coaches were kept in the dark, too

One of the most damning details is that even Keeler's own coaches didn't know who she was being put on the mat against. One coach told the family directly:

"I most certainly would not put Kallie on the mat if I thought she was competing with a male."

This is a coach stating the obvious — that a 16-year-old girl should not be grappling with a biological male in a full-contact sport — and simultaneously revealing that the information was withheld from the very people responsible for her safety. The district created conditions where this could happen, then ensured the adults closest to the athletes couldn't prevent it.

Wrestling is not soccer. It is not a track. It is sustained, close-contact physical combat. The idea that biological sex is irrelevant in this context isn't progressive. It's delusional. And a girl paid the price for that delusion.

Law enforcement is involved

The Pierce County Sheriff's Office has reviewed footage of the match and confirmed that its School Resource Officer is following up with Keeler. The investigation remains active.

This matters because it shifts the frame from policy debate to potential criminal conduct. Whatever one's position on transgender participation in sports — and there should only be one serious position — the allegation here is sexual assault of a minor. The policy failure enabled the crime, but the crime stands on its own.

Federal action with teeth

The Office for Civil Rights investigation represents exactly the kind of federal intervention that the current administration has signaled it would pursue. President Trump has issued directives aimed at restricting transgender participation in female sports divisions, and the Department of Justice has challenged state policies that allow biological males to compete in women's categories.

For years, the conservative argument on this issue was dismissed as culture-war noise. Hypothetical, critics said. Fearmongering. The parade of horribles that would never actually materialize.

Kallie Keeler is not hypothetical. A dozen girls filing complaints about males in their locker room is not hypothetical. A coach who would have refused the matchup — had anyone bothered to tell him the truth — is not hypothetical.

Every institution that was supposed to protect these girls prioritized an ideology over their bodies and their dignity. The school district knew. The administrators heard the complaints. They chose to look away, because the alternative — acknowledging biological reality — had become culturally impermissible.

The cost of cowardice

The left's framework on this issue has always rested on a single rhetorical move: make the conversation about the feelings of the trans-identified individual and never about the girls who lose scholarships, privacy, and — in this case — physical safety. The framing only works if you never look at the other side of the scale.

But here's the other side of the scale: a 16-year-old who went to a wrestling match and alleges she was sexually assaulted by someone who should never have been on the mat with her. A mother who recorded her daughter's distress. Parents who asked questions and got silence. A school district that treated a dozen complaints from teenage girls as less important than maintaining a policy no one was brave enough to challenge.

The federal government is now asking the questions that Puyallup refused to ask itself. The sheriff's office is investigating what administrators chose to ignore.

Twelve girls complained. It took the federal government to listen.

President Trump put the Senate on notice Friday: pass the SAVE Act, or he'll go around it. In a pair of Truth Social posts, the president declared that voter ID requirements will be in place for the midterm elections — with or without congressional approval — and signaled he would issue an executive order to make it happen.

The first post landed around 4:30 p.m. EST:

"There will be Voter I.D. for the Midterm Elections, whether approved by Congress or not!"

Thirty minutes later, the follow-up made the mechanism explicit:

"If we can't get it through Congress, there are Legal reasons why this SCAM is not permitted. I will be presenting them shortly, in the form of an Executive Order."

The message was unmistakable. The SAVE Act — the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act — cleared the House on Wednesday in a razor-thin 218-213 vote. It now faces an uncertain path in the Senate, where Democratic opposition and Republican timidity threaten to run out the clock before November.

What the SAVE Act actually does

The legislation requires voters to present proof of citizenship. For mail-in ballots, it mandates either a photocopy of a state-issued ID or, for those who cannot obtain a valid ID, an affidavit sworn under penalty of law accompanied by the last four digits of their Social Security number.

This is not a radical proposition. It is the minimum threshold a functioning democracy should expect. You need an ID to board a plane, buy cold medicine, or open a bank account. The notion that proving you are a citizen before casting a vote in an American election constitutes "overreach" tells you everything about where the opposition's priorities lie, as The Hill reports.

Trump framed the politics bluntly:

"Even Democrat Voters agree, 85%, that there should be Voter I.D."

And yet only one Democrat in the entire House — Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas — voted for the bill on Wednesday. One. Out of an entire caucus.

Democrats who flipped against their own votes

The Democratic retreat is worth examining closely. Three House Democrats — Reps. Ed Case of Hawaii, Jared Golden of Maine, and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez of Washington voted for a previous version of the SAVE Act. That earlier version did not include the voter ID requirement for mail-in ballots. When the updated bill came to the floor on Wednesday with that provision added, all three voted no.

So these Democrats were fine with proof-of-citizenship requirements in the abstract. But the moment the legislation gained teeth — the moment it addressed the specific mechanism most vulnerable to fraud — they walked. That's not a principled stance. That's a tell.

In the Senate, the landscape is even bleaker. Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania is the only Democrat who has indicated support for the legislation. The rest of the caucus appears content to let the bill die quietly.

The Senate's paralysis problem

Conservatives have pushed Senate Republicans to deploy the "talking filibuster" — forcing opponents to hold the floor and defend, in public and on camera, why they oppose requiring proof of citizenship to vote. Senate Majority Leader John Thune said his caucus will discuss the tactic but has not committed to it. His concern: a weeks-long floor debate on the SAVE Act would block Republicans from moving forward on other priorities.

That calculation deserves scrutiny. Priorities are not all created equal. Housing reform and permitting bills matter. But election integrity is the foundation beneath every other legislative fight. If voters cannot trust that the people casting ballots are legally entitled to cast them, the legitimacy of every law Congress passes erodes.

Rep. Keith Self of Texas captured the dynamic plainly:

"The president has to bring every possible weapon he has to this fight to get the Senate to move, because the Senate will not move without incredible, crushing pressure."

Trump's executive order threat is that pressure. It forces senators to make a choice rather than run out the clock in comfortable ambiguity.

Murkowski's objection — and what it reveals

Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska has come out against the bill, posting a statement on X that leaned heavily on procedural concern:

"Election Day is fast approaching. Imposing new federal requirements now, when states are deep into their preparations, would negatively impact election integrity by forcing election officials to scramble to adhere to new policies likely without the necessary resources."

She followed it with a line that could have been written by the opposition's messaging shop:

"Ensuring public trust in our elections is at the core of our democracy, but federal overreach is not how we achieve this."

"Federal overreach." Requiring proof of citizenship to participate in a federal election is now federal overreach. By that logic, every federal election law ever passed — from the Voting Rights Act to campaign finance disclosure — qualifies. The framing collapses under its own weight.

Murkowski's argument also contains a quiet concession: she acknowledges that "public trust in our elections" matters. But she offers no alternative mechanism for achieving it. The objection is entirely about timing and logistics — never about whether the underlying requirement is just. That's because the underlying requirement is obviously just. Even the opponents know it.

The broader fight

Trump urged Republicans to make this a centerpiece of their midterm messaging:

"Republicans must put this at the top of every speech — It is a CAN'T MISS FOR RE-ELECTION IN THE MIDTERMS, AND BEYOND!"

He's right about the politics. Voter ID polls well across every demographic, including — by Trump's cited figure — 85% of Democratic voters. The gap between where Democratic voters stand and where Democratic politicians stand on this issue is a chasm. It's the kind of chasm that costs seats in a midterm year.

Democrats' position requires them to argue, simultaneously, that American elections are the most secure in the world and that adding basic verification measures would somehow undermine them. That illegal immigrants don't vote in meaningful numbers, and that requiring proof of citizenship would disenfranchise people. Neither of these propositions can be true. If noncitizen voting isn't happening, a citizenship requirement changes nothing. If it would change something — well, then it's doing exactly what it's supposed to do.

Trump characterized Democratic opposition with his usual directness, calling them:

"horrible, disingenuous CHEATERS" who have "all sorts of reasons why it shouldn't be passed, and then boldly laugh in the backrooms after their ridiculous presentations."

The rhetoric is hot. But the underlying observation — that opposition to voter ID is performative and strategic rather than principled — is difficult to rebut when 85% of your own voters disagree with you.

What comes next

The specifics of Trump's threatened executive order remain to be seen. He stated there are legal reasons the current system "is not permitted" and promised to present them shortly. The legal terrain for executive action on election administration is complex — elections are primarily run by states, and any order would almost certainly face immediate court challenges.

But the executive order may not need to survive litigation to succeed. Its primary function right now is political: to force the Senate's hand. Every day the SAVE Act sits without a vote is a day senators have to explain why they won't let Americans decide whether voters should prove they're citizens. That's not a debate most incumbents want heading into November.

The House did its job. The president made his position clear. The Senate is the bottleneck — and everyone watching knows it.

California Governor Gavin Newsom landed in Munich, Germany this weekend to attend the Munich Security Conference — appearing on a climate panel and meeting with Denmark's foreign minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen — while back home, his state staggers under the weight of devastating wildfires, roughly 116,000 homeless residents, rampant drug overdoses, and a proposed billionaires' tax that is already driving wealth out of the state.

This is the second international trip in as many months. The Daily Mail reported that last month, Newsom attended the World Economic Forum in Davos. Before that, a visit to Brazil to announce a climate partnership. His office says the governor has "stepped up as the leading US presence on the global stage."

The governor of a state. The global stage.

The 2028 campaign trail runs through Europe

Newsom isn't hiding the ball anymore — if he ever was. At the Munich climate panel, he told attendees that President Trump was "temporary," adding:

"He'll be gone in three years."

That's not diplomacy. That's a campaign stump speech delivered on foreign soil. Eric Schickler, a professor of political science at UC Berkeley, told the San Francisco Chronicle what everyone already knows:

"This is a standard strategy that you use when you're running for president, especially if you're running as a governor."

Newsom isn't the only Democrat treating Munich like an early primary stop. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer — both described as potential 2028 nominees — were also scheduled to attend. The Munich Security Conference has apparently doubled as a Democratic beauty pageant.

Meanwhile, Newsom's rhetoric abroad grows sharper with each trip. His official statement before departing framed the whole excursion as a counter to Washington:

"While Donald Trump continues to demonstrate that he is unstable and unreliable, California is leaning in on the partnerships that make California stronger, Americans safer, and our planet healthier."

His office added that the trip comes as the Trump administration "undermines alliances and retreats from climate leadership." The framing is unmistakable: Newsom isn't governing California. He's auditioning to govern America — and using foreign capitals as his backdrop.

The Davos dress rehearsal

The Munich trip follows a revealing episode at Davos last month. Newsom claimed he was denied access to the US headquarters at the World Economic Forum following pressure from the Trump administration. His response, posted on X:

"How weak and pathetic do you have to be to be this scared of a fireside chat?"

The White House Rapid Response account offered a different read on the situation:

"The failing Governor of California (rampant with fraud) watches from the corner cuck chair as @POTUS delivers a true masterclass in Davos. Embarrassing!"

Newsom defended the Davos trip by leaning into California's economic heft:

"Give me a category and California outperforms. Fourth largest economy in the world, so we can punch above our weight. We can come here with formal authority and a little moral authority."

He continued:

"And I tell you, we need a little moral authority in our body politic in the United States of America today."

Moral authority. The governor presiding over 116,000 homeless people and a wildfire recovery effort that has drawn bipartisan frustration.

What he's leaving behind

The crises Newsom keeps flying away from aren't abstractions. They are Californians without homes, without answers, and increasingly without patience.

The Los Angeles wildfires devastated communities, and Newsom's rebuilding plan has faced significant pushback. Spencer Pratt — the reality star who announced a run for Los Angeles mayor — captured a frustration shared well beyond celebrity circles when he posted on X:

"Nobody actually believes that giving the STATE money will help fire victims rebuild their homes."

He followed up:

"We have all seen billions of federal dollars fall into Newsom's bottomless money pit, without a single dollar seen by the intended recipients."

When a reality television personality is making a more compelling case for government accountability than the state's elected opposition, something has gone sideways.

Then there's the proposed billionaires' tax — a one-time levy of 5% on net worth, covering stocks, bonds, artwork, and intellectual property, with billionaires given five years to pay. It hasn't been voted on or signed into law yet, but the signal alone has been enough.

Google cofounders Sergey Brin and Larry Page, venture capitalist Peter Thiel, and tech investor David Sacks have all made moves to leave the state. California currently has roughly 200 billionaires. The question is how many it will have once Sacramento finishes telling them they're ATMs.

The tax targets net worth, not income — a distinction that matters enormously. This isn't a higher marginal rate on earnings. It's the state claiming a percentage of what people own. The flight of capital isn't a mystery. It's a rational response.

The contradiction Newsom can't outrun

There's a particular kind of politician who believes that looking important is the same thing as being effective. Newsom's international itinerary — Brazil, Davos, Munich — reads like the calendar of a man who has decided that his state's problems are less interesting than his own ambitions.

Consider the math. California's governor is flying to Europe to talk about climate leadership while his state's wealthiest residents pack their bags. He's meeting with foreign ministers while wildfire victims wait for rebuilding funds. He's telling foreign audiences that the sitting president is "temporary" while 116,000 Californians sleep without permanent shelter.

Newsom wants the world to see him as America's shadow president — a serious man doing serious work on the global stage. But you don't earn moral authority by claiming it at a podium in Munich. You earn it by solving the problems in your own backyard.

California's crises will still be there when the governor lands. They always are.

Joy Behar has a legal prediction for Attorney General Pam Bondi: prison. The View co-host declared Thursday that Bondi is "looking at some prison time," offering a half-baked Watergate analogy as her legal reasoning and zero actual evidence of wrongdoing.

No charges. No investigation. No legal basis whatsoever. Just Joy Behar, a television personality, sentencing the sitting Attorney General of the United States on daytime TV.

The Case According to Joy

Behar built her argument — such as it is — on a historical comparison that collapses the moment you touch it. She invoked the Watergate scandal, noting that President Nixon avoided prison, but his Attorney General, John Mitchell, did not:

"Just a little history, during the Watergate scandal, President Nixon did not go to jail, but John Mitchell did. John Mitchell was his Attorney General."

From this, she leapt to her conclusion:

"So at the end of the day, Ms. Bondi, you're looking at some prison time."

Co-host Sunny Hostin dutifully backed the play, according to the New York Post, adding that Bondi "could be held to account." Held to account for what, exactly, neither woman specified.

That's the entire legal theory. A different Attorney General, serving a different president, in a different era, committed actual crimes and went to prison; therefore, Pam Bondi should expect the same. The logical chain has about as many missing links as The View has legal scholars on its panel.

Empathy Lectures from the Comfort of a Studio Chair

Before arriving at her prison forecast, Behar set the table with a moral indictment of Bondi that was long on emotion and short on specifics. She described feeling "nauseous" watching Bondi speak in some unspecified context:

"I felt like when I was watching it, I felt a little nauseous from her. I was like, 'Why are you so lacking in empathy? What is wrong with you? What happened to you in your life that you can't give a moment to these poor girls?'"

Who "these poor girls" are, what event Behar was watching, and in what capacity Bondi was speaking — none of this was explained. The audience is simply expected to absorb the emotional charge and move on. Context is optional when outrage is the product.

This is the rhythm of The View: vague references to something terrible, a demand for empathy from the political opponent, and then the pivot to punishment. The emotional setup exists to make the absurd conclusion feel earned. It isn't.

The Bus Theory

Behar also took it upon herself to offer Bondi some unsolicited career advice, warning her that loyalty to the president is a one-way street:

"By the way, she needs to understand that she is speaking to Trump when she's up there, she's not speaking to anyone else. He has a whole reputation for throwing everyone under the bus. And when he's out of office, he really is going to throw you under the bus, Honey."

There's a particular kind of arrogance in a daytime talk show host counseling the Attorney General on political survival. Behar frames herself as the worldly-wise observer who can see what Bondi cannot — that her service will be unrewarded. It's concern-trolling dressed up as sisterly advice, and it assumes Bondi is either too naive or too ambitious to understand her own position.

The implication, of course, is that Bondi isn't acting out of conviction or duty but out of blind loyalty. That framing reveals more about how the left views public service than it does about Bondi. If you serve in an administration they despise, your motives can't possibly be genuine. You must be a pawn waiting to be sacrificed.

When the Standard Doesn't Apply

Consider what actually happened here. A television host, with no legal training, driving the analysis, publicly declared that a sitting cabinet member should expect incarceration — based on nothing more than political opposition and a historical analogy that shares exactly one data point: "was an Attorney General."

Imagine the roles reversed. Imagine a conservative commentator pointing at a Democratic Attorney General and casually predicting prison time, citing no investigation, no charges, no evidence — just vibes and a Watergate reference. The segment would be clipped, condemned, and held up as proof of dangerous rhetoric by every media watchdog in the country before the first commercial break.

But this is The View, where the rules of responsible commentary have never applied with any consistency. The show exists in a space where accusations function as arguments, where feelings are evidence, and where the applause of a studio audience substitutes for legal standing.

The Real Tell

What Behar's segment actually demonstrates isn't a legal case against Pam Bondi. It's the left's frustration with an Attorney General who is doing her job as the administration sees it — and their inability to counter that with anything substantive. When you can't argue the policy, you argue the person. When you can't argue with the person, you predict their imprisonment.

No charges have been filed. No investigation has been announced. No legal authority has suggested Bondi faces criminal exposure. The entire "case" lives and dies on Joy Behar's emotional reaction to a clip she didn't bother to contextualize for her own audience.

That's not commentary. It's wish-casting with a live mic.

A federal grand jury in Washington declined to indict six Democratic members of Congress who published a video last November urging service members to refuse unlawful orders. The US Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia, led by Trump appointee Jeanine Pirro, had sought the charges — and came up empty.

The six lawmakers — Senators Mark Kelly of Arizona and Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, along with Representatives Jason Crow of Colorado, Maggie Goodlander of New Hampshire, Chris Deluzio of Pennsylvania, and Chrissy Houlahan of Pennsylvania — all have backgrounds in the military or intelligence community. Their November 2025 video was brief and direct:

"Our laws are clear. You can refuse illegal orders."

That single sentence detonated a political firestorm. And now, months later, the legal machinery marshaled against them has stalled at the grand jury stage, as the Daily Mail reported.

The video and the fallout

The Uniform Code of Military Justice already establishes that service members must obey lawful orders — and may refuse illegal ones. The six Democrats weren't announcing a novel legal theory. They were restating existing law on camera.

But context matters. The video landed in November 2025, and its timing carried an unmistakable political charge. It wasn't a civics lesson — it was a message aimed at the commander-in-chief. The Democrats knew exactly what they were doing, and the reaction was immediate.

President Trump responded on social media, calling the video:

"SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!"

Followed by:

"HANG THEM GEORGE WASHINGTON WOULD !!"

Capitol Police moved to provide 24/7 security for the lawmakers. Senator Slotkin described the shift in mid-November:

"Capitol Police came to us and said, 'We're gonna put you on 24/7 security.' We've got law enforcement out in front of my house. I mean, it changes things immediately."

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth pursued his own track against Senator Kelly — a 25-year Navy combat pilot and former astronaut — seeking to strip his military rank and pay. That process remains ongoing.

The indictment that wasn't

The DOJ probe moved forward despite the lawmakers announcing they would not cooperate with it. The federal attorneys assigned to the case were reportedly political appointees rather than career DOJ prosecutors, according to an anonymous source cited by NBC News.

That detail matters. Grand juries are famously sympathetic to prosecutors. The old line about indicting a ham sandwich exists for a reason. When a grand jury declines to indict, it signals something beyond reasonable disagreement — it suggests the case presented to them was not persuasive on its most basic terms.

The Speech or Debate Clause in Article I of the Constitution provides lawmakers with broad protections for remarks relating to the "legislative sphere." Whether this specific video falls within that sphere is a legitimate legal question. But a grand jury didn't need to reach the constitutional argument — they apparently weren't convinced the case cleared even the preliminary threshold.

This is the core problem. If the administration believed these lawmakers committed a prosecutable offense, the case needed to be airtight. Instead, they handed Democrats exactly the narrative they wanted.

Democrats take a victory lap

The six lawmakers wasted no time framing the outcome. Senator Kelly released a statement Tuesday evening:

"It wasn't enough for Pete Hegseth to censure me and threaten to demote me, now it appears they tried to have me charged with a crime — all because of something I said that they didn't like. That's not the way things work in America. Donald Trump wants every American to be too scared to speak out against him. The most patriotic thing any of us can do is not back down."

Senator Slotkin posted on X:

"But today wasn't just an embarrassing day for the Administration. It was another sad day for our country. Because whether or not Pirro succeeded is not the point. It's that President Trump continues to weaponize our justice system against his perceived enemies. It's the kind of thing you see in a foreign country, not in the United States we know and love."

Representative Crow was characteristically blunt:

"If these f***ers think that they're going to intimidate us and threaten and bully me in the silence, and they're going to go after political opponents and get us to back down, they have another thing coming. The tide is turning."

Representative Houlahan called it:

"It's a vindication for the Constitution."

None of these statements is surprising. What's notable is how cleanly they land. When you pursue a case and lose, your opponents get to write the story.

The real cost

Here's where conservatives should be honest with themselves. The "seditious six" — as some on the right dubbed them — published a video that was politically provocative and deliberately timed to undermine confidence in the chain of command. There are legitimate reasons to find it objectionable. Encouraging service members to second-guess orders, even under the banner of existing law, carries implications that extend well beyond a civics refresher.

But objectionable speech and criminal conduct are not the same thing. The gap between the two is where American liberty lives. Conservatives spent the better part of a decade arguing — correctly — that the Obama and Biden DOJ had been weaponized against political opponents. The IRS targeting of Tea Party groups. The FISA abuse during the Russia investigation. The unequal application of the law during the summer of 2020. Those arguments carried weight because they were grounded in evidence of institutional overreach.

A failed indictment of sitting members of Congress — pursued by political appointees, rejected by a grand jury — hands the left the mirror image of every argument conservatives have made about prosecutorial abuse. It doesn't matter whether the two situations are truly equivalent. Politics runs on narrative, and this narrative writes itself.

The six Democrats are now more prominent than they were before the video. They have a persecution story. They have quotable defiance. They have a grand jury that functionally sided with them. Every strategic objective the prosecution might have served has been inverted.

What discipline looks like

Conservatives have stronger tools than failed indictments. The Speech or Debate Clause exists precisely to keep political speech disputes out of criminal courts and inside the political arena — where voters, not prosecutors, render judgment. The proper venue for accountability was always the next election, the committee hearing, or the public argument.

When the left overreached with its prosecutions, the result was a backlash that helped fuel a political realignment. Overreach doesn't become acceptable because the other side does it first. It becomes a gift to your opponents.

The administration has real power and a real mandate. Spending that capital on a case that a grand jury won't even return diminishes both.

The general counsels of America's three largest cell phone carriers sat before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee Tuesday morning and defended their companies' decisions to hand over lawmakers' phone data to former special counsel Jack Smith — data obtained through subpoenas issued under non-disclosure orders that kept the targeted members of Congress entirely in the dark.

At least 84 subpoenas hit AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon as part of Smith's investigation. Ten of those subpoenas targeted the records of 20 current or former lawmakers. The companies complied. The lawmakers never knew.

That silence is the heart of the scandal.

The carriers' defense

According to Politico, each executive offered a variation on the same theme: we followed the law. T-Mobile general counsel Mark Nelson told the subcommittee that when T-Mobile receives valid demands from government entities, it responds "as required by law and with customer privacy top of mind." Verizon Consumer general counsel Chris Miller acknowledged the situation was imperfect but insisted his company operated within the legal framework. AT&T general counsel David McAtee offered a slightly different picture — his company actually pushed back.

McAtee testified that AT&T raised the Speech or Debate Clause with Smith's office when asked to produce lawmakers' phone data. The clause, a constitutional protection designed to shield legislators from executive branch intimidation, should have given any prosecutor pause. Smith's team apparently felt otherwise.

"The Special Counsel's office never responded to that email, at least not substantively. And ultimately, the office abandoned the subpoena, and no records were produced."

So when AT&T flagged a constitutional concern, Smith's office went quiet — and eventually walked away. That raises an obvious question: if the subpoena couldn't survive a polite email about constitutional protections, how solid was the legal basis in the first place?

T-Mobile and Verizon, by contrast, did not mount similar challenges. They turned over the records. Verizon, which controlled many accounts for lawmakers' personal and official phones, bore the brunt of senatorial anger.

Senators who became targets

Sen. Lindsey Graham's phone records were seized as part of Smith's probe. Graham directed his frustration squarely at Verizon's Miller:

"I don't think I deserve what happened to me."

"You failed me. You failed to honor the contract protecting us all."

Graham was among the most vocal in arguing that he and other affected lawmakers should be compensated. Sens. Josh Hawley and John Kennedy also gave Miller an earful during the hearing. The anger wasn't performative — these are sitting U.S. senators whose private communications were swept up by a political prosecution, and the companies they pay for phone service helped make it happen without so much as a courtesy call.

Miller, to his credit, conceded what others wouldn't:

"These were unprecedented circumstances, and while we fully complied with the law, we also acknowledge that we could have done better in terms of our process. One year ago, we began working with the Senate Sergeant at Arms on changes to the handling of legal demands for official Senate lines. And we have expanded those changes to include personal and campaign lines."

"Could have done better" is doing a lot of heavy lifting there. Verizon handed a politically motivated special counsel the call records of elected officials, shielded by non-disclosure orders that prevented those officials from knowing, challenging, or contesting the surveillance. A year later, they started talking to the Sergeant at Arms about maybe improving the process.

The real accountability gap

The carriers are the middlemen. The real question is what Jack Smith's office was doing issuing 84 subpoenas — ten of them targeting lawmakers — while operating under non-disclosure orders that ensured no one on Capitol Hill could raise a constitutional objection in real time.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley framed it plainly in his opening statement:

"Smith and his team irresponsibly steamrolled ahead while intentionally hiding their activities from Members of Congress."

Grassley has pledged to call Smith to testify before his committee in the coming months. Smith recently appeared before the House Judiciary Committee, where he maintained that politics played no role in his work and said he would have made the same prosecutorial decisions regardless of whether the former president was Republican or Democratic.

That claim grows harder to sustain with each new revelation. Dozens of felony charges were levied against a political opponent. Subpoenas vacuuming up the phone records of Republican lawmakers. Non-disclosure orders ensured none of the targets could fight back. And when one carrier — AT&T — raised a basic constitutional question, the special counsel's office abandoned the subpoena rather than answer it. That's not the behavior of a prosecution confident in its legal footing. That's the behavior of a prosecution hoping no one would ask.

The Durbin deflection

Ranking member Sen. Dick Durbin offered the Democratic response, which amounted to: why are we even talking about this?

"This is frankly an embarrassing use of the committee's limited time, and I urge my colleagues to turn their attention to the threats that President Trump currently poses to our democracy."

A special counsel secretly obtained the phone records of sitting members of Congress, and the Democratic position is that investigating it wastes time. Durbin did say Smith should testify "as soon as possible," — but the framing tells you everything. For Democrats, the surveillance of Republican lawmakers isn't a civil liberties concern. It's an inconvenience that distracts from their preferred narrative.

Imagine, for one moment, the reaction if a Trump-era special counsel had secretly subpoenaed the phone records of 20 Democratic lawmakers. The words "constitutional crisis" would have trended for a week. Every editorial board in America would have discovered a sudden passion for the Speech or Debate Clause. The asymmetry isn't subtle.

What comes next

Grassley's pledge to haul Smith before the Senate Judiciary Committee sets up the next act. Smith's House testimony offered his version of events — no political motivation, just following the facts. But the facts now include a special counsel who issued subpoenas he abandoned the moment a carrier questioned their constitutionality, who operated behind non-disclosure orders that neutralized congressional oversight, and who targeted the communications of the very legislators responsible for checking executive power.

The carriers will update their processes. Verizon already has. But process reforms don't answer the foundational question: What happens when a weaponized prosecution uses lawful mechanisms to achieve unlawful ends? The subpoenas were technically valid. The non-disclosure orders were technically legal. And yet the result was that a special counsel investigating the president's political allies secretly obtained the phone records of his political allies in Congress — and nobody could object because nobody knew.

The system worked exactly as Smith designed it to. That's the problem.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani became the first New York City mayor in nearly a century to skip the installation of the city's new Catholic archbishop — then tried to cover it with a tweet.

Archbishop Ronald Hicks, 58, accepted the reins of the New York Archdiocese from Cardinal Timothy Dolan at St. Patrick's Cathedral on Friday in a ceremony that began at 2 p.m. The 11th archbishop since 1850 now leads a flock of an estimated 2.5 million Catholics across Manhattan, the Bronx, Staten Island, and counties north of the city.

The mayor was not there. He posted about it on X instead.

"Congratulations to Archbishop Ronald Hicks on today's installment and welcome to New York City."

He followed that with a promise that he and Hicks share "a deep and abiding commitment to the dignity of every human being" and that he looks forward to "working together to create a more just and compassionate city where every New Yorker can thrive."

Every New Yorker, apparently, except the 2.5 million Catholics whose most significant religious ceremony in years didn't rate a walk up Fifth Avenue.

A tradition every mayor honored — until now

The mayoral attendance record stretches back to at least 1939, when Fiorello LaGuardia attended the installation of Francis Spellman. Ed Koch — Jewish — was present for Cardinal John O'Connor's ceremony in 1984. Rudy Giuliani was at St. Patrick's for Archbishop Edward Egan's installation in 2000. Michael Bloomberg — also Jewish — attended Cardinal Dolan's installation mass in 2009.

Koch and Bloomberg didn't share the faith. They showed up anyway. That's what leaders of a pluralistic city do — they honor the institutions that bind their constituents together, especially the ones that don't share their own background. It is the most basic gesture of civic respect.

Mamdani couldn't be bothered, however, as MSN reported.

The schedule that doesn't add up

City Hall eventually claimed Mamdani had a "scheduling conflict" and had sent a Catholic deputy mayor in his place. But his own public schedule tells a different story. The mayor attended an interfaith prayer breakfast at 10 a.m. and had a winter weather press conference at 4 p.m. The installation began at 2 p.m. — at a cathedral that, as the Catholic League pointedly noted, is a short walk up Fifth Avenue from the prayer breakfast venue at the New York Public Library.

The Catholic League did not mince words:

"The mayor of New York City traditionally attends the installation of the new archbishop of New York, but Mamdani — who was invited — ghosted the event."

"He could easily have been there. Instead, he attended to business as usual."

City Hall ignored several outreach attempts by the New York Post on both Friday and Monday. Only after publication did a spokesperson surface to say Mamdani and Hicks would speak on Tuesday. The damage-control instinct arrived well after the damage.

Selective interfaith outreach

What makes Mamdani's absence sharper is the context surrounding it. In the same week, he put out a tweet marking World Hijab Day. At the annual interfaith prayer breakfast — the very event he attended that same Friday morning — he suggested that the United States should use the Prophet Muhammed's example on immigration.

No one objects to a mayor engaging with the Muslim community. The problem is the contrast. When you find time to commemorate World Hijab Day and invoke the Prophet Muhammed at a public event but can't walk a few blocks to honor the installation of the Catholic archbishop who shepherds millions of your constituents, you aren't practicing interfaith leadership. You're practicing selective faith engagement, and the selections are telling.

Bill Cunningham, former communications director and top adviser to Mayor Bloomberg, attended the 2009 installation himself. He told the Post:

"It was a missed opportunity for the mayor to show he wants to serve all the segments of the city."

"There are certain institutions the mayor of New York might want to take note of. One of them is the Catholic Church."

Ken Frydman, spokesman for Giuliani's 1993 campaign, was blunter:

"I thought Mamdani only disdains Jews who like Israel. Turns out, he also disdains Italian, Irish and other Catholic New Yorkers."

The message received

The Catholic League framed the absence in terms that will resonate far beyond one missed ceremony:

"Mamdani has been in office for just over a month, and already he is signaling to Catholics that they are not welcome."

That's the read, and Mamdani has done nothing to rebut it. His own representative, asked about the absence, offered this to a reporter: the mayor didn't go, but he tweeted about it. As if a social media post is a substitute for presence. As if the mayor of the largest city in the country can discharge his civic obligations from a phone screen.

Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Catholic, was in Syracuse at the Democratic convention formally accepting a nomination — an actual scheduling conflict with a verifiable event. Nobody faulted her for it. Mamdani had a four-hour gap between breakfast and a press conference. The excuse doesn't hold.

What just over a month reveals

A mayor barely five weeks into office has managed to signal to one of the city's largest religious communities that their traditions rank below a weather briefing. He's shown that "interfaith" means the faiths he personally prioritizes. And when called on it, his administration went silent for days before offering a story contradicted by his own public calendar.

New York has had mayors of every faith and no faith. Every single one of them understood that the installation of an archbishop isn't a church picnic — it's a civic event, a recognition that the Catholic Church is woven into the fabric of the city. Schools, hospitals, charities, and parishes in every borough. You don't have to take communion to acknowledge what that institution means to millions of people.

Mamdani tweeted. The 2.5 million Catholics of the New York Archdiocese will remember what he didn't do.

A suspect in the 2012 Benghazi attack is now on American soil, facing murder, arson, and terrorism charges — and the prosecutor who met his plane at 3:00 a.m. says he's just the beginning.

The Department of Justice announced that Zubayar al-Bakoush had been extradited to the United States to face an eight-count indictment tied to the attack that killed Ambassador Stevens, Sean Smith, Tyrone Woods, and Glen Doherty. U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro appeared on FNC's "Hannity" to lay out the charges and deliver a message that ought to rattle anyone still breathing free after that night in Benghazi.

Pirro said:

"We are not done yet, Sean. There are more of those people, those peaceful protesters. That was nonsense."

The indictment — filed roughly two months ago and unsealed the day of Pirro's appearance — charges Bakoush with supporting terrorism, providing material support to terrorism resulting in the murder of several people, including Smith and Ambassador Stevens, the attempted murder of Scott Wickland, and arson.

3:00 a.m. on the tarmac

Pirro didn't delegate this one. She was standing on the tarmac when Bakoush's jet landed in the early hours of Friday morning — and she made no effort to hide her contempt for the man stepping off it.

"I wanted to see that dirtbag Bakoush get off that jet and make sure that he got into the hands of American law enforcement. My office indicted him two months ago. The indictment was unsealed today."

She described the brutality in plain terms. When attackers could not breach Villa C, where Ambassador Stevens sheltered with Sean Smith, they retrieved gas cans and set the building on fire. The goal was to make sure those Americans died.

"These people when they couldn't breach villa C where Ambassador Stevens was with Sean Smith, they went out and got gas cans. I'm talking about Bakoush, and they set fire to make sure that those Americans died."

Pirro credited Kash Patel, Dan Bongino, and Marco Rubio with helping secure the extradition. The machinery of accountability, dormant for over a decade, was finally put into motion.

The families waited thirteen years

Before going on air, Pirro had already spoken to the families of all four Americans killed in Benghazi. Their reaction tells you everything about how long this justice was delayed.

"They were thrilled. They didn't expect this."

That line deserves a moment. The families of Americans murdered in a terrorist attack on sovereign U.S. facilities — people who watched Washington spend years deflecting, minimizing, and moving on — did not expect anyone would still be pursuing their case. That is the indictment of the previous response that no courtroom filing could match.

Patricia Smith, the mother of Sean Smith, texted Pirro on the day the indictment was unsealed. Through Pirro, she shared the words her son had spoken to her before he was killed:

"Mom, I'm going to die. They're not going to send help."

Family members, relayed through Pirro, asked her to pass along a message to President Trump:

"Please tell President Trump how grateful we are. We knew that he stood for us. We knew he would never forget."

The lies that aged into history

Pirro drove straight at the official narrative that the Obama administration constructed in the aftermath of Benghazi — the story about a "peaceful protest that went awry," the assurances of a few "troublemakers," the careful stage management on Sunday morning talk shows.

"We knew that we were being lied to. We knew that when they said it was a peaceful protest that went awry, or there were just a few troublemakers or that when President Obama said, quote, 'We did everything we could.'"

They didn't do everything they could. That has been obvious for thirteen years. But what made Benghazi burn in the national memory wasn't just the failure — it was the institutional shrug that followed. The "What difference does it make?" posture. The Sunday show's talking points treated the truth like a messaging problem to be managed rather than a massacre to be answered.

Pirro drew the contrast herself, and it's a sharp one. In 2012, the cavalry never came. Now the cavalry brought a defendant back in handcuffs.

"This was for most Americans, Sean, and for me in particular, the first time in my life that I realized that the American cavalry wasn't coming for you. And right now, we know the difference between the presidents because it is President Trump who has made the decision to bring the American cavalry in to protect Americans."

What comes next

Bakoush is not the first Benghazi defendant prosecuted by Pirro's office. She referenced two prior defendants who went through the same jurisdiction. He won't be the last. Pirro's language was deliberate and forward-looking — "future Benghazi defendants" — a phrase designed to land in Benghazi and wherever the remaining attackers are hiding.

This case languished. Pirro said it herself. The question now is whether the pace holds — whether the apparatus that pulled Bakoush out of wherever he'd been sitting for over a decade can find the rest of them. The indictment is eight counts. The promise is open-ended.

For thirteen years, the families of the Benghazi dead carried their grief through a political environment that treated their loss as an inconvenient talking point — something to be debunked, fact-checked, or memory-holed whenever it became uncomfortable for the people who let it happen. Patricia Smith's son told her he was going to die because help wasn't coming. Now someone is answering for it.

Not all of them. Not yet. But Jeanine Pirro was on that tarmac at 3:00 a.m. for a reason.

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