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Jasmine Crockett claims voters were ‘disenfranchised’ following crushing defeat in key Texas primary
Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) endured a brutal electoral blow Tuesday night after her opponent James Talarico secured the nomination in the Texas Senate Democratic primary.
Talarico, a more moderate Democrat, decisively won the nomination, dashing Crockett’s aspirations for higher political office. With 80% of the vote tallied on Wednesday morning, Talarico sailed through with 53.1% of the vote, while Crockett brought in just 45.6%, according to the New York Times.
Talarico’s win may indicate a shift toward a more moderate platform.
Despite Talarico’s decisive win, Crockett was quick to blame election fraud.
“We’re about to file a lawsuit to keep the voting polls open,” Crockett said. “… I can tell you now that people were being disenfranchised.”
Bob Daemmrich/Texas Tribune/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Talarico embraced the blue-dog Democrat campaign style, pitching himself as a Christian and appealing to working-class voters. Crockett, on the other hand, exemplified progressivism in full force, modeling herself after Squad members like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).
Despite Crockett’s appeal to the progressive faction of the left, Talarico’s win may indicate a shift toward a more moderate platform within the Democratic Party.
RELATED: 3 contentious Texas primaries that hang in the balance
Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images
Talarico will now face off against either Attorney General Ken Paxton or incumbent Sen. John Cornyn in November.
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James talarico, Jasmine crockett, Senate primary, Texas primary, Senate democrats, House democrats, Moderate democrat, Progressive, 2026 primary, Politics
Lindsey Graham feverishly demands ANOTHER Middle Eastern conflict: ‘Fly with Israel’
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has long been a cheerleader for U.S. military interventions and/or U.S.-orchestrated regime changes around the globe in countries such as Afghanistan, Cuba, Iraq, Libya, Russia, Syria, and Venezuela. Iran appears, however, to have been a priority target for the senator.
Graham expressed great satisfaction when the U.S. and Israel resumed their bombardment of Iranian targets on Saturday, suggesting that “the biggest change in the Middle East in a thousand years is upon us” and that “if the ayatollah goes down, historic peace advances.”
After adding to reporters on Tuesday that regime change in Tehran opens “a gateway to peace,” Graham animatedly indicated that he first wants to see the U.S. intervene militarily in another Middle Eastern nation.
‘Settle the score, even the account.’
“One thing to President Trump, in case you’re watching. In 1983, Ronald Reagan sent Marines and sailors to try to police and deal with the Lebanese civil war,” said Graham. “They were at the end of the runway. Hezbollah attacked the Marine barracks, killed 220 Marines, 18 sailors, and wounded 100 others. Ronald Reagan, who I admire and love, withdrew and never did anything about it.”
The senator suggested that President Donald Trump should settle the 43-year-old score.
“I’m calling on President Trump today: Join Israel to attack Hezbollah. Avenge the Marines. America never forgets,” said Graham, identifying alleged Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps “assets” in Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, as potential U.S. targets.
RELATED: Poll: GOP voters’ lukewarm support for Iran strikes significantly lower than past conflicts
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated on Tuesday that Beirut “must understand that Hezbollah is dragging them into a war that is not theirs.”
Israeli forces have in recent days seized control of additional strategic positions and exchanged fire with Hezbollah militants in southern Lebanon.
The Israel Defense Forces indicated that they have bombed numerous Hezbollah targets across the country and assassinated numerous hostile officials, including Abu Hamza Rami, the commander of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad in the Lebanon sector.
Graham, who is running for re-election in America, implored Trump to “come up with a new operation called ‘Semper Fi.’ Fly with Israel and go after Hezbollah who has American blood on its hands.”
“Not only take the mothership of Iran down,” continued the senator, “also take the proxy of Hezbollah. Settle the score, even the account.”
Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) was among those who criticized Graham over his warmongering, stating, “Lindsey hasn’t seen a fist fight that he hasn’t wanted to turn into a bombing raid. So I just take it with a grain of salt, dude.”
BlazeTV host Auron MacIntyre wrote, “Yeah, this is going well.”
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Lebanon, Middle east, Foreign entanglements, Regime change, Iran, Lindsey graham, War, Warmonger, Republican, South carolina, Interventionist, Intervention, Neoliberal, Israel, Donald trump, Netanyahu, Politics
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‘RINO’ congressman loses primary after failing to secure Trump’s endorsement
Rep. Dan Crenshaw, the only Texas Republican incumbent not to receive President Donald Trump’s endorsement in this election cycle, lost his re-election campaign on Tuesday, according to unofficial results.
Crenshaw, who was hoping to secure a fifth term in Texas’ 2nd Congressional District, was defeated in the primary race by state Rep. Steve Toth (R).
Toth ‘has stepped up to the plate to challenge one of Congress’s biggest RINOs, Dan Crenshaw.’
Toth received just under 57% of the vote, securing a majority and avoiding a runoff election.
Hours after polls closed on Tuesday, Toth declared victory, posting a video on X and stating: “Big thanks to the voters of Congressional District 2. I will work hard for all of you.”
U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) endorsed Toth ahead of the race, writing in a post on social media, “Steve faithfully served the people of Texas in the Texas House of Representatives, championing our Texas values of liberty, limited government, and constitutional governance.”
“Steve is an unwavering fighter for school choice, fiscal responsibility, and the next generation of Americans. Washington needs bold leadership and representatives who will stand up for Texans at every turn,” Cruz continued. “Steve has the experience, the courage, and the conviction to do just that. I’m honored to support his campaign and urge voters in Texas’s 2nd Congressional District to join me in electing Steve Toth to Congress.”
RELATED: Tuesday’s must-watch primaries: The races that will determine if America First takes over in 2026
Dan Crenshaw. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call Inc. via Getty Images
Some of Toth’s supporters have accused Crenshaw of opposing President Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again agenda.
Mark Ivanyo, the executive director of Republicans for National Renewal, stated, “@SteveTothTX has stepped up to the plate to challenge one of Congress’s biggest RINOs, Dan Crenshaw. Crenshaw has stood against MAGA consistently and held out as a stalwart of the Liz Cheney wing of the GOP that has done so much damage to our country.”
RELATED: Dan Crenshaw brushes off apparent death threat as ‘hyperbole’ as ethics complaint looms
Photographer: Sharon Steinmann/Bloomberg via Getty Images
U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) endorsed Crenshaw last week, crediting him for doing “a lot behind the scenes” “to help weed out the public corruption in Washington.”
An internal poll from Crenshaw’s campaign released in November showed the incumbent with a 28-point lead over Toth, according to a press release.
At the time the polls closed in Texas, 7:00 p.m. local time, bettors on Kalshi Markets gave Crenshaw a 68% chance of winning the election. Less than two hours after polls closed, those predictions swung in Toth’s favor with nearly 99% odds.
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News, Dan crenshaw, Steve toth, Texas, Ted cruz, Anna paulina luna, Martin etwop, Nicholas plumb, Republican primary, Politics
Chip Roy’s political future uncertain after nail-biting Texas AG race
The list of possible successors to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) was whittled down somewhat in Tuesday’s primary elections.
On the Republican side, Rep. Chip Roy (R), an antagonist of Paxton who had Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz’s endorsement, faced off with Mayes Middleton, a Texas state senator who characterized himself as a proud supporter of the America First agenda; Aaron Reitz, the Paxton-endorsed former assistant attorney general who promised to “destroy the left” if elected; and Joan Huffman, a Texas state senator supported by various police unions.
‘I’d like to come home to Texas.’
Roy, who led the pack in a Texas Politics Project Poll taken last month, said in a video statement on Tuesday afternoon, “There’s a lot of important issues, and as a former federal prosecutor and the former first assistant attorney general — someone who’s been in the battle fighting for you — I’d like to come home to Texas and be your attorney general.”
The congressman came home for a relatively disappointing performance, trailing Middleton throughout the night.
With over 91% of the expected votes in, Middleton had secured 39.2% of the vote, while Roy had 31.6% as of Wednesday morning, reported NBC News. Huffman and Reitz secured 15% and 14.2% of the vote, respectively.
RELATED: Trump-endorsed candidate wins Senate primary in key battleground state
Mayes Middleton. Photo by Montinique Monroe/Getty Images
As neither of the top two Republican candidates obtained more than 50% of the vote, they must go head-to-head on May 26 in a primary runoff election.
Just before midnight, Middleton — a seventh-generation Texan and father of four who was endorsed by numerous conservative groups including the Texas Family Project, Moms for America Action, and the True Texas Project — wrote on X, “1st Place! Thank you to conservatives across Texas for your trust, your vote, and for giving us incredible momentum going into the runoff.”
Middleton pledged in his campaign to “lead the charge to secure our border, protect Texas kids, ensure fairness in girls’ and women’s sports, protect Texas taxpayers and consumers, ensure strict election integrity, and root out waste, fraud, and abuse from our government.”
Reitz congratulated Roy and Middleton, noting, “They ran strong campaigns, I respect them both, and they earned their place in the next round. I wish them both well.”
On the Democrat side, Nathan Johnson, a litigator and composer who contributed scores to the anime series “Dragon Ball Z,” competed for his party’s nomination against former Galveston Mayor Joe Jaworski and Anthony Box, an Army veteran, former FBI agent, and attorney.
With 92% of the votes counted, the Associated Press reported that Johnson led Jaworski and Box by over 20 percentage points with 47.9% of the vote, just shy of the 50% necessary to avoid a runoff on May 26. Jaworski reportedly had 26.7% of the vote as of early Wednesday, while Box had 25.4%.
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Texas, Lone star state, Chip roy, Aaron reitz, Mayes middleton, Primary election, Primary, Texas primary, Politics
Memo to Hegseth: Military education needs a strategic makeover
Watching the swarm of active and former officers on TV and across social media in the wake of the Iran operation, one thing becomes painfully clear: We are not educating the American officer corps for 21st-century war.
In almost every case, these officers — regardless of service — stay locked in the tactical weeds. They can tell you the circular error probable of a Tomahawk missile, the engagement envelope of a JDAM, and the close-quarters choreography of a SEAL platoon. They can talk gear, ranges, platforms, and “capabilities” until your eyes glaze over.
Too many mid-level officers can operate tactically and, at best, think in an operational frame. Few can function in the strategic register.
What they cannot do — with a few exceptions — is think strategically.
Gen. Jack Keane stands out because he can talk operational and strategic moves as a ground commander sees them. But the larger pattern points to a flaw baked into our professional military education system: It produces tacticians who struggle to connect the fight in front of them to the history behind it and the policy goals above it.
That flaw shows up as a shallow understanding of American history, American military history, and the U.S. role in the world since World War II. Even with Iran — a country that has loomed in U.S. policy for decades — many younger officers appear hazy on basic context.
They don’t know, for example, that Iran aligned with the United States during World War II. They don’t know the long arc of American involvement with the Shah (reinstalled in 1948, uninstalled at the fumbling behest of Jimmy Carter in 1979), or the 1979 revolution, or the Reagan-era gamesmanship, or the diplomatic failures and half-measures that followed. They don’t grasp how those chapters shape the threat environment we are dealing with right now — or why “Iran” is never just Iran.
That ignorance produces a second-order problem: a lack of situational awareness about almost any contemporary politico-military challenge.
Too many mid-level officers can operate tactically and, at best, think in an operational frame. Few can function in the strategic register. Fewer still can explain the principles of grand strategy — or, more accurately, war policy: what the nation wants, what it will pay, and what it must prevent.
Without that understanding, senior officers cannot give clear, disciplined advice to a president or a White House staff that may lack military experience. The armed forces become a machine that can execute missions brilliantly while remaining uncertain about the “why.”
There is another cost to this historical and strategic illiteracy: a warped sense of time.
Military operations do not unfold on cable-news timelines. Understanding the implications of a wartime environment takes time. Reshaping an adversary’s behavior takes time. Consolidating a political outcome takes time. If officers making decisions lack a working understanding of the history of that environment, they will miss opportunities that could save lives and treasure — and they will overestimate the speed at which results can be achieved.
I say this as someone who has lectured for decades at military institutions, including the U.S. Air Force Academy, the National Defense University, and the National Intelligence University.
In recent years, I have watched what can only be described as intellectual sludge: more than 20 years of forced social engineering and liberalization within the military academic ecosystem. Diversity, equity, and inclusion became more important than producing officers who are not risk-averse and who understand the hard realities of war — including destruction and death — and the grim imperative to minimize our casualties while maximizing the enemy’s. Brutal, yes. Also true.
RELATED: Memo to Hegseth: Our military’s problem isn’t only fitness. It’s bad education.
Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images
Gen. Curtis LeMay put it plainly: “I don’t mind being called tough, because in this racket, it’s tough guys who lead the survivors.”
There is hope on the horizon, at least in the Air Force. Through what looks like a deus ex machina, the Air Force Academy has rapidly changed its top leadership — installing a new superintendent, commandant, and dean in a single sweep. The new dean, Col. James Valpiani, has a résumé you could shorthand as “Clark Kent in blue.” USAFA has also begun reversing the overly civilianized faculty model, replacing it with Air Force officers who have the appropriate degrees and the right instincts.
That is a start.
Now comes the core reform: The academy must make U.S. history, U.S. military history, and U.S. Air Force history — from World War II forward — a central, non-negotiable part of the curriculum. Young officers need to understand not only what America can do, but what America is trying to do — and why. They need a strategic rationale, not just a technical one.
That kind of grounding also restores a concept the services once prized: meritocracy. The smartest and most aggressive should lead, and they should lead with a strategic understanding worthy of the responsibility.
Gen. George Patton liked to say, “A good plan, violently executed now, is better than a perfect plan next week.” A good plan depends on something deeper than PowerPoint. It depends on a commander with history embedded in his soul — history understood as lived reality, not as trivia.
I would sure like to help plant it there.
Pete hegseth, Us military, Military education, American history, Air force academy, Strategic thinking, Military officers, Opinion & analysis, Military academies, Grand strategy, Jack keane, Iran, Shah, Islamic revolution
Scandal-plagued Texas congressman forced into runoff rematch — after barely escaping defeat last time
Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) faced a primary rematch against firearms influencer Brandon Herrera for Texas’ 23rd Congressional District seat on Tuesday — and will have to face him yet again.
Gonzales, who narrowly defeated Herrera in a 2024 runoff race, will once again battle Herrera in a runoff election on May 26 after neither candidate received more than 50% of the primary vote on Tuesday.
As of Wednesday morning, unofficial election results showed Gonzales with roughly 41.6% of the vote and Herrera with 43%.
‘I think the voters in Texas are going to speak pretty loudly.’
The incumbent’s re-election campaign came under scrutiny in September when one of his staffers, Regina Santos-Aviles, committed suicide by setting herself on fire. Allegations soon surfaced that Gonzales and Santos-Aviles had been having an affair.
While Gonzales dismissed the claims as smear tactics, some Republican lawmakers called on him to resign after explicit text messages he allegedly sent to Santos-Aviles were leaked to the public in late February.
Gonzales has refused to step down, stating, “What you’ve seen is not all the facts.”
Gonzales secured endorsements from several Republican politicians, including President Donald Trump, House Speaker Mike Johnson (La.), Rep. Steve Scalise (La.), and House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (Minn.). Trump reposted his endorsements on Friday, but notably omitted Gonzales.
RELATED: Tuesday’s must-watch primaries: The races that will determine if America First takes over in 2026
Tony Gonzales. Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call Inc. via Getty Images
Herrera, Gonzales’ most prominent competitor, received endorsements from several Republican members of Congress, including Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (Fla.), Rep. Eli Crane (Ariz.), Rep. Chip Roy (Texas), and Rep. Lauren Boebert (Colo.).
Rep. Mike Haridopolos (R-Fla.) predicted ahead of the primary election that Gonzales would lose.
“I think the voters in Texas are going to speak pretty loudly. And I would guess that his days are numbered in Congress,” Haridopolos stated.
RELATED: 3 contentious Texas primaries that hang in the balance
Brandon Herrera. Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images
Herrera’s internal poll showed him receiving 45% of the vote, up 24 points ahead of Gonzales.
At the time the polls closed in Texas, 7:00 p.m. local time, bettors on Kalshi Markets gave Herrera a 95% chance of winning the election.
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News, Texas, Tony gonzales, Brandon herrera, Donald trump, Trump, Regina santos-aviles, Mike johnson, Steve scalise, Tom emmer, Anna paulina luna, Eli crane, Chip roy, Lauren boebert, Mike haridopolos, Republican primary, Politics
‘Judgement Day is coming’: Ken Paxton advances with establishment incumbent in key Texas primary
Attorney General Ken Paxton advanced in the heated Texas Senate Republican primary alongside incumbent Sen. John Cornyn.
Paxton and Cornyn will now go to a runoff after spoiler candidate Rep. Wesley Hunt secured just over 13% of the vote, according to the New York Times. With 82% of the vote count in as of early Wednesday morning, Cornyn held a narrow lead over Paxton at 42.1%, while the attorney general secured 40.9% of the vote.
‘Republican voters are now forced to endure an even longer primary runoff election.’
“Judgement Day is coming for Ken Paxton,” Cornyn’s campaign said in a post on X.
RELATED: 3 contentious Texas primaries that hang in the balance
Photo by Danielle Villasana/Getty Images
Republican operatives criticized Hunt for running as a spoiler candidate, calling his candidacy a “vanity tour.”
“Instead of fighting for President Trump and conservative priorities, Wesley launched a career-ending vanity tour without any substance or political reasoning,” the Senate Leadership Fund said in a statement. “While Wesley’s amateur consultants got wealthy on his senseless campaign, Republican voters are now forced to endure an even longer primary runoff election.”
President Donald Trump notably refrained from weighing in on the race despite the lobbying effort from Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) to garner support for Cornyn.
“I like all three of them,” Trump told reporters, referring to Cornyn, Paxton, and Hunt. “Actually, I like all three. Those are the toughest races. They’ve all supported me. They’re all good, and you’re supposed to pick one, so we’ll see what happens.”
RELATED: Tuesday’s must-watch primaries: The races that will determine if America First takes over in 2026
Photographer: Mark Felix/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The three-way race drained valuable resources fighting for a comfortable Republican seat, effectively delaying the GOP primary until May 26, 2026.
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Texas primary, Texas senate seat, Republican primary, 2025 primary, Ken paxton, Wesley hunt, John cornyn, Senate republicans, House republicans, Attorney general, Donald trump, John thune, Politics
Mexico Mandates Biometric SIM Registration For All Phone Numbers
Mexico is six months away from building a surveillance system that knows the face behind every phone call in the country.
