We have got a democracy, Benjamin Franklin said in a quote much appreciated this year, if we can keep it. 

For the past week or so leading up to Independence Day, our nation’s semi-quincentennial, we have been publishing comments from the right and the left on the state and the future of American democracy. 

The discussion continues with our next Talking With, Not At… Debate & Donuts IV at the Allen Theatre in Annville, Pennsylvania, 6 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday, July 20.

Topic is: What do you think about the condition of American democracy, and what are your hopes and thoughts for its future? 

Scroll down to the next page with the trackbar on the far right (not a political position) to read comments about the state of our democracy from contributing pundits and a reader. Click on The Gray Area to read comments on our democracy by Contributing Pundit Jerry Lanson and Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay.

As always, we offer you the chance to become a citizen pundit for The Hustings. Email your COMMENTS to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings, whether moderate or hard left/hard right in the subject line so we publish your comments in the appropriate column. –Editors

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THURSDAY 7/9/26

Strait of Hormuz [NASA photo].

Ceasefire is Over – After President Trump threatened Iran while attending the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, Wednesday attacks between the US and Iran quickly picked up to, it appears, new extremes. 

The US hit Iranian missile and drone sites near the Strait of Hormuz Wednesday night, while Iran fired on US military base-hosts Kuwait and Bahrain, a senior US official told The Wall Street Journal

US Central Command said attacks on Iran were broader in scope than Tuesday’s strikes and included Iran’s air-defense systems, coastal surveillance assets, naval capabilities and logistics infrastructure, according to the WSJ report. Jordan on Thursday said its air defenses had intercepted eight Iranian missiles.

•••

Just When You Thought it Was Safe to Go Back to the Pumps – After an 0.6-cent increase Wednesday, reversing several weeks of long, slow gas price relief, the national average for a gallon of unleaded regular jumped another 5 cents Thursday to $3.846, according to AAA. That’s $1.044 higher than on February 27. Diesel is up 3.8 cents Thursday according to AAA, to $4.810, up $1.036 since the beginning of the US-Iran war. 

•••

Nominating Convention to Replace Platner – Nightmarish memories of President Biden’s last-minute withdrawal from the 2024 election in their heads, the Maine Democratic Party Wednesday announced plans to hold a nominating convention to select a new US Senate candidate, CQ Roll Call reports, to replace Marine Corps veteran/oysterman/left-wing populist Graham Platner after he withdrew over sexual assault allegations. 

“We believe that for the movement to continue, it can’t be me,” Platner said in an 11-minute social media video Wednesday, according to the report. “And for that reason, we are suspending campaign operations.”

Platner’s withdrawal two days after a Politico report he denies in which a former girlfriend accuses him of sexual assault came ahead of next Monday’s deadline to be pulled off Maine’s ballot. The Democratic Party has until July 27 to forward a replacement candidate in their quest to beat incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins, whose already mild resistance to President Trump has diminished during his second term. 

Potential candidates …

Maine Beer Co. Founder Dan Kleban already has announced, according to Roll Call.

Nirav Shah, who led Maine’s public health agency during the COVID pandemic and was deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the Biden administration told NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly on All Things Considered Wednesday why he would be the right candidate if he chooses to run. 

Other candidates identified by Roll Call are …

Troy Jackson, former state senate president who points to a recent Public Policy Polling result that show him leading Collins 49% to 44%.

Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, who lost to Collins in 2014.

Former congressional staffer Jordan Wood, who ran for the Democratic nomination for Senate, then shifted his campaign to the state’s Second Congressional District.

Paige Loud, another former Second Congressional District candidate. ––Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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THURSDAY 7/9/26

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

The first-ever “FIFA Peace Prize-Football Unites the World” award winner Donald J. Trump is a man who seems to be getting to that “Hey, you! Get off of my lawn!” stage of life.

On Wednesday, July 1, during a game between the USA and Bosnia and Herzegovina, USA striker Folarin Balogun, who happens to be a US citizen through the 14th Amendment, something which Trump is opposed to, received a red card for a foul. A red card means the player is ejected from the game and is suspended for at least the next game.

That suspension was troublesome for the US team as Balogun is the premier player for the squad. He had scored three goals in the World Cup tournament games he participated in, which may not sound like much, but that is a big number in the sport.

So without Balogun, things seemed dire for the US team, which was to go up against Belgium.

Ever the diplomat, Trump got on the phone with FIFA President Gianni Infantino . . . the man who happened to give Trump the FIFA Peace Prize.

Who cares if there are rules?

Balogun was reinstated.

Belgium won the game by a commanding 4 to 1.

Balogun didn’t score that single US goal.

One week later, our very own presidential diplomat was back at it, but this time more in what is ostensibly his wheelhouse.

While attending the NATO summit in Turkey, he said this about the Iranian people that the US is negotiating with to end the war in Iran: “I don’t want to deal with them anymore — they’re scum. You know what scum is? They’re scum. They’re sick people. They’re led by sick people. And they’re vicious, violent people.”

He went on to say:

  • “it’s just a waste of time dealing with them”
  • “They’re liars”
  • “There’s something wrong with them”
  • “They’re cuckoo”

When Infantino presented Trump with the “FIFA Peace Prize” at what was still then the Kennedy Center, renamed a couple weeks later before that switch was found to be breaking the rules, he said: “This is what we want from a leader. A leader that cares about the people. We want to live in a safe world, in a safe environment. We want to unite — that’s what we do here today, that’s what we’ll do at the World Cup, Mr. President.”

Yes, a leader who cares by insulting people that the country needs to come to an agreement with, unless, of course, he goes back to his “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again” mode.

While he claims he is making it a “safe world” by going to war with Iran to keep it from developing a nuclear weapon, providing no evidence that that was, to use one of his metaphors, in the cards, odds are he is making the world less safe by treating the Iranians the way he is.

Let’s never forget that the 9/11 hijackers used only box cutters and pocket knives, not nuclear weapons, to cause the deaths and create the devastation in New York and Washington.

And let us also not forget that for the first and only time in the history of the NATO alliance Article 5 was invoked on behalf of the US. That part of the organization’s treaty says an attack on one NATO member is considered an attack on all. These are rules people abide by.

So Trump goes to the NATO summit and says:

“Greenland is very important for the US, but it’s not important for Denmark,” again threatening the sovereign territory of a US ally.

It would be better for all of us if this “FIFA Peace Prize” winner stuck to soccer.

Macaulay is pundit-at-large for The Hustings.

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THURSDAY 7/9/26

Scroll down this column to read liberal commentaries on the state, and future, of our democracy by contributors Sharon Lintner, K.E. Bell and Hugh Hansen, and go to The Gray Area for commentary by Jerry Lanson.

In Broad Daylight -- It has been said that democracy dies in darkness, but in America it is dying in broad daylight. Members of the press are being publicly disrespected. Truths are being twisted. Rights are being reversed. The future of democracy is extremely fragile and as things stand now, I think it is quite possible to lose democracy. -- Sharon Lintner (Contributing Pundit)

•••

Depends on Midterms -- The question of how confident we should be in our democracy starts with our faith in our fellow man. If we've learned anything from the Trump era it's that about a third of people — and maybe as high as 40 percent — can either fall for a conman or justify the evil this man has done. That leaves two-thirds of us to defend democracy. The problem is all the power is in the hands of those who would destroy it for their own ends. While I think the Democrats will garner about 60 percent of the votes in the midterms, the Republicans' ability to cheat democracy may make up for that 20-percent shortfall. Trump's biggest fear is accountability, so I believe he is willing to pull another January 6th to avoid losing the midterms or seating enough winning Democrats to give them the gavel. Basically, I think democracy, at least democracy in the way Americans believe it should exist, is dead if Republicans can cheat the midterms. 

And then there are the Democrats. Should the Dems win in the midterms, I don't have faith that they'll do the right thing, either. The rampant corruption of this regime (the word administration implies too much respect) must be punished, and the Supreme Court must be remade (again, in part to mitigate Republican cheating). If Dems regain power and don't bury this dark era for our country under an avalanche of convictions, ethics standards, voting rights laws (bye-bye, gerrymandering), and anti-corruption legislation, America's democracy won't be worth saving anyway.

It will be up to us at the ballot box and the leaders we elect to set the country on the path that was promised in the Constitution. Let's hope that a vocal majority will be enough to overcome a lawless, immoral, corrupt minority. –K.E. Bell  (Contributing Pundit)

•••

Citizens Must Learn -- When I've thought about and looked toward the future of US democracy lately, I find I have no vision at all. My crystal ball, never crystal-clear, has turned into a brick. 

I think I've generally lived in optimism about our country's future. As a teacher, I saw (and helped) people learn things, then saw them adjust their thoughts and actions constructively in response. I mean, that's what it takes, right? For our democracy to succeed, a big chunk of our citizens must learn (whether formally or from experience) and then act accordingly. That has to happen more quickly in today's world than it did in 1926. 

The size and durability of the Trumpian base just blows my mind in that regard. It makes it seem perfectly possible to me that the "big chunk" I described is simply not big enough to respond to the challenges we face from big money, new tech, climate change, and foreign relations.

Or, maybe there are a few supremely effective new teachers coming into the political system. Great teachers enable learning I'd never have seen coming in my brick. --Hugh Hansen (Contributing Pundit)

•••

“Democracy consists of choosing your dictators, after they’ve told you what you think it is you want to hear.” – Alan Coren

Alan Coren (1938-2007) was an English writer, humorist, BBC broadcaster and satirist who had an openly cynical view of the form of government Americans have now held dear for 250 years.

Does Coren have a point?

Whether you agree or disagree with Coren, your opinion is equally valid and salient; even as the current government swings toward authoritarianism, the editorial We at The Hustings has observed a great deal of optimism for the future of our democracy from both right and left, Republicans, Democrats, and independents. 

We also are aware of opinions from left and right that said trend toward “authoritarianism” is overblown, undeserved or even necessary in order to help preserve American democracy.

As our nation’s semi-quincentennial rapidly approaches, we humbly seek your civilly stated opinions on this issue. 

Send your COMMENTS on the state of our democracy and/or its future to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate whether you lean left or right, regardless of the opinion stated within, in the subject line. –Editors

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MONDAY 6/30/26

As an original copy of the Declaration of Independence fades [National Archives] and we celebrate its 250th anniversary, The Hustings features comments on the state and future of our democracy in the right and left columns. Also read Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay and Contributing Pundit Jerry Lanson on our democracy in The Gray Area.

Ukraine Can Build Its Own Patriots – In a press conference at the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President Trump gave Ukraine the green light to produce its own Patriot missiles, the Kyiv Independentreports. 

“We are going to give you a license to make Patriots,” Trump said. “This way, he (Zelenskyy) can’t complain that we are not giving him enough.”

Zelenskyy has long argued Ukraine needs Patriot missiles to push back Russia’s latest assault on his country, even as Ukraine makes progress hitting infrastructure deep into Russia with its advanced drones. 

Trump said the US will show Ukraine how to build the missiles, adding “it’s very complex, actually,” the BBC reports.

•••

No More Dealing – Following several days of skirmishes between the US and Iran, President Trump told reporters at the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, he has had enough.

“To me, it’s over, I don’t want to deal with them anymore,” Trump said, as he sat for a press conference with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte (The Wall Street Journal). “They’re liars, they’re cheats, they’re sick people. Now I’ll let our wonderful negotiators keep talking if they want, but I don’t see it.”

Trump later told reporters at the NATO summit the US will “probably” hit Iran “very hard” Wednesday night, the BBC reports.

As between the many on-off ceasefires and negotiations over the last four-plus months, it doesn’t appear to be over-over. 

But oil was up more than 5% early Wednesday, with Brent Crude jumping to approximately $78 a barrel, according to the WSJ.

The beginning of the end of the ceasefire started with Iran attacking three ships including a liquified natural gas tanker in the Strait of Hormuz. Then the US military said it hit more than 80 targets, mostly along Iran’s coast, near the strait, which led to Iran launching drones and ballistic missiles toward Bahrain and Kuwait, both of which host US military bases.

•••

Gas Up – The 5%+ jump in oil prices as the Trump administration signaled end of the US ceasefire with Iran very quickly translated to upticks on US gas stations’ prices. Wednesday morning, AAA reported the national average price for a gallon of unleaded rose 0.6 cents from Tuesday to $3.796, which is 99.4-cents higher than February 27. Diesel was up 1.6 cents over Monday, to $4.772 per gallon Wednesday. That’s 99.8 cents higher than February 27.

•••

Russia Returns to Olympics – Russia will be able to compete at the Los Angeles 2028 Games under its own flag, the International Olympics Committee announced Tuesday, for the first time since the country was banned in 2016 for state-sponsored doping of athletes and later Russia’s invasion of Ukraine (per The Guardian). IOC President Kirsty Coventry pointed to a new IOC rule issued last week that says athletes should not be punished for their government’s behavior.

•••

Another Fatal ICE Shooting – Immigration and Customs Enforcement says an undocumented immigrant was fatally shot as he tried to run over a federal agent conducting a vehicle stop in a predominantly Latino neighborhood in Houston, The Texas Tribunereports. The son of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo says his father had lived in the US for 35 years and was attempting to obtain a work permit. –TL

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TUESDAY 7/7/26

Trump Calls Didn’t Help – Belgium’s national football/soccer team posted the following on social media after it trounced the US national team, 4-1, Monday night: “Overturn this.”

Over the weekend, President Trump called Gianni Infantino, reportedly three times, to get the FIFA chief to overturn a red card against Folarin Balogun that would have suspended the US team’s highest scorer from playing in Monday night’s match against Belgium. Balogun did not score the team’s single goal in the loss, which eliminated the US team from the World Cup finals.

•••

Great Populist Hope is Done – Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has called on the Democratic Party’s nominee to challenge Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) in November’s midterms, Graham Platner, to “immediately withdraw,” following allegations of sexual assault published Monday by Politico. Platner also lost support of progressives including Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said Monday it will no longer invest in the race for Maine senator if he remains on the ballot.

Marine Corps veteran Platner has until now survived allegations of sexual misconduct and of wearing a tattoo bearing Nazi-associated symbol. He did not immediately withdraw, but said he is “taking the time to reflect” on his candidacy.

Platner has less than a week. If he withdraws by next Monday, Maine law allows the Democratic Party to choose his replacement.

•••

McConnell’s Health – Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) was hospitalized June 14 and his absence since has hit the Republican Party with different factions reacting differently, according to The Daily Beast

Two days after he was hospitalized, Sen. John Thune (R-SD) said he spoke with his predecessor as majority leader and “he sounded good. … He’s following the stuff we’re doing this week up here, very much so.”

Meanwhile, McConnell’s staffers refused to confirm he is conscious. 

MAGA Republicans who still don’t appreciate McConnell calling President Trump “morally responsible” for the January 6th attack on the US Capitol also remain circumspect. Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) has tweeted he “doesn’t know” what’s going on with McConnell, while über-Trumper Laura Loomer Monday morning claimed he’s “brain dead,” and the White House knows it, according to the Beast’s report.

•••

Still More Gas Relief – AAA’s national average price for a gallon of unleaded fell another seven-tenths of a cent Tuesday to $3.79, though 80.8 cents higher than on February 27. –TL 
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MONDAY 7/6/26

Ukraine-Russian Peace Talks? – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and President Trump are to meet at the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, Wednesday to exchange ideas on how to end Russia’s war on Ukraine, two people familiar with the plan told the Kyiv Independent Monday. Ukraine now believes there is an opportunity to pressure Russian dictator Vladimir Putin to negotiate directly with Zelenskyy, according to the report. 

This comes after Russia’s overnight missile and drone attack on Kyiv Monday, killing at least 18 and injuring 60 (NPR). Russia has intensified attacks on Ukrainian civilian targets as Ukraine has successfully struck oil reserves and other infrastructure well inside Russia with its advanced drones. 

Zelenskyy last week called on NATO to step up its supply of anti-ballistic missiles to let it more successfully shoot down Russian strikes. 

But one of the Ukrainian officials speaking to the Independent said; “Everyone can see that the war is changing, and one of the reasons for this shift is the growing sentiment in Russia – people want Putin to end the war – plus the daily hardships they’re facing and putting pressure on prices due to the gasoline crisis.”

•••

Trump Suspends Red Card – Recipient of FIFA’s first peace prize President Trump convinced FIFA President Gianni Infantino after three phone calls over the weekend to review the red card on US men’s national team striker Folarin Balogun, The New York Times reports. The resulting suspension of Balogun’s red card means he will play in Monday night’s Round 16 World Cup football/soccer match against Belgium.

Balogun’s red card from the US team’s previous game, against Bosnia-Herzegovina automatically triggered a one-game suspension.

“In line with article 27 of the FIFA disciplinary code, the implementation of the match suspension is suspended for the probationary period of one year,” a statement from FIFA reads (per The Athletic). “If Folarin Balogun commits another infringement of a similar nature and gravity during the probationary period, the suspension shall be revoked and the sanctions enforced without prejudice to any additional sanctions imposed for the new infringement.”

Balogun, 25, earned the red card after he tripped over an opponent and stepped on his ankle. The Brooklyn-born son of Nigerian parents (insert birthright citizenship irony here), Balogun said the move was an accident.

But wait, an appeal … FIFA has approved the Belgian team’s right to appeal the suspension of Balogun’s suspension, Sports Illustrated reports Monday.

•••

More Gas Relief – AAA’s national average price for a gallon of unleaded is $3.787 Monday, 2.6 cents lower than Friday’s average and 82.8 cents costlier than February 28. Diesel is $4.756, a 5.5-cent break over Friday and 90.7 cents higher than late February. –TL

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INDEPENDENCE DAY WEEKEND 2026

Jack Smith Explains Trump Cases – For the first time since he left the Justice Department as special counsel prior to President Trump’s inauguration last year, Jack Smith emphasized the lack of politics behind his investigations into Trump’s alleged 2020 election interference and the then-former president’s spiriting away of classified documents to Mar-a-Lago in January 2021, in an interview with host Nicole Wallace on MS NOW’s Deadline: White House Thursday.

“I have investigated cases focusing on the facts and law throughout my career,” Smith said, of the election interference case. “We did this case the same way, under the same standards. The thing that’s important to know is those standards are not meant to change from one administration to the next, and in my experience – until now – they haven’t. … I was perfectly happy to bring this case if the facts and law warranted it or not. It hasn’t mattered what person’s political party was to do that, that’s how we went about our work. Completely apolitical. Politics did not play a role.”

Smith declined to speak in any detail with Wallace about the classified docs case because the investigation is sealed, under court order.

•••

Canoeist Charged – Former Olympic canoeist David Hearn, 67, was charged with one felony count of misdemeanor destruction of government property, in a case involving the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and President Trump’s $16 million renovation involving a new “American flag blue” liner. The felony charge against Hearn, which involves a maximum fine of $250,000 or up to 10 years in prison was announced in a press conference Thursday by US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeannine Pirro, per CNN

Hearn told The Washington Post last month he was arrested June 19 while returning from a bike ride, “mere seconds” after briefly reaching into the reflecting pool to touch the president’s new liner. 

On May 7, a motorcade for Trump drove across the newly painted and sealed pool before it was refilled with water, which eventually filled with green algae blooms. 

In Thursday’s press conference, ex-Fox News host Pirro “melts down” after a reporter asked a question about a greater destruction of federal property, according to The Daily Beast.

“Alright, this is a problem. Are you talking about January 6th?” Pirro responded before attempting to move on to another reporter’s question.

Defendant’s attorney Norm Eisen said, “David Hearn is innocent. These charges are outrageous and should be alarming to every American. This indictment reflects the administration’s efforts to shift blame from their own failures.” 

•••

Gas Continues to Inch Down – AAA’s national average price for a gallon of unleaded regular is down 1.5 cents Friday to $3.823, or 85.4 cents higher than February 28. Diesel is $4.811, Friday, 1.6 cents lower than Thursday and 96.2 cents higher than late February. –TL

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Meh June Jobs Report Could Keep Fed From Raising Interest Rates

THURSDAY 7/2/26

June Jobs – The US economy added 57,000 jobs in June according to the Labor Department. That’s not the big, six-digit number economists had predicted, such as the 129,000 jobs added in May, though the unemployment rate also ticked down, to 4.2% in June from a steady 4.3% rate from March through May.

Employment in professional and business services, social assistance and health care have been trending up, while leisure and hospitality – which have had strong jobs growth since the pandemic’s end – were trending downward, according to the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“More people left the labor force last month,” The Wall Street Journal, which had expected 115,000 jobs added for the month based on its poll of economists, writes. 

That trend drove down the unemployment rate by one-tenth of a percent, mostly from “young people leaving the job market,” MacroPolicy Perspectives co-founder and President Julia Coronado told Marketplace Morning Report. “Not a lot of strength there.”

•••

Russia Hits Kyiv Hard – At least 20 people were killed by a wave of Russian missiles and strike drones on Kyiv overnight Thursday, according to the city’s military administrative chief, Tymur Tkachenko. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had warned Kyiv citizens to take cover with his news that Russia was preparing another large-scale attack, according to The Kyiv Independent.

“It was a terrible night for Kyiv,” Mayor Vitali Klitschko said. “Damage in all districts of the city.”

Zelenskyy says Ukraine needs more anti-ballistic weapons to shoot down Russian Missiles, NPR’s Morning Edition reports. The Russian strikes are meant to counter Ukraine’s success with long-range drone strikes on Russian oil infrastructure to as far away as Moscow, St. Petersburg and even Siberia, which has led to fuel shortages throughout parts of the country.  

•••

Justice Targeted – Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a Trump 45 administration appointee, is facing backlash from MAGA-conservative lawmakers and pundits for her vote with the majority in the 5-4 decision Tuesday to uphold the birthright citizenship provision of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, The Hill reports. 

Ending birthright citizenship in the US is a major plank in President Trump’s/Stephen Miller’s draconian immigration policy. Trump has often falsely claimed that the US is one of the few countries to grant automatic citizenship to babies born in the country from immigrants. 

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) Wednesday called for impeachment of “rogue, activist judges,” according to the report: “We’re looking at you, Amy Coney Barrett.”

•••

Hot Speech Promised – After explaining to reporters his $2 billion income report for 2025 filed with the Office of Government Ethics and before boarding his first flight on a refurbished Qatari-donated Boeing 747 Air Force One, President Trump vowed to give his speech Saturday in the Salute to America 250 Celebration & Fireworks in Washington, D.C., no matter what the (climate change-heated) temperature.

“By the way, on July 4th, it’s going to be approximately 107 degrees out, and I’m going to go, and I’m going to make a really long speech just to show that I can do anything.”

The Salute to America 250 begins 7 p.m. Eastern Saturday, with Trump’s speech scheduled to begin at 9:45 p.m.

•••

Steady, Gas – AAA’s national average price for a gallon of unleaded regular is down 0.9 cents Thursday to $3.838, or 86.9 cents higher than February 28. Diesel is $4.827, Thursday, 1.6 cents lower than Wednesday and 97.7 cents higher than late February.–TL

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Trump Made $1.2B on Crypto in 2025

WEDNESDAY 7/1/26

Presidential Profits – You might recall that there was widespread speculation a financially strapped Trump Organization might have had to sell off some of its most important assets, including real estate holdings, after New York State Supreme Court Judge Arthur F. Engoron imposed a $354.8 million judgment in February 2024 on Donald J. Trump’s business for “disgorgement of ill-gotten gains for financial fraud.”

By August 2025, a New York appeals court upheld now-President Trump’s liability, but voided the penalty as excessive. A Justice Department investigation into the case’s prosecutor, New York Attorney Gen. Letitia James, apparently is ongoing.

Meanwhile … President Trump, his organization and his family have done very well for themselves since the New York state case concluded. The president’s 2025 financial disclosure released late Tuesday shows the cryptocurrency established by sons Donald Jr. and Eric, World Liberty Financial, took in net income of at least $528.6 million (see, especially, pages 849-855). 

In total, Trump claimed a crypto windfall last year of more than $1 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal, with $635 million in royalties from an entity linked to the president’s memecoin.

Trump has turned the US into the “crypto capital of the world,” White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said in a statement released Tuesday (per WSJ).

Trump tchotchkes … This category, though not named such, earned the president nearly $7 million in ’25. Net income from Trump watches was $4.7 million, from Save America publications, $1.9 million and from the Greenwood Bible, $208,486. Trump’s sneakers and fragrances, sadly, earned the president just $67,634. 

“Neither the president nor his family has ever engaged – or will ever engage – in conflicts of interest,” Kelly’s statement says. “All actions by President Trump and his administration are taken in the best interest of the American people.”

•••

Progressives Progressing – Republicans have been eager to describe progressive Democrats’ victories over moderate incumbents in recent primaries as the Democratic Party’s shift toward socialism. Or in the spirit of Sen. Joe McCarthy (R-WI) and his chief counsel in the 1950s, Roy Cohn, “Marxists.” Fact-check alert: Socialism isn’t Marxism.

Last week Tuesday three progs backed by New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani beat two incumbents and a moderate-left candidate in the Democratic primary for three deep-blue congressional districts in New York State. 

This Tuesday, Melat Kiros, 29, defeated 15-term Rep. Dianna DeGette, 68, in the Colorado Democratic primary race to represent the Denver area in the House (The Associated Press via The New York Times). With 90% of the vote counted Wednesday, Kiros, an immigrant who has expressed opposition to US support for Israel in the Gaza war, has 51.3% of the primary vote to DeGette’s 41.7%.

Never mind that candidates like Kiros represent the Democratic Party’s mirror image of Trump-backed Republicans “primarying” incumbent Republicans; this already has become a key midterm campaign argument by GOP candidates in their struggle to maintain House and Senate majorities.

•••

Outta Here – House Republican leaders called Independence Day recess early Tuesday afternoon when a procedural measure to forward 2027 defense authorization, national security-state spending and other bills was defeated, 198-224, after GOP leaders failed to advance President Trump’s demands to pass the SAVE Act, CQ Roll Call reports. Fourteen Republicans joined Democrats in sinking the procedural measure, including House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA), who was attempting to bring back the rule for a retake, according to the report.

•••

Steady, Gas – AAA’s national average price for a gallon of unleaded regular Wednesday remained unchanged from Tuesday’s average of $3.847. That’s 87.8 cents higher than February 28. Diesel is $4.843 Tuesday, 1 penny lower than Tuesday and 99.3 cents higher than late February. –TL

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SCOTUS Upholds Birthright Citizenship

TUESDAY 6/30/26

Birthright Citizenship Upheld – The Supreme Court sided with a challenge to President Trump’s executive order banning birthright citizenship from the 14th Amendment, in Trump v. Barbara, 6-3. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch dissented. Justice Brett Kavenaugh filed an opinion concurring with Chief Justice John Roberts, Sonya Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Amy Coney Barrett and Ketanji Brown Jackson on the judgment but dissenting in part.

Trans Ban for Female Sports – The Supreme Court has upheld states' bans on transgender athletes playing female sports in public schools, NPR reports. There was one ruling for two cases, West Virginia v. B.P.J. and Little v. Hecox. The two cases involve Title IX, the 1972 law that requires equal opportunity for female and male athletes in public schools, and the Equal Protection Clause of the US Constitution. 

•••

Iran Won’t Meet – White House envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are in Qatar for peace talks, but Iran's representatives have refused to meet with them, officials from Doha say (per The Times of Israel). This follows a weekend of missile attacks from both sides during the 60-day MOU/ceasefire. 

Meanwhile, Israel has agreed to leave Lebanon, NPR’s Morning Edition reports, but only after Lebanon, which has a small, weak military, removes Iranian-backed Hezbollah.

•••

Putin on Defense – Ukrainian drones hit Russia’s Dubna Space Communications Center in Moscow Tuesday, The Kyiv Independentreports. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine is “gradually carrying out its plan of long-range sanctions” against Russia.

This comes after a weekend in which dictator Vladimir Putin admitted Sunday that Russia is suffering fuel shortages due to Ukrainian strikes on infrastructure (Financial Express). Putin vowed to boost anti-aircraft defense capacity and ensure fuel supplies, especially to Crimea, which Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014.

•••

More Gas Ease – AAA’s national average price for a gallon of unleaded regular is down 1.3 cents from Monday to $3.847 as of Tuesday. That’s 87.8 cents higher than February 28. Diesel is $4.853 Tuesday, a break for truck drivers of 0.6 cents per gallon from Monday, up $1.03 since the beginning of the war. –TL

_______________________________________________

Trump Must Pay $5m Judgment

MONDAY 6/29/26

Trump Appeal Denied – The US Supreme Court declined to consider President Trump’s appeal of a jury verdict that found he sexually abused and defamed writer and former Elle magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll (The Wall Street Journal). This leaves in place a $5 million judgment against Trump, who was found liable by a federal jury in Manhattan.

Mail In Your Ballot – Perhaps the most important US Supreme Court decision this term so far is the 5-4 ruling that federal election law does not pre-empt Mississippi’s election law allowing the counting of absentee ballots up to five days after the federal election date. Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote the 5-4 majority opinion joined by Chief Justice John Roberts, Sonya Sotomayor, Elena Kagen and Ketanji Brown Jackson, SCOTUSblog reports, in reversing the Fifth Circuit District Court’s finding in Watson v. Republican National Committee.

Trump Can Fire Independent Agency Members – In Trump v. Slaughter SCOTUS in a 6-3 vote gave the president “sweeping authority” (SCOTUSblog) over approximately two dozen multi-member agencies to fire individual members. 

But Trump Cannot Fire a Fed Governor – The president cannot fire Federal Reserve member Lisa Cook of the Board of Governors, SCOTUS ruled 5-4 in Trump v. Cook (ibid SCOTUSblog).

CORRECTION: A previous version of the Trump v. Cook decision above misstated the Supreme Court's vote count. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavenaugh joined Justices Elena Kagen, Sonya Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson in the 5-4 vote.

•••

State of MOU – At Iran’s request, Iranian and US diplomats are to meet in Qatar Tuesday, NPR reports, following a weekend of military strikes from both sides in the region surrounding the Strait of Hormuz. 

Negotiations over the memorandum of understanding, which will reach its two-week mark in a couple of days started out rather strong with Secretary of State Marco Rubio late Friday announcing the US and Iran had reached an agreement to suspend attacks in the Strait and allow commercial vessels to enter and exit freely (per The New York Times). 

Then Iran struck two ships over the weekend, prompting the US to strike back at multiple done missile and radar bases, according to NPR’s Morning Edition. Iran fired missiles at US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain. 

This is the “new normal,” Jake Sullivan, national security advisor for the Biden administration who was instrumental in reaching the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) for the Obama administration, told Morning Edition’s Leila Fadel Monday.

“Neither side wants to go back to full-scale war, but Iran wants to show it has control of the Strait of Hormuz,” Sullivan said.

So President Trump may not have to take responsibility for a “forever war” in such a “new normal,” but it appears his administration has handed long-term control of the Strait of Hormuz over to Iran.

•••

More Gas Ease – AAA’s national average price for a gallon of unleaded regular is down 3.9 cents from Friday to $3.86 as of Monday. That’s 89.1 cents higher than February 28. Diesel is $4.859 Monday, a break for truck drivers of 7.5 cents per gallon from Friday, up $1.036 since the beginning of the war. – Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

_____
MONDAY 6/30/26

Scroll down this column to read conservative commentaries on the state, and future, of our democracy by contributors Andrew Boyd, Rich Corbett and Stephen Macaulay, and reader John Santoni.

Where’s Competency, Leadership? -- I have one foot out of the Trump camp, but I have no idea where to look for competency let alone leadership in this caustic, pedantic, self-serving, lying, cheating, stealing, self-absorbed, self-aggrandizing, sociopathic bunch. And that's just the Republicans, whose only real virtue is that they're not neo-Marxists. –Andrew Boyd  (Contributing Pundit)

•••

Democracy Under Strain -- My take on the current state of our democracy is that it is under extreme strain and is in imminent peril. That is mainly due to Donald Trump and MAGA’s continuous undermining of confidence in our elections.

Donald Trump will never accept any type of an election loss and his cult followers have proven they are more than willing to use violence in his name. They will use violence to keep Trump in power, despite an election loss. 

Trump has also proven that he will pardon anyone who uses violence on his behalf. He also controls the executive branch, the military, the DOJ, and half the legislative branch (the Republican Party).

Only the judiciary stands as a check on his power. But the judiciary depends on the DOJ to enforce its rulings. Therefore, our separation of powers has also been pushed past its breaking point.

Those things place the future of our democracy in imminent peril. Those facts basically sum up the whole situation. –John Santoni (via email)

•••

Patriots' Promise: Why America’s Best Days Are Ahead -- As we celebrate another Independence Day, America stands at a pivotal moment. Our nation, forged by the courage and sacrifice of patriots who risked everything for liberty, continues to shine as a beacon of freedom and opportunity. As a conservative who deeply loves this country, I remain profoundly optimistic about our future. Recent polls underscore this divide in national sentiment: a NBC News survey found that 90% of Republicans express pride in being American, compared to just 29% of Democrats. This gap highlights a resilient conservative commitment to our founding principles amid challenges. With strong leadership and a renewed focus on individual liberty, limited government, and American exceptionalism, our best days are still ahead.

Yet we must confront the real pressures threatening that promise. Elements on the far left of the Democratic Party push socialist- and communist-inspired policies – centralized control, wealth redistribution and identity-driven division that erode the self-reliance and free enterprise which built our prosperity. These ideologies clash with the American spirit, fostering dependency rather than empowerment and weakening the exceptional nation that has inspired the world.

President Trump captured the American Spirit powerfully in his June 25 speech: "We owe everything to the patriots who risked all to create the greatest and most exceptional nation the world has ever known." As conservatives, we honor that legacy by rejecting radical experiments and recommitting to the timeless values of our Founding Fathers. This July 4th, let us celebrate with renewed confidence: America’s future is bright because patriots will always defend her greatness. Happy Independence Day. May God bless the United States of America. –Rich Corbett (Contributing Pundit)

•••

Where’s Congress? -- As H.L. Mencken put it, “Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.”

And the American people are getting it so and not just because of the selfish, mendacious and not-well-informed president.

Congress, by and large, has been given up its function for one reason and one reason only.

While many members of the House and Senate express their love and admiration for Donald Trump more than they do for their spouses, much of that emotion is predicated not necessarily on authentic feelings, but simply because these people are afraid of losing their jobs if they aren’t sufficiently deferential in a way that must give some of them at least a nanosecond of pause when the look in the mirror.

At the risk of going on too long, as I won’t be doing this 250 years from now, here, from the Constitution that these people swear to uphold, is Article 8, Section 1, which is a job description for members of Congress: The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

To borrow Money on the credit of the United States; To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;

To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization, and uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States; To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

To provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States; To establish Post Offices and post Roads;

To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

To constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court; To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations;

To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;

To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years; To provide and maintain a Navy;

To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;

To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;

To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings;

—And

To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.

So how are they doing?

Regulating commerce with foreign nations? Nope. The Trump tariffs are doing that.

How about dealing with things occurring on the high seas? Not that, either: Let’s not forget the alleged-but-not-proven-to-be drug boats being blown up. And that also goes to “make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water” were it that those people on board are captured.

Declare war? Not that, either.

There’s the rather prolix thing about exercising exclusive legislation regarding buildings the government owns, having it that Congress has authority over those places — you know, like the White House, the building that has had a wing demolished and plans that apparently include some sort of massive bunker (which, for those who claim to be Originalists, qualifies as a fort) that Congress has had nothing to do with.

All of which is to say if Democracy in America is to have a future, then the people need to elect those who will actually do their jobs. Otherwise, the American people will continue to get it good and hard. –Stephen Macaulay (Pundit-at-Large)

•••

Join the conversation – Email your COMMENTS to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings, whether moderate or hard-right/hard-left in the subject line. –Editors

______
MONDAY 6/30/26

Washington reflecting pool water off the Lincoln Memorial was deep American flag blue after President Trump’s $14.2 million project to renovate it. Now it is deep algae green. 

Meanwhile, in Lucerne, Switzerland, Vice President Vance and Iran Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi have made “major progress” in reaching a permanent peace deal, including US dropping of sanctions on Iranian crude oil, petroleum products and derivation sales and “associated banking.” 

Is the US better off now than it was in February?

On May 25, The Hustings and the Allen Theatre in Annville, Pennsylvania held a live debate on the US-Israeli war on Iran. These issues in Washington, Tehran and Lucerne are ongoing.

Continue the discussion in these right and left columns with your COMMENTS in an email to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings in the subject line.

Why not become a Citizen Pundit? Consider us something like X-Twitter without the echo chambers, conspiracy theories, dubious facts and trillionaire’s ownership. --Editors

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MONDAY 6/22/26

President Trump signs the MOU with the Islamic Republic of Iran at the Palace of Versailles last Wednesday, as French President Emmanuel Macron looks on. [White House photo]

•Read the Iranian soccer team's post-it note left in the SoFi Stadium locker room after the team's 0-0 draw versus Belgium, in The Gray Area.

FRIDAY 6/26/30

Miller’s Victory Lap – Immigration hardliners repeatedly lost in court before the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling handing President Trump virtually unchecked power over Temporary Protection Status on immigrants Thursday, according to The New York Times. SCOTUS’ ruling in Mullen v. Dole means Haitian and Syrian refugees are out of time in the US under TPS.

“This is a victory 10 years in the making,” White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller said. “We can finally remove these Haitian illegal migrants from the United States.”

Author of the majority opinion Justice Samuel A. Alito, Jr., wrote that Trump’s many statements about Haitians were not “overtly racial.” (NYT)

While campaigning for his return to the White House in September 2024, Trump said of Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio; “They’re eating the dogs. They’re eating the cats. They’re eating the pets of the people that live there.”

The Rev. Carl Ruby, senior pastor of Central Christian Church and organizer with Springfield Neighbors United and the “faith-rooted movement for immigrant justice,” G92, told NPR’s Morning Edition that Springfield shifted from being one of the fastest-shrinking towns to becoming one of the fastest-growing towns as Haitian refugees arrived. Many have started businesses and are professionals who have taken manual jobs in Springfield, because they are not licensed in Ohio for their professions, he said. 

•••

Gassing Down – The Strait of Hormuz is open with ships passing through and oil prices continuing to fall, according to Marketplace Morning Report. The average national price of a gallon of regular unleaded is $3.901 Friday, AAA reports, which is 1.7 cents lower than Thursday and 93 cents higher than February 28. Diesel is $4.934 Friday, down 2.1 cents from Thursday and up $1.111 from the beginning of the US-Israeli war on Iran.–TL

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Trump Gets His TPS

THURSDAY 6/25/26

Victory for Stephen Miller – In Mullen v. Doe, which was combined with Trump v. Miot the US Supreme Court paused, 6-3, rulings by the Washington, D.C. and New York federal courts that banned the Trump administration from ending designations under Temporary Protective Status (TPS) for foreign citizens for whom it may not be safe to return to their homes, SCOTUSblog reports. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito wrote the TPS statute prohibiting judicial review “is clear, and its plain meaning is very broad.” 

For the dissenting opinion, Justice Elana Kagan wrote that Haitian and Syrian TPS beneficiaries “ask only for one thing; that they may stay in this country while they continue to litigate their claims.”

Second and Fourth Amendment – SCOTUS reversed, 6-3, Hawaii’s law prohibiting licensed concealed-carry permit holders from carrying handguns on private property open to the public without the property owner’s express authorization. In Wolford v. Lopez, SCOTUS says the state’s law violates the Second and Fourth Amendments (per SCOTUSblog).

•••

Shouting Lunch – A Senate GOP lunch with President Trump initially meant to celebrate signing of the bipartisan 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act devolved into a shouting match Wednesday, Republican senators told Congressional Quarterly’s Roll Call.

Lame duck Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), who lost his primary to a Trump-endorsed Republican called out the president over whether he has been forthcoming about the war in Iran and the pending peace deal. 

Trump asked how anyone could vote for the War Powers Resolution, which passed Tuesday 50-48 with Cassidy and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) crossing the aisle to vote in favor. Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), who is voluntarily retiring this year, told Fox News that Trump was “calling people out” for their votes at the same time the Trump administration tries to negotiate a permanent peace deal with Iran.

“Well, we’ve not been briefed on how it’s going. At which point I think the president said something negative about me,” Cassidy told Roll Call. (Trump reportedly called him a “lunatic.”) “I’m not going to be bullied when I feel like I’m asking a question the American people need to know. It began to escalate.”

But Trump’s presence at the luncheon was more about his push for the SAVE America Act, his pet bill written to crack down on voter ID in time for the midterms. Thanks to 47 Democrats, the bill will not get the 60 votes necessary to pass in the Senate.

“I can’t say it was surprising,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-ND) said about Trump’s behavior at the luncheon. “He’s strongly committed to the SAVE America Act, and blowing up the filibuster.”

After the luncheon, however, Sens. Cassidy and Rand changed their votes on the War Powers Resolution, resulting in a 50-47 Senate vote in favor of the war.

•••

Easing Gas – National average price for a gallon of unleaded regular is $3.918 Thursday, an unobtainable penny less than Wednesday and 94.7 cents over February 28, AAA reports. Diesel has edged downward, too, to $4.955, or 3.3 cents lower than Wednesday and $1.132 more expensive from the beginning of the US-Israeli war on Iran. –TL

_______________________________________________

Trump Won't Sign

WEDNESDAY 6/24/26

UPDATE: President Trump says he won't sign the bipartisan ROAD to Housing Act until Congress takes action on his SAVE America Act that would tighten national voting rules in time for the midterms. The White House had touted the bill as a pillar of Trump's affordability agenda and scheduled his signing ceremony for noon at the Capitol Wednesday, but now it is "of minor importance," he said in social media posts Wednesday morning (The Wall Street Journal). The bill will become law if the president does not sign or veto it within two weeks.

On the ROAD to a Historic Housing Act – A bipartisan House of Representatives passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act Tuesday, 358-32, marking Congress’ most significant such legislation since the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit of 1986, The Wall Street Journal reports. 

Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Tim Scott (R-SC) led backing of the ROAD to Housing Act, which passed the Senate earlier this week, 89-10, and now proceeds to President Trump’s Resolute Desk for signing.

Trump had backed a provision included in the bill that bans the sale of homes to institutional investors who already own more than 350 single-family homes, though with certain exceptions, including for property built specifically to be leased (per CQ Roll Call).

The bill also speeds up federal environmental reviews for certain projects, ties cities’ federal funding to affordable housing production and removes certain restrictions on the building of manufactured homes, including a requirement they are built on a metal frame. Removing the metal-frame requirement could cut costs of manufactured homes by as much as $10,000, according to the WSJ.

However, there is no new funding for affordable housing projects, the WSJ reports, and the bill is up against increased mortgage rates and material costs and Congress does not have the authority to override local zoning regulations and building codes.

•••

Mamdani Wins Again – New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani defeated establishment Democrats running in Tuesday’s primaries for heavy blue congressional districts (Roll Call). These overwhelming victories in deep blue congressional districts by Mamdani-backed candidates is foreshadowing how the progressive arm of the Democratic Party plans to fight the MAGA GOP’s right-wing populism in 2028.

In New York’s 13th District, challenger Darializa Avila Chevalier narrowly defeated five-time Rep. Adriano Espaillat, chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, 49% to 46%. The AP called the race for Mamdani’s endorsee at 10:38 p.m. local time

For New York’s 10th, Brad Lander trounced incumbent Rep. Dan Goldman, 62% to 38%. The AP called the race just after polls closed at 9 p.m. EDT.

Both losing incumbent representatives were endorsed by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY). 

In the race to replace retiring Rep. Nydia M. Velázquez for New York’s 7th District, state Rep. Claire Valdez defeated Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, 57% to 34% in a race the AP called at 9:23 p.m. Velázquez had endorsed Reynoso. 

•••

Diesel Breaks Below $5 – National average price for a gallon of unleaded regular is $3.928 Wednesday, up 0.6 cents over Tuesday and 95.7 cents over February 28, while diesel has fallen to $4.98, or 2 cents lower than Tuesday and $1.165 more expensive from the beginning of the US-Israeli war. –TL

_______________________________________________

Trump Loves American Trucks

TUESDAY 6/23/26

Trump’s Economy – President Trump is scheduled to visit a Mack Truck assembly plant in Macungie, Pennsylvania, in the Lehigh Valley Tuesday and shift attention from the Iran MOU to tout the strengths of his economy. This is Trump’s fourth visit of his second term to the purple state and the first in this midterm elections year, The Philadelphia Inquirer notes.

Touting a strong economy Tuesday could be tough as the tech stock selloff “accelerates” according to The Wall Street Journal, and pre-trade futures in the tech-intensive NASDAQ 100 down 3%.

‘Plunging’ gas prices? … Not quite, but Trump will be able to tell Mack Truck workers the gas they use to get to work is 0.3 cents cheaper on Tuesday than it was Monday according to AAA’s national average for a gallon of unleaded regular. The president is not likely to mention that it’s still 95.1 cents more expensive than on February 28, according to AAA. The diesel that powers those Macks averages $5 per gallon, flat Tuesday, down 1.3 cents from Monday and up $1.185 over the beginning of the US-Israeli Iran war.

•••

Reflections in a Swamp – It’s straight out of the authoritarian handbook: Leader’s pet project somehow turns sour. Dear leader cracks down on radical opposition he blames for destruction or defect of said project and orders his police force to arrest anyone who looks suspicious. Could be East Germany’s Stasi, Soviet bureaucrats, modern China or Putin’s Russia.

Or the current White House, where President Trump has “stepped up” law enforcement presence at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, claiming that vandalism was the chief cause of the “American flag blue” pool filling with green algae blooms.

Trump said he has photographic proof of an individual cutting a 350-foot gash into the pool’s bottom coating, though he offered few details to back any of this up. 

“I saw it,” Trump said. “They cut it very violently.”

US Attorney for Washington Jeanine Pirro said her office received a handful of citations over alleged destruction, though experts blame the green algae on more intense heat from the deep blue lining Trump had added.

But there were no such large gashes in the pool lining earlier Monday to back up the president’s claims, The Wall Street Journal reports. 

Stina Blomgren of Sweden’s SVT briefly touched the pool water’s surface, she told Newsweek. Blomgren said a National Guard member told her, “Please refrain from touching the water. That will be the last time you do that. Any time after that you will be detained.”

No bid for green water … Beside the $14.7 million no-bid contract to Atlantic Industrial Coatings to reline the reflecting pool in American flag blue, the White House awarded a $1.7 million no-bid contract for improvement of the pool’s filtration system to Ohio-based Greenwater Services, a company owned by the J.J. Cafaro Investment Trust. 

The trust is led by John J. Cafaro, who has contributed more than $300,000 to Trump-linked political committees, The New York Times reports. Cafaro, a Florida neighbor of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, pleaded guilty in 2001 for conspiracy to bribe then-US Rep. James A. Traficant Jr. (D-OH) and later testified against the congressman, according to the report. 

•••

IAEA Back In Iran? – Just prior to leaving Lucerne, Switzerland to return to the US Monday, Vice President Vance told reporters that Iran has agreed to allow inspectors from the United Nation’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) back in as part of the initial MOU negotiations. 

Not so, says Iran, which kicked out the IAEA in July 2025, after June US-Israeli missile strikes.

The art of the Trump White House’s deal so far seems to be making many concessions to Iran for maybe not so much in return. Sanctions on Iranian oil will be lifted under the deal, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said. That means Iran can sell freely at market prices, after years of evading said sanctions via ‘dark fleets’, and of selling oil outside the US dollar-based international banking system (per NPR’s Morning Edition).

The most controversial part of the deal is the unfreezing of $300 billion in overseas accounts to Iran so it can buy food from American farms. 

•••

Out of Subpoenas – US District Judge Patrick Schlitz has blocked the Trump administration’s attempt to subpoena Gov. Tim Walz, Attorney Gen. Keith Ellison, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her, as well as Hennepin and Ramsey county officials over a Justice Department investigation of whether they obstructed or impeded law enforcement during the sweeping immigration operations in the Twin Cities area, according to MinnPost.

Schlitz called the subpoenas an effort of harassment and retaliation to “coerce Minnesota officials into assisting the federal government with enforcing civil immigration law and to harass and retaliate against them for failing to do so.”

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a MinnPost email seeking comment.

•••

In Memoriam: Alan Greenspan – Federal Reserve chairman for Presidents Reagan to Bush 43 Alan Greenspan died Monday at his Washington home, his wife Andrea Mitchell, chief Washington correspondent and chief foreign affairs correspondent for NBC News announced Monday. Greenspan, an erstwhile jazz musician and avowed Ayn Rand-devoted libertarian who served the second-longest tenure as Fed chair, from 1987 to 2006, oversaw the longest period of US economic growth in history. Greenspan also has taken some blame over the 2007-08 financial crisis leading to the Great Recession because of his laissez-faire policy toward banking. He was 100. –TL

_______________________________________________

This is a Reflecting Pool ... Green is its Color

MONDAY 6/22/26

Green Algae Reflecting Pool and Swiss Talks – What color was Washington’s algae-green reflecting pool before President Trump signed a no-bid $14.2-million contract for an “American-flag blue” liner underneath? What of sanctions off Iranian crude oil, petroleum products and derivatives and related frozen bank assets, prior to the start of the war some 16 weeks ago?

Apologies for the all-too-obvious metaphor. 

Vice President Vance and Iran’s diplomats failed to show last Friday for talks at the beginning of the US-Iran 60-day ceasefire negotiated via memorandum of understanding last week. But Vance and his Tehran counterparts did show up in Lucerne, Switzerland, along with mediators Qatar and Pakistan later over the weekend. 

Iran’s diplomats reportedly walked out when a bellicose President Trump again warned he would revive missile attacks on the country Sunday. On Monday, both sides reported some progress.

To wit: The US issued waivers to allow Iran to sell crude oil, petroleum products and derivatives, and “associated banking,” The Times of Israel reports. Mediators said the two sides set up a “de-confliction cell” to stop military operations in Lebanon, mediators say (TToI further notes that neither Israel, Lebanon, nor Hezbollah were present for the negotiations). 

The United Nations reports there was no fighting between Israel and Hezbollah on Sunday.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi called the talks in Switzerland “major progress.”

Speaking of pre-war status … The Trump administration declared the Strait of Hormuz “open” to commercial traffic, while Iran said it had remained closed. 

Which is it? 

Most up-to-date source we can find is straits.live, which reports …

“No. ... The Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed to commercial shipping. As of 22JUN2026 • 1422Z, it is day 113 since the 28 February 2026 closure declaration.”

Meanwhile, at the pool … President Trump on Saturday blamed “vandalism” for “real problems” at the reflecting pool, where experts say the dark blue paint just applied to the liner attracted more heat from the sun, adding to the green algae bloom, The Guardianreports. Paint has been seen peeling off the water.

Trump claims that vandals have been arrested, though on Friday, David Hearn of Bethesda, Maryland, told The Washington Posthe was arrested mere seconds after reaching in and touching the American flag-blue liner at the end of a 52-mile bike ride around Hains Point. He is scheduled to appear in D.C. Superior Court July 9.

Happy semi-sesquincentennial.

•••

Starmer Out – British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will step down and hand over Labour Party leadership to former Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, The Guardian reports. Starmer said Monday he will remain a caretaker PM until the elections.

Starmer became Labour’s first PM just under two years ago, following 14 years of Conservative Party leadership. 

Burnham won a by-election in Makerfield last week and will be sworn in as a Minister of Parliament Monday, setting him up for a party leadership election. A second candidate to replace Starmer as Labour Party leader, former health Secretary Wes Streeting has decided not to run and will support Burnham, according to The Guardian

Starmer’s resignation “marks the beginning of a transition and it is important that this process is conducted in an orderly and responsible way,” Burnham said, adding “I will put myself forth in the process.” 

•••

More Gas Relief – Fuel prices continue to drop, with the national average for a gallon of unleaded regular at $3.929 Monday, 4.4 cents less than last Friday and up 95.4 cents from February 28. Diesel is down 8.2 cents from Friday to $5.013 per gallon, up $1.198 from late February. – Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

_____
MONDAY 6/22/26

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

One of the things that could be said to characterize the Trump Administration — both the man at the top and his multitude of minions — is that they all have a tendency to make pronouncements that are as accurate as the horseshoes that most people toss in the game of that name. Close, but certainly no cigar.

Or, to put it more fundamentally, say things that just aren’t true in the sense that most people consider veracity.

For example, JD Vance said after arriving in Switzerland for talks with the Iranians that the Strait of Hormuz was open, even though the Iranians said it was closed. Now it may be that the US Navy isn’t keeping the passage shut, which could mean to Vance that it is open, but if the Iranian government says it is closed, do you think that if you were the captain of a giant oil tanker you’d want to risk going through? If you were the owner — or the insurer — of a tanker would you give sailing orders to the captain?

One of the consequences of the war is that the Iranians now know that they have a chokehold on the important passage.

Donald Trump told Fox News on Sunday that he had spoken to Iranian officials and told them, “You close it and you won’t have a country.”

Clearly, deft negotiating tactics, rolling out with the threats of obliteration.

Energy Secretary Chris Wright said on Fox News Sunday, “What we’re demonstrating to the Iranians is we can have [a] flow of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz with or without them.”

Wright said that in the previous 24 hours 67 ships, guarded by US military assets, made it through the strait.

Which could be true.

But there are several things to keep in mind.

Prior to the war, ships didn’t need the US Navy to make it through the Strait.

Presumably there are limited naval resources that can be deployed to escort ships, so this is going to be a slow — and expensive to US taxpayers — undertaking.

What’s more — or actually less — 67 is about half the number of ships that passed through the Strait on average in a given 24-hour period before the war. 

And at present, according to Lloyd’s List, the venerable British journal that collects such information, there are as many as 600 commercial vessels that are stuck inside the Persian Gulf. 

So if it is 67 in 24 hours, that’s about three ships per hour. If there are 500 left in the Gulf, this means it would be seven 24-hour days to get them through. And realize that these are vessels that are stuck there, and before the war there was regular passage in and out, so just getting a handful of ships through isn’t much of an advantage. A start, sure, but not some sort of open passage — especially as the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps dumped mines into the Strait.

Then there’s this from Senator Linsey Graham on CBS News’ Face the Nation Sunday.

While he had been critical when the Memorandum of Understanding was released, Graham since has slid back to his supine position, telling host Margaret Brennan, “I spent four-and-a-half hours with President Trump Friday.” Whoa! He’s quite the guy being able to spend so much time with his liege lord.

As you may or may not know, Graham received his law degree in 1981 and was in the US Air Force Judge Advocate General’s Corps for 33 years (6.5 years in active duty; 6 in the Air National Guard; 20 Air Force Reserve).

Graham also said this on Face the Nation:

“If this deal fails, President Trump is going to take the Strait of Hormuz over by force. The United States will control the Strait of Hormuz. We'll charge a fee for all those who go through to pay for the operation.”

The whole notion of taking over the Strait “by force” aside (presumably this would require troops on the ground), there’s that “We’ll charge a fee for all those who go through.”

As an attorney dealing at levels that those lawyers who run constant TV commercials never experience you’d think Graham would know a little something about the law, and while he was in the Air Force, and not the Navy, you’d think his long legislative career would have made him familiar with maritime law, like the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which explicitly states there can be no tolls for passage in international straits like Hormuz.

Oh, but he calls it a “fee.” Perhaps that’s something to make up for the ~$300,000 per day it costs to operate a naval destroyer.

When you think of what it means for the Strait to be “open,” chances are you don’t think of the need for escort ships of any sort.

But Donald Trump doesn’t dance around the finer points of language.

On June 20 he put this on his social media platform:

“There will be NO TOLLS in the Hormuz Strait for 60 days during the Cease Fire Period, and there will be NO TOLLS after the 60 day period has expired, unless they are imposed by and for the United States of America, should the deal not be completed, for services rendered as the Guardian Angel to the countries of the Middle East for purposes of both past, present, and future reimbursement of costs. Thank you for your attention to this matter!!! President DJT”

That’s right, NO TOLLS “unless they are imposed by and for the United States of America. . .for services retendered at the Guardian Angel to the countries of the Middle East for purposes of both past, present and future reimbursement of costs.”

Even NO apparently doesn’t mean NO in Trump World. Until it does, which is when he says it does.

Macaulay is pundit-at-large for The Hustings.

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MONDAY 6/22/26

Verify -- I agree with Mr. Corbett that skepticism is absolutely required around Iran keeping its word. I wish, but don't dare hope, that the Trump administration cares enough about that caveat to insist on effective verification measures. My bet is that, like Ms. Bondi before him, Mr. Corbett's citing of the Dow Jones Industrial Averages in support will miss the essentials of the moment. --Hugh Hansen

Pause, or Red Herring? -- What time is it? It’s hard to opine on the MOU with Iran because the story and the circumstances change by the hour. At best, this is a 60-day pause that could lead to an end to the war, which in turn would get us back to where we started. At worst, it’s another red herring meant to keep the distraction going while Israel continues to attack its neighbors, Iran gets richer as it exacts fees to use the Strait of Hormuz, and Americans pay more at the pump and watch inflation grow and grow. 

This whole thing was foolish from the start and Americans are left footing the bill. It’s worked for Trump, though, because we’re not talking about the Epstein files, and the DOJ is no closer to releasing them in full as required by law. --K.E. Bell

•••

Join the discussion as a Citizen Pundit and email your COMMENTS on the 60-day ceasefire with Iran at editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings in the subject line.

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THURSDAY 6/18/26

Former Presidents Biden, Obama, George W. Bush and Clinton (as well as former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton) were among attendees of the Grand Opening Ceremony at the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago Thursday. Not invited: President Trump, Vanilla Ice.

•Our contributing pundits offer short takes on the US-Iran MOU in our Right and Left columns. Also do not miss Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay’s detailed analysis/commentary in The Gray Area.

JUNETEENTH 2026

UPDATE: Ceasefire in Lebanon -- Israeli Defense Force spokesman Brigadier Gen. Effie Defrin confirms in a statement that Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah are in a ceasefire (per BBC). "We are in a ceasefire," Defrin's statement says. "The IDF is prepared to continue fighting if called upon to do so."

Vance Grounded – Oil tankers have begun moving through the Strait of Hormuz, but potential fall-guy Vice President JD Vance has called off his Friday trip to Lucerne, Switzerland, to meet with Iran’s negotiators, The New York Times reports. Key issue for those talks during the 60-day ceasefire MOU signed by President Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian is dismantling Iran’s nuclear capabilities, often stated as the reason the Trump administration with Israel started the war in late-February.

“If it works out, I’m taking the credit,” Trump said to reporters about the since-delayed negotiations in Switzerland (per NPR’s Morning Edition). “If not, I’m blaming you, JD. You’d better watch out.”

Or Trump could blame Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said ahead of the signing that Israel would not withdraw from Lebanon, one of the key Iranian demands in negotiation of the MOU.

Friday Lebanon’s National News Agency reported at least 16 Lebanese were killed by Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon (per The Guardian), while Hezbollah reported it sees intense fighting there and Netanyahu said Israeli Defense Forces will stay “for as long as necessary.” A four-soldier IDF tank crew, including a battalion chief, was killed by Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, The Times of Israel reports.

Analysis by a Haaretz journalist called the MOU “an incredibly bad document” from an Israeli standpoint. 

It might be an incredibly bad document from Vice President Vance’s point of view, as well.

•••

At Least the Strait is Open – Fuel prices continue to drop, with the national average for a gallon of unleaded regular at $3.973 Friday, the AAA reports. That’s 2.6 cents less than Thursday and just 99.8 cents higher than February 28. Diesel is down 3.4 cents to $5.095, up $1.28 from late February. – TL

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THURSDAY 6/18/26

Crux of the MOU – President Trump and Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian signed the peace deal, or memorandum of understanding, or 60-day ceasefire, Wednesday. Trump signed at the Palace of Versailles where he enjoyed an elegant state dinner with French President Emmanual Macron, after the G7 summit. Pezeshkian presumably signed in Tehran.

Israel is delegated to one of the US’ allies in the opening paragraph of the memorandum of understanding triggering a 60-day (“permanent”?) ceasefire between the US and Iran. 

“The United States of America and the Islamic Republic of Iran and their allies in the current war by signing this MOU declare the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, and undertake from now on not to initiate any war or any military operations against each other, and to refrain [from] the threat or use of force against each other and ensuring the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Lebanon. The final deal will confirm the permanent termination of the war on all fronts including Lebanon, and other provisions of this paragraph.” [Via The New York Times.]

That unnamed ally, formerly known as the co-sponsor of the 15-week war on Iran with the United States, might not be on-board, according to The Times of Israel, which scoops Thursday that “Israel is not backing down on keeping troops in southern Lebanon …” Officials close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu say Israel is holding “stubborn” talks with the US on the matter.

Is Netanyahu getting the US stuck in the sort of quagmire Trump promised to avoid?

6-7 … Paragraph six of the MOU develops “a definitive, mutually agreed plan with at least $USD 300 billion for the reconstruction and economic development” of Iran, to be finalized within 60 days, which sounds suspiciously like another attempt to develop luxury seaside resorts, as floated by the Trump administration in Israel’s war on Gaza last year, or the Jared Kushner/Ivanka Trump plan to develop an island off the coast of Albania.

Paragraph seven terminates “all types of sanctions against Iran, including the United Nations Security Council resolutions and IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency] Board of Governors resolutions and unilateral US sanctions.” (Hat tip to Military Times.)

Nukes in 8 … “Iran reaffirms that it shall not pursue or develop nuclear weapons” and the US and Iran “have agreed to resolve disposition of stockpile enriched material pursuant to a mechanism that will be mutually agreed upon” in paragraph seven.

The MOU “sidesteps” the reasons the Trump administration went into Iran, The Wall Street Journal reports in its analysis, and “makes no demands on Tehran over its militias or huge arsenal of missiles.”

Trump 45’s vice president, Mike Pence, says the deal “smacked of appeasement,” the BBC reports.

•••

No Appeasement Here – The Federal Open Market Committee under new Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh voted to keep interest rates steady Wednesday, in the 3.5% to 3.75% range. Not what President Trump wanted from his hand-picked chairman, but perhaps what he was asking for with a jump in inflation to 4.2% thanks mostly to the war on Iran. 

Unless that Consumer Price Index number comes down quickly, you can expect a likely rate hike or two in the second half of the year. Eight FOMC members anonymously project the Fed will hold that interest rate range, but nine see room for an increase while only one of the members sees room to cut, USA Today reports.

•••

Less Than $4 – With the signing of the US-Iran MOU/peace deal, the national average price of a gallon of unleaded regular has dropped to $3.999 Thursday, down 2.6 cents from Wednesday and up $1.024 from February 28. Diesel is down 3.3 cents to $5.129 per gallon, up $1.314 from late February. – Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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THURSDAY 6/18/26

Skeptical Optimism -- Markets are cheering the US-Iran MOU and promised reopening of the Strait of Hormuz after being closed the last 100 days. Oil is down 5% to March lows, the Nasdaq is up 3% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average is hitting all-time highs. 

Lower energy costs and eased inflation fears are welcome, but history suggests skepticism is warranted when making deals with Iran. Who really believes that when the ink dries on Friday’s formal signing that this will be a permanent peace? Cautious optimism here, but at least de-escalation will deliver relief for American families and our economy ... that is, if Iran follows through. --Rich Corbett

(An editing mistake applied to the first sentence of this commentary has been corrected -- Ed.)

•••

Join the discussion as a Citizen Pundit and email your COMMENTS on the 60-day ceasefire with Iran at editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings in the subject line.

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THURSDAY 6/18/26

Is the memorandum of understanding leading to peace talks with Iran real this time? Which side seems to be the winner?

On May 25, The Hustings and the Allen Theatre in Annville, Pennsylvania held a live debate on the US-Israeli war on Iran. Although the fighting has stopped, there is still a lot to discuss regarding the gains for each side and whether peace will be permanent.

Continue the discussion in these right and left columns with your COMMENTS in an email to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings in the subject line.

We’re also interested in reading your thoughts about Sunday night’s UFC Freedom 250 celebration in conjunction with President Trump’s 80th birthday at the White House. 

There’s also removal of Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center and his trip to France for the G7 Summit. 

So why not become a Citizen Pundit? We are like X-Twitter without the echo chambers, conspiracy theories, dubious facts and trillionaire ownership. --Editors

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MONDAY 6/15/26

Your tax dollars hosting Sunday night's United Fighting Champtionship Freedom 250/Trump 80th birthday party/ Flag Day event on the South Lawn of the White House [UFC image].

WEDNESDAY 6/17/26

What’s the Deal? – Um. Still don’t know. Speaking at the end of the G7 summit in Evian, France, President Trump said allies there “love” the memorandum of understanding, or tentative agreement, with Iran, but earlier Wednesday said the US would resume bombing Iran if “they don’t behave,” The New York Times reports. 

“Nobody knows what it is,” the president said of the MOU, “but it’s very strong.” 

What The Associated Press knows from leaked copies of the interim agreement “that broadly matches the document” everyone was expecting to see Wednesday is that as soon as it is signed – which one guesses, means this Friday in Geneva -- Iran will immediately take steps to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and will be allowed to sell its oil without restrictions. 

Trump also said that “most people” and most importantly, the “market” are happy with the agreement. By midday Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Averages had hit an all-time high of 52,212.40 points, up 0.41% for the day so far.

“The one president I did not want to be was the late great Herbert Hoover,” Trump said (NYT again), who presided over the Wall Street crash of late-October 1929.

As Israel has not committed to withdrawal from Lebanon, which is said to be a major plank in the MOU, Trump said Tuesday that Israel has been fighting Hezbollah there “too long” (The Independent). “Too many people have been killed. You don’t have to knock down an apartment house every time you’re looking for somebody, because there are a lot of people in apartment houses and they’re not all Hezbollah.”

•••

Trumpian Chess Move – President Trump said Wednesday he is suspending his nomination of Jay Clayton as his permanent director of national security until Congress passes his Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, with “Trump Jr.,” Bill Pulte remaining as acting director in the meantime, The New York Times reports.

Passage of the SAVE Act, which would require documented proof of US citizenship to register to vote and meant to help shore up the GOP’s thin majorities in the House and Senate, will not pass with Democrats having 47 votes in the Senate. Upshot is that Pulte, who does not have complete support of congressional Republicans, let alone any Democrats, could be acting director at least through the midterms.

•••

Still More Fuel Price Relief – The national average for a gallon of unleaded regular came down another 1.9 cents Wednesday to $4.025, says AAA. That’s up $1.05 from February 28, when the Strait of Hormuz was still open to oil tankers. Diesel is down 3.3 cents Wednesday, AAA says, to $5.162 per gallon average, up $1.347 from late February.

•••

It’s a Ballroom Ritz – As workers began to demolish the East Wing of the White House last autumn, President Trump promised his grand ballroom would cost $200 million and be financed by private donations (though the potential quid pro quo for such donations usually does not equate to a free lunch). Last March 31, Trump told reporters the ballroom would cost up to $400 million. 

“This is taxpayer-free,” Trump said. “We have no taxpayer putting up 10 cents.”

Showing signs of enterprise-journalism life, The Washington Post reported Tuesday Golden Grand Ballroom de Trump will cost taxpayers far more than one thin dime. 

Cost is now estimated to be $600 million, according to a copy of the detailed project summary prepared by the ballroom contractor for the White House three weeks before the president’s “taxpayer-free” misstatement and obtained more recently by the WaPo–TL

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TUESDAY 6/16/26

Zelenskyy at G7 – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy showed President Trump pictures of Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, the religious landmark last week hit by a direct Russian attack, in a half-hour G7 summit meeting Tuesday that included French President Emmanuel Macron, The Kyiv Independent reports.

Trump was “visibly disappointed” and “appeared moved” by the photos of the 11th Century monastery, sources familiar with the meeting in Evian-les-Baines, France, told the Ukrainian newspaper. 

Zelenskyy, Trump and Macron also took part in a joint working session with other G7 leaders, according to the Independent, where Russia’s war against Ukraine was a key topic. G7 leaders agreed on supplying air defense support to Ukraine, Zelenskyy said.

“We talked about both the systems and the missiles,” he told reporters.

•••

Doubt Accumulates – We were going to headline this news item “Doubt Builds,” but that would be too generous about the memorandum of understanding President Trump said Monday has been signed electronically with the Islamic Republic’s shadowy leadership. No text of that 1.5-page MOU has been released. 

The formal, signed-in-person deal set for Geneva Friday starts the 60-day ceasefire clock running and will be signed on the US side by Vice President JD Vance [hmm -- and not Secretary of State Marco Rubio].

What’s more, bipartisan senators are ready to challenge the deal, as the law gives Congress 30 days after such a deal is transmitted to review the agreement and vote on a resolution of disapproval, CQ Roll Call reports. 

“Trump must release the details publicly, brief Congress immediately and end this war for good,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), said, somewhat predictably.

Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-SC), a MAGA-in Trump supporter who also is among the most hawkish Republicans on Capitol Hill lately, expressed concerns that “Iran’s view of the agreement seems different” than what the administration is laying out.

“Under our law, any nuclear deal with Iran will be sent to Congress for review and a vote,” Graham social media’d, according to Roll Call. “I look forward to reviewing the final product and I believe it is imperative that the architects of the deal, Vice President Vance and his negotiating partners, be part of this process in presenting the final deal to Congress.”

This could be an issue … Israel will not be bound by a US-Iran agreement that it withdraw from southern Lebanon, Michael Leiter, Israel’s ambassador to the US told NPR’s Steve Inskeep on Morning Edition Tuesday. “We’re not withdrawing from Lebanon,” he said.

•••

Trump Attorney Defends Fraud Suspect – Latest potential case of the Trump White House favoring the filthy rich over the populous comes from The Wall Street Journal, which reports that the president’s personal attorney, Boris Epshteyn, has quietly joined the criminal defense for an Indian billionaire accused of fraud.

According to the WSJ’s scoop, attorneys for Gautam Adani, founder and chair of energy and logistics giant Adani Group, in 2025 pressed the Justice Department to drop his 2024 fraud case. But senior officials last year refused and gave the DOJ the “green light” to proceed.

Then, Epshteyn, who also is Trump’s legal coordinator and advisor, joined Adani’s law team from Sullivan & Cromwell, seven people familiar with the matter told the WSJ

After two meetings between the legal team and DOJ officials, the WSJ reports, the Justice Department officials “took the unusual step” of asking a judge to dismiss charges against Adani and other defendants. The May 18 motion awaits the judge’s approval. 

•••

More Gas Relief – AAA’s national average for a gallon of unleaded regular fell to $4.044 Tuesday, 2.1 cents cheaper than on Monday and $1.069 more than February 28. Diesel is $5.185 Tuesday, down 1.2 cents from Monday and $1.379 since before March. –TL

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MONDAY 6/15/26

Flow, Oil, Flow – Iran’s Supreme National Security Council confirmed Sunday that the Islamic Republic has finalized a 60-day ceasefire after “months of long and difficult negotiations” that will reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with both Iran and the US removing their blockades. The US and Iran are to sign the deal in Geneva on Friday and then begin negotiating limiting nuclear arms and lifting sanctions on Iran.

“The deal with the Islamic Republic is now complete,” President Trump posted on Social Media Sunday, according to The New York Times

“Ships of the World, start your engines,” Trump wrote. “Let the oil flow!”

In a 28-minute phone interview with the NYT, Trump said the agreement, when reached, will assure a “permanently toll free” Strait of Hormuz.

“Following intense talks, we are pleased to announce that the peace deal between the United States of America and Islamic Republic of Iran has been REACHED,” Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif posted in social media, according to The Wall Street Journal. “Both sides have declared the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon.”

Beside the two-month ceasefire, the agreement ends military operations on all fronts, including fighting between Israel and Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon. Earlier on Sunday, the NYT reports, Israel bombed Beirut’s southern suburbs in retaliation for rocket fire by Hezbollah.

Trump posted that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu showed “no judgment” and demanded all sides “stand down.”

The president called both the NYT and WSJ later Sunday, before his UFC Freedom 250/birthday party/Flag Day event Sunday night.

He told the WSJ the deal includes Iran’s agreement not to obtain nuclear weapons, though he didn’t mention this in any of his myriad social media posts. He’s not in a hurry to extract Iran’s nuclear material, apparently.

“We’ll get the nuclear dust later on when we’re ready to go in and do it,” he told the WSJ. “I’d say over the next month or two, there’s no rush.”

Sen. James Langford (R-OK) told NBC News’ Meet the Press Sunday that unlike the Obama administration’s Joint Comprehensive Plan Of Action, or JCPOA, Trump’s deal will prevent Iran from ever reaching nuclear weapon capability.

But there is no indication the agreement to be worked out in Geneva will prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons capability in perpetuity.

Before the breakthrough was announced, the NYT citing sources reported that the US was seeking a 20-year moratorium on Iranian nukes, while Iran wanted 10 years – and, The Art of the Deal ahoy, they’re likely to settle on 15 years.

But if the Islamic Republic fails to reach a final deal with the US on nukes, Trump told the NYT he would restart military operations against Tehran and make the US “the guardian of the Middle East in return for 20% of the Mid East region’s revenues.”

Front page of the New York Post pictured a stern President Trump with the headline “Locked and Loaded” while The Atlantic called the peace deal with Tehran “an Iranian victory.”

•••

Gas Relief – Oil prices continue to fall with the AAA’s national average for a gallon of unleaded regular dropping to $4.065 Monday, down 6.4 cents from last Thursday and up $1.09 from February 28. Average price of diesel is $5.197, down 10 cents from last Thursday and up $1.391 from the end of February.

•••

Trump Down – Following a federal court order, the letters spelling out “Donald Trump And” have been removed from the side of the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts building in Washington, D.C. Crowds cheered the removal even as workers hid their de-lettering under a tarp, according to NPR.

Matthew Floca, chief operating officer and executive director confirmed to Politico that work crews had removed “all physical signage” from the building and grounds “that purports to rename the Kennedy Center after President Trump or any individual beside President Kennedy.” – Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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MONDAY 6/15/26

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

By the time you read this, the war in Iran may be over. President Trump said it would be, though as this is being written mid-afternoon Eastern Daylight Time on June 14 and that means it is evening in Iraq, odds are it won’t be, at least not today.

Trump has repeatedly said over the past several weeks about how a “deal” was imminent. While these unfounded claims certainly diminished his veracity, even, perhaps, among those who still gave whatever he said lots of viability, it did have a positive effect causing slight downward movements on the price of oil, as some people figured the flow through the Strait of Hormuz would resume. It didn’t.

Funny thing about that.

More than one elected official who is hoping that saying nice things about Donald Trump will help them keep their jobs come November has said that it will be “a win” for the president if the Strait of Hormuz is reopened.

Does it occur to this elected official that prior to Operation Epic Fury the Strait of Hormuz was open; that the US Strategic Oil Reserve had a nice supply of 415-million barrels in it, and is now at about 349 million, the lowest level in more than 40 years; that gasoline was 39% cheaper and jet fuel 43% cheaper, both of which have an impact on their constituents’ vocations and avocations?

Yes, that will be quite a “win.”

Then there’s things like this, from Senator James Lankford (R-OK) on Meet the Press June 14: “I think people forget Iran has been at war with the United States for 47 years. What President Trump is trying to do is to be able to end Iran’s constant attack of Americans, and American assets and American allies in that region and come and get us. So, to get an end to that is very, very significant. We have military bases all in that region because Iran is constantly attacking us.”

Now if we use his logic that Iran “has been at war” with us for 47 years and that consequently the US has built military bases in that region, the US has been at war with Iran for 47 years.

Perhaps now it is more kinetic.

But here’s the thing: just as it seems no one in the administration had figured the Strait of Hormuz would be seized by the Iranians, has anyone thought about the ramifications of President Trump’s posts like “a whole civilization will die tonight” or Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s quote on the White House website on April 8, “Iran begged for this ceasefire — and we all know it” on the Iranian people, especially the younger cohort who have seen the bombs come raining down and the structures and people being blown up?

Perhaps the deal will be reached so that the Iranian “nuclear dust” will be no longer a threat and there will be a pledge by the Iranian leadership that there will be no nuclear weapons now or in the future.

That is a good thing.

But it doesn’t take a nuclear weapon to wreak havoc. Remember there were 19 terrorists with box cutters on 9/11/2001 that took 2,977 souls and cost trillions of dollars to the US economy.

Back in April 2005 the first US Director of National Intelligence was appointed as a result of a recommendation in the “9/11 Commission Report.” The reason for the DNI was to coordinate efforts among the US intelligence agencies to prevent something like 9/11 from happening again.

When President Trump had appointed Bill Pulte to be the temporary acting DNI earlier this month he said he wanted Pulte “to execute the immediate and needed downsizing” of the office of the Director of National Intelligence.

That’s right: the organization that was established to keep the homeland safe — and which has done an excellent job since 2005 — is now to get the DOGE treatment.

Who could imagine that something bad could be the result of the US decreasing its intelligence capabilities — especially in a time when the Administration has done its damnedest to alienate many of our allies who once shared intelligence with us?

Probably not the people who didn’t see the Strait of Hormuz being closed.

Macaulay is pundit-at-large for The Hustings.

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MONDAY 6/15/26