As an original copy of the Declaration of Independence fades [National Archives] and we approach its 250th anniversary, The Hustings is asking citizen pundits (readers) and contributing pundits from the right and left for thoughts about its resulting democratic republic’s condition.
•Go to The Gray Area to read Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay’s column on President Trump’s July 4 speech.
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
_______________________________________________
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
_______________________________________________
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
_______________________________________________
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
_______________________________________________
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