SEE IT: SNAP advocate defends taxpayer-funded Coca-Cola in fiery exchange with GOP lawmaker on waste
Rep. Brandon Gill sparred with a SNAP policy advocate over whether taxpayer-funded food benefits should pay for sugary sodas like Coca-Cola.

Senate Republicans are elevating Colombia as a role model in their push for stricter voting rules in the U.S. — and using California as their foil.Why it matters: Republicans don't have the votes to jam through President Trump's SAVE Act, but some conservatives are using Colombia's election system to keep the up the pressure on GOP leaders.Colombia just elected Abelardo de la Espriella, a populist business owner who secured President Trump's endorsement. The country requires voters to present a national I.D. card, relies on paper ballots and does not generally allow mail-in voting.Republicans want the U.S. to follow suit.What we're hearing: Some GOP senators are considering a hearing with California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Colombia officials to compare election processes, Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) told Donald Trump Jr. on a podcast."We always first invite before we consider a subpoena," Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) told Axios, when asked about the possibility of subpoenaing Newsom for such a hearing.Johnson, who chairs the Homeland Security subcommittee on investigations, said Republicans still need to determine the best witnesses "to contrast the Colombian election with the fiasco in California.""Colombia just had an election with only paper ballots, no mail-in ballots, voter ID, proof of citizenship. They counted the ballots in three hours. That sounds like what President Trump has been proposing," Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) wrote in a Dear Colleague letter ahead of Senate Republicans' lunch with Trump on Wednesday.Behind the scenes: At a closed-door lunch Tuesday, Moreno told senators that Colombian officials were confused when he asked what happens if someone shows up to vote without an ID, because it doesn't happen, sources familiar with the lunch told Axios.Moreno was in Colombia during the country's election last week.Between the lines: Trump has blown up the congressional schedule with his demands that lawmakers pass the SAVE America Act, which requires voter ID, proof of citizenship for registration and restricts mail-in voting.There is no clear path for passing such a bill through the Senate, with Democrats opposed and even some Republicans uncomfortable with the mail-in voting measures in particular.That has not stopped Trump allies from continuing to push for federal voting reforms.
Rep. Brandon Gill sparred with a SNAP policy advocate over whether taxpayer-funded food benefits should pay for sugary sodas like Coca-Cola.
NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani announces $15 million in taxpayer-funded sex change initiatives for children and adults as a defense against federal action.
Border Czar Tom Homan has announced a major expansion of immigration enforcement resources, including the deployment of 10,000 new agents nationwide. The post WATCH: Border Czar Tom Homan Announces 10,000 New Immigration Agents Nationwide, Tells Cartel Threats ‘Come Get Some!’ appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
City’s mayor has consistently argued that rising housing costs have made it increasingly unaffordableA New York City housing board has voted to freeze rent for approximately 1m apartments.In a major victory for Zohran Mamdani, the mayor who campaigned on a pledge to freeze rent, the Rent Guidelines Board voted 7-1 on Thursday to freeze increases on one- and two-year leases. The decision will provide relief to tenants in more than 1m rent-stabilized apartments, representing over 40% of the city’s rental housing. Continue reading...
A city board packed with Mamdani appointees voted in favor of the Mayor’s key campaign promise.
Democrats hold a "secret weapon" heading into this fall's midterm elections, according to CNN's Harry Enten.Health care costs have surged past gas prices, food and housing to become Americans' single biggest financial concern, Enten said, and Democrats hold a decisive advantage over Republicans on that topic."This, to me, is the Democrats' secret weapon," he said.According to Enten's analysis of polling data, 22 percent of Americans cite healthcare as their primary financial worry, well ahead of food at 18 percent, housing at 14 percent and gas prices at just 8 percent, and highlighted the finding as particularly notable given the outsized media attention typically paid to gas prices in affordability discussions.The numbers get worse for the Trump administration from there, Enten said. Its net approval rating on healthcare costs sits 36 points underwater, with disapproval far outpacing approval. Among independents — a group already showing signs of frustration with the administration — that gap widens dramatically to 50 points underwater, a figure Enten called striking."So you see, you know Trump really struggling here, but here, even with the obvious, there's an interesting little nugget going on here," he said.Enten pointed to a substantial Democratic advantage in trust on the issue. Democrats currently hold a 21-point edge over Republicans on health care, he noted — larger than the 17-point advantage they held in 2018, when health care-driven momentum helped the party secure a net gain of 40 House seats during Trump's first midterm cycle.Much of the current frustration traces back to early 2026, when enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies that millions of Americans relied on were not extended, according to Enten. Prediction markets have grown increasingly pessimistic about a reversal: Enten noted that betting markets gave a 43 percent chance in January that the subsidies would eventually be extended, but that figure has since collapsed to just 7 percent.Taken together, Enten argued, the data — high public anxiety over health care costs, the administration's weak approval numbers, and Democrats' growing trust advantage — closely resemble the conditions that fueled the party's strong performance in 2018."It will be interesting to see if Democrats really try to re-engage with that issue," Enten said. "They absolutely should be running on health care. It is a big win for them." - YouTube youtu.be
If California Gov. Gavin Newsom has made anything clear thus far, it’s that he will say pretty much anything to advance his presidential aspirations. But his latest […]