Hunter Biden went on Candace Owens’ podcast to reinvent as a political truth teller — but remains as delusional as ever
In his interview with Candace Owens this week, Hunter Biden tried to reinvent himself one more time.

In the digital age, all politics is national. Just ask United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who may lose his job following the Labour Party's sweeping losses in his country's May 7 local elections.
In his interview with Candace Owens this week, Hunter Biden tried to reinvent himself one more time.
President Trump invited the family of Sheridan Gorman, the Loyola University freshman who was murdered by an illegal alien in Chicago earlier this year, to speak at his Suffern, New York, rally on Friday about their tragic loss. Gorman's mother and father shared the stage with her sister and another young woman, both of whom were holding pictures of Sheridan Gorman. The post WATCH: Trump Brings Family of Sheridan Gorman, Teen Murdered by Illegal Alien in Chicago, On Stage at Rally to Deliver Heartbreaking Message to Open Border Lunatics appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
President Donald Trump received chants of “four more years” during a rally this Friday in Rockland County, New York. Buoyed by the crowd, the president touted the […]
President Trump delivered remarks at Rockland Community College in Suffern, New York, on Friday, and he was welcomed to the stage by New York Giants Quarterback Jaxson Dart, who came out publicly in support of the President. Dart, the second-year NFL star and Giants' starting quarterback, has not been a visible supporter of Trump in the past, but has hinted at his politics. The post (VIDEO) Giants Quarterback Jaxson Dart Comes Out as Trump Supporter Opening Rockland Community College Trump Rally – Crowd Chants “USA” as Trump Enters appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
U.S. President Donald Trump isn't backing down for his push for a White House ballroom, insisting that it is a matter of national security. And he is turning it into yet another loyalty test or purity test for GOP lawmakers. But according to political scientists interviewed by the UK-based i Paper, this strategy poses significant political risks for Trump.The i Paper's Jonathan Singh stresses that Trump's push for the ballroom is about much more than the ballroom itself — it exemplifies his "demand for loyalty and is a way for the U.S. president to test who is with him and against him." Singh, however, describes this a "risky approach" for the United States' 2026 midterms."Favoring unwavering loyalty over electoral success, this week, Trump helped to end the midterm election hopes of three sitting Republicans: Kentucky's Thomas Massie, a critic of the government's handling of the (Jeffrey) Epstein scandal; Georgia's Brad Raffensperger, who defied Trump's call to 'find' votes to overturn the 2020 election; and Louisiana's Bill Cassidy, a supporter of Trump's 2021 impeachment," Singh explains. "The president also demanded the firing of a non-partisan Senate official who rejected his attempt to include $1bn (£740m) for his vast White House ballroom in an immigration bill, a vote on which was then abandoned by Senate Republicans on Thursday."Singh continues, "The president's strategy appears to center on building a movement of frightened loyalists who will back even his most narcissistic ambitions — a growing concern for Republican lawmakers who might dare to challenge him. But for a president facing tanking poll numbers and crises at home and abroad, taking down those who oppose him is a way of establishing control over a fracturing party and is part of a wider strategy to secure ultra-loyalty to the Trump political brand, according to experts."One of the political experts interviewed by the i Paper is Elisa Wirsching, a professor of government for the London School of Economics.Wirsching told the i Paper, "This is more strategic than personal, even though his rhetoric is very Trump-like and impulsive. The pattern aligns with Trump's more general approach, namely loyalty above policy or even ideology — and loyalty above electability…. What (Cassidy and Massie) had in common was specific acts of defiance against Trump personally."Wirsching noted that "few Republicans" will "push back, even where they privately disagree, because individual defection is punishable and collective resistance has never been organized" against Trump — adding, "Each Republican member's strategy is to keep their head down and hope they are not next."Peter Finn, who teaches international relations at the University of Greenwich, believes that Trump's push for loyalty within the GOP is being encouraged by the political turbulence of 2026.Finn told the i Paper, "Trump has the ability to shape events in the short term. But societies are complicated, and events are hard to predict and control. So this is one area where Trump can still directly impact events and maybe he’s finding some sort of solace in that."
Oil giant Chevron is refusing to play along with the Democrat blame game and is directly calling out Gavin Newsom and Sacramento Democrats for the insane gas prices crushing California families. The post Chevron Fights Back Against Radical Left’s Vandalism Campaign – Slaps “Sacramento Policies Did This” Signs on California Gas Pumps After Newsom Tells Californians to Avoid the Gas Company appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
President Donald Trump urged Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh on Friday to ignore public musings about fiscal policy — even from the commander in chief himself — and operate “independently.” “Honestly, I really mean this. This is not said in any other way. I want Kevin to be totally independent,” he told the East Room […]