Month: March 2026

Top DHS Shakeup: Noem and Lewandowski Exit

President Trump removed DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and named Senator Markwayne Mullin to take over at the end of March. Senior adviser Corey Lewandowski is also leaving amid questions about a $200 million ad contract and who approved it. The move follows tense congressional testimony and media reports suggesting the contract process was limited to a few firms.

Messi Meets Trump at the White House

Lionel Messi and Inter Miami visited the White House. The team presented gifts, posed for photos, and President Trump welcomed the MLS champions. Here is what happened, who was there, and what it might mean politically and culturally.

Olbermann’s Attack on Coach Lou Holtz

Keith Olbermann posted a harsh reply to tributes for late coach Lou Holtz. Holtz died at 89 and is remembered for his coaching, faith, and family. The exchange highlights how public disagreement plays out in national conversations.

Hasselbeck Calls Out The View’s Open Borders

Elisabeth Hasselbeck pushed back on The View panel by arguing for stronger border checks and using the studio audience as a live example of vetting. She cited border statistics and pressed the hosts on practical inconsistencies in their stance.

Talarico’s Controversial Sermon to Voters

James Talarico won the Democratic Senate nomination in Texas while leaving a trail of eyebrow raising religious and social comments. He has discussed God, Jesus, sex and abortion in ways that have pundits and opponents talking. Here is what he actually said and why it matters.

DOJ Drops Autopen Probe Into Biden Pardons

Federal prosecutors in Washington have closed a criminal inquiry into whether President Biden or his aides used an autopen to sign pardons. News outlets say the team could not find a legal basis to bring charges despite evidence of repeated autopen use.

Comer Summons Gates and Six Others

House Oversight Chair James Comer asked seven people to give transcribed interviews in the Epstein inquiry, including Bill Gates and former Obama White House counsel Kathy Ruemmler. The move follows new document releases and recent resignations tied to those documents.

U.S. and Ecuador Strike Drug Cartels

U.S. Southern Command said American and Ecuadorian forces launched coordinated operations against groups it calls narco-terrorists in Ecuador. The move follows recent U.S. strikes on drug vessels and fits a broader push to choke cartel operations in the hemisphere.