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California Congressman Leaves GOP, Still Backs Republicans
What happened Rep. Kevin Kiley, a California congressman, said he…
What happened Rep. Kevin Kiley, a California congressman, said he is leaving the Republican Party and will register as an independent. He asked the House clerk to update the official roster. Kiley also said he plans to caucus with House Republicans for the rest of this term. The change adjusts the public count to 217 Republicans, 214 Democrats, and 1 independent. Why he says he left Kiley blamed what he calls hyper-partisanship and gerrymandering in California, and said he filed to run as No Party Preference in his next election. He framed the move as a bid to remove partisanship from local representation and to answer to constituents instead of party bosses. That is a tidy political line, and it will be interesting to see if it holds when votes matter. https://twitter.com/jamiedupree/status/2031055667117568248?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw https://twitter.com/KevinKileyCA/status/2030096771335213064?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw What it does to House math The headline is simple. One member now lists as independent. The practical effect is limited because Kiley will caucus with Republicans. For Speaker Mike Johnson the majority remains narrow. If all members are present and voting one GOP defection could matter on tight procedural fights. That reality keeps the drama alive without flipping control. How solid is his support for the…
Thune Won’t Kill Filibuster for SAVE Act
Quick take Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters he…
How SDNY Revived a Dead Case
The odd bounce between districts The Eastern District of New…
The odd bounce between districts The Eastern District of New York looked at the facts and chose not to charge Michael Castillero. Then the case landed in the Southern District of New York and suddenly became a headline. That switch is not a small detail. When one federal office declines, a second office taking the same matter raises questions about forum shopping and incentives inside the Department of Justice. It also shows how different U.S. attorney offices can treat the same evidence very differently, which matters a lot to anyone who thinks fairness should not depend on geography or PR. The incentives that shape prosecutions Federal prosecutors do not operate in a vacuum. Offices like SDNY are well known for aggressive, high profile cases. That reputation can attract resources, attention, and praise. The incentives are obvious. A big win looks good in press releases and career files. The danger is that an appetite for dramatic results can tilt how evidence is packaged and presented. The question to ask is simple. Are some cases made to fit a narrative rather than the other way around? What happened to Michael Castillero Castillero was charged in a case that another federal office had…
Kennedy: Trump Had No Choice on Iran Strike
Kennedy's Main Claim Senator John Kennedy told Newsmax that President…
Cheap Gas Promised After Gulf Strikes
What the secretary actually said On Fox News Sunday, Energy…
Are We Safer After Operation Epic Fury?
What Rep. Crawford told Maria Bartiromo On Fox's Sunday Morning…

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