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Omar Snaps at Disclosure Questions
The Disclosure NumbersCongressional financial forms are meant to show what…
The Disclosure NumbersCongressional financial forms are meant to show what lawmakers own, owe, and earn. That is the theory, anyway, which is often where government paperwork and reality part ways. In this case, disclosures reviewed by the Wall Street Journal reportedly showed Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota with a net worth between $18,000 and $95,000, while earlier filings had placed her wealth somewhere between $6 million and $30 million. Her office has said the older figures were the result of accounting errors, but it has not offered a detailed public explanation. When the numbers move that far, people tend to ask questions. That is not outrage. That is just basic arithmetic with a pulse.A Reporter Gets Shut DownA Lindell TV reporter tried to press Omar on the change, according to a video posted to X, and the exchange went downhill fast. Omar first said she still believed the reporter was stupid for asking questions, then doubled down when asked again. She said she had already explained the matter to the public, though the exchange did not exactly sound like a master class in clarification. When the reporter kept going, Omar ended the conversation with a profane line and walked away…
Missing GOP Vote Raises Fresh Questions
Kean Has Missed More Than 50 VotesRep. Thomas Kean Jr.…
Reeves Triggers Redistricting Countdown
Reeves Starts the ClockMississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said Friday that…
Reeves Starts the ClockMississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said Friday that he will call a special legislative session on redistricting, but only after the U.S. Supreme Court rules in Louisiana v. Callais. Under his plan, lawmakers would meet 21 days after the court issues its decision. That is a tidy way to avoid drawing maps under a cloud of legal guesswork, which is rare in politics and almost impressive. Reeves said the legislature should get the first chance to redraw district lines once the new rules are clear, and he framed the move as a matter of state authority and timing.Why Callais MattersThe Louisiana case could reshape how courts handle race in congressional mapmaking. It stems from a fight over a district map that created a second majority-minority seat, and the Supreme Court is now weighing how far states must go when race and voting patterns overlap. The Trump Justice Department has urged the court to end race-based districts unless there is strong proof they are needed. In plain terms, the administration is arguing that mapmaking should not keep sorting voters by race first and citizenship second, a habit that has produced plenty of paperwork and very little peace.What the DOJ…
DeSantis, Jeffries Trade Redistricting Blows
Jeffries Turns Up the Heat Florida is now in the…
Mullin, Schumer Trade Fire Over ICE
Schumer Takes Aim At EnforcementSenate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer used…
London Rental Ads Spark Fresh Fury
Religious filters meet the housing marketLondon has found a new…

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