Conservative

The Morning Brief — March 25, 2026

Jack Smith’s Lawfare Carnival Gets Its Formal Autopsy

Margot Cleveland laid it out before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee Tuesday: unconstitutional appointment, subpoenas that violated the Speech or Debate Clause, phone records vacuumed up on private citizens like Kash Patel — the whole rotten bouquet. The good news is that the Constitution survived Jack Smith. The bad news is that nobody seems to be in any particular hurry to make sure this never happens again. Victor Davis Hanson says a reckoning awaits — I’ll believe it when I see a perp walk, not a podcast.

The Morning Brief — March 24, 2026

Markwayne Mullin Confirmed As Next Homeland Security Secretary

Mullin cleared 54-45, with Fetterman and Heinrich crossing the aisle — which tells you everything about how radioactive the open-borders caucus has become in an election year. Rand Paul voted no, presumably because Mullin once offered to fight a union boss on the Senate floor, and Paul has principles about something or other. A new DHS chief is good news; now someone needs to actually reopen the agency so those nine-hour TSA lines at Atlanta stop being a thing.

The Morning Brief — March 23, 2026

Iran Issues New Threat As Trump’s 48-Hour Ultimatum Hits Halfway Mark

Tehran’s response to Trump’s ultimatum was, essentially, “nice Gulf neighbors you have there.” Iran is now threatening to strike the energy and water systems of Saudi Arabia and the UAE if Trump follows through on hitting Iranian infrastructure — which is a bold move for a regime that just launched ballistic missiles at Diego Garcia and missed. The mullahs are playing a very dangerous game of chicken with a president who has demonstrated he is not running a bluff operation. Tick tock.

The Morning Brief — March 22, 2026

Trump Sets 48-Hour Clock For Iran As Strait Of Hormuz Standoff Escalates

Trump told Iran to fully open the Strait of Hormuz or watch its power plants get obliterated — and he’s given them 48 hours to decide. Over 20 nations have already lined up to help enforce the opening, which is the kind of coalition-building that tends to happen when the guy making the threat is actually credible. The mullahs spent eight years learning that the previous American president would send them a strongly worded letter; they’re getting a remedial education now.

The Morning Brief — March 21, 2026

Trump Says U.S. Considering ‘Winding Down’ Iran War — And Hormuz Is Someone Else’s Problem

Twenty-one days in, Trump is signaling the objectives are nearly met and the Strait of Hormuz can be somebody else’s headache — specifically, the somebodies who actually depend on it for their economic survival. That’s not isolationism, that’s arithmetic: if Europe and Asia need that waterway open, they can chip in something more than strongly worded statements. Meanwhile, Bessent is easing oil sanctions to kneecap Iran’s leverage over global supply — which is the kind of economic judo that doesn’t require a single additional Marine.

The Morning Brief — March 20, 2026


Trump Eyes Iran Wind-Down, Tells the World to Guard Its Own Strait

Three weeks into the Iran campaign and Trump is posting on Truth Social that we’re “getting very close to meeting our objectives” and that the Strait of Hormuz is someone else’s problem to secure. Good. The nations that depend on that shipping lane for their economic survival can stop free-riding on the U.S. Navy and pick up the tab themselves. America First isn’t isolationism — it’s a bill coming due.