Democrats, for all their faults, walk lockstep into every political upheaval. Only in GOP-land will you hear about Republicans doing their darnedest to break the hearts of the voters.
Let’s look at three tactical errors that could sink our hopes for 2026. Here’s more from Lori Colley.
Republicans are poised to make big redistricting gains. Sean Spicer, the former White House Press Secretary, joins Jesse Kelly to break it all down.
Among the topics discussed: Redistricting in Texas, the upcoming North Carolina gubernatorial race, voter roll cleanup efforts and the likelihood of J.D. Vance as the Republicans’ Presidential nominee in 2028.
The Democrats keep going batshit crazy as Republicans start using the same gerrymandering tactics that the leftists have perfected.
Texas is the new center for the firestorm, but the redistricting battles there mirror stuff we’ve seen for decades out of New York and Illinois.
Somehow, the Republicans get accused of being Nazis, while no one bats an eye when the looney tune leftists engage in such spirited legerdemain. Here’s more from the Liberal Hivemind.
The GOP in Texas has flexed its muscles, redrawing districts ahead of the 2026 mid-term elections. President Donald Trump says the Republicans are looking to pick up as many as five additional seats in the U.S. House. U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, the leftist extremist from Houston, might be one of those losing her seat.
There will be redistricting gains in other states as well, Trump declares, so the Democrats are losing even more ground. Here’s more from Liberal Hivemind.
Steve Turley says the shift isn’t just happening in Texas. Ohio, North Carolina, Florida and other red states are now engaged in redistricting. At the same time, traditional red states like Utah, Idaho and Arizona also will be posting gains.
Meanwhile, the 10 states losing the most population or stagnating are all blue states, particularly California, New York and Illinois. So Democrats will be taking it on the chin — not only in 2026, butr possibly for many years to come.