Day: February 21, 2026
The premier has decided to delay cabinet reshuffle due to a no-confidence resolution that is expected to be submitted to parliament by the right-wing National Rally party, which criticizes the government’s energy policy, News.Az reports, citing Reuters.
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“The prime minister is waiting for the announcement of the discussion of the no-confidence vote proposed by the National Rally,” the newspaper cited the source.
The newspaper anticipated that the cabinet reshuffle will take place no earlier than February 25. It is already known that three members of the government will vacate their offices: Culture Minister Rachida Dati, who is running to Paris mayor, Minister Delegate for the Budget and Public Accounts Amelie de Montchalin, who has been appointed head France’s Court of Auditors, and Minister Delegate for Autonomy and Disability Charlotte Parmentier Lecocq.
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Rodriguez said hundreds of prisoners are currently being released under the law, which was passed by the ruling party-controlled legislature on Thursday. Human rights organizations say the law falls short of offering relief for hundreds of political prisoners in the country, News.Az reports, citing Reuters.
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Interim President Delcy Rodriguez, who took power last month after the U.S. ouster of President Nicolas Maduro, has bowed to Trump administration demands on oil sales and released hundreds of people classified by human rights groups as political prisoners. Venezuela has denied holding political prisoners and says those jailed have committed crimes.
Opposition politician Juan Pablo Guanipa, a close ally of Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado, had a house arrest order against him lifted, his brother, lawmaker Tomas Guanipa, told Reuters late on Thursday.
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The second round of indirect negotiations between the United States and Iran, held in Geneva on February 17, 2026, ended — despite optimistic rhetoric — with a highly uncertain outlook. Public statements suggested “progress,” but the strategic reality indicates that both sides remain fundamentally entrenched.
U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance stated that a certain degree of progress had been achieved during the second round of nuclear talks. Yet in practical terms, the parties largely maintained their original positions. According to Israeli analysts, the negotiations are, with a high degree of probability, doomed to fail.
An American official, speaking on condition of anonymity, revealed that Iran agreed on Tuesday to present detailed proposals within the next two weeks in an effort to bridge gaps in the negotiations. “Progress has been made, but many details remain to be discussed,” the official said, adding that Iranian representatives promised to return within two weeks with comprehensive proposals, as reported by The Times of Israel.

Source: Reuters
These remarks followed Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s description of the Geneva talks as “constructive” and his claim that agreement had been reached on their “guiding principles.” However, a senior Israeli official quoted by Channel 13 offered a far less optimistic interpretation: “Our impression is that this is a smokescreen,” he said, emphasizing that “the chances of reaching an agreement remain extremely low.”
That assessment may prove accurate.
Throughout decades of diplomatic engagement, Iranian negotiators have demonstrated exceptional skill in conducting prolonged and exhausting talks. Strategic ambiguity and delay have often worked in Tehran’s favor. However, in this case, time constraints may alter the calculus. The term of the occupant of the White House is limited to four years, and President Trump has signaled that he will not allow negotiations to stretch indefinitely.
According to CNN and CBS, citing their sources, Washington may launch strikes against Iran as early as this Saturday. On Thursday, February 19, President Trump publicly stated that within ten days it would become clear whether a deal with Iran would be reached — or whether the United States would have to act by force.
This statement was preceded by a February 18 White House meeting of senior national security officials to assess the situation. Special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner briefed the President on the outcome of the Geneva talks.
At the same time, Iran sought to broaden the scope of negotiations by proposing not only a resolution of the nuclear crisis but also the development of bilateral economic cooperation, including in the oil and gas sector, according to CBS News. The initiative appears designed to redirect the process and introduce economic incentives into the equation.
Yet this offer is unlikely to change the strategic picture. Tehran is unlikely to abandon its long-standing ambition of maintaining regional dominance.
Inside the White House, policymakers are weighing two major risks: the dangers of escalation if strikes are launched, and the consequences of restraint if no action is taken. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated that President Trump remains committed to resolving the issue diplomatically and described reaching a deal as a “wise decision” for the Iranian government. However, given the ideological and institutional mindset of those shaping policy within the Islamic Republic, such a compromise appears improbable.
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Source: CNN
According to CNN, on February 28 Secretary of State Marco Rubio is scheduled to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to brief him on the status of negotiations. Leavitt declined to clarify whether any decision on strikes would be coordinated with Israel. Nevertheless, recalling the experience of the 12-day war, joint action remains a plausible scenario.
Meanwhile, military preparations continue at an accelerated pace.
Axios reports that if President Trump decides to strike Iran again, it would involve a large-scale military operation lasting several weeks. Since late January, the United States has been steadily increasing its military presence in the Persian Gulf.
According to BBC Verify, the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln is currently positioned near Iran and is expected to be joined shortly by USS Gerald R. Ford, the most powerful aircraft carrier in the U.S. Navy. The Ford has already entered the Mediterranean Sea and is expected to assume a position near the island of Crete.
BBC Verify also reports that the United States has established aerial refueling points at bases stretching from Rota in southern Spain to Crete in Greece. In the past week alone, dozens of refueling aircraft and transport planes crossed the Atlantic.
According to Flightradar24 data, 39 aerial refueling tankers have been redeployed closer to a potential theater of operations over the last three days. In addition, 29 heavy transport aircraft, including C-17 Globemaster III planes, have been repositioned to Europe.
Earlier this month, units of the 69th Air Defense Artillery Brigade were deployed from Fort Hood to Europe via six flights. The brigade is equipped with Patriot and THAAD missile defense systems capable of protecting allied forces and U.S. personnel from missile and aerial threats. One C-17 aircraft from Fort Hood was dispatched to Jordan.
Former Pentagon official Mark Cancian has stated that the countdown to potential U.S. strikes would begin once the USS Gerald R. Ford assumes its operational position.
In recent days, the United States has also deployed F-35 and F-22 fighter jets to the Middle East. According to The Wall Street Journal, Washington has assembled in the region its largest concentration of air power since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
The scale of these deployments suggests preparation not for symbolic deterrence, but for sustained operational engagement.
A potential U.S. campaign could last several weeks and involve strikes against a wide range of military and state facilities of the Islamic Republic. While a ground invasion remains unlikely, a prolonged air campaign conducted in coordination with Israel appears increasingly plausible.
Such strikes could significantly impact internal dynamics within Iran. There is a strong likelihood that U.S. air operations would intensify protests, particularly in Kurdish provinces and in Sistan-Baluchistan, where armed clashes with regime forces continue.
Jerusalem appears fully aware of the risks and is preparing accordingly. Various medical institutions, military facilities, and civil defense services have reportedly been mobilized in anticipation of possible escalation.
The strategic objectives of a military campaign would likely extend beyond nuclear containment. The broader aim could be the destabilization — and eventual overthrow — of the Islamic regime, to be replaced by a secular government aligned with U.S., Israeli, and broader regional interests.
There is also a significant geopolitical dimension. In the event of a successful campaign, Washington could strengthen its position regarding the Strait of Hormuz and Middle Eastern energy flows. Such control would have profound implications for global energy markets and could negatively impact the economy of Washington’s principal competitor — the People’s Republic of China.
For now, Geneva provides diplomatic cover. But beneath the surface, the indicators point toward a decisive shift.
The coming days may determine whether diplomacy survives — or whether the region enters a new phase of prolonged confrontation.
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Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev was in Washington, D.C., Thursday for Donald Trump’s inaugural Board of Peace meeting. When protesters showed up outside of his hotel, his bodyguards attacked them.
The protesters at the Waldorf Astoria on Pennsylvania Avenue were calling for the release of political prisoners in Azerbaijan, which has been under Aliyev’s dictatorial rule for more than 20 years. In a statement, the Embassy of Azerbaijan alleged the protesters “violently attempted to enter the protected area and took offensive actions against the Presidential vehicle” when Aliyev’s motorcade was arriving at the hotel. It added, “The Presidential Security Service had no choice but to immediately intervene.”

According to the protesters, that’s not what happened. One of them, Rahim Yagublu, 27, said that the guards kicked him in his stomach and hit his jaw. His father is political activist Tofig Yagublu, in prison in Azerbaijan on forgery and fraud charges. Another protester, Adil Amrakhly, 35, said that while running away from the guards, he hurt his leg.
“We intended to hold a peaceful protest to demand freedom for political prisoners in Azerbaijan,” Amrakhly told The Washington Post, adding that at least four other protesters were injured.
“They started beating us,” Yagblu said. He added that nearby police didn’t do anything and that protesters called an ambulance. After looking at everyone’s injuries, first responders didn’t take anyone to the hospital.
“This just shows us he’s a dictator, and there is no free speech in my country,” Yagublu said, regarding Aliyev.
Video was posted to X Thursday night showing some of the fighting.
İlham Əliyevin mühafizəçiləri Vaşinqtonda ondan siyasi məhbuslara azadlıq tələb edən azərbaycanlı mühacir fəallara vəhşicəsinə hücum edib, onları yumruq və təpiklə vurublar. Əliyevin cangüdənlərinin hücumuna məruz qalanlardan biri də siyasi məhbus Tofiq Yaqublunun oğludur. pic.twitter.com/Xq4L3v1ACw
— Azadlıq Qəzeti (@azadliq_news) February 19, 2026
Azerbaycanlı Korumalar Muhaliflere Saldırdı Benzeri Kürtlere Olmuştu
Washington’da “Barış Kurulu / Board of Peace”de olan Azerbaycan Devlet Başkanı Aliyev’in korumaları, “Siyasi mahkumlara özgürlük” sloganıyla eylem yapan Azerbaycanlı muhaliflere saldırdı.
Hatırlatma: ABD’de… pic.twitter.com/1awbV53sHS
— metinyoksu (@metinyoksu) February 19, 2026
The incident was reminiscent of a similar event in Trump’s first term in May 2017, when Turkish security personnel attacked protesters outside the Turkish ambassador’s residence while Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was in Washington to meet with Trump. At the time, Congress unanimously called for criminal charges against the 24 people filmed attacking protesters. One month later, two people were arrested and arrest warrants were issued for the other security officers, but charges would be dropped the following March.
Will Thursday’s incident be handled similarly? Aliyev and Azerbaijan are in Trump’s good graces for joining the Board of Peace, so the president and his Republican allies in Congress may not push for justice this time. That would be a shame, considering peaceful protest is a constitutional right and a major freedom for people in the U.S.
Some congressional Republicans quietly celebrated President Trump’s massive Supreme Court tariff loss on Friday.
The court ruled 6–3 to undo the president’s sweeping, illegal “Liberation Day” tariffs—a massive plank of his economic and foreign policy platform. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that Trump’s invocation of an emergency in order to impose tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act was a clear overreach of Congress’s authority and eschewed decades of precedent.
While Trump fumed, Republicans across the conservative spectrum reacted with delight.
“We all know members that we’ve talked to on the GOP side of the aisle who are silently, quietly breathing a sigh of relief,” Fox News’s Shannon Beam said on Friday after the ruling. “There have been Republicans on Capitol Hill who have voted against some of the president’s tariffs—they think it’s actually hurt the economy, and hurts their ability to go out and make the argument that this president is working to make things more affordable. So, some of them [are] quietly happy.”
John Yoo, the deputy attorney general under former President George W. Bush who was investigated for his role in the “torture memos,” echoed Beam’s sentiments.
“This might be a blessing in disguise, because we just had GDP report numbers from last year that showed the economy significantly slowed,” he said. “If all the tariffs the president announced are immediately eliminated and he has to take about a year—if he really chooses to do it again—has to take about a year to impose these tariffs again. That might actually have a positive boost on the economy, which could have a very positive effect on President Trump and Republicans by the midterm elections.”
Plenty of congressional Republicans made their feelings public. Representative Don Bacon called Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurring opinion “perfect words.”

“Today, the Supreme Court reaffirmed authority that has rested with Congress for centuries. The American people already know that tariffs make building and buying here at home more expensive,” said Senator Mitch McConnell. “And Kentuckians understand this painful reality better than most. But the use of IEEPA to circumvent Congress in the imposition of tariffs, already without precedent, isn’t just bad policy –—it’s also illegal.”
The widespread GOP approval of this judicial loss shows that Trump may have even less control over his own party than we thought ahead of a closely watched midterm election.
President Trump spent Friday afternoon berating the Supreme Court after it ruled 6–3 to strike down his “Liberation Day” tariffs—calling them “fools,” “lapdogs,” and “foreign interests.”
“The Supreme Court’s Ruling on TARIFFS is deeply disappointing! I am ashamed of certain Members of the Court for not having the Courage to do what is right for our Country,” Trump wrote on Truth Social after the ruling, seeming to single out the conservative justices who struck down his tariffs. “When you read the dissenting opinions, there is no way that anyone can argue against them. Foreign Countries that have been ripping us off for years are ecstatic, and dancing in the streets—But they won’t be dancing for long!
“The Democrats on the Court are thrilled, but they will automatically vote ‘NO’ against ANYTHING that makes America Strong and Healthy Again. They, also, are a Disgrace to our Nation,” he continued. “Others think they’re being ‘politically correct,’ which has happened before, far too often, with certain Members of this Court when, in fact, they’re just FOOLS and ‘LAPDOGS’ for the RINOS and Radical Left Democrats and, not that this should have anything to do with it, very unpatriotic, and disloyal to the Constitution. It is my opinion that the Court has been swayed by Foreign Interests, and a Political Movement that is far smaller than people would think—But obnoxious, ignorant, and loud!”
Trump also attacked “certain members of the court” at a press conference where he announced new 10 percent global tariffs.
“The Supreme Court’s ruling on tariffs is deeply disappointing, and I’m ashamed of certain members of the court,” he told a room full of reporters. “Absolutely ashamed, for not having the courage to do what’s right for our country.” Asked whether he regretted nominating Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Comey Barrett—two conservatives who, alongside Chief Justice John Roberts, voted with liberals to block his tariffs—Trump called them “an embarrassment to their families.”
Trump: The Supreme Court’s ruling is deeply disappointing. I’m ashamed of certain members of the court for not having the courage. pic.twitter.com/GEt1usu6Pd
— Acyn (@Acyn) February 20, 2026
TRUMP when asked if he regrets nominating Justice Gorsuch and Justice Barrett: I don’t want to say whether or not I regret. I think it’s an embarrassment to their families. pic.twitter.com/xtHAshuMOe
— First To Hear It (@firsttohearit) February 20, 2026
President Donald Trump claimed Friday the Supreme Court had granted him the power to destroy other countries, after the high court took away his weapon of choice: sweeping reciprocal tariffs.
Speaking to reporters, Trump rambled about how “ridiculous” it was for the Supreme Court to block the illegal tariffs he’d imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, while also bragging that the court had only strengthened his grip on other strings he could pull.
“The court has given me the unquestioned right to ban all sorts of things from coming into our country—to destroy foreign countries,” Trump claimed. “But a much more powerful right than many people thought we even had, but not the right to charge a fee.
“I can destroy the trade, I can destroy the country, I’m even allowed to impose a foreign country-destroying embargo. I can do anything I want—but I can’t charge one dollar,” Trump fumed. “Because that’s not what it says, and it’s not the way it even reads.”
Trump imposed his so-called “reciprocal tariffs” in April 2025 using the IEEPA, a rule that allows the president to regulate commerce in case of a national emergency—but doesn’t actually include the word “tariff.” In the court’s ruling Friday, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that the actual language in IEEPA “cannot bear the weight” of Trump’s tariffs.
Still, Trump couldn’t seem to wrap his head around it.
“I can do anything I want to do to them but I can’t charge any money. So I’m allowed to destroy the country, but I can’t charge ’em a little fee. I could give ’em a little two-cent fee, but I cannot charge under any circumstances. I cannot charge them anything,” Trump rambled. “Think of that, how ridiculous is that?
“I’m allowed to embargo them, I’m allowed to tell ’em you can’t do business in the United States anymore, ‘We want you out of here!’ But if I want to charge them $10 I can’t do that,” he continued.
Despite the crushing blow to his sweeping reciprocal tariffs that have caused mayhem abroad and at home, Trump insisted the ruling was somehow a good thing because it validated other statutes that were “even stronger than the IEEPA tariffs.”
Trump even patted himself on the back for holding back with his initial tariffs. “I didn’t want to do anything that would affect the decision of the court. Because I understand the court, I understand how they’re very easily swayed,” Trump said.
“I wanted to be a good boy,” Trump added. Good boy no more, it seems.
Trump ended the press conference by announcing his plan to impose new 10 percent tariffs under Section 232, a rule that allowed tariffs to be levied on certain products that threaten national security. Good luck with that, Donald.
Read more about Trump’s response:
The president’s hotly anticipated backup plan to replace his unacceptable global tariffs is, basically, to just keep doing the tariffs regardless.
The Supreme Court deemed Donald Trump’s “liberation day” tariffs illegal Friday morning, throwing not only the White House’s economic plan into wack, but also the primary driver behind the administration’s foreign policy agenda.
But the judicial conclusion was of no matter to Trump. In a White House press conference that afternoon, Trump revealed that he would impose an additional 10 percent global levy while keeping the remaining ones in place, blatantly flouting the judicial order.
“Going forward, we’re going to take in more money,” Trump said.
The new tariffs will begin in three days, according to the president.
Trump was clearly irate over the decision, huffing between his sentences as he slumped over the lectern, slandering many of his Republican allies in a loose, slapdash speech to the nation.
“I don’t think the court meant it, because the court doesn’t show great spirit toward our country, in my opinion,” Trump continued, suggesting that members of the nation’s highest judiciary had been compromised by foreign interests. “Lots of very bad decisions.”
In the court’s 6–3 majority opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act as the foundation for his tariff plan was an erroneous overreach of his office’s power.
“Slimeballs,” Trump said, referring to the justices who voted against his tariffs—two of whom, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, he appointed, in 2017 and 2020 respectively.
Responding to a reporter’s question, Trump rejected previous comments that he had made claiming the country would be “financially defenseless” without his tariffs.
“They write this terrible, defective decision,” Trump said. “It’s almost like it’s written by not smart people.”
When asked whether his administration would abide by the order and issue refunds to countries that had been affected by his tariffs, Trump barked that attempting to do so would result in the topic being relitigated in courts for the “next five years.”
Roberts noted in his opinion that the country’s founders “gave ‘Congress alone’ the power to impose tariffs during peacetime,” broadly upending any possibility for the White House to create a tariff proposal all on its own. But the president appeared nonetheless unwilling to work with his legislative peers as of Friday.
“Why didn’t you work with Congress to enact a tariff plan?” pressed a reporter.
“I didn’t have to,” Trump insisted.
This story has been updated.
Senator Mitch McConnell appears to be stalling the voting bill backed by President Trump, and fellow Republicans are not happy.
McConnell, who leads the Senate Rules Committee, is refusing to schedule a vote on the legislation, thus preventing it from moving forward. The bill would create barriers for voting, requiring specific forms of ID in order for Americans to exercise their constitutional right.
In blocking it, the retiring senator and former majority leader has drawn the ire of his colleagues. Representative Tim Burchett posted a video on X Friday saying McConnell’s actions are partially coming from a place of “meanness” because he doesn’t like Trump, and called his mental acuity into question.
“He’s blocking the SAVE Act, or is he? Is it him or a staff member, because as you know, he’s a lot like Joe Biden was in his last few days in office, or last years in office,” Burchett said. “His cognizant level is diminishing daily.”
What is happening with Mitch McConnell and why is he stopping the SAVE AMERICA ACT? pic.twitter.com/76R6DSCVFw
— Tim Burchett (@timburchett) February 20, 2026
Burchett went on a tangent about how much of Congress is run by staffers because certain aging members of Congress have diminishing mental capacity, citing the case of Representative Kay Granger, the former House Appropriations Committee chair who disappeared for months in 2024 and was later found to be living in an independent living facility.
Representative Anna Paulina Luna also attacked McConnell, claiming on X without evidence that “over 84% of Americans and 95% of Republicans want voter ID. Why do you completely disregard the will of the people who voted for you?”
McConnell’s stance has similarly drawn the attention of right-wing personalities on social media who have been calling out his mental acuity for days over the bill, which doesn’t have the 60 votes necessary to overcome a Senate filibuster. Representative Andy Barr, who is running to fill McConnell’s seat in November, wrote a letter to the senator last week asking for his help to pass the bill, to which McConnell hasn’t responded.
Last year, McConnell wrote in The Wall Street Journal that such a bill would give a future Democratic president and Congress the ability to “use more sweeping mandates to carry out a complete federal takeover of American elections.”
“The current administration has better ways to spend its time than laying the groundwork for a leftwing election takeover,” McConnell wrote.
Burchett’s attempt to call out McConnell’s age and fitness is not without merit, as the senior Kentucky senator has had health issues and noticeable mental lapses. But not only is Burchett ignoring the long-term implications of the bill, he is also selectively ignoring the very clear cognitive decline experienced by the president of the United States.
It’s been a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad morning for Donald Trump.
At the start of Friday, a new gross domestic product report revealed that the economy had cooled in the last quarter of 2025, showing a general deceleration in growth due to large cuts to federal spending, reported Axios.
Trump and his associates have ripped through the executive branch over the past year, hacking and slashing at government expenditures on the authority of what they claim is a “mandate from the people.” The result has shuttered several core agencies, including the Department of Education, USAID, and Voice of America, while others, such as the Environmental Protection Agency, have been hollowed out through enormous staff reductions.
Following the Project 2025 blueprint, the president and his congressional allies also took aim at Medicaid, cutting hundreds of billions of dollars from the public health insurance program.
The savings, however, will not be felt by voters. Republicans opted to spend that money elsewhere, such as on a massive budget bump for ICE and enormous tax cuts for the ultrawealthy. This will result in a near-identical level of discretionary spending for 2026 compared to the previous fiscal year, according to a preliminary analysis of federal budget records by the Penn Wharton Budget Model, as reported by The New York Times.
Trump was already publicly venting about the economic revelation nearly an hour prior to the GDP report’s release, blaming the unattractive digits on Democrats.
“The Democrat Shutdown cost the U.S.A. at least two points in GDP,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “That’s why they are doing it, in mini form, again. No Shutdowns! Also, LOWER INTEREST RATES.”
Trump then mocked Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, writing to his followers that “two late” Powell is “the WORST!!!”
The news is the second-worst thing that Trump heard about his economic agenda just this morning. A couple of hours after the report came out, the Supreme Court knocked down the president’s tariff plan, deciding 6–3 that the Oval Office’s sweeping trade reform was an erroneous overreach that breached Congress’s authority.
Trump learned of the judicial rebuke while attending a White House breakfast with governors. The president had ordered cameras out of the room mere moments before the ruling was made public, though he told those gathered at the assembly that he had a “backup plan” in mind, reported CNN’s Kaitlan Collins.
If Donald Trump’s administration really wants to find evidence of foreign interference in Georgia’s elections, then they need look no further than the president’s old friend Elon Musk and his shady super PAC.
Members of the Georgia State Elections Board voted Wednesday to issue a formal letter of reprimand to Musk’s America PAC over the billionaire technocrat’s illegal scheme to get Trump elected. Georgia, a key battleground state in 2024, was the target of aggressive campaigning by Trump’s team.
In October 2024, the Georgia secretary of state’s office launched an investigation after receiving numerous reports from residents across several counties saying they’d received partially prefilled absentee ballot applications from Musk’s America PAC, according to John Fervier, the State Elections Board’s chairman.
There was evidence to suggest America PAC had violated a state law that prohibits any person or entity, other than an authorized relative, to send an elector an absentee ballot application prefilled with the elector’s required information, according to Janice Johnston, the SEB’s vice chairman.
America PAC had also failed to display in a conspicuous location that this was not an official government publication, was not provided by the government, and was not a ballot, Johnston added.
The board swiftly voted to issue a letter of reprimand to America PAC.
This letter comes weeks after Trump suggested that his Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was spotted lurking around a federal raid at the election office in Fulton County, Georgia, because she was investigating foreign interference in elections.
It should come as no surprise that the only evidence of meddling with people’s votes came from Trump’s own camp—the same thing happened in the 2020 election too.
Fox News doesn’t want a war with Iran and is trying to persuade its most famous viewer, Donald Trump, that it’s a bad idea.
On Fox & Friends Friday morning, host Rachel Campos-Duffy urged Trump to “make a better case” for “potentially going into another war.” Campos-Duffy is the wife of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, and was filling in for Ainsley Earhardt.
“I don’t think the case has been made sufficiently for me,” Campos-Duffy said. “You read The New York Times. There’s a lot of people who also feel that way. If you’re going to get us potentially into a war, you have to explain why it matters to us.”
Campos-Duffy added that she didn’t think that military action would aid protesters within Iran against the ruling clerical regime.
“I just want to mention, you know, I do feel sorry for the protesters. Again, it’s not clear to me that doing this move, potentially going to war is necessarily going to help the protesters,” Campos-Duffy said. “I’d like to think that was true. Explain to me why. Explain to me why I should risk my military-aged boys potentially going into another war in the Middle East. I thought we were done with that.”
Brian Kilmeade looks like he’s going to have a stroke as Rachel Campos Duffy goes way off script on the subject of Trump’s new Middle East war of choice which Fox has been working overtime to sell pic.twitter.com/Z3O8fxc0eP
— a newsman (@a_newsman) February 20, 2026
A Fox host openly questioning Trump’s rationale for military action, let alone one who happens to be the wife of a Cabinet secretary, suggests that there is dissension among MAGA and right-wing media over the prospect of attacking Iran. Trump told reporters Friday morning that he was considering a limited military strike to pressure Iran into a deal, and Reuters reports that the United States is in the advanced stages of planning such an attack, looking into targeting individuals and even regime change.
Will Trump listen to his supporters who have doubts or even outright oppose military action? Right now, the military buildup around Iran is almost unprecedented, and a bombing campaign could start a dangerous and deadly war for all sides.
President Trump said that he had a backup plan after the Supreme Court struck down his tariffs on Friday morning.
“President Trump commented on the Supreme Court ruling striking down his tariffs while inside the White House breakfast with governors this morning, calling it a ‘disgrace,’ I’m told,” CNN’s Kaitlan Collins wrote on X. “He told those gathered that he has a backup plan.”
The Supreme Court ruled 6–3 Friday that Trump could not use a law meant for national emergencies to invoke global, sweeping tariffs.
CNN’s Kristen Holmes reported that Trump became enraged when he learned about the decision, at one point ranting about “these f—king courts.”
“Trump was speaking to a room full of U.S. governors at the White House when he was handed a note from an aide informing him of the Supreme Court decision, a source tells me,” wrote Reuters’s Jarrett Renshaw. “Trump was visibly frustrated and told the crowd that he had to do something about the courts, the source said.”
“There is no exception to the major questions doctrine for emergency statutes. Nor does the fact that tariffs implicate foreign affairs render the doctrine inapplicable. The Framers gave ‘Congress alone’ the power to impose tariffs during peacetime,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote. “And the foreign affairs implications of tariffs do not make it any more likely that Congress would relinquish its tariff power through vague language, or without careful limits.”
There really isn’t any legal “backup plan” to a Supreme Court ruling, as that’s the entire point of the highest court in the land. We can only speculate as to what kind of extrajudicial last-ditch efforts Trump might take here.
This story has been updated.
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Trump to raise global tariff rate to 15% from 10% after Supreme Court ruling
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