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On March 31, 2026, President Donald J. Trump signed Executive Order 14399, titled “Ensuring Citizenship Verification and Integrity in Federal Elections,” which seeks to combat potential voter fraud by improving citizenship verification and mail-in ballot procedures.

The executive order is a significant, proactive step aimed at addressing long-standing concerns about the security and integrity of mail-in voting. The landmark directive requires federal agencies to create verified citizenship lists, limits the U.S. Postal Service to delivering mail ballots only to state-approved voters, and mandates secure, trackable ballot envelopes with Intelligent Mail barcodes.

Many agree these measures will safeguard our elections and help ensure only eligible citizens participate, particularly in the lead-up to the 2026 midterm elections.

However, two Republican officials with direct experience overseeing elections have expressed strong skepticism, predicting that the order faces successful legal challenges and is likely to be blocked by federal courts.

On April 5, 2026, Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt and former Maricopa County, Arizona Recorder Stephen Richer—two Republican officials with extensive experience overseeing elections—appeared on ABC’s “This Week” and expressed strong skepticism about President Trump’s executive order. Both voiced concerns that the order oversteps federal authority and risks creating unnecessary confusion ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

Schmidt, Pennsylvania’s Secretary of the Commonwealth and the state’s top Republican election official, emphasized the need for stable rules that voters can rely on. “We want voters to know that the election is going to be free, fair, safe and secure, and that everyone knows what the rules are beforehand,” he said.

“So confusion is never a positive thing unless you are seeking to sow distrust in the outcome of an election.” He added that he is “confident of an outcome in our favor” regarding Pennsylvania’s legal challenge.

Richer, who managed elections in Arizona’s largest county from 2021 to 2025, noted that while he shares some of the order’s goals—such as stronger verification and tracking—Arizona already has proof-of-citizenship requirements and ballot-tracking systems in place.

“While I agree with some of the elements in the executive order and some of the aspirations, the form does matter,” Richer said. He predicted the order would be quickly blocked by courts and argued that the federal approach risks undermining public trust rather than strengthening it.

The White House has strongly defended the order as an essential step to restore public confidence in elections.

Officials argue the President has clear authority under immigration and security laws to strengthen voter verification, pointing to narrower past actions on voter ID and citizenship checks. They emphasize that the measure addresses growing concerns from the 2020 and 2024 elections, including the risk that illegal immigrants may have cast ballots in federal races.

Legal opposition has mounted quickly. Multiple lawsuits have already been filed, including one by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, and another by 23 states, including Arizona and Pennsylvania, arguing that the order violates the Elections Clause of the U.S. Constitution by infringing on states’ authority over the “times, places, and manner” of federal elections.

Legal experts widely agree that while Congress has authority under the Constitution to regulate certain aspects of federal elections, a president’s executive order cannot unilaterally override existing state election laws.

Democrats have criticized the order as an unlawful attempt to restrict voter access, with Jeffries calling it “unlawful and unconstitutional” and vowing continued litigation to protect free and fair elections.

Some states led by Republicans are hesitant because putting the order into effect would be complicated and expensive, and it would conflict with the election rules they already have in place.

Across the country, many Americans have welcomed the executive order as a strong and timely action to secure our elections and restore faith in the voting process. Arizona already implements proof-of-citizenship requirements and ballot tracking systems successfully, even as most voters continue to vote by mail.

While a handful of veteran Republican election officials like Al Schmidt and Stephen Richer have raised concerns, the executive order’s unwavering commitment to election integrity has resonated deeply with Americans who demand and deserve fair, safe, and trustworthy elections.

These impending court fights will deliver a defining verdict on how far executive power can reach into state-run elections, and the outcome could fundamentally rewrite the rules of voting reform in the United States for decades.

A widely admired war hero known to millions simply as “Ike,” Dwight D. Eisenhower, the 34th president (1953–1961), entered the White House in 1953 promising to end one war and prevent others. He more than kept that promise, delivering on it with calm persistence and earning the sincere appreciation of a nation weary of conflict.

He ended the Korean War, gave America eight years of peace and booming prosperity, guided the nation safely through the Cold War, and closed his presidency with a powerful farewell warning against the dangers of the military-industrial complex.

Many historians now rank him among the most effective leaders in U.S. history—precisely because his steady hand helped create what millions of Americans still remember fondly as the golden years of peace, opportunity, and national confidence.

Born in 1890 in Denison, Texas, and raised in Abilene, Kansas, Dwight D. Eisenhower began his career as an American soldier and one of the greatest military leaders of his generation. His command of Allied forces during World War II made him a beloved national hero.

In 1952, both parties courted him, and he chose the Republicans, defeated Adlai Stevenson in a landslide, he won re-election in 1956 by an even larger margin. He governed as a pragmatic moderate who valued balance, fiscal responsibility, and restraint.

His military experience gave him rare wisdom. Unlike most politicians, he understood the true cost of war, not just in lives lost and treasure spent, but in the toll it took on America’s national character.

When Eisenhower took office in January 1953, America was locked in a brutal, seemingly endless war in Korea, with over 50,000 American deaths already recorded.

Campaigning on a pledge “to go to Korea,” he visited the front lines weeks before his inauguration. He quickly negotiated an armistice, signed on July 27, 1953, which halted the fighting and created a demilitarized zone that still exists today.

The fighting stopped. For the remainder of his presidency, the United States avoided major new combat involvement—an extraordinary achievement at the height of the Cold War.

Eisenhower had quietly faced the risk of escalation, including private consideration of nuclear options, yet chose firm de-escalation. This became the first step in what he called his “crusade for peace.”

The 1950s brought remarkable prosperity under his leadership. The American economy expanded robustly, with strong GDP growth, low inflation (often below 2 percent), and low unemployment. Mild recessions occurred, but overall price stability and opportunity allowed the middle class to grow dramatically, supported the baby boom, and reshaped suburban America.

Eisenhower’s signature domestic achievement was the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, which launched the Interstate Highway System—the largest public-works project in American history. It transformed commerce, defense mobility, and daily life, created hundreds of thousands of jobs, and fueled explosive suburban growth.

He also strengthened Social Security, created NASA in response to Sputnik, launched the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, and advanced civil rights by desegregating the District of Columbia and federal workforce, enforcing Brown v. Board with troops in Little Rock, and signing the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1960—the first such laws in nearly a century.

He balanced the federal budget three times and kept deficits in check, viewing a strong economy as a vital national-security asset. In foreign policy, his “New Look” strategy emphasized nuclear deterrence, strong alliances like NATO, and “more bang for the buck,” helping deter major conflict while skillfully managing crises in Suez, the Taiwan Strait, and Berlin without escalation. No new wars broke out.

On January 17, 1961, just days before leaving office, Eisenhower delivered one of the most memorable farewell addresses in American history. From the Oval Office, the old soldier warned the nation against the growing influence of the military-industrial complex: “In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.”

It was a remarkably honest warning from a man who had spent his life in uniform and understood both the necessity and the risks of a large permanent arms industry.

Outwardly calm and stoic, Eisenhower often appeared as a grandfatherly figure. In truth, as political scientist Fred I. Greenstein demonstrated in his groundbreaking study The Hidden-Hand Presidency, he was a far more sophisticated and effective leader than his contemporaries realized.

Drawing on declassified diaries and memoranda, Greenstein showed how Eisenhower consciously practiced a “hidden-hand” style: working diligently behind the scenes, delegating credit to others, using language strategically to build consensus or obscure his own role, and applying his exceptional organizational skill and emotional intelligence to achieve results with minimal public friction. “Gently in manner, strong in deed” could have served as his unspoken motto.

This approach not only allowed him to navigate the treacherous politics of the 1950s with remarkable success but also explains why his steady hand produced eight years of peace and prosperity that felt almost effortless to the American people.

Time has revealed Eisenhower’s genuine greatness. Scholars increasingly place him in the top tier of American presidents for his crisis management, economic stewardship, and moral restraint.

He ended a war, built the Interstate Highway System, balanced the budget, kept the country strong and morally grounded, and—speaking with the quiet authority of a soldier-statesman—warned America to guard against the very military-industrial forces he had helped create. That is precisely why Dwight D. Eisenhower may be the most underrated president in modern American history.

A five-star general who had personally witnessed war, he gave America eight years of peace with no new major conflicts, a growing economy that expanded the middle class, a sense of stability and national confidence the country had not known in decades. With the calm wisdom and hard-earned authority of a soldier-statesman, he also left a timeless warning to guard our democracy against the dangers of the military-industrial complex. In the end, he delivered exactly what Americans needed most—peace, prosperity, and the foresight to help protect it for future generations.

The men and women of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are not villains. They are federal law enforcement officers executing the laws of the United States as written by Congress and upheld by the courts. They are fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers, sons, daughters, veterans, and public servants who place themselves in harm’s way to protect American sovereignty. Yet for nearly two decades they have been the subject of a sustained rhetorical assault that has distorted their mission, endangered their lives, and undermined respect for the rule of law itself.

To understand how we arrived at this perilous moment, one must return to 2008 and the words of Barack Obama during his campaign for the presidency. In a speech addressing immigration, candidate Barack Hussein Obama described a system in which families were, in his words, “terrorized by ICE.” That phrase, inserted into a broader appeal for comprehensive immigration reform was not a throwaway line. It was vivid, emotionally charged language that cast federal agents not as law enforcers but as perpetrators of fear. Though Obama also spoke of border security, employer accountability, and the need for lawful immigration pathways, the rhetorical damage was done. The imagery of “terror” became embedded in the political bloodstream.

Words matter. When a politician, especially a potential future president, characterizes lawful enforcement as terror it legitimizes hostility toward those enforcing the law. It reframes the officer as the aggressor and the violator as the victim. That inaccurate framing did not remain confined to that sole campaign speech. It metastasized over time, amplified by activists, echoed by media figures, and ultimately adopted by a growing faction within the Democratic Party.

Obama’s defenders often point out that his administration deported more than three million individuals, earning him the moniker “Deporter in Chief.” That is true. But policy and rhetoric can diverge, and in this case they did. Even as removals increased the administration shifted priorities away from broad interior enforcement and toward narrower categories. More importantly, the language surrounding enforcement softened into something approaching apology. Raids were described as disruptive to families. Enforcement became something dainty and managed delicately rather than executed decisively. The moral clarity of law enforcement began to erode.

This rhetorical pattern extended beyond immigration. When a police officer in Cambridge, Massachusetts arrested a Harvard professor, Obama famously remarked that “the police acted stupidly.” That statement, made before all facts were known, sent a message heard loud and clear across the nation: the Commander in Chief was willing to publicly second guess law enforcement. In another widely cited moment, Obama said that if he had a son, “he’d look like Trayvon,” aligning himself emotionally and physically with a narrative that many interpreted as prejudging law enforcement actions in the case of Trayvon Martin. Again, the cumulative effect was unmistakable. The presumption of good faith on the part of police officers was steadily replaced with suspicion.

Fast forward to the years following Obama’s presidency and the rhetoric escalates further. Prominent Democrats began openly calling for the abolition of ICE. Figures such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Elizabeth Warren lent legitimacy to slogans that portrayed ICE as inherently violent, dangerous, abusive and illegitimate. Others went further, comparing agents to historical villains and labeling their work as “state violence.” This was no longer nuanced policy debate. It was vilification.

The consequences of such language are not theoretical. They are measurable and real. In recent years, federal data has shown dramatic increases in assaults, threats, and targeted attacks against ICE officers. Agents have been doxxed. Their families have been harassed. Their homes have been targeted. When you tell the public that a group of law enforcement officers are akin to secret police or oppressors, you should not be surprised when unhinged individuals take that rhetoric literally.

The summer of 2020 provided a chilling demonstration of what happens when anti law enforcement rhetoric reaches a fever pitch. Following the death of George Floyd, protests erupted across the country. Many were peaceful. But many were not. Cities burned. Federal buildings were attacked. Police officers were injured, assaulted, and in some cases killed. The banner of Black Lives Matter became, in certain quarters, a cover for lawlessness. The chant to defund the police gained traction among elected officials. The line between protest and riot blurred, and respect for law enforcement collapsed in ways not seen in generations.

ICE agents, already demonized, found themselves particularly vulnerable. Unlike local police, they often operate in anonymity due to the sensitive nature of their work. Yet that anonymity was stripped away by activists determined to expose and intimidate them. In response, agents began wearing masks not for public health, but for personal safety. Think about that. Federal officers in the United States of America concealing their identities to protect themselves and their families from politically motivated harassment and physical or, God forbid, deadly harm. That is the environment created by years of reckless rhetoric.

It is essential to state plainly what should never have been in doubt. ICE agents are not the enemy. They are enforcing laws passed by elected representatives. If those laws are to be changed the proper avenue is Congress, not intimidation. To delegitimize the enforcement of law is to delegitimize the law itself. And when the law is delegitimized, society begins to unravel.

Barack Hussein Obama’s 2008 remark about families being “terrorized by ICE” may have been intended as a critique of policy but its legacy has been far more corrosive. It helped seed a narrative that transformed law enforcement into a moral adversary. That narrative has since been weaponized by activists and politicians alike, with dangerous and predictable results.

A nation cannot function if its laws are optional and its law enforcement officers are targets. The men and women of ICE deserve not condemnation, but gratitude. They stand on the front lines of a difficult and often thankless mission. They deserve the full support of the American people, not the slanders of those who seek political advantage by tearing them down.

Law and order is not a slogan. It is the foundation of civilization. Undermine it, and everything else begins to crumble. In fact, it’s already crumbled in some ways.

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ROGER STONE MEDIA

WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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