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There are few spectacles in American politics more noxious than watching the federal government descend into paralysis while the permanent political class in Washington continues cashing taxpayer funded paychecks as though nothing has happened.

During government shutdowns, national parks close their gates like abandoned fortresses, airport security officers work without immediate compensation, military families brace for uncertainty, and federal workers stare into the abyss of financial instability. Yet for decades Congress itself remained cocooned inside a gilded citadel of constitutional protection, insulated from the economic agony imposed upon the very citizens whose labor finances the Republic. That outrageous asymmetry finally collided with mounting public rage in the Spring of 2026 when the United States Senate unanimously approved a measure intended to withhold Senators’ pay during future government shutdowns. The resolution was presented to the American people as an act of accountability, shared sacrifice, and moral reciprocity. Whether it ultimately becomes meaningful reform or merely another theatrical flourish in the endless carnival of Washington symbolism remains a far more complicated question.

The measure at the center of this controversy is Senate Resolution 526, introduced by Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana. Kennedy, whose populist rhetoric often combines Southern plainspokenness with prosecutorial severity, argued that members of Congress should not continue receiving uninterrupted compensation while ordinary Americans and federal employees suffer through appropriations stalemates created by political dysfunction. The resolution emerged after repeated shutdown crises, including the sprawling 43 day federal shutdown in late 2025 and the subsequent Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding standoff earlier in 2026. Those confrontations exposed once again the grotesque contradiction embedded within the machinery of government. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers continued reporting to airports without timely pay. Federal contractors faced financial devastation. Agencies froze operations like locomotives stranded on a frozen rail line. Meanwhile senators continued receiving their salaries under constitutional protections established more than two centuries ago.

Kennedy framed the resolution as an instrument of “shared sacrifice,” insisting that lawmakers should “put our money where our mouth is.” In a city addicted to rhetorical pageantry, that phrase resonated with a furious electorate that has grown increasingly contemptuous of congressional privilege. The Senate agreed. The procedural cloture vote to end debate passed by an astonishing 99 to 0 margin. Not a single senator voted against it. Following cloture the resolution passed by voice vote without recorded opposition. In practical terms, every senator who participated supported the measure. There were no recorded “Nay” votes because none were cast.

That unanimity is politically revealing. In modern Washington, where partisan hostility resembles trench warfare conducted through television cameras and social media volleys, a 99 to 0 vote is almost biblical in its rarity. Republicans supported it. Democrats supported it. Institutional conservatives supported it. Progressive populists supported it. Even senators who privately understood the constitutional minefield surrounding congressional compensation chose not to oppose a measure so politically radioactive to resist. Voting against it would have been portrayed as an open defense of congressional entitlement during national dysfunction.

Yet beneath the applause and moral posturing lies a critical reality that much of the public does not fully understand. Senate Resolution 526 is not a law. It is not legislation requiring House passage. It does not go to the President’s desk for signature. It is an internal Senate resolution governing Senate procedures. That distinction matters enormously. The resolution applies only to senators, not members of the House of Representatives. It also does not immediately take effect. In order to comply with constitutional restrictions involving congressional compensation, implementation is delayed until after the November 2026 midterm elections and the beginning of the next Congress.

Even more important is the fact that senators are not permanently losing their pay under the resolution. Their compensation would merely be withheld temporarily during a shutdown and then restored afterward through back pay once appropriations are enacted. In essence, the measure functions more like delayed compensation than true forfeiture. Critics argue this transforms the proposal into a symbolic gesture rather than genuine punishment. Supporters counter that delayed pay still creates pressure and aligns senators more closely with the federal workforce that suffers during shutdowns.

The constitutional architecture surrounding congressional compensation is one of the primary reasons reform efforts have repeatedly collided with legal obstacles for decades. The framers of the Constitution intentionally insulated Congress from financial coercion. Article I, Section 6 declares that senators and representatives “shall receive a Compensation for their Services.” That language was designed to preserve legislative independence from the executive branch and from state governments. The framers feared that political adversaries might weaponize congressional compensation to intimidate lawmakers or manipulate legislative behavior. In the aftermath of the Articles of Confederation, they sought to create a federal legislature immune from economic extortion.

The 27th Amendment complicates matters even further. Ratified in 1992 after originating as part of James Madison’s original Bill of Rights proposals, the amendment prohibits laws varying congressional compensation from taking effect until after an intervening election for the House of Representatives. That is precisely why Kennedy’s resolution postpones implementation until the next Congress. Immediate enforcement would almost certainly trigger constitutional litigation.

These constitutional barriers have forced lawmakers to devise increasingly elaborate workarounds resembling legal labyrinths worthy of Byzantine imperial bureaucracies. Some proposals place salaries into escrow accounts during shutdowns. Others withhold compensation temporarily but restore it later through mandatory back pay. Some apply only prospectively to future Congresses. Others attempt partial deductions rather than outright forfeiture. Each mechanism reflects an effort to navigate the constitutional reef without capsizing upon judicial review.

Kennedy’s resolution is merely the latest chapter in a long saga of congressional pay reform efforts. Numerous lawmakers from both parties have introduced related measures over the years. Representative Bryan Steil of Wisconsin introduced the “Withhold Member Pay During Shutdowns Act,” designated H.R. 5891. Earlier bipartisan proposals included versions championed by Representative Abigail Spanberger of Virginia, Representative Eugene Vindman, and Representative Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania. Senator Rick Scott of Florida repeatedly advanced “No Budget, No Pay” legislation requiring Congress to pass budgets and appropriations before receiving compensation. Some versions sought permanent forfeiture without back pay. Others used escrow systems or delayed compensation mechanisms.

Many of these efforts gained bipartisan rhetorical support but died quietly within committees or procedural choke points. Washington possesses a remarkable talent for converting public outrage into symbolic gestures that evaporate before meaningful implementation. The congressional cemetery is littered with reform proposals that generated thunderous headlines before vanishing into legislative oblivion.

The voting history on these broader measures reveals the complicated politics beneath the surface. Some earlier “No Budget, No Pay” efforts in prior Congresses passed the House with large bipartisan margins, including one notable vote exceeding 285 members in support. Yet Senate resistance, procedural barriers, constitutional concerns, and institutional self preservation repeatedly prevented final enactment. In other instances, measures were blocked through objections during unanimous consent requests. Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts, for example, previously objected to certain proposals advanced by Senator Rick Scott.

Supporters of stronger reforms argue that temporary withholding with guaranteed back pay amounts to little more than performative contrition. They contend that permanent forfeiture during shutdowns would create real incentives for Congress to avoid fiscal brinkmanship. Opponents counter that allowing compensation to be weaponized could undermine legislative independence and create dangerous constitutional precedents. Some constitutional scholars insist that only a formal constitutional amendment could permanently authorize no pay or no back pay policies without serious legal vulnerability.

Senator Lindsey Graham himself acknowledged that a constitutional amendment may represent the most legally durable solution. Yet constitutional amendments in modern America are rarer than eclipses. Achieving two thirds support in both chambers and ratification by three fourths of the states is an almost Herculean political undertaking in an era of relentless polarization.

The broader public frustration driving these reforms is understandable. Government shutdowns have evolved into recurring rituals of political nihilism. They resemble ancient sieges in which rival factions barricade themselves inside fortified camps while ordinary citizens suffer the consequences. Essential workers are transformed into collateral damage within appropriations warfare. Federal agencies stagger through uncertainty like wounded leviathans drifting through storm battered seas. Public confidence in Congress, already languishing near historic lows, deteriorates even further with every fiscal confrontation.

For many Americans the notion that Congress continues receiving uninterrupted salaries during these crises symbolizes everything rotten within the modern federal apparatus. The image is politically toxic because it reinforces perceptions of an insulated ruling class divorced from the hardships imposed upon ordinary citizens. That perception explains why even senators with constitutional reservations overwhelmingly supported Kennedy’s resolution. The political optics of opposing it would have been catastrophic.

Still, Americans should understand clearly what has and has not happened. Congress has not abolished its own pay during shutdowns. The Senate has not enacted binding federal law applicable to the entire legislative branch. There is no imminent statute awaiting presidential signature. The House remains untouched by Kennedy’s resolution. Permanent forfeiture without back pay remains constitutionally dubious absent an amendment. What the Senate approved was a narrowly tailored procedural measure crafted carefully to survive constitutional scrutiny through delayed implementation and eventual reimbursement.

Whether this marks the beginning of serious congressional accountability or merely another ceremonial flourish in Washington’s theater of controlled outrage remains uncertain. The Capitol has always excelled at staging symbolic acts while preserving the underlying architecture of institutional privilege. Ancient Rome perfected bread and circuses. Modern Washington perfects resolutions and headlines.

Yet the fury driving this issue is real. Americans are exhausted by shutdown politics. They are exhausted by performative brinkmanship masquerading as governance. They are exhausted by watching the political aristocracy shield itself from the consequences of its own dysfunction. Senate Resolution 526 represents an acknowledgment, however limited, that public patience has reached a breaking point.

In the end, this battle is not merely about congressional salaries. It is about legitimacy itself. A Republic cannot endure indefinitely when its citizens believe their governing class inhabits a separate moral universe insulated from the burdens imposed upon the nation. The Framers created constitutional protections for congressional compensation to preserve independence from tyranny. They never intended those protections to become armor plating for political irresponsibility.

U.S. Praise the Jury Was Not Allowed to See

Part 1 made the geopolitical argument for Trump’s pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez.

Part 2 examined the case the Biden Department of Justice put on.

Part 3 examined how the prosecutors lied to get the trial in front of a biased judge and an uninformed jury.

Part 4 showed how the prosecutors coached cooperators to lie about ledgers and radar that did not exist.

Part 5 examined the four cooperators — 134 murders between them, 700 tons of cocaine trafficked, whose uncorroborated testimony was the basis for Hernández’s 45-year sentence.

This is Part 6.

The United States government told two different stories about Juan Orlando Hernández.

In the first version, Hernández was one of America’s great anti-drug allies in Latin America.

In the second story, told by the Biden administration’s Department of Justice, Hernández ruled Honduras as a narco-state, accepted bribes from cartels, and used the authority of the Honduran presidency to shield cocaine shipments moving toward the United States.

Both stories originated from the United States government.

One of them is a lie.

The Calendar

For eight years, while Juan Orlando Hernández served as president of Honduras, the praise directed toward him by the United States government came from the agencies responsible for monitoring narcotics trafficking.

Either they were all fooled for nearly a decade, or something stranger happened.

Apparently, everybody in charge either thought he was helping stop trafficking, or the greatest intelligence failure in modern hemispheric history lasted nearly a decade.

In March 2015, General John F. Kelly, then commander of United States Southern Command, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee that drug-trafficking flights into Honduras had fallen from nearly 300 in 2011 to almost none. He described it as a 98 percent reduction and attributed the result to Hernández’s government.

In May 2015, General Kelly told the Honduran newspaper El Heraldo that, within little more than a year of Hernández’s presidency, Honduras had declined from the number one transit country for South American cocaine to the fifth.

In 2017, Vice President Mike Pence met Hernández at the White House and publicly described him as “a good friend & key ally on promoting security, stability, & democracy in Central America.”

In 2017, General Kelly, then serving as Secretary of Homeland Security, publicly referred to Hernández as “a great guy, good friend.”

On June 7, 2018, the official social media account of the Drug Enforcement Administration announced publicly: “DEA met with President Hernandez of Honduras today. Critical to reducing violence and addiction caused by drug trafficking that afflicts both our nations.”

In 2019, Hernández stood beside President Donald Trump at the White House while Trump told reporters, “President Hernandez is working with the United States very closely. Through this partnership we’re stopping drugs at a level that has never happened.”

In 2020, Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf told Hernández: “We are committed to continuing our support as you continue to do more to secure your borders and dismantle gangs and cartels.”

In 2020, Admiral Craig S. Faller, commander of United States Southern Command, stated publicly: “In 2020 already, Honduras has taken more drugs off the streets and has more prosecutions than in 2019 combined.”

In 2021, the State Department’s International Narcotics Control Strategy Report — the INCSR — stated that the Honduran government had seized 14.2 metric tons of cocaine in the first nine months of the year alone.

The figure was four times the total number of seizures reported for 2020.

On January 27, 2022, Hernández left office as president of Honduras.

Three weeks later, the Biden administration’s Department of Justice indicted him in the Southern District of New York.

In April 2022, the newly elected government of Xiomara Castro extradited Hernández to the United States.

Then came the trial.

The Exclusion

Renato Stabile, Hernández’s defense counsel, moved to admit the State Department’s annual certifications recognizing Honduras as a counter-narcotics partner.

The prosecution opposed the request.

Judge P. Kevin Castel granted the government’s motion to exclude the evidence.

The government’s star witnesses were four cooperators.

Together, they admitted involvement in 134 murders and the trafficking of 700 tons of cocaine. Each testified under a cooperation agreement, under which federal prosecutors sought reduced sentences in proportion to the assistance their testimony provided the government.

The jury was presented with the government’s theory that Hernández had governed Honduras as a narco-state.

The jury was not informed that, for eight consecutive years, the United States government’s agencies had publicly documented the opposite conclusion.

Judge Castel prohibited the defense from placing that record before the jury.

The DEA Agent Who Said the Opposite

Judge Castel did more than exclude the documented record showing decreases in drug trafficking during Hernández’s presidency.

The prosecution was also permitted to present testimony from a Drug Enforcement Administration agent, Jennifer Taul, who testified that cocaine trafficking through Honduras increased between 2014 and 2019, covering five years of Hernández’s presidency.

For eight consecutive years during Hernández’s presidency, the State Department’s International Narcotics Control Strategy Report — the INCSR — documented decreases in cocaine trafficking through Honduras.

The same agency that published reports documenting decreases in cocaine trafficking through Honduras sent an agent to testify that trafficking had increased.

Only one version reached the jury.

The Same Prosecutors. The Opposite Expert.

The prosecutors from the Southern District of New York who tried Hernández in 2024 had previously presented a different expert witness in an earlier case.

Dr. Darío Euraque, an expert in Honduran history and political systems, had previously testified in a related federal narcotics case that cocaine trafficking through Honduras had decreased during Hernández’s presidency.

Five years later, the same Southern District of New York office presented Agent Taul to testify that trafficking had increased during those same years.

The Sidebar

During the jury-instruction phase of the trial, defense counsel Stabile informed Judge Castel that DEA Agent Taul’s testimony was false.

Stabile wanted the jury informed that cocaine trafficking through Honduras had decreased during Hernández’s presidency and proposed to introduce the DEA’s International Narcotics Control Strategy Reports.

Castel denied the motion.

The jury deliberated without having access to the DEA’s published record.

The Ruling

After the conviction, Hernández moved for a new trial. He argued that the prosecution had presented false testimony to the jury regarding cocaine trafficking trends during his presidency.

On May 9, 2024, Judge Castel acknowledged that a conflict existed between Agent Taul’s testimony at Hernández’s trial and Dr. Euraque’s testimony in an earlier trial.

Castel nevertheless ruled that even if Taul’s testimony had been false, the contradiction would not have altered the result.

Castel said that even if trafficking did decrease during Hernández’s presidency, that proved Hernández was using anti-trafficking policies as cover for trafficking.

In a trial concerning whether Hernández had protected cocaine trafficking, evidence that he had publicly and measurably opposed trafficking was likely to suggest innocence.

In a trial about whether a president protected cocaine trafficking, evidence that the president spent years fighting cocaine trafficking was considered too favorable to the defense.

Hernández in His Own Words

At sentencing on June 26, 2024, Hernández spoke in front of the judge who had kept it from the jury, the record that had been excluded.

“Three agencies, the DEA, the State Department, and three presidencies — Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Biden — informed the United States Congress during every year of my presidency that the passage of drug was being reduced from 90 percent that was traveling through Honduras and coming to the United States, down to 4 percent. But you were not able to hear that, nor was the jury. So the witness presented by the DEA is saying that the DEA lied and those three presidents and all of them lied?”

Castel told Hernández the courtroom was not a public forum. He was not welcome to make a speech.

Castel Explains

Judge Castel then explained why he had excluded the U.S. government’s record.

“In a political environment in which the public sentiment in Honduras and its allies, including the U.S., was vehemently opposed to drug trafficking,” Castel said, “it was necessary for Hernandez to maintain the public image of being an anti-drug crusader while secretly aiding select drug traffickers.”

The extraditions Hernández authorized, the anti-narcotics laws he enacted, the cooperation extended to American agencies, and the praise he received from United States presidents and senior military officials were, in Judge Castel’s reasoning, not evidence of innocence.

They were evidence of concealment.

If the jury had seen the eight years of certifications, the SOUTHCOM testimony, and the Army War College endorsement, the jury might have asked the inverse question.

Not whether Hernández’s counter-narcotics work was the cover for hidden trafficking —but whether Judge Castel’s framework was the cover for a Biden-era political decision to dispose of a Trump-allied Honduran ex-president. The cover for a diplomatic gift to the leftist Castro government that had just turned Honduras toward Beijing.

Castel sentenced him to 45 years.

The Pardon

When President Donald Trump pardoned Hernández, he characterized the prosecution as a setup orchestrated by the Biden administration.

The prosecution began three weeks after Hernández left office and proceeded with the cooperation of the newly installed government of Xiomara Castro, which had shifted Honduras’s political orientation toward China.

What Happened to Honduras After Hernández

Under Hernández, in the first nine months of 2021 alone, the Honduran government seized 14.2 metric tons of cocaine.

Under Castro, in all of 2023, the Honduran government seized less than half a ton.

The first coca plantations in Honduras were discovered in April 2017, during Hernández’s tenure. They were minor. They were eradicated.

Under Castro, coca cultivation expanded into a national phenomenon. Honduras stopped being a transit point. It became a cocaine producer.

There is a lot of money paid to a lot of people in the world of drug trafficking. Following the money in drug trafficking is hard.

Cocaine trafficking through Honduras went down under Juan Orlando Hernández.

It went up after him.

Maybe that was the point.

At the center stands Tulsi Gabbard.

Tulsi Gabbard is one of the most unusual and controversial figures ever to ascend to the apex of the American intelligence apparatus. A former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii, combat veteran, Lieutenant Colonel, and former presidential candidate who publicly broke with her own party over war, surveillance, and the sprawling national security bureaucracy, Gabbard spent years condemning the intelligence establishment before ultimately becoming Director of National Intelligence (DNI) under President Donald Trump.

Her appointment alone sent seismic tremors through Washington’s permanent ruling class. Yesterday those tremors erupted into a political earthquake after allegations exploded across Capitol Hill and conservative media that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had removed highly sensitive files from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) during an escalating confrontation over the declassification of records involving the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the infamous MKUltra mind control program.

The controversy erupted publicly after reports circulated during Jesse Watters’ broadcast on Fox News on May 13, 2026. Watters stated that CIA personnel had effectively “raided” Gabbard’s office and removed dozens of boxes of classified records reportedly being prepared for public release. According to the claims aired on television and amplified across social media, the records included materials tied to the Kennedy assassination, covert CIA operations, and MKUltra, the notorious Cold War era program in which the agency conducted experiments involving LSD, hypnosis, psychological conditioning, and other forms of behavioral manipulation.

The story detonated instantly because of its staggering implications. Tulsi Gabbard is not merely another cabinet official. As Director of National Intelligence she oversees the broader Intelligence Community, including coordination among the CIA, The National Security Agency (NSA), The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA),and numerous other agencies. For the public to hear allegations that the CIA had entered the orbit of the DNI and removed records under dispute created the appearance of an internal war inside America’s intelligence hierarchy itself.

The controversy intensified further due to testimony reportedly connected to CIA whistleblower James Erdman, who allegedly informed Senate investigators that approximately forty boxes of documents had been seized from ODNI custody while undergoing declassification review. According to accounts circulating among congressional investigators and conservative journalists, those files were being processed for release pursuant to President Trump’s renewed push for maximum transparency regarding historical intelligence abuses. The implication was unmistakable. Critics of the CIA immediately suspected that elements within the agency were attempting to prevent disclosure of material that could humiliate current and former officials or expose decades of deception surrounding politically radioactive subjects.

Representative Anna Paulina Luna of Florida became one of the most aggressive public voices on the matter. Luna has emerged as a leading advocate for declassification efforts involving JFK, RFK, MLK, intelligence abuses, and covert operations. She publicly stated that she had been informed that documents under ODNI jurisdiction had been taken by the CIA and warned that if the records were not returned Congress could pursue subpoenas. Her remarks dramatically escalated the story because they granted congressional credibility to what otherwise might have been dismissed as internet rumor or political theater.

However, the details became murkier as the day progressed. Gabbard’s office categorically denied that the CIA had “raided” the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. DNI press secretary Olivia Coleman issued a public statement declaring that the reports were false. Luna herself later clarified that the event did not occur literally on May 13, 2026 and that the word “raid” may have been imprecise. Intelligence officials speaking anonymously to media outlets likewise insisted there had been no forcible seizure or dramatic confrontation. Yet notably, the clarifications stopped short of fully denying that disputed documents had been removed from ODNI control at some earlier point.

That distinction is critically important because the core issue is not whether armed CIA officers stormed Tulsi Gabbard’s office like a scene from a political thriller. The underlying issue is the alleged struggle over who controls historically explosive intelligence records and whether factions inside the national security bureaucracy are resisting Trump administration declassification efforts.

To understand why this matters, one must understand the central role the CIA plays in both controversies. The Kennedy assassination remains perhaps the most scrutinized intelligence related event in American history. Despite decades of investigations, public skepticism persists because thousands of records remained classified or partially redacted for generations. Many researchers believe elements of the intelligence community concealed information about Lee Harvey Oswald’s contacts, CIA surveillance activities, anti Castro operations, and intelligence failures before the assassination. Even when documents have been released, heavy redactions and missing files have fueled suspicion rather than trust.

MKUltra is equally incendiary. Beginning in the 1950s, the CIA conducted secret experiments exploring methods of mind control, interrogation resistance, chemical manipulation, and psychological conditioning. Subjects were sometimes dosed with LSD or subjected to experiments without informed consent. Congressional investigations in the 1970s exposed aspects of the program, but many records had already been destroyed on orders from CIA leadership. The surviving revelations permanently stained the agency’s reputation and transformed MKUltra into shorthand for unchecked clandestine power operating in the shadows of government.

Tulsi Gabbard’s role in this unfolding drama is particularly significant because she has long positioned herself as hostile to regime change operations, secret wars, and intelligence excesses. Throughout her political career she repeatedly accused elements of the national security establishment of misleading the American people and perpetuating endless foreign conflicts. Her appointment by President Trump was therefore viewed by many intelligence veterans as akin to placing an institutional skeptic atop the intelligence pyramid itself.

This broader context explains why conservatives and anti establishment figures interpreted yesterday’s reports as evidence of Deep State resistance. To them, the dispute symbolizes a larger battle between elected officials seeking transparency and entrenched intelligence bureaucracies determined to protect institutional secrets. The allegations also dovetail with broader claims made this year by whistleblowers involving CIA obstruction concerning investigations into the origins of the coronavirus, surveillance of congressional investigators, and internal classification disputes.

At present, many aspects of the story remain contested and unresolved. No publicly released evidence confirms a dramatic physical raid in the literal sense. Yet multiple figures connected to congressional oversight and whistleblower channels continue asserting that disputed records involving JFK and MKUltra were removed from ODNI custody during a sensitive declassification process. The distinction between “raid” and “custodial dispute” may ultimately prove more semantic than substantive depending on what facts emerge in the coming days.

What happens next could become enormously consequential. Congress may issue subpoenas. Additional whistleblowers could emerge. Tulsi Gabbard herself may eventually speak publicly in greater detail. CIA Director John Ratcliffe may be forced to clarify the agency’s actions. Most importantly, the controversy has once again focused national attention on the enduring secrecy surrounding America’s intelligence agencies and the historical episodes that continue to haunt them decades later.

The American people are witnessing a spectacle that resembles less a bureaucratic disagreement than an invisible civil war inside the architecture of the national security state. At the center stands Tulsi Gabbard, the former Democratic insurgent turned Trump intelligence chief, now seemingly locked in a confrontation with the very institutions she spent years condemning from the outside.

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Politics, History, News & Style — Roger Stone’s Unfiltered Perspective Roger Stone outlines a series of aggressive policy shifts and diplomatic maneuvers characteristic of a second Trump administration in May

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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.
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