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Quick take: I’ll recap the key headlines driving the morning, note what’s happening on the Hill and at the White House, highlight recent court moves, call out a baffling media framing, preserve the exact quoted passages that appeared in the original, and keep the original embed markers in their places.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Good morning. This edition pulls together the biggest items stirring conservative newsrooms and what to expect from the Capitol and White House today. It’s a compact briefing that prioritizes the facts, notable rulings, and a media critique that jumped out yesterday.

Several hot topics dominated the morning roster, including allegations that left-wing activists plotted to influence juries in Trump prosecutions, a major executive privilege decision with downstream effects, and Democrats continuing to block DHS funding. Those stories are paired with commentary and a roundup of trending pieces across conservative outlets.

The House is out this week, leaving the Senate to handle the day’s agenda. On Tuesday the calendar listed closed briefings and hearings, including a closed briefing on Operation Epic Fury and Senate hearings focused on sanctuary cities, birthright citizenship, and boosting domestic agricultural consumption.

Meanwhile, the president returned to Washington with a full slate. Scheduled items included executive time in the morning and two policy meetings in the Oval Office in the afternoon. The president also made public comments about recent strikes on Iran that were characterized as crippling parts of that nation’s military.

The American justice system depends on jurors walking into a courtroom willing to weigh the evidence and follow the law as instructed by the judge. The entire structure weakens if jurors arrive with a preexisting political mission.

On the campaign and party front, GOP members attended a party conference in Miami, and there are signals of continued energy around the SAVE America Act from the conservative movement. On the Democratic side, polling and intra-party debates over strategy and nominees kept those outlets busy.

We’ve had a glaring lack of accountability for Democrat misconduct for far too long. This may finally get us closer to some real action, in addition to exposing more of the truth.

There were several notable court developments Monday. In one immigration case, a federal judge denied a plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and class certification. In another matter, a D.C. Circuit ruling denied an administration motion for an emergency stay pending appeal.

The Small Business Administration announced a policy change: going forward, the agency will not offer loans to non-citizens, leaving SBA lending limited to U.S. citizens. This move drew immediate commentary from both sides of the political aisle about priorities and fairness in federal lending programs.

On the lighter side of the political culture wars, criticism continued over high-profile creators whose films flopped amid perceived ideological messaging. That debate about audience tastes versus creator intent remains active across outlets and social feeds.

There’s a good reason that a new poll found that Democrats had a lower positive number than ICE. Maybe they should be doing a little more soul-searching about that, and showing a little less hypocrisy. But at this point, why would any American vote for any of these people when they don’t give a darn about our own security?

Now to a baffling media moment: a legacy outlet published a short promotional blurb that framed two arrested teens in a way that read as shockingly sympathetic, given the gravity of the alleged conduct. The copy suggested the pair were simply enjoying the city before their lives were “drastically” changed by arrest, language that many readers found tone-deaf given the reported facts.

Two Pennsylvania teenagers crossed into New York City Saturday morning for what could’ve been a normal day enjoying the city during abnormally warm weather. 

But in less than an hour, their lives would drastically change as the pair would be arrested for throwing homemade bombs during an anti-Muslim protest outside of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s home. Here’s what we know so far.

The phrasing implied that arrest alone was what transformed a normal outing into something else, even though the arrest followed alleged use of homemade explosive devices near a public figure’s residence. That framing prompted swift questions about media priorities and sensibilities.

Later, the outlet removed the post, but a screenshot preserved the original wording. That removal only amplified the conversation about accountability in reporting and how narratives are shaped in real time.

Other pieces that trended across conservative media highlighted a range of topics from Second Amendment debates and candidate positioning in Texas to an argument about how the Supreme Court handles emergency matters. Multiple outlets ran opinion pieces linking those themes to broader concerns about transparency and governance.

This is who, and what, Mamdani supports.

Closing notes: a presidential visit is set for Wednesday to a logistics facility in Kentucky, and the court docket continues to produce decisions that will influence policy fights and campaign messaging. The pace remains brisk and the stakes high as the next political chapters roll out.

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