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Quick snapshot: a sharp take on the Schumer shutdown and the political theater from both sides, updates from the Hill and the White House, cabinet moves and court fights, and why Democrats’ attempts to feign toughness keep looking stagey and hollow.

Monday, October 27, 2025

Good morning. This is the Morning Minute — a fast tour of what’s heating up and what to expect today, from the shutdown showdown to presidential travel and courtroom maneuvers. The aim is to get you into the loop without the fluff so you can see who’s governing and who’s posturing.

When Torrance city leaders rejected the County’s $30 million Extended Stay proposal, critics accused them of being anti-homeless. In reality, they were anti-corruption, protecting taxpayers from another multimillion-dollar transfer of public wealth to private hands.

There’s a pile of stories bubbling across conservative outlets, and the common thread is accountability. Whether it’s questioning media interviews or calling out political theater, the tone here is blunt: stop the cover-ups and start fixing real problems. That angle frames much of what’s trending this morning.

I’m here for running Jean-Pierre around in circles and making her stammer like a goat. She was one of the worst offenders of the cover-up and deserves to be held accountable.

The Schumer Shutdown has entered Day 27 and it’s revealing priorities. Republicans on Capitol Hill are pointing out that Democrats chose a shutdown rather than negotiate a clean continuing resolution, and they’re driving home consequences for that choice. Leadership on the GOP side, including Senate and House figures, is holding firm against last-minute concessions that fund the same status quo.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) and House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) appear to be standing firm, though, maintaining a posture of negotiation from strength rather than capitulation. That posture matters because voters expect leaders to protect budgets and border security without surrendering conservative principles.

President Donald Trump is wrapping an Asia trip that included Malaysia and now moves on to Japan, where he’ll meet the Emperor. The administration is pitching the travel as a wins-focused swing that combines diplomacy and economic deals. The optics are important: projecting strength abroad while pushing a domestic agenda at home.

In the cabinet, Secretary of Health & Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. publicly thanked Under Secretary Anthony Tata for intervening to reinstate a service member who had been court-martialed over COVID shot rules. That move spotlights how personnel and politics collide in real-world consequences for servicemembers and families. It’s the kind of practical intervention conservatives advertise when they talk about standing up for individual rights and discipline in the ranks.

The courts were quieter over the weekend but expect activity on National Guard deployment and related challenges. The 9th Circuit issued an administrative stay while considering whether to rehear its earlier ruling en banc, which could complicate the administration’s posture in some regions. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court’s decisions on stay applications will be watched closely for precedent and immediate impact.

  • ↔️ State of Oregon v. Trump (National Guard deployment) — 9th Circuit Court of Appeals issued administrative (temporary) stay on its 10/20 stay pending appeal to resolve en banc proceedings.

On Tuesday, the president will meet with Japan’s new prime minister and visit troops aboard the U.S.S. George Washington, then host business leaders in Tokyo that evening. Those meetings blend diplomacy, defense, and commerce — the classic trifecta Republicans argue should define national power. And domestically, Hurricane Melissa threatens Jamaica, a reminder that foreign policy still intersects with humanitarian concerns.

The politics of performance keeps coming up. Democrats keep attempting to reclaim working-class and male voters with contrived gestures and staged photos, and it keeps failing. Voters see the difference between authentic leadership and manufactured messaging, and authenticity wins.

I’m not sure what explains the reluctance to talk about Wolford, but I suspect the main reason for keeping their collective mouths shut about Hemani is that the left is generally more supportive of legalizing marijuana than the right, and the gun control lobby is far more popular in liberal circles than conservative ones.

They’ve trotted out high-profile figures with props and tough lines, but it reads like theater: a bat here, a war-cry there, and still no coherent policy to back it up. The recommendation? Stop auditioning and start solving problems. That’s a message Republicans will keep pushing as the calendar ticks toward the next big vote.

There’s lighter stuff sprinkled in the coverage too. Some moments are just meant to amuse or deflate the overdramatized coverage, and readers get a mix of serious and silly like every morning news cycle should offer. Keep an eye on the embeds for video and audio updates that pair with the day’s headlines.

Finally, a direct note on the shutdown: the editorial line here is clear — the Democrats chose this shutdown and the public will see who prioritized politics over people. The debate now is over who will blink first and whether conservative leadership can translate pressure into meaningful policy outcomes without surrendering key priorities.

Editor’s Note: The Schumer Shutdown is here. Rather than put the American people first, Chuck Schumer and the radical Democrats forced a government shutdown for healthcare for illegals. They own this.

It’s like I’m ….

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