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- ⏰🚨 Trump’s Big Bill Hits a Major Snag
⏰🚨 Trump’s Big Bill Hits a Major Snag
She wasn’t elected—but she’s standing in the way of 53 GOP senators and the White House.

June 27th, 2025
Good morning, patriots! HUGE win for life: The Supreme Court just sided with South Carolina in its effort to cut Planned Parenthood funding. States can choose to stop sending taxpayer dollars to abortion providers.
Hot Headlines
📈 Global Trade Surged 11% in May
🗳️ Trump Hits 48% Hispanic Support
🏭 GE Moves $490M Production to Kentucky
💰 Tariff Revenue Hits $27B Record High
Unelected Bureaucrat Blocks Trump's Big Bill

What Happened: The White House hosted a high-profile event Thursday to rally support for President Trump’s landmark legislation — a sweeping bill covering taxes, border security, energy policy, and defense funding. After a narrow House passage, the Senate is now racing to meet a self-imposed July 4 deadline. But Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough has become a major roadblock. Her rulings have stripped out provisions key to Trump’s America First agenda, including banning Medicaid funds for illegal immigrants and blocking sanctuary city funding.
Why It Matters: MacDonough was appointed by Democrats and never elected by voters. Yet her opinions are threatening to stall the will of the president, the vice president, and a majority of the Senate. Some Republicans are pushing back: Sen. Tuberville wants her fired, and Rep. Steube says VP JD Vance should overrule her entirely. Still, leaders like Sen. Thune are trying to revise the bill to pass under reconciliation rules without needing 60 votes. With only three GOP defections to spare, the margin for error is razor thin.
What’s Next: Senate Republicans must decide: compromise with the unelected parliamentarian or override her to deliver on Trump’s second-term priorities. Either way, time is running out — and all eyes are on the upper chamber.
Should Vice President JD Vance overrule the Senate parliamentarian to advance Trump’s agenda? |
TRIVIA OF THE DAY

Which U.S. President was also Chief Justice of the Supreme Court? 🤔 |
SCOTUS to Rule on Birthright Battle

What Happened: The Supreme Court will release its final opinions of the term Today, including a landmark case on President Trump’s executive order to end birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrants. The justices won’t rule on the order’s lawfulness just yet — instead, they’ll decide whether lower federal courts can block the policy nationwide while litigation continues. That ruling could radically limit the power of activist judges who’ve long used nationwide injunctions to stall conservative policies.
Other major rulings expected Friday include:
Parents' right to opt kids out of LGBTQ lessons
Louisiana redistricting and second Black-majority district
Texas age restrictions for adult websites
Challenge to Obamacare's preventive care task force
FCC program subsidizing rural internet access
Why It Matters: With President Trump’s constitutional originalist justices now shaping the Court, this term has been a turning point. Friday’s rulings could curb federal judicial overreach, affirm parental rights, and uphold common-sense protections for children and families. These decisions reflect a broader realignment toward the rule of law — not woke ideology.
What’s Next: We’ll break down each ruling in Monday’s edition of Rightly Informed. For now, thank President Trump for putting constitutionalist warriors on the bench. Without them, these fights wouldn’t even be possible.
📩 Don’t miss Monday’s deep dive — it’s going to be big.
QUICK HITS
🗽 Ackman Vows Millions to Defeat Socialist
💸 Billionaire investor Bill Ackman pledged to bankroll any New York City mayoral candidate who can defeat socialist assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, calling Mamdani's views "anti-growth" and "anti-American." Ackman’s move signals growing frustration among business leaders with far-left policies in urban areas. If the donor class starts uniting against socialist candidates, it could reshape big-city politics in 2025 and beyond.🏛️ DOJ Sues Minnesota Over Tuition for Illegals
The DOJ sued Minnesota over a law that gives in-state tuition to illegal immigrants while denying it to some U.S. citizens. The Justice Department argues the policy violates the Equal Protection Clause by discriminating against out-of-state American students. The case could set a major precedent on how far states can go in favoring non-citizens over citizens in education benefits.🧊 ICE Nabs Dozens of Illegal Murder Suspects
Newly released ICE data reveals that agents have successfully arrested or detained 6% of all known illegal immigrant murder suspects—despite limited resources and constant political pressure. The arrests show ICE is actively working to get violent offenders off the streets. Supporters argue this is proof the agency plays a vital role in protecting American communities and needs more tools—not fewer—to do its job.🗳️ Wisconsin Court Blocks Dems’ Map Push
The liberal-controlled Wisconsin Supreme Court refused to hear two Democratic-backed challenges to its congressional district maps ahead of the 2026 midterms, dealing a major setback to Democrats seeking fairer representation. Despite redrawing state legislative maps earlier, the court left the heavily GOP-favored congressional boundaries intact, keeping six Republican-held seats and frustrating efforts to flip competitive districts in western and southeastern Wisconsin. With no new review, Democrats’ hopes to regain House ground this cycle are dimmed—unless they can force action through federal courts or other states.🎖️ Hegseth Blasts Identity Politics at Briefing
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth shut down a reporter who asked why he didn’t single out a female pilot involved in a recent U.S. airstrike, saying, “We don’t play your little games.” Hegseth emphasized he’s proud of all American pilots and slammed the media’s focus on identity over mission. His takedown reflects growing frustration with politicized press narratives.