Too Much Ambiguity
I spend about three hours a day trying to keep track of political and governmental news.
Click Here to ContinuePresident Trump, Iran, and the Hinge of History
For the sake of America’s (and the world’s) safety, every element of American power must be brought to bear immediately to win the Battle of the Persian Gulf.
Click Here to ContinueThe Four Building Blocks of the 2026 Republican Victory
This is a formula for a huge Republican victory — if we can get gasoline under control and work on affordability so we are seen as the party trying to improve the lives of Americans.
Click Here to ContinueNewt talks with New York Post reporter, Miranda Devine, about the latest in the Hunter Biden laptop story after Twitter released documents exposing their cover up this week.
Click Here to ContinueNow is a good time for Americans to think about the hard lessons of neglecting history and ignoring reality.
Click Here to ContinueNewt provides his point of view on what we can learn from the 2022 midterm election results and what it will take for Republicans to win in 2024.
Click Here to ContinueSteve Kornacki interviews Newt on the origin story of the 1994 Republican “revolution,” the midterm election when the GOP took the House majority for the first time in four decades.
Click Here to ContinueAfter the disappointing, for some of us shocking, 2022 election results, there must be a Republican effort to rethink what happened.
Click Here to ContinueNewt talks with Joe Gaylord, a senior political advisor, about the midterm elections results.
Click Here to ContinueNewt talks with Dr. Weifeng Zhong from the Mercatus Center about China’s COVID lockdowns, Biden’s meeting with Xi Jinping, and what we can expect next.
Click Here to ContinueAmerica’s future will be significantly better if we have Herschel Walker’s courage, candor and directness in the Senate for the next six years.
Click Here to ContinueBiden and the Democrats make every decision based on how it impacts America and always choose what hurts most.
Click Here to ContinueIf Republicans are going to successfully work through the next two years in Congress – and win the presidency in 2024 – we need to look much more deeply at what worked and what did not work in 2020 and 2022.
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