FiveStack with Dean Blundell & Zev Shalev

FiveStack: Trump is Cornered at 31% Approval; Senate Kills The Billionaire Ballroom; House Prepares for War Resolution Vote

58 min · 21 mei 2026
aflevering FiveStack: Trump is Cornered at 31% Approval; Senate Kills The Billionaire Ballroom; House Prepares for War Resolution Vote artwork

Beschrijving

A pollster tied to Fox put Donald Trump’s approval at 31 percent today. Twenty-five is the number that ended Nixon. A president at 31 and sliding can no longer make his own party afraid of him — and on Thursday, his own party stopped pretending to be. The Senate killed the billion dollars he wanted for his ballroom. The House moved to take away his power to wage war. Two dozen Republicans lined up to kill the fund he built to pay the people who stormed the Capitol. Five stories, one engine: a cornered president, and the arithmetic that cornered him. 5️⃣ The Ballroom Dies on a Technicality Trump wanted a billion dollars of public money for the ballroom going up on the White House lawn. He buried it inside a spending bill and called it Secret Service security. He did not get it. He lost it on a technicality, which is the only way anything stops this White House anymore. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse walked through the kill: the White House is a public building under the Environment and Public Works Committee, and it sits on national park land under Energy and Natural Resources. Republicans wrote their reconciliation bill without instructions to either committee. Whitehouse and Martin Heinrich sent their lawyers to argue the funding was therefore defective. The parliamentarian agreed in a day. Bye-bye, billionaire ballroom. What’s left is the question of why a president needs a billion-dollar fortress at all. Trump talks about drone ports and snipers and keeping the world safe. The likelier read is the one Dean gave it: this is a bunker, and a man builds a bunker when he does not plan to leave. The same afternoon, a commission of his own appointees approved his triumphal arch by the Arlington Memorial Bridge. The fortress and the monument, waved through on the same day. Trump noticed only the second one — “I finally get good news,” he said. 4️⃣ The Democrats Disown Their Own Autopsy For months the Democratic National Committee sat on its own report into why Kamala Harris lost. On Thursday, Chair Ken Martin released it — and stapled a note to the front saying the party “cannot independently verify the claims presented.” He published the autopsy and disowned the coroner in the same motion. Martin did not release it because he wanted the answers. He released it because hiding it had become the bigger story. So the report — which faults the Biden White House for never preparing Harris and says she “wrote off rural America” — hit every front page with the party’s own fingerprints smudged across it. The Democrats had a reckoning to write and a plan to write. They published a draft they refused to sign. This is the only story today that did not break against Trump by breaking toward someone. On a Thursday when every lever of his power jammed, the party built to replace him spent the morning arguing with its own paperwork. A 31 percent president is beatable. He still has to be beaten by somebody. 3️⃣ Good Night, Colbert Stephen Colbert taped the final Late Show on Thursday night, 11 years after he inherited the desk and a decade as the most-watched host in late night. CBS calls the cancellation “purely financial.” Colbert calls it what it followed: Paramount’s $16 million settlement with Trump over a 60 Minutes edit — a payment Colbert named a “big fat bribe,” made while the company needed federal sign-off on an $8 billion merger. This is media capture in its most comfortable form — not a censor, a spreadsheet. The company settles, the merger clears, the loudest nightly critic of the president goes dark, and nobody has to say the word. Bari Weiss now runs the newsroom. The ratings are gone. A historic network is dying a quiet, self-inflicted death. The miscalculation is that it works. Late night is where the men at the Yankees game get their politics — the ones who do not read the Post and would never call themselves political. Kill Colbert, and every host still standing inherits a reason to swing harder and a martyr to swing for. Jon Stewart, on Colbert’s couch this week, named the future better than any pollster: a day when the country “repudiates this putrid administration,” he said, and the joyful noise from its bowels makes Hungary’s break from Orbán “look like an Amish Sabbath.” 2️⃣ One Vote From the End of the Iran War Last week the House split 212 to 212 on whether to pull the United States out of Trump’s war with Iran. A tie fails, and the war went on. On Thursday the arithmetic moved: Jared Golden, the lone Democratic holdout, said he would vote yes, and the House headed back to the floor. The final count is unconfirmed as this posts — but the count was never the real story. Watch what actually turned those votes. Not conscience — Dean called it the butterfly effect, and the plainer word is self-preservation. Trump spent sixteen months primarying the Republicans who crossed him: Thomas Massie for wanting the Epstein files, Bill Cassidy for voting against him nine percent of the time. The survivors looked at a 31 percent president and did the math. A vote to claw back war powers is no longer a vote against a strongman. It is a vote with the wind. It comes the same day Tehran hardened. Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, ordered that the country’s near-weapons-grade uranium stay inside Iran — the exact concession Trump promised Israel a peace deal would deliver. So Trump now sits between a Congress moving to forbid him from fighting the war and an enemy refusing to give him a reason to stop. He owns the Strait of Hormuz, he says. What he owns is a war he cannot win and cannot end — and gas prices that will carry it into November. 1️⃣ The Slush Fund — and the Quiet Half Harry Dunn and Daniel Hodges held the Capitol on January 6, 2021. The men who beat them were pardoned. On May 20, those same men started filing claims against a $1.8 billion federal fund — and Dunn and Hodges sued to freeze it before a dollar moved. Read the claims out loud. One January 6 defendant who served 1,075 days wants $30 million. Michael Caputo wants $1.8 million “today.” Mike Lindell went on Fox to ask for $400 million. This is not compensation for a wrong. It is a down payment on the next one — money to keep the people who stormed the Capitol once ready to do it again. Two dozen Republicans now say they will help kill it, more than the math requires. The money was never the deepest part of this. The same settlement that created the fund barred the IRS, forever, from auditing Trump, his family, or his companies — and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche signed a memo handing the Trump family permanent immunity from financial crimes, past, present, and future. So ask the obvious question: what is inside those sealed returns that is worth this much trouble to bury? Narativ has spent years tracing the Epstein money, and that trail runs through tax filings and financial records exactly like the ones Blanche just sealed. The fund is the loud half of this story. The immunity is the quiet half — Trump shredding the records while the country argues about the payouts. THE PATTERN Add up the Thursday. The Senate took the ballroom. The House moved on the war. Two dozen Republicans turned on the slush fund. Even CBS folding and the Democrats fumbling their autopsy run on the same current — a 31 percent president generates no fear, and a strongman nobody fears is just a man. None of it was courage. Every Republican who found a spine this week found it in a poll. But the machine Trump built to make himself untouchable — the fund, the immunity, the war power, the ballroom he never has to leave — runs on fear, and the fear is draining out. He spent the day asking for good news. He should have been counting votes. The Fivestack airs weekdays at 3 PM ET with Dean Blundell and Zev Shalev. Subscribe free or paid at narativ.org — paid subscriptions push this reporting in front of more people. Thank you Lev Parnas [https://substack.com/profile/35788031-lev-parnas], Ellie Leonard [https://substack.com/profile/39376636-ellie-leonard], This Will Hold [https://substack.com/profile/315023719-this-will-hold], LC - Silence is Complicity [https://substack.com/profile/498003941-lc-silence-is-complicity], Story Carrier [https://substack.com/profile/3151678-story-carrier], and many others for tuning into my live video! Join me for my next live video in the app. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.narativ.org/subscribe [https://www.narativ.org/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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aflevering The Rollout: Lev Parnas Says Tonight's Address Launches the Plan to Steal 2026 artwork

The Rollout: Lev Parnas Says Tonight's Address Launches the Plan to Steal 2026

Lev Parnas drove his car into the Fivestack on Thursday — literally, phone mounted on the dash — and spent an hour telling Dean Blundell and Zev Shalev why tonight matters more than Washington wants to admit. At 9 PM, Trump addresses the nation on what he calls foreign interference in American elections. Parnas, who flew to Washington last week to warn Democratic leadership in person, put it plainly: “Today is the rollout. Today is the beginning of the next rollout for Project 2025 — to keep Donald Trump in office forever.” The five stories all fed the same machine. 5️⃣ The 104 The panel opened on the number rattling both parties: 104 House Democrats — nearly half the caucus — voted Wednesday to end $3.3 billion in Israel aid. Zev called it what it is: a big number, and a weapon. “Trump will use that against Democrats,” he said, while Parnas begged the coalition to hold: “We can disagree hardcore on a lot of different policies — but we should all agree we don’t want to live in a dictatorship.” 4️⃣ The Grift Ledger Dean brought the receipts on the fraud Trump won’t mention tonight. Forbes reported the president has taken in $2.4 billion this year — six thousand times his salary. A CNN whistleblower story detailed stock buys that preceded his Truth Social endorsements, American Eagle to Nvidia. And Gabriel Perez — Trump’s personal teleprompter operator — landed on administrative leave after making $100,000 on Polymarket, betting on speeches he read before the country did. Zev pitched the fix: a live counter outside the White House tracking what Trump takes from the American people, running every second. 3️⃣ Epstein’s Money Men Leon Black didn’t show. The Apollo co-founder’s videotaped deposition, set for today, slid to September 3 — no reason given by his lawyers. His Epstein NDAs still land in the committee’s hands next week, and the panel that grilled Goldman’s Kathryn Ruemmler over her Epstein emails keeps working the money. Parnas, who testified before the same committee, saw the pattern: the paper trail survives every delay. 2️⃣ Blanche’s Worst Day Day two of Todd Blanche’s confirmation produced the week’s most damning testimony. Elizabeth Oyer, the career pardon attorney, told senators Blanche’s office pressured her to restore gun rights to a convicted domestic abuser — Mel Gibson, a friend of the president. “When I wouldn’t, Mr. Blanche fired me within hours,” she testified. “He then took extraordinary measures to silence me. He sent U.S. Marshals to my home.” Her close drew blood: “The casual lies that Mr. Blanche tells, even while sitting in this chair testifying to this committee, are emblematic of a much larger problem.” Epstein survivor Danielle Bensky recounted Blanche’s DOJ leaving her name unredacted hundreds of times. Tillis set his price on camera: meet the Epstein victims, or the no vote stands. Cornyn isn’t moving either. The committee sits 11–10. 1️⃣ The Rollout Then the show returned to where it began — 9 PM. Parnas laid out the sequence he’s been warning about for months: tonight’s curated “declassified” documents seed the doubt; indictments follow — Obama, Comey, Clapper are the targets he hears — and the FBI’s signature-matching review of ballots seized from Fulton County supplies the “proof.” Dean named the tell: sixty-plus courts found no fraud, and no one has been charged. Zev named the flaw: “He’s got a bit of a process issue here. He was the president in 2020.” And Parnas named the mechanism: “When you pick and choose what you declassify, it becomes propaganda.” The target isn’t 2020. It’s November. THE PATTERN One machine, five gears. A prime-time lie needs an attorney general who fires the honest lawyers, a committee that runs out the clock on Epstein’s bankers, a press under subpoena, and an oppositionatoo divided to answer. Zev left the panel with the counterweight: “He’s turned America into the very thing he said he was trying to fix. But that’s not who America is — millions are going to show up in their droves.” Thank you Ellie Leonard [https://substack.com/profile/39376636-ellie-leonard], Lyudmila and Daniel [https://substack.com/profile/153454755-lyudmila-and-daniel], Richard Hogan, MD, PhD(2), DBA [https://substack.com/profile/205390666-richard-hogan-md-phd2-dba], Alex LeMay [https://substack.com/profile/163250417-alex-lemay], Lori Modafferi [https://substack.com/profile/385631085-lori-modafferi], and many others for tuning into my live video with Dean Blundell [https://substack.com/profile/34833166-dean-blundell]! Join me for my next live video in the app. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.narativ.org/subscribe [https://www.narativ.org/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

17 jul 20261 h 4 min
aflevering BLANCHE COLLAPSES UNDER FRAUD CLAIMS; OSSOFF EVICERATES CLAYTON; TRUMP'S ADDRESS TO THE NATION IS A POWER GRAB BASED ON A LIE artwork

BLANCHE COLLAPSES UNDER FRAUD CLAIMS; OSSOFF EVICERATES CLAYTON; TRUMP'S ADDRESS TO THE NATION IS A POWER GRAB BASED ON A LIE

Three of Trump’s nominees sat for confirmation on the same day a federal judge’s fraud finding hung over the tallest of them — and by airtime, the votes to sink him were coming into view. Zev Shalev and Dean Blundell spent the hour with attorney and military veteran Anne P. Mitchell, who watched the Blanche hearing with Zev gavel to gavel and came armed with the one legal wrinkle nobody else caught. 5️⃣ THE HIGH-T DEPARTMENT OF WAR Pete Hegseth opened the day by authorizing annual testosterone-deficiency screening for every warfighter over 30 — “the biological foundation required to sustain the fight.” This from the secretary who banned flu vaccines until 222 active-duty members got sick enough to bring the mandate back. Mitchell’s read ran the other way: “He actually is saying the quiet part out loud. We’re going to boost your testosterone so unnaturally high that you are going to be just hair-trigger angry all the time. And then we’re going to funnel that anger into the quote-unquote enemy.” Dean reached for the historical parallel — the Luftwaffe’s amphetamine program — and Mitchell reached for the obvious question: what does Moscow think of an army that announces its men need pharmaceutical help to be fighters? 4️⃣ CLAYTON, DEFENESTRATED Jay Clayton wants to run American intelligence and could not say who won the 2020 election. Jon Ossoff asked him seven times. “I’m not going to do this with you. This is a job interview,” Clayton offered — before the exchange collapsed into “I’ve answered the question” / “No, you didn’t” / “That’s my answer.” Then came Fulton County: Clayton claimed he first learned yesterday, in Ossoff’s office, that Tulsi Gabbard attended the raid on a Georgia election facility — then conceded thirty seconds later he simply hadn’t “thought about it recently.” Mitchell called the whole performance what a courtroom would: “This is the equivalent of invoking the Fifth, in terms of non-responsiveness.” Zev called the ritual itself: a loyalty test. Lie about 2020 under oath, and the president knows you’ll lie about whatever comes next. 3️⃣ TOMORROW AT 9: THE OPERATION The 2020 question wasn’t academic. Tomorrow night Trump takes primetime to unveil “declassified intelligence” about the election he lost — served up by acting DNI Bill Pulte, teed up for the man who wouldn’t say who won. Mitchell flagged the tell in the credible reporting: foreign *plans* to interfere — not evidence anything happened. Old news, rebranded as a scandal, 110 days before the midterms. And the show put down the marker that matters: he cannot cancel the midterms. “The states have control over elections, even federal elections,” Mitchell said. Zev’s count: the administration is 0-for-14 trying to pry voter rolls from the states — “and he will go 0-for-50.” 2️⃣ THE MATH THAT SINKS BLANCHE The Judiciary Committee sits 11–10 with Graham’s chair empty, and by airtime both John Cornyn and Thom Tillis were being reported as no votes — two Republicans who got primaried out of their party and, as Mitchell put it, got handed their freedom in the process. Blanche spent the day answering fraud questions with “I don’t know” and “I wasn’t part of that decision” — about a settlement he announced, advocated, and signed. Under oath, Mitchell noted, those are the only words left that aren’t a confession. 1️⃣ THE $2 BILLION SELF-DEAL The story of the day, walked step by step. Trump sued his own IRS over his leaked tax returns. The DOJ — which, in Judge Kathleen Williams’ words, has “vigorously defended” the IRS in every such suit — rolled over for this one. The IRS’s own rank and file had prepared a 25-page defense that was never used. Trump dismissed his own case with prejudice; the $1.776 billion “settlement” appeared the next day, paying Trump allies and immunizing the family’s taxes forever. Williams reopened the case after 35 former federal judges told her something smelled, voided the fund, named the lawyers — and referred them for discipline. Then Mitchell delivered the wrinkle: the settlement protects “plaintiffs” — and the moment Trump dismissed the case, there were no plaintiffs. “It was a non-entity that was being protected. Blanche had to know that. A first-year law student would know that.” Whether that makes the AG nominee a fraudster or a man quietly harpooning his own client’s scheme, the paper trail runs through his signature either way. THE PATTERN One day, one test, three nominees — and every answer pointed at the same boss. The fraud was signed at Justice, the loyalty oath was administered at Intelligence, and the audience for all of it speaks at 9 PM Thursday. The desperation is the tell: a president polling at Nixon levels, stacking officials whose only qualification is what they’ll refuse to say under oath. Watch tomorrow night with us — and as Mitchell said, call, call, call. Watch: [link]Thank you Robin Payes [https://substack.com/profile/22747167-robin-payes], Shulamit Elson [https://substack.com/profile/402784719-shulamit-elson], Cathy R. Payne [https://substack.com/profile/100082266-cathy-r-payne], Lalisa [https://substack.com/profile/286625111-lalisa], Cheryl Young [https://substack.com/profile/91404474-cheryl-young], and many others for tuning into my live video with Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. [https://substack.com/profile/17911946-anne-p-mitchell-esq] and Dean Blundell [https://substack.com/profile/34833166-dean-blundell]! Join me for my next live video in the app. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.narativ.org/subscribe [https://www.narativ.org/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

15 jul 20261 h 2 min
aflevering THE FIVESTACK: THE HUNTER BECOMES THE HUNTED artwork

THE FIVESTACK: THE HUNTER BECOMES THE HUNTED

Today’s FiveStack is brought to you by GroundNews [https://groundnews.com/fivestack] — FiveStack viewers get 40% off their Vantage plan. Five stories, one thread. Dean Blundell and Zev Shalev spent Tuesday’s Fivestack tracing a single line through a broken news day: the people who built a machine to jail, track and frighten Americans are now the ones living behind the walls. A president who bombs a foreign capital flinches at his own hit list. Two justices who handed Trump immunity now beg Congress for bodyguards. The hunter, Zev argued, always becomes the hunted — he watched it happen once already, growing up white in apartheid South Africa. 5️⃣ Trump Books Primetime to Declare the 2020 Election Stolen — Again Trump has booked the nation for Thursday at 9 p.m. to claim newly “declassified” intelligence proves foreign interference handed Democrats the 2020 election — and, per reporting from Georgia’s own senators, to declare Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock illegitimate ahead of the 2026 midterms. Zev called it what it is: a pre-announcement of the intent to cheat. Trump ran the 2020 election as the sitting president; 80 court cases, up to the Supreme Court, found no fraud. The big lie built the resentment that carried him back to power. This is the sequel — the biggest lie, aimed at the vote that comes next. 4️⃣ Twenty FBI Agents at Graham’s Door — and Trump Wants Them Gone Twenty FBI agents searched Lindsey Graham’s home; Kash Patel called it “assisting local authorities.” Zev laid the calendar out plainly: Israeli intelligence warning of an Iranian plot to kill Trump, Graham in Kyiv closing a Russia sanctions deal, a published hit list, Trump refusing the new Air Force One — and then Graham dead. Russia, Iran and China run as one alliance; one death could serve all three. Zev stopped short of the conspiracy — he believes the aortic dissection, the same silent killer that took Graham’s father — but Trump’s “the FBI is wasting their time” only sharpened the question. Dean’s read: you can’t believe a word the man says, so watch what he’s this eager to shut down. Today’s FiveStack is brought to you by GroundNews [https://groundnews.com/fivestack] — FiveStack viewers get 40% off their Vantage plan. 3️⃣ Blindspot: DOGE Let AI Write Housing Policy — and the Right Won’t Cover It This week’s Ground News Blindspot is a story the right-leaning press is ignoring: DOGE used an AI model to draft federal housing policy affecting millions, then refused to name the model, the prompts or the guardrails. Wired obtained the records. The tell of the whole regime, Zev and Dean agreed — too lazy to do the work, willing to hand millions of Americans’ housing to a chatbot and sign it unread. See what both sides cover and hide: groundnews.com/fivestack, 40% off. 2️⃣ The Split Screen: Justices Beg for Guards While ICE Stops Stopping Cars Kagan and Barrett sat before appropriators — the first justices to face Congress since 2019 — asking $14 million to protect their homes; Barrett described the bulletproof vest Secret Service handed her, and her twelve-year-old asking what it was for. The same day, ICE ordered agents to halt vehicle stops nationwide after killing two men in a week — Joan Sebastian Guerrero in Biddeford, work-authorized and not the target, and Lorenzo Salgado Araujo in Houston, also the wrong man. The powerful seek protection from the people; the people seek protection from the government. Dean’s harder edge: the Court handed Trump the immunity that built this, and the threats are the job now. 1️⃣ Blockade Hour: Trump Scraps the Toll, Keeps the War Trump announced a 20% toll on the Strait of Hormuz Monday and killed it by Tuesday — days after Rubio called Iran’s own tolls illegal under maritime law. The blockade itself went live at 4 p.m., mid-show. Trump calls himself “guardian” of a strait Iran still controls; only 22 ships crossed on July 9, down from 147 before the war. As Dean put it: watch nothing change in the Strait of Hormuz. THE PATTERN Zev brought it home through apartheid. In white South African suburbs, families sealed themselves behind high walls, barbed wire and glass shards, more imprisoned by their own fear than the people in the open, communal townships they feared. Tonight Trump builds an iron fence around the White House, extends the National Guard through 2029, and houses his cabinet behind a twelve-foot electrified fence on a military base. Miller, Noem, Hegseth — all living in more of a jail than any citizen. The fear they manufacture to hold power is the same fear now closing in on them. The hunter becomes the hunted. That is the whole show. Tomorrow: Narativ carries the Blanche confirmation hearing live from 9 a.m., then Trump’s primetime address at 9 p.m. Today’s FiveStack is brought to you by GroundNews [https://groundnews.com/fivestack] — FiveStack viewers get 40% off their Vantage plan. Subscribe free — The Narativ and the Fivestack, every day. Know Sooner: narativ.org Thank you Rabbi Joshua Hammerman [https://substack.com/profile/13881731-rabbi-joshua-hammerman], LeftieProf [https://substack.com/profile/116079548-leftieprof], Michelle C. Funk [https://substack.com/profile/1290880-michelle-c-funk], Stephanie Munoz [https://substack.com/profile/14218548-stephanie-munoz], Lori Modafferi [https://substack.com/profile/385631085-lori-modafferi], and many others for tuning into my live video with Dean Blundell [https://substack.com/profile/34833166-dean-blundell]! Join me for my next live video in the app. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.narativ.org/subscribe [https://www.narativ.org/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

14 jul 202656 min
aflevering BREAKING: LINDSEY GRAHAM’S SISTER TAPPED TO SERVE REST OF HIS TERM artwork

BREAKING: LINDSEY GRAHAM’S SISTER TAPPED TO SERVE REST OF HIS TERM

Dean Blundell and Zev Shalev returned from a two-week break to five headlines telling one story: one man pulling power into his own hands, and only the courts and the states pulling back. Watch the full countdown at narativ.org. 5️⃣ A Senate Seat, Filled by Truth Social It became official an hour after the show ended: Governor Henry McMaster appointed Darline Graham Nordone — Lindsey Graham’s sister, who has never held public office — to serve out his term, hours after Trump announced the pick by Truth Social and preempted the governor’s own press conference. On the show, Zev played Graham’s final tape — Kyiv, 24 hours before his death, announcing the White House had agreed to his Russia sanctions bill — and walked the who-benefits board on a death the medical examiner calls natural causes and Iranian state TV calls a kill. The whole story, including the photograph propping up Mitch McConnell’s empty seat, is in the episode. 4️⃣ Twelve States Move to Stop the Ellison Media Empire California AG Rob Bonta led a 12-state antitrust suit to block Paramount Skydance’s $110 billion takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery — CNN, HBO and CBS News under Larry Ellison’s family, Trump’s biggest donor, who already holds Oracle and TikTok. Zev takes you inside how media owners actually collude — he watched it from inside CBS — and Dean names what Jake Tapper’s weekend Trump interview was really about. 3️⃣ ICE Kills Again — Maine This Time ICE agents shot and killed a man in his car in Biddeford, Maine this morning — the second fatal ICE shooting in under a week, at least the fourth death this year — and it took the Maine House Speaker, not the agency, to tell the public. Biddeford poured into the streets. Dean connects it to the Houston foreman ICE admits it killed by mistake last week, and to the $5,000 NDAs his reporting says witnesses were offered. 2️⃣ Judge Kathleen Williams Kills the $1.8 Billion Slush Fund A federal judge tore up Trump’s settlement with his own IRS — voiding the $1.8 billion “weaponization victims” fund, the family immunity deal, all of it — ruled the suit was filed for an “improper purpose,” and referred Todd Blanche to the Florida bar for attempting to defraud the court. Blanche faces his Senate confirmation hearing for Attorney General on Wednesday. The hosts break down the 56 pages that just followed him there. 1️⃣ The Guardian of the Strait Iran struck US facilities in Bahrain and radar sites in Oman, and Trump answered by Truth Social: America is now “the Guardian of the Hormuz Strait” and “will be reimbursed at the rate of 20%” on all cargo through it — a toll on a war Congress never voted on, from a blockade Dean calls fantasy dressed as policy. What it actually buys: higher prices straight through November. Watch the full Fivestack at narativ.org — and tonight at 7 PM ET, Amanda Ungaro returns to Narativ Live with new Zampolli documents. Fivestack viewers get 20% off annual subscriptions. Thank you Caro Henry [https://substack.com/profile/464640-caro-henry], Lalisa [https://substack.com/profile/286625111-lalisa], Courtney M 🇨🇦🏳️‍🌈 [https://substack.com/profile/136249074-courtney-m], Fran [https://substack.com/profile/194263848-fran], Jeanne Elbe [https://substack.com/profile/96662126-jeanne-elbe], and many others for tuning into my live video with Dean Blundell [https://substack.com/profile/34833166-dean-blundell]! Join me for my next live video in the app. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.narativ.org/subscribe [https://www.narativ.org/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

13 jul 202646 min
aflevering FiveStack: SCOTUS Hands Trump the Government artwork

FiveStack: SCOTUS Hands Trump the Government

Today’s FiveStack is brought to you by GroundNews [https://groundnews.com/fivestack] — FiveStack viewers get 40% off their Vantage plan. In forty-eight hours the Supreme Court closed its term and rewrote who runs the government. Six to three, again and again — a number that tells you how fixed this Court has become. It gave Donald Trump the agencies, opened the money spigot, and let the states decide who counts as a girl. Then it drew exactly two lines it would not let him cross: it would not erase the Fourteenth Amendment, and it would not hand him the Federal Reserve. On Tuesday’s Fivestack, Zev counted the five rulings down — least significant to most — with guest Anne P. Mitchell, the Stanford Law professor and federal-law author who writes Notes from the Front. (Dean Blundell was out sick; Mitchell stepped in at short notice.) What follows is the countdown, the words the justices actually wrote, and the impact measured in numbers. 5️⃣ The Court Lets the States Decide Who’s a Girl For three years Lindsey Hecox fought Idaho’s law to try out for the Boise State women’s track team, and a West Virginia middle-schooler, Becky Pepper-Jackson, fought to stay on her school squad. On June 30 the Court ended both fights at once, upholding state bans on transgender girls in girls’ and women’s sports. Kavanaugh wrote it. The vote was 6–3. Mitchell put her finger on the move that should trouble even people who welcome the result: the Court resurrected “separate but equal.” A century of race cases held that separate is inherently unequal. Here the majority says the opposite — that limiting girls’ teams to “biological females” is “substantially related” to an important government interest, and so it stands. The ruling leans on the meaning of “sex” when Title IX passed in 1972, before the country was having any conversation about gender identity. “It’s funny,” Mitchell noted, “how they only do that when it’s to their ideological advantage.” The reach is total. This is the Supreme Court, not a circuit — it is now the law of the land. Twenty-seven states already ban trans girls from school sports; every public school and university in them, K-12 through the NCAA, now operates on solid constitutional ground. Sotomayor, in dissent: “to the Court, the facts do not matter, even though the consequences are serious.” The majority, she wrote, lets states bar every transgender athlete “even if the facts show” no competitive advantage — moving the goalposts to answer the constitutional question without the record to support it. 🎯 THE GROUND NEWS BLINDSPOT — The Next Fight Is Already Here This week’s GroundNews.com [http://groundnews.com/fivestack]’s Blindspot is the sequel the Court already greenlit: it granted review of the assault-weapons bans in Connecticut and Cook County, Illinois — the first direct ruling on AR-15-style rifles and high-capacity magazines, with about a dozen state bans hanging on it. Arguments come this fall. Mitchell, who says she hasn’t missed a call yet this term, expects the bans struck. Power, then money, now the guns — the same six justices, one case at a time. Sign up for the blindspot at groundnews.com/fivestack [http://groundnews.com/fivestack] and get 40% off of their vantage plan. 4️⃣ Trump Tried to End Birthright Citizenship — and Lost On day one of his second term Trump signed an order stripping citizenship from babies born on U.S. soil to undocumented and temporary residents. Eighteen months later Chief Justice Roberts told him no, 6–3: children born here to parents “unlawfully or temporarily present” are “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States and “are citizens at birth.” The challengers’ reading, Roberts wrote, “commanded only a dissent in 1898, and neither time nor circumstance has changed the fact it is not the law.” Mitchell traced the stakes back to the worst day in the Court’s history. The Fourteenth Amendment exists because of Dred Scott — the 1857 ruling that Black Americans born on this soil were not citizens. The amendment was the country’s answer. Her takeaway: even a Supreme Court can be overruled by the people who wrote the Constitution to begin with. “They are only one of three — I argue four — branches of government,” she said. “The fourth being we the people.” The number behind the ruling is enormous. Roughly 255,000 to 260,000 babies a year — about one in nine U.S. births — had their citizenship riding on this case, and the order reached past the undocumented to the children of H-1B workers, international students, asylum seekers, and DACA recipients. It is Trump’s biggest defeat of the term. And the warning sits in the dissent: Thomas, joined by Gorsuch, wrote 90 pages arguing the other way. The three justices who wanted to read the amendment down are still on the bench. 3️⃣ The Court Opens the Spigot — Unlimited Party Money A Watergate-era cap on how much a party could spend hand-in-glove with its own candidate just fell. In NRSC v. FEC, Kavanaugh wrote for a 6–3 majority that coordinated-spending limits “necessarily abridge political parties’ freedom of speech.” One of the original plaintiffs, back in 2022, was a Senate candidate named JD Vance — now the Vice President, who will run on a case he helped bring. Mitchell flagged a detail most coverage skipped: the suit was filed under Biden, but by the time it reached the Court, the Trump DOJ agreed with the plaintiffs. The justices had to appoint outside counsel to defend the limits at all — and you have to wonder how vigorous a defense the law got with no administration behind it. The result rewires the money. A single donor’s reach jumps from $7,000 given directly to a candidate to roughly $500,000 routed through the party — a 70-fold widening, by Justice Kagan’s math — and the party can now operate in lockstep with the campaign. Republicans are cheering louder than Democrats, Mitchell said, because “they’re the party of a massive amount of money behind the donors.” The throughline is Citizens United. That ruling freed the outside money; this one frees the inside money, the party and the candidate spending as one. Kagan, in dissent, warned it “ushers back in the same opportunities for quid pro quo corruption that the contribution limits were meant to check.” Watch the airwaves in contested districts as November approaches. 2️⃣ The Fed Survives — But Read the Fine Print Here the show did what Narativ exists to do: correct the headline. Every outlet reported that the Court let Lisa Cook keep her seat at the Federal Reserve. Mitchell stopped Zev cold. “That’s not what it says.” What the 5–4 ruling actually did was send Cook’s case back down. Trump moved to fire her over an allegation of mortgage fraud surfaced by Bill Pulte; the Court found she had never been given a chance to answer it, and remanded so she can present her defense. Along the way the majority wrote an exhaustive history of why the Fed, created by its own statute, has always stood apart — but it pointedly did not announce a blanket rule that Fed governors can only be fired for cause. As Mitchell put it, Trump probably wishes he had fired Cook without stating a reason at all. Had he done that, she’d have gone the way of Rebecca Slaughter. Why it ranks second on a list where it touches one person: this is the board that sets interest rates, that steers inflation, affordability, the direction of the whole economy. A president who can install a majority on the Federal Reserve can manipulate the cost of living heading into an election. The Court drew its second line here — not out of principle, but because even this majority knows a president who can fire the Fed chair on a whim can crash the bond market. The line held by a single vote. 1️⃣ The 90-Year Wall Falls — Trump Can Fire Them All The biggest ruling of the term overturned a unanimous 1935 precedent. For ninety years, Humphrey’s Executor held that a president could not fire the members of independent agencies just for disagreeing with him. On June 29, in Trump v. Slaughter, Roberts erased it 6–3. The case began when Trump fired FTC commissioners Rebecca Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya in 2025 with no cause, citing only Article II. Mitchell called the animus by name. Roberts has been gunning for Humphrey’s since 2010, chipping away case by case, shopping for the right plaintiff and the right moment for fifteen years — a Federalist Society long game, with Trump as the figurehead willing to bring the suit. The Chief Justice wrote his contempt into the opinion: “if anything more is left of Humphrey’s, the Court overrules it.” This was never really about Slaughter. It was about who is allowed to work in government. The impact is structural: more than two dozen independent agencies — the FTC, the SEC, the FCC, the NLRB, and the rest — lose their insulation. Congress built them bipartisan on purpose, so the referees couldn’t be fired for the call. Now they answer to one man. Mitchell offered her “cynical hope” — that Trump has already done most of the firing, so the damage may be priced in. Zev was less sanguine: a president who has spent his term gutting the government of anyone who opposes him will go as deep as the law now lets him. The enforcement machine has one master, and he has shown he will use it. ALSO FROM THE BENCH Two rulings barely made the headlines, and Mitchell brought both to the table. In Chatri v. United States, the Court held that pulling a person’s cell-phone location data from Google is a Fourth Amendment search requiring a warrant — Americans have “a reasonable expectation of privacy in their cell phone location information.” Against an administration building a Palantir-fed database to geolocate people, that is a real limit. And in a quieter blow to Trump, the Court let states count mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day, even if they arrive after — even as the USPS floats a rule demanding states hand over their voter rolls. Mitchell’s advice: use a drop box, not the mail. THE PATTERN Read these decisions as one move. The Court expanded executive power, opened the money, upheld the culture-war ban, and reached toward the guns — and where it stopped Trump, it stopped him narrowly and for reasons of self-protection, not principle. The Fourteenth Amendment was too plain to erase; the Fed was too dangerous to hand over. Everything the Constitution’s text or the bond market protected survived. Everything else moved toward the Oval Office. That is not a term of decisions. It is a transfer of power — and the only check left standing is the one the justices can’t touch: a November election. Today’s FiveStack is brought to you by GroundNews [https://groundnews.com/fivestack] — FiveStack viewers get 40% off their Vantage plan. The fight isn’t over; it just got more expensive. Subscribe to Narativ for the intelligence behind the news — and Know Sooner. Guest: Anne P. Mitchell writes Notes from the Front at annpmitchell.substack.com. Thank you Lesley Jane Seymour [https://substack.com/profile/182346601-lesley-jane-seymour], Robin Payes [https://substack.com/profile/22747167-robin-payes], Lalisa [https://substack.com/profile/286625111-lalisa], Noble Blend [https://substack.com/profile/21659563-noble-blend], Michelle C. Funk [https://substack.com/profile/1290880-michelle-c-funk], and many others for tuning into my live video with Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. [https://substack.com/profile/17911946-anne-p-mitchell-esq]! Join me for my next live video in the app. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.narativ.org/subscribe [https://www.narativ.org/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

30 jun 202658 min