Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Tariff Argument Fails Again

By Stan Veuger & Simon Johnson

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

 

After the Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s global tariff regime, for which he cited the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the administration imposed a new set of worldwide 10 percent tariffs based on Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act. These tariffs will supposedly stay in place for the statutory maximum of 150 days, while the administration presumably prepares a long-term protectionist regime.

 

Setting aside the economic harm these new tariffs inflict, they represent yet another attempt to circumvent the congressional power to “lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises” (Article I, Section 8, Clause I of the U.S. Constitution). The administration admitted as much in court earlier this month while defending the tariffs in a suit seeking to overturn them, surprising the panel of judges by directly linking the imposition of the Section 122 tariffs to the demise of its IEEPA tariffs.

 

But Section 122, like IEEPA, does not provide the president with broad tariff powers. Instead, it is predicated on specific conditions. Section 122 authorizes the president to proclaim temporary duties or quotas “whenever fundamental international payments problems require special import measures to restrict imports,” the so-called “necessary threshold condition,” as Judge Taranto of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has described it.

 

He can do so for any of three enumerated purposes. The first one of these purposes, the one invoked by President Trump, is “to deal with large and serious United States balance-of-payments deficits.” A balance-of-payment deficit here refers to a drain on monetary reserves, including gold. If that sounds quixotic, it is because the language only makes sense in the context of the Bretton Woods system, as we will see below.

 

The other two enumerated purposes, not at issue here, are “to prevent an imminent and significant depreciation of the dollar in foreign exchange markets” and “to cooperate with other countries in correcting an international balance-of-payments disequilibrium.”

 

Two conditions have to be met for Section 122 to authorize the new worldwide tariffs: that we are facing fundamental international payment problems, and that we are dealing with large and serious balance-of-payment deficits.

 

The first condition, that fundamental international payments problems exist, is not seriously argued by the government, which instead claims it is merely a prefatory phrase. That legal strategy makes sense, as we face no such problems. There is ample global demand for U.S. debt, and we do not struggle to pay for imports of goods and services either. If anything, it is surprising how much debt we are able to issue at low cost, while the president frequently complains about the size of the trade deficit. We may have a fundamental spending problem, but certainly not an “international payments problem.”

 

What Congress meant by the second condition, that the actions serve to deal with large and serious United States balance-of-payments deficits, can only be understood in the context of the early 1970s. These were the final years of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates anchored by the dollar-gold standard. Under that system, U.S. balance-of-payments deficits would result in (and reflect) a drain on U.S. gold and currency reserves. When this outflow was large enough, it could undermine the U.S. ability to meet its obligation to convert dollars into gold at a rate of $35 an ounce.

 

President Nixon’s decision to suspend convertibility in 1971 triggered the demise of this system, which came to a definitive end with the 1976 Jamaica Accords. Since then, we have lived in a system of floating exchange rates under which “large and serious balance-of-payment deficits” as envisioned in Section 122 can literally no longer exist. Foreign governments can no longer come to the United States to exchange dollars for gold, and if the dollar becomes overvalued, the exchange rate simply adjusts instead of us having to prop it up.

 

To provide a sense of how irrelevant the concept rapidly became under the new international monetary regime, it perhaps suffices to note that the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis ceased publication of overall payments balances shortly after the Jamaica Accords were signed. Janice Westerfield explained this well in the November/December 1976 Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s Business Review: “As the international monetary system moved to floating exchange rates, these overall measures came to be misinterpreted by the public.”

 

Weirdly, the government itself is now intentionally misinterpreting balance-of-payment statistics. It argues that instead of the specific balances that were of concern under Bretton Woods—and which it no longer publishes—it can pick and choose whatever balance it likes from within the Balance of Payments (capitalized here to indicate that we are talking about the statistical statement, which summarizes all transactions between U.S. residents and non-residents). The administration has brought up the balance of trade, the current account balance (a broader measure that adds a set of income flows to the balance of trade), and various other numbers. But just as accountants do not use the term “net profit” to refer to any positive number reported somewhere in a profit-and-loss statement, the term “balance-of-payment deficit” does not refer to any single negative number reported in the Balance of Payments.

 

The government argues that Congress must have had some of these other concepts in mind when it made Section 122 authority conditional on balance-of-payments deficits, because by 1974 we had already started moving away from Bretton Woods. But, in fact, that system was not officially replaced until 1976, and the legislative record confirms that Congress did not expect Section 122 to be relevant if the fixed exchange rate system were abandoned. As the Senate Finance Committee report on the Trade Act explained: “under present circumstances such authority [to impose surcharges … for balance of payments reasons] is not likely to be utilized.”

 

If the administration truly believes sweeping tariffs are an appropriate response to the trade deficit, it should make that case to Congress and to the American people. The courts should not let the administration rely on a clear misinterpretation of an outdated statute, just as they did not let the administration rely on an overly expansive reading of an emergency statute.

What Do Palestinians Think a Palestinian State Should Look Like?

By Seth Mandel

Monday, April 20, 2026

 

There’s a lively debate on social media today over whether Israel could have avoided much international opprobrium had it simply continued to offer statehood to the Palestinians even after current and past Palestinian leadership rejected such offers.

 

At the center of this debate online was Matt Yglesias’s assertion that Israel and/or pro-Israel commentators ought to outline an endgame for the conflict that provides the Palestinians with self-determination. The responses continue to come in. Having witnessed Benjamin Netanyahu suggest that a division of Jerusalem could even be on the table as part of a solution that ends the conflict, I don’t actually think it’s reasonable to frame the question this way. But even if we did, and even if Israel reiterated its suggested endgames, what would that accomplish?

 

We know what end-game maps the Israelis have, in the past, offered or accepted as final-status agreements. The Clinton-era parameters are public, and so is the fully detailed map offered by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in 2008 to PA President Mahmoud Abbas, which was drawn up after extended personal negotiations between the two leaders.

 

We have, then, lots of proof that over the years, Israel would have accepted the two-state solution. What we don’t have is any proof that the Palestinian leadership would accept a two-state solution.

 

So here’s a radical idea: The Palestinian leadership should be asked to rectify this. Make an offer. Produce an acceptable map. It would be even better if the Palestinians were to announce that they were ready to end the conflict so long as specific and enumerated conditions were met.

 

As of now, we don’t know if the Palestinians would be willing to end the conflict, even if they stopped turning down statehood. The two are related: The Palestinian leadership most likely has never considered accepting a two-state proposal precisely because they would be expected to see it as a resolution to the conflict. Israelis understand this, and it accounts for some of the hesitation they have shown to continue offering the Palestinians a state: They want an end to the conflict and the Palestinians are unwilling to make such a promise.

 

October 7 made this clear not only to Israelis but to the world. Too much of the Palestinian public seemed most divided not on whether October 7 was good or bad but whether it was good or a hoax. The response from the “pro-Palestinian” industry globally was to support Hamas or, at the very least, only punish the Jewish state.

 

To top it all off, the October 7 attacks were aimed at torpedoing negotiations seeking a broad Arab-Israeli peace that would include a path to a Palestinian state. One of the two Palestinian factions was successful in sabotaging those talks and thus sabotaging the path to statehood.

 

Putting the onus on Israel, then, would only be understandable for someone born yesterday. Since no one born yesterday is on Twitter arguing over the Arab-Israeli conflict, there is a certain faux-naivete to this entire debate.

 

The Palestinians could disrupt their own unbroken pattern of rejectionism if they wanted to. And so they should: Mahmoud Abbas should make a speech, tomorrow if possible, and say explicitly that the Palestinians are prepared to consider the conflict resolved if they attain statehood through negotiations with Israel. In the same speech, Abbas should do what Olmert did for him and hold up a map of the two-state solution based on past negotiations.

 

If they really wanted to put Bibi on the spot, that would do it. The onus would then be on Israel to make a counteroffer—which is what Abbas would have done in 2007 were he negotiating in good faith.

 

Israelis have meticulously detailed and outlined “end game” maps. The Palestinians should take a turn doing so. If, that is, such a map exists.

The Son Also Rises

By Nick Catoggio

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

 

I often describe the president and his movement as “postliberal,” but it’s a misnomer. They’re not postliberal. They’re preliberal.

 

A truly postliberal politics would differ meaningfully not just from liberalism but from what preceded it.

 

Donald Trump’s politics do not. Might makes right, loyalty above all, rampant self-enrichment, punishing one’s enemies: There’s nothing novel or innovative about how the president wields public power that distinguishes it from the way state business was done before the Enlightenment.

 

He and his fans don’t pretend otherwise. MAGA has always defined itself as backward-looking, from the vague nostalgia of “making America great again” to dopes with Roman-statue avatars on social media clamoring for the West to “RETVRN.” It’s atavistic to its marrow.

 

The biggest tell about the president’s preliberalism is his attraction to the trappings of royalty. He’s gilded the Oval Office, put his name on buildings and currency, obsessed over a palatial new ballroom and victory arch, and will soon host the closest thing modern America has to gladiatorial combat on the White House grounds. He palpably yearns for monarchy and has undertaken to get as close as America’s fragile constitutional order will let him.

 

And monarchies, you may have heard, are hereditary.

 

Our uncrowned king has behaved accordingly in both public and private life, involving his children in the Trump Organization, enlisting them in his presidential campaigns, and even making some of them White House advisers. As I write this, his daughter’s husband is preparing to try to broker peace with Iran for the United States.

 

From monarchies to the mafia, outfits that follow preliberal norms place special value on familial relationships. For one thing, family members are (somewhat) less likely to betray each other than non-relations are, a valuable trait for those operating in cutthroat kill-or-be-killed cultures. And because preliberalism is all about leveraging power for one’s personal advantage, it stands to reason that those who rise to the top would want that power to be hereditary. If you can’t rule forever, the next best thing is ensuring that your gene pool does.

 

Yesterday at The Bulwark, Jonathan Last took the president’s monarchical aspirations to their logical conclusion. Forget J.D. Vance, he wrote: Isn’t Donald Trump Jr. the likeliest Republican nominee in 2028?

 

I’m going to make the case against thinking so. But honestly, I kind of agree.

 

The case for Junior.

 

You don’t need a complicated triple-bank-shot theory to explain why the president’s son has the inside track. It’s this simple: Because the Republican Party is a moronic personality cult, Donald Trump effectively has the power to pick his own successor. Whomever he endorses will be a prohibitive favorite among his slavishly loyal supporters.

 

Such is the power of the Trump name on the right, as Last notes, that Junior is already polling in second place in early 2028 primary polls, slightly ahead of Secretary of State Marco Rubio. It’s a distant second behind Vance, sure, but so what? The vice president is coasting on his high profile and the widespread assumption that he’s Donald Trump’s choice for heir apparent. If that were to change—if Junior were to take a more visible political role after the midterms and his father were to begin sounding iffy on Vance—the polling would change as well. Dramatically.

 

In fact, if the president started talking up his son as a potential candidate, my guess is that Vance would concoct an excuse not to run in 2028. “A [Trump Jr.] candidacy would carry the explicit endorsement of Trump the Father, making it impossible for the vice president or secretary of state to contest the race without becoming unpersoned,” Last writes. “Challenging Don Jr. would turn them into enemies of the people.”

 

Indeed. Why would J.D Vance, who’ll still be in his 40s in 2032, want to destroy his political future by challenging Junior in 2028 and antagonizing the Trump monarchy? He’d almost certainly lose the primary, and if he didn’t his “disloyalty” would nonetheless fatally alienate some MAGA fanatics whose votes he’d need to win the general election.

 

Depending upon how unfavorable the political environment is to Republicans in the next cycle, the VP might even prefer to step aside. If the GOP nominee is doomed to lose, better that it be Junior. Vance would then be set up for a comeback four years later in which he’d argue that only Trumpism without a Trump can prevail in a Trump-weary America.

 

The Republican establishment might favor a candidacy by the younger Trump for similar reasons. A resounding defeat for Junior in a Democrat-friendly 2028 cycle would give party apparatchiks an opening at last to say that Trumpism has run its course and it’s time to try something different. Losing with Vance risks having the opposite effect, convincing grassroots cultists that the GOP needs a Trump atop the ballot to win.

 

The president also has reasons to prefer his son to Vance as nominee.

 

It’s not a pure matter of ensuring that his gene pool controls the Republican Party for the indefinite future, although it is of course partly that. Getting Junior elected president is the closest Donald Trump is likely to come to remaining in charge himself.

 

His opinions in retirement would surely weigh heavily on Vance, but the VP will need to separate himself from Trump on some unpopular issues if he runs in 2028, beginning with the Iran war. The unstated premise of his candidacy will inevitably end up being something like “Trumpism but minus the crazy bits” that voters dislike. “I’m my own man,” he’ll say when asked whether he intends to do his former running mate’s bidding.

 

By contrast, the implicit promise of a Trump Jr. campaign will be that he isn’t his own man. He will do the bidding of his father, giving his dad the extra term that the 22nd Amendment and the, ahem, election-riggers in 2020 cruelly denied him. If the president wants to maximize his power over the GOP in retirement—and maximizing one’s power is what preliberalism is all about—then Junior is the purest, most reliable instrument for doing so.

 

But lay aside those political implications. Last has another all-but-insuperable argument for why both Donald Trumps will be keen to have someone from the family on the ballot in 2028. It’s the only way to make sure that the gravy train keeps rolling:

 

In just cash and gifts, the Trump family’s total take [during the president’s second term] is already more than $2 billion (and that doesn’t include Jared and Ivanka or Barron Trump). That’s a hard number, not a paper value. If the Trump family no longer occupies the White House and relinquishes its claim on the Republican party—thereby removing the possibility that it could return to the White House—does that money keep flowing based on the business genius of Don, Eric, Barron, and Jared?

 

Probably not.

 

The Trump family will continue to cash in on its influence even in a GOP run by J.D. Vance, but there’s no question that Vance’s political interests would diverge from their financial interests in a way that Donald Trump Jr.’s political interests would not. Having converted a political party into a racket that’s made them filthy (well, filthier) rich, why would they now just … hand it over to the Hillbilly Elegy guy?

 

That would be a remarkable act of generosity. And racketeers aren’t known to be generous.

 

The case against Junior.

 

The argument that Trump Jr. remains an unlikely nominee in 2028 despite dad’s monarchical pretensions is as straightforward as the argument for believing he’s the favorite. Two words: Trump fatigue.

 

In five of the last 10 polls tracked by RealClearPolitics, the president has been under 40 percent approval. The worst of them, from Reuters, has him as low as 36 percent. At this point it’s easier to imagine how that might get worse than how it might get better. The Iran war resumes; the shocks to the global oil supply persist; inflation rises; a manic Trump tries to interfere aggressively in the midterms; many, many more tweets raising questions about his sanity ensue.

 

Fifteen months into Trump’s second term, we’ve already reached the point where Tucker Carlson is delivering introspective monologues about his culpability in helping to return the president to power. “I do think it’s like a moment to wrestle with our own consciences,” he told his brother during a podcast conversation this week. “You know, we’ll be tormented by it for a long time. I will be, and I want to say I’m sorry for misleading people, and it was not intentional.”

 

“Tormented” with buyer’s remorse with 33 months still to go: Does that sound like a promising posture for Republicans to nominate another guy named Donald Trump in 2028?

 

Perceptions that Junior’s presidency would be a de facto third term for his unpopular father are such an obvious electoral disaster in the making for the GOP that I suspect all but the most ardent MAGA cultists would worry about it. Even some cultists might think twice: Unbound to the president’s son by the charisma and celebrity that they found captivating in his dad, they might reasonably prioritize maximizing the right’s chances of winning by nominating someone else over loyalty to the Trump offspring.

 

Junior also has potential vulnerabilities that J.D. Vance does not. He and his siblings cashing in on the presidency will surely be a target of corruption inquiries next year if Democrats flip the House. He’ll also feel obliged out of family loyalty (or filial expectations) to defend the Iran war, a subject which Vance and his allies have worked hard to distance the vice president from. And he’ll face rumors about his, ah, energetic public appearances that the more docile Vance will not.

 

Then there are what we might call the “known unknowns” of 2028.

 

I would not bet against anyone whom Trump endorses as nominee, but if the president were to pass away before making an endorsement then his son’s chances would drop to near-zero. Republicans would not want to weaken President Vance with a primary challenge in what looks to be a tough general election climate. And without Trump Sr. commanding the GOP base to back his son, I’m not sure that his name alone would create a meaningful constituency for Junior. My guess is that his support would top out roughly where it is now, at around 15 percent in primary polls. In all likelihood, he would opt to stay out of the race.

 

Conceivably, he might not run even if his father is still alive, kicking, and willing to endorse him. It’s the same argument I made earlier for why Vance might prefer not to challenge Junior in 2028 but in reverse: If Democrats are a prohibitive favorite in the next cycle due to Trump fatigue, better that some other Republican serve as the party’s sacrificial lamb for voters. Trump Jr. might choose to back Vance, expecting him to be crushed, and then run on a “Trumpism is back!” platform in 2032.

 

As for the Trump family’s gravy train, it’s true that Trump Jr. as party leader would be more willing to let that continue than Vance would—but it’s barely true. The vice president is so insecure about his support on the right that he pulls his punches even when denouncing bigots who insult his wife; he wouldn’t dare ask the Republican base to choose between him and the Trumps by moving against their corruption. Especially not as long as Trump Sr. is alive.

 

A three-man race.

 

I think Jonathan Last is mostly right about what the 2028 primary will look like if in fact the president designates his son as heir apparent.

 

Vance and Rubio will decline to run, concluding that they have too much to lose by trying and failing to depose the Trump royal family. They’ll endorse Junior and quietly hope for a GOP wipeout that fall, paving the way for them to run in 2032.

 

But Trump Jr. surely will get a challenge from the “America First” cohort that feels betrayed by his father. Carlson is the obvious candidate, having seemingly burned his bridges to the president with his comments about being “tormented” by his part in reelecting him. By challenging Junior he would be playing the same sort of role, ironically, that Trump himself played in 2016 by attacking the Bushes. We can’t win unless we repudiate the mistakes made by a man we all voted for, he’ll say to Republicans. No more Trumps.

 

A Junior-versus-Tucker primary in 2028 feels like the logical endgame given the trajectory this garbage party is on. No technocrats, no policymakers, no governing experience, just a loudmouth online troll who’s spent his life getting rich off of daddy’s name versus a conspiratorial postliberal propagandist who seems to think America’s core problem is that it isn’t more like Russia.

 

“I promise you that if the choice was Tucker or [Trump Jr.], Fox and the Wall Street Journal editorial page would make their peace with Junior,” Last writes. That’s true, and many other traditional Republicans would do the same. Conservatism can only be saved by nominating Donald Trump’s obnoxious son is precisely the conclusion that the last 10 disgraceful years of right-wing politics have been leading up to.

 

But I don’t think we’d end up with a two-man race.

 

A comparatively normal candidate with less to lose than Vance or Rubio by jumping in would want to test his luck with an electorate torn between two problematic populist chuds. “Tucker and Junior will split the Trumpists,” that candidate might calculate, “and I’ll clean up with the plurality that wants off the crazy train.”

 

Ted Cruz is an obvious possibility. He wants to run, he has a beef with Carlson, and he won’t have the same prestige as Vance or Rubio in 2032 if he stands aside in the next cycle and waits for a better opportunity. I think he’d get in and hope that the base divides roughly equally between the three candidates, then start pounding the point that Trump and Carlson are too kooky and repellent to win a general election.

 

But even if he miscalculated and became an also-ran, he could still salvage something useful from the campaign by pivoting to becoming an attack dog against Tucker for Junior. That would earn him the Trump family’s gratitude and potentially a Cabinet position in the unlikely scenario that Junior ends up as president.

 

In the end, though, the monarchy will likely get what it wants, as monarchies tend to do. That’s the sort of party Republican voters want to belong to and increasingly the form of government under which they want to live, so it’s Trump Jr.’s nomination if he wants it. Probably.

The Rise of the Dearborn Democrats

By Rich Lowry

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

 

Michigan Democrats had to choose between a Hezbollah-sympathizing radical and a perfectly respectable former Barack Obama attorney.

 

Given the drift of the party, it wasn’t a difficult choice — it was the virulently anti-Israel extremist all the way.

 

At their convention over the weekend, Democrats selected Amir Makled as their nominee for a seat on the University of Michigan Board of Regents. A Dearborn, Mich., lawyer, Makled represented pro-Hamas student demonstrators, called for the university to divest from Israel, and expressed great respect for anti-Israel terrorists in social media posts.

 

He reposted X items referring to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah as a “martyr” after he was killed in an Israeli strike. He gave the same treatment to a Hezbollah official named Abu Ali Khalil, “a martyr on the road to Jerusalem.” For his part, Qasem Soleimani got the honorific “Haj” after Trump eliminated him in a targeted assassination.

 

All the other terrorists killed by the U.S. or Israel in recent years might wonder why they didn’t rate and get similar Makled-endorsed Hallmark cards.

 

The Michigander has been admirably opened-minded when it comes to rancid hatred of Israel. He didn’t let his progressivism stop him from retweeting a Candace Owens post calling Israelis “demons,” who “lie, steal, cheat, murder, and blackmail.” He praised Marjorie Taylor Greene and has endorsed views of Tucker Carlson and antisemitic goon Dan Bilzerian.

 

Once upon a time, the mere association with such figures would be a deal-breaker in Democratic politics, but we live in the age of the horseshoe. Extremes on the left and the right meet on common ground from different directions; the foremost wild-eyed left-right consensus is that Israel is a malign power with untoward influence in U.S. domestic politics.

 

It is telling that the Democratic incumbent on the Board of Regents that Amir Makled defeated, Jordan Acker, is a Jewish former Obama official who saw his office and his home vandalized in pro-Hamas agitation. (Another, non-Jewish Democratic incumbent member of the board survived the convention.)

 

We are witnessing the rise of the Dearborn Democrats, not in the literal sense, but in the same sense that Jeane Kirkpatrick coined the phrase “San Francisco Democrats” in the 1980s. Back then, San Francisco, an elite coastal city, stood for the dovishness and permissiveness of liberalism; today, Dearborn, home to a large Arab-American enclave, stands for an all-consuming opposition to Israel with all that that entails, including a conspiratorial view of AIPAC and an underlying anti-Westernism.

 

The ethos of the 2024 “uncommitted movement” in Michigan, urging voters not to vote for Joe Biden in protest of his support for the Gaza war, has now surged to a formidable position within the Democratic Party. A new Decision Desk poll shows that 75 percent of Democrats favor the Palestinians over the Israelis. The swing against Israel is even more pronounced among young voters. An Echelon Insights survey found that among Democrats under age 50, 54 percent had an unfavorable view of Iran, while 62 percent had an unfavorable view of Israel.

 

The anti-Israel views of the right-wing influencers promoted by Amir Makled have yet to measurably change the orientation of GOP politics, but the Democrats are shifting rapidly.

 

In the Democratic Senate primary in Michigan, Abdul El-Sayed, who says Israel is as evil as Hamas, could well prevail. In New Jersey the other day, Democrat Analilia Mejia, who had hesitated to say that Israel has a right to exist, won a House special election. A Bernie Sanders–sponsored resolution to block the sale of military bulldozers to Israel last week won the support of 40 out of 47 Senate Democrats.

 

The Dearborn tendency, if it reaches full fruition, will leave many Jewish Democrats feeling politically homeless. It will make the Democratic Party even more reflective of campus radicalism. And if a Democrat wins the White House in 2028, the U.S. may well begin to treat Israel less as an ally and more like the equivalent of apartheid-era South Africa.

Murphy’s ‘Awesome’ Problem

By Abe Greenwald

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

 

I’m going to give Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy the benefit of the doubt—not really, just stick with me.

 

Yesterday, he wrote, “awesome” on a retweeted X post claiming that 26 Iranian shadow fleet vessels made it through the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. The world came down on Murphy’s head for seeming to cheer on the Iranian regime against the United States Navy. But Murphy claimed he was being sarcastic and is saddened by Donald Trump’s supposed bungling of the war.

 

It's not that I would put it past Murphy to root for the Iranians. In 2020, he did some foreign policy freelancing and met in secret with former Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference. He’s also spoken multiple times at the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), an NGO that denies any connection to the Islamic Republic while forever downplaying the regime’s crimes and pushing the U.S. to adopt a more accepting posture toward Iran.

 

Murphy has peddled the NIAC line at every turn. He opposed Trump’s 2020 assassination strike on IRGC leader Qassem Soleimani and, in 2022, he supported the idea that the Biden administration should remove the IRGC from its list of designated terrorist organizations.

 

All of which is to say that Murphy holds repugnant views on Iran and the Middle East. And he may very well have thought it was “awesome” that Iran reportedly outwitted the U.S. at sea. I just don’t think he’s quite dumb enough to have knowingly blurted out what was in his heart at that moment.

 

He is, however, thoroughly dumb enough to have believed the fake story in the first place. It turns out, no Iranian vessels made it through the blockade. And he’s repugnant enough to have used the false story as a zinger against Trump before bothering to verify it.

 

I therefore judge Chris Murphy guilty of wanting pro-regime, anti-American propaganda to have been true. And that’s more than bad enough.

 

Think about it. If Murphy felt the news was too good to fact-check, then he can’t logically have been sarcastic about declaring it awesome. So while he probably wanted the retweet to be understood as sarcasm, he was obviously thrilled to have a snippet of bad war news to aim at Trump. In other words, it turns out that Murphy is more than dumb enough to have unwittingly revealed what was in his heart.

 

That’s what shines through here, and it’s why he looks and sounds so uncomfortable in trying to explain himself after the fact. You can’t do sarcasm when you’re in earnest agreement with your own supposedly sarcastic comment.

 

I’d call this emotional dissonance, except people like Murphy aren’t really conflicted at all: They want Trump to fail. This, by extension, means they want the U.S. to fail and Iran to triumph. The only thing that’s tripping up Murphy is logical dissonance. There’s no way to pretend that you’re patriotic while rooting against America. The mask won’t fit your face.

Chris Murphy’s Revealing Social Media Faceplant

By Noah Rothman

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

 

Apparently, it’s everyone else’s fault that no one quite knew what to make of Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy’s characteristically attention-grabbing remark on Tuesday morning:

 

 

There is some ambiguity in Murphy’s remark. Was the senator cheering on the ships that supposedly evaded the American blockade? Was he going for sarcasm, mourning the U.S. Navy’s inefficacy with a melancholy hint of self-satisfaction over having his skepticism of this war confirmed by events?

 

As political observers wrestled over these competing interpretations of Murphy’s remark, we at least learned that the senator was dead wrong about the facts:

 

 

So, sardonic or not, Murphy’s comments were not tethered to reality. Rather, he broadcast a propagandistic account of events that had not occurred — propaganda that advantages an American enemy in wartime. Moreover, had the senator or his communications team done their homework, they would have known they were boosting the signal on a claim retold by an unreliable narrator.

 

Semafor revealed in late September an Iranian influence operation, called the ‘Iran Experts Initiative’ (IEI), which was run by [former Iranian regime official Mohammad Javad] Zarif’s Foreign Ministry starting in the spring of 2014,” that outlet reported in early 2024. At the time, Ali Vaez was one of the figures explicitly associated with the IEI, although he and others objected to the notion that they were “tools of Iranian influence.”

 

As opprobrium from all quarters rained down on Murphy’s shoulders, he returned to social media — not to withdraw his remark but to scold all those who mistook his meaning:

 

 

Maybe. Or perhaps the senator revealed a tendency that the Wall Street Journal’s William McGurn castigated him for in a Monday column. “On Mr. Trump, they all agree,” he wrote. “They can’t stand him, and they want him to fail more than they want America to succeed.”

 

Perhaps Murphy’s initial post was little more than a world-weary sigh. If so, we might expect him to take some solace in the fact that he had amplified misinformation, but the senator seems to derive no comfort from his initial error. Indeed, his outlook remains unchanged, even as the facts in evidence did. If his perspective on the war is static despite the dynamism on the ground, maybe McGurn has Murphy and his political allies pegged.

 

Their problem isn’t that the war is being mismanaged as much as it is with the person managing it.

Young Democrats Are Now More Hostile Toward Israel Than Iran or China

By Jim Geraghty

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

 

On yesterday’s Editors podcast, Rich Lowry mentioned the results of a March Echelon Insights survey, asking 1,033 self-identified Republican and Democratic registered voters how they feel about various countries.

 

Note that the question wording was, “Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion about the following countries?” so we don’t know whether the respondent was thinking about the country as a whole, or its government.

 

Unsurprisingly, almost all respondents felt positively about Canada, although Democrats — both under age 50 and aged 50 and above — felt more positively about our neighbor to the north than Republicans. The survey showed similar dynamics in respondents’ views of the United Kingdom. (For the rest of this newsletter, I’m going to refer to those under 50 as “younger” and those 50 and above as “older.” Sorry, 50-year-olds.)

 

Where you started to see a gap was Mexico, where Democrats, both younger and older, felt significantly more positive about our neighbor to the south than both younger and older Republicans.

 

Thankfully, all groups felt negatively about Russia, although older members of both parties felt significantly more negatively about Moscow than younger Republicans. (Living memories of the Cold War make a difference, apparently.) Every demographic felt somewhat negative about Venezuela, although younger Democrats were only slightly more negative than positive in their opinion of that country.*

 

But the most fascinating, and disturbing, parts of the survey came in the splits about the remaining countries: Iran, China, and Israel.

 

On Iran, older Republicans felt overwhelmingly negative — the most negative any demographic felt about any country in the survey — and older Democrats felt almost as negatively. But younger Republicans felt less negatively about Iran than older Democrats, and while younger Democrats felt negatively about Iran, it was 37 percentage points fewer than their older counterparts.

 

While every demographic in the survey felt negatively about Iran, younger Democrats felt significantly less negatively about Tehran. (I suspect living memories of the Iranian hostage crisis make a difference, too.)

 

Ask Americans how they feel about China, and you’ll get strikingly different answers depending upon age and partisan demographic. Among older Republicans, “negative” scored 83 percentage points net; a number comparable to feelings about Russia and only slightly less hostile than older Republicans’ perceptions of Iran. But among younger Republicans and older Democrats, it was 50 points net in the negative category. But younger Democrats don’t feel that negatively toward Beijing at all, just around 14 percent.

 

Now . . . you remember that whole Covid-19 thing, right? The regime’s constant lying about the outbreak when accurate information was needed most? Or the ongoing genocide of the Uyghurs? The serious threat of an invasion of Taiwan? All the spying going on? All the fentanyl production?

 

That’s all within the past few years. You don’t need memories of Tiananmen Square, or the Cultural Revolution, or Chinese support for the North Vietnamese during the Vietnam War.

 

Is that all a TikTok effect? What kind of naïve, gullible idiot would feel so positively about China? Oh, wait, I just realized that Eric Swalwell is 45 years old.

 

But if you want to find a country that younger Democrats really feel negatively about . . . look to the world’s lone Jewish state.

 

Among younger Democrats, when asked about Israel, “negative” scored 45 percentage points net; only Russia scored worse among this demographic, and even that was only 15 percentage points worse. Remember on Iran, among young Democrats, “negative” scored 40 percentage points net.

 

Young Democrats feeling negatively about Israel has been well-reported. But young Democrats feeling more negatively about Israel than Iran or China has not. Remember, the Iranian regime and its loyalists still use “Death to America!” about as frequently as commas.

 

Younger Democrats’ intense hostility to Israel was a serious outlier compared to other demographics; among older Democrats, “negative” scored 19 percentage points net. Israel is now a partisan issue; among younger Republicans asked about Israel, “positive” scored 11 percentage points net, and among older Republicans, “positive” scored 65 percentage points net.

 

Let’s say that for some reason, you don’t buy the results of this Echelon Insights survey. Numbers from two recent Pew Research surveys broadly line up with the conclusions. First, from a survey about Israel, released April 7:

 

Eight-in-ten Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents currently have an unfavorable view of Israel, up from 69 percent last year and 53 percent in 2022. Democrats under 50 are slightly more likely than older Democrats to say they have a very unfavorable view of Israel (47 percent vs. 39 percent).

 

More Republicans and Republican leaners have a favorable than unfavorable view of Israel (58% vs. 41%). Still, the share of Republicans with a negative view has ticked up since last year, driven by those under 50. Today, 57% of Republicans ages 18 to 49 have an unfavorable opinion of Israel, up from 50% last year. Large majorities of Republicans 50 and older continue to view Israel positively.

 

Then, from another Pew release, a week later:

 

The increase in favorability toward China comes largely from Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents. The share of Democrats who view China positively is up 8 points from last year. Opinion among Republicans and Republican leaners is largely unchanged.

 

Like with favorability, that movement comes mostly from Democrats: 14 percent of Democrats say China is an enemy, down from 22 percent in 2025 and 28 percent in 2024. A large majority of Democrats (72 percent) still view China as a competitor. . . .

 

Younger Americans have more positive views of China than older adults do. About a third of adults under 50 (34 percent) have a favorable opinion of China. Just 19 percent of those ages 50 and older agree.

 

Americans under 50 are also much less likely than those 50 and older to say China is an enemy of the U.S. (20 percent vs. 38 percent). Republicans of different ages particularly diverge on this:

 

Republicans younger than 50 are 23 points less likely than Republicans 50 and older to think China is an enemy.

 

Among younger and older Democrats, the gap is just 8 points.

 

Now . . . have you seen any significant change in the behavior of the Chinese regime in recent years? Xi Jinping is still running things over there. Is this simply a matter of the Covid-19 pandemic receding into the rearview mirror?

 

I would also pose the question: Which countries do political leaders in each party talk about the most? On paper, Democrats are strongly opposed to Vladimir Putin and Russia. But I don’t feel like I hear them talking about it much anymore — certainly not as much as they talk about Israel.

 

Rich noted in his most recent syndicated column:

 

At their convention over the weekend, Democrats selected Amir Makled as their nominee for a seat on the University of Michigan Board of Regents. A Dearborn, Mich., lawyer, Makled represented pro-Hamas student demonstrators, called for the university to divest from Israel, and expressed great respect for anti-Israel terrorists in social media posts.

 

He reposted X items referring to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah as a “martyr” after he was killed in an Israeli strike. He gave the same treatment to a Hezbollah official named Abu Ali Khalil, “a martyr on the road to Jerusalem.” For his part, Qasem Soleimani got the honorific “Haj” after Trump eliminated him in a targeted assassination. . . .

 

The Michigander has been admirably opened-minded when it comes to rancid hatred of Israel. He didn’t let his progressivism stop him from retweeting a Candace Owens post calling Israelis “demons,” who “lie, steal, cheat, murder, and blackmail.” He praised Marjorie Taylor Greene and has endorsed views of Tucker Carlson and antisemitic goon Dan Bilzerian.

 

Why is Israel, a country roughly 6,000 miles from Ann Arbor, such a central issue to who serves on the University of Michigan Board of Regents?

 

A big part of it is that America’s Muslim and Arab communities are becoming a bigger and more consequential demographic within Democratic Party politics, particularly in the state of Michigan. But I think there’s another, less-discussed reason.

 

If you’re looking at the world clearly, I think you look at the world beyond our shores and see some major threats to the (relative) peace and prosperity we enjoy today:

 

·         How do we deter a Chinese invasion, blockade, or other attempt to take over Taiwan? How do we mitigate, counter, or overcome China’s far-reaching and wide-ranging efforts to maximize the Beijing regime’s leverage around the world?

 

·         How do we get Russia to stop attempting to invade Ukraine and threaten its neighbors? Vladimir Putin and his regime feel like they can harass other countries with impunity, with everything from poisonings to cyberattacks to GPS jamming to sabotage and assassinations. What can we do to deter them?

 

·         Assuming this current conflict doesn’t topple the mullahs’ regime in Tehran, what do we do about the constant threat from Iran, the world’s top state sponsor of terrorism?

 

·         North Korea still has nukes and still is hostile. Even if Kim Jong-un’s cholesterol catches up with him, his successor is just about guaranteed to be trouble in some form.

 

(There are other major national security priorities, particularly non-state actors like terrorist groups and transnational criminal organizations, but the ones I just outlined strike me as the big four state-based threats.)

 

Those are all hard questions, with few easy or convenient answers. I suspect the average Democratic primary voter, and the candidates who win their votes, don’t spend a lot of time thinking about those threats, in part because there are no simple or politically convenient answers.

 

But you know what is simple or politically convenient? Bashing Israel. A Democratic candidate who talks up the threats from China and Russia runs the risk of his audience’s eyes glazing over, or maybe accusations of being a jingoistic, paranoid warmonger defending the legacy of colonialism. But pledge to cut off military aid to Israel, or cite the latest implausible numbers from the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry, and you’ve got a sure-fire applause line at a Democratic rally.

 

Democratic primary voters, particularly the younger ones, want to hear their candidate talk about how bad Israel is. But when it comes to China or Iran, they yawn.

 

*“Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion about Venezuela?” is an interesting question, because when someone thinks of Venezuela, do they think of the old Nicolás Maduro regime, the nascent Delcy Rodríguez regime, or the Trump administration’s military operation nabbing Maduro in January? The Economist, no fan of Trump or U.S. military interventions in general, offered a detailed portrait of the country showing there are glimmers of good news here and there, albeit with major questions of whether the Rodríguez regime is serious about reform, both political and economic:

 

Nonetheless, some 700 political prisoners have been released. That is unprecedented in 27 years for the sheer number, for not being part of an explicit deal and because there have not been many new arrests, notes Alfredo Romero of Foro Penal, a legal watchdog.

 

What is more, the regime is tolerating political demonstrations and marches. In January and February there were over 1,200 protests. “We’re determined not to leave the streets,” says Yriana Aular, a retired teacher on a march in Caracas.

 

ADDENDUM: At 4:09 p.m. Tuesday, President Trump posted to Truth Social:

 

Based on the fact that the Government of Iran is seriously fractured, not unexpectedly so and, upon the request of Field Marshal Asim Munir, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, of Pakistan, we have been asked to hold our Attack on the Country of Iran until such time as their leaders and representatives can come up with a unified proposal. I have therefore directed our Military to continue the Blockade and, in all other respects, remain ready and able, and will therefore extend the Ceasefire until such time as their proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other.

 

So, we’re extending our side of the cease-fire. This morning, U.K. Maritime Trade Operations, a shipping monitor run by the British Navy, reports, “An outbound cargo ship reports having been fired upon and is now stopped in the water,” and “a Container Ship reported that the vessel was approached by 1 IRGC gun boat, no VHF challenge that then fired upon the vessel which has caused heavy damage to the bridge.”

 

Again, the instructions for a “cease-fire” are right there in the name. If the Iranians aren’t stopping shooting at cargo and container ships . . . why have we stopped shooting at them?