Trump Checkmates the Mullahs
Clay Travis and Buck Sexton highlight a charity event (Back the Blue) they attended at Mar‑a‑Lago that raised more than $1.3 million to support law enforcement. The conversation then shifted to President Donald Trump’s latest statements on Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, and global energy markets. Clay and Buck walk through Trump’s early‑morning announcements indicating that the Strait of Hormuz is effectively open for international shipping while remaining closed to Iranian oil exports until negotiations are finalized. As a result, oil prices fall sharply—down roughly $10 per barrel—and stock markets surge, with the Dow and S&P 500 climbing toward record highs. The hosts argue that earlier predictions of economic collapse and World War III were again proven wrong as markets stabilize and energy prices retreat.
Clay lays out what he characterizes as a near‑total U.S. victory over Iran, citing Trump’s claims that Tehran has agreed to give up its enriched nuclear material and accept an inspection regime. Buck, who describes himself as historically cautious due to past Middle East failures, credits Trump’s deal‑making approach—treating geopolitics like a business negotiation—as potentially the most effective foreign‑policy maneuver of his lifetime if Iran fully complies. Both hosts emphasize the strategic brilliance of reversing Iran’s leverage in the Strait of Hormuz, blocking Iranian exports while keeping global trade flowing.
SCOTUS Wisdom
Clay and Buck dig into remarks by Justice Clarence Thomas during a speech at the University of Texas, where he warned about the dangers of progressivism, intolerance toward opposing views, and the erosion of civil discourse, especially among younger generations. Clay, himself a lawyer, connects Thomas’s remarks to what he sees as a growing crisis in legal ethics, particularly the punishment of attorneys for representing politically controversial clients. The conversation includes sharp criticism of efforts to strip law licenses from lawyers associated with President Trump, arguing this weaponizes professional institutions to enforce ideological conformity.
Building on that theme, Clay and Buck discuss speculation about upcoming Supreme Court vacancies. They suggest Justice Clarence Thomas is unlikely to step down, noting his proximity to becoming the longest‑serving justice in history, while predicting Justice Samuel Alito may retire in the near future—potentially giving Trump another high‑stakes Supreme Court nomination during the summer.
Kim Strassel, WSJ
Clay and Buck welcome Wall Street Journal columnist Kim Strassel, who provides a detailed assessment of the U.S. naval embargo on Iran and why it has dramatically shifted Tehran’s negotiating calculus. Strassel explains that the blockade has cut off Iran’s primary revenue source, stressed its currency, limited oil storage capacity, and heightened internal unrest—factors that appear to have forced the Iranian regime to reassess its options.
The conversation with Strassel explores whether President Donald Trump has effectively “checkmated” Iran or if the regime is simply engaging in another delay strategy. While all three agree that Iran is historically adept at stalling, Strassel notes that the combination of sustained military pressure and economic isolation looks far more consequential than previous negotiations. The hosts debate possible risks, including rogue actors, Iranian proxies, or surprise attacks in the Strait of Hormuz that could rapidly destabilize the situation. Still, the consensus is that Trump’s blockade has exposed Iran’s limited leverage and left the regime with shrinking alternatives.
Clay and Buck ask Strassel about the early contours of the 2028 presidential race, with discussion focusing on Kamala Harris’s public re‑emergence, book tour, and signaling that she intends to run. Strassel predicts Harris will enter the race due to ambition and name recognition, though she acknowledges the challenges Harris would face against smoother operators like Gavin Newsom. On the Republican side, the hosts discuss rising figures such as JD Vance and Marco Rubio, contrasting Vance’s overt positioning with Rubio’s quieter, results‑driven profile.
Exposing Healthcare Fraud
An interview featuring Dr. Mehmet Oz, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Dr. Oz outlines a sweeping effort to combat fraud, waste, and abuse in federal healthcare programs, describing how lax rules and political incentives allowed massive overbilling, fake hospices, and corrupt medical practices to flourish—particularly in states like California and New York. He reveals that hundreds of fraudulent hospices have already been cut off from federal funding, emphasizing that none have challenged the decision, an indication of widespread wrongdoing.
Dr. Oz also discusses strategies to restore confidence in Medicare and Medicaid while improving health outcomes. He promotes preventive care, technology‑driven personalization, AI‑assisted health monitoring, and aggressive price negotiations for prescription drugs. A major highlight of Hour 3 is Oz’s discussion of GLP‑1 weight‑loss medications, which he calls a potential game changer for reducing chronic disease and long‑term healthcare costs. He explains that the administration has implemented most‑favored‑nation pricing to dramatically lower costs for American patients and argues that broader access to these drugs could save taxpayers money while improving national health.
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