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POLITICS

Adelson-led lobby defeats Massie as GOP cedes youth to boomers

Sunday, May 24, 2026 · from 4 podcasts
  • The Israel lobby spent $35M to oust Rep. Thomas Massie, the only Republican who refused their money.
  • Massie lost by 10 points despite leading millennials 3-to-1, crushed by boomer turnout.
  • Analysts say the purge marks the GOP's final pivot from 'America First' to donor-driven foreign policy.

The Republican Party traded its future for $35 million. That’s the price tag on the primary defeat of Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, the most expensive House race in history, funded by pro-Israel groups and billionaires like Miriam Adelson. On Breaking Points, Krystal Ball noted the three most expensive congressional races all targeted incumbents who ran afoul of the Israel lobby: Massie, Jamal Bowman, and Cori Bush.

Massie wasn’t just a critic of Israel; he was the only Republican in Congress who refused all money from its lobby. His opposition to unconditional foreign aid and his alliance with Democrat Ro Khanna to force a vote on releasing the Epstein files made him a dual threat. Tucker Carlson argued this made Massie an existential danger to a party establishment protecting a two-tiered justice system. “When the government hides the most important facts from its citizens, democracy ceases to exist,” Carlson said.

"AIPAC publicly celebrated defeating Massie, tweeting 'pro-Israel Americans are proud to help defeat anti-Israel candidates.' This admission confirms a foreign lobby dictates U.S. politics."

- Tucker Carlson, The Tucker Carlson Show

The execution was algorithmic. The No Agenda Show’s John C. Dvorak argued the national media missed the real cause of Massie’s 10-point loss - a targeted, “algo-driven” smear campaign about an alleged affair and a “boner phone” that saturated MAGA-adjacent social media feeds. This narrative bypassed mainstream outlets like Fox News entirely, flipping the race in two weeks while pundits focused on Israel and Epstein.

The result exposes a fatal generational split. Pollster Rich Baris, speaking on Carlson’s show, said Massie was clobbering his opponent 3-to-1 with millennials before the money hit. He only lost because older “boomer” voters, the median Republican primary voter is 55, were driven to the polls by the ad blitz. Baris calls it a Pyrrhic victory: the GOP spent a fortune to replace a principled conservative popular with young voters with a neocon candidate, Ed Golliver, whose professional background is almost entirely classified.

"The Israel-first donor class doesn’t care which party controls Congress; they only need a bipartisan majority to preserve the special relationship and foreign aid spigot."

- Rich Baris, on The Tucker Carlson Show

The purge signals a completed transformation. Carlson recalls Trump’s 2016 promise that government should serve American citizens exclusively. Now, the president brags about 99% approval in Israel while his domestic support sits at 35%. The lobby’s victory, celebrated in Israeli newspapers as “the most consequential Republican primary for Israel,” confirms the GOP’s agenda is no longer set by its voters. The party chose donors over its base, and in doing so, may have ceded the next generation.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

No Agenda Show
No Agenda Show

Adam Curry

1870 - "VBS"May 21

  • John C. Dvorak noted that the Justice Department's order barring IRS investigation of President Trump and his sons was reported as such, but the underlying issue was a "slush fund for Trump allies," suggesting a media reframe.
  • Kentucky Congressman Thomas Massie lost his primary by nearly 10 percentage points, with John C. Dvorak suggesting a "smear campaign" about an alleged affair and a "boner phone" as the primary cause, rather than solely Trump's opposition.
  • John C. Dvorak criticized mainstream media for ignoring the alleged Massie scandal, instead attributing his loss to his anti-Trump stances, while MSNBC commentary ironically highlighted Massie's traditional conservative record.
  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth campaigned for Ed Gowrin against Thomas Massie, an action criticized by MSNBC as potentially violating the Hatch Act, while the Pentagon stated Hegseth appeared as a private citizen.
  • Carlson controversially labeled Israel the "most violent country in the world," citing its public boasting of assassination programs, and criticized its government's actions in Gaza as "disgusting and immoral."
  • Two teenagers, Cain Clark (17) and Caleb Vasquez (18), armed with 30 firearms, stormed the Islamic Center of San Diego, killing three people, with police reporting they were radicalized online and held anti-Islamic and anti-Semitic views.
  • The Justice Department indicted former Cuban dictator Raul Castro for his alleged role in the 1996 shootdown of "Brothers to the Rescue" civilian planes, resulting in four deaths, a move timed for Cuban Independence Day.
Also from this episode: (13)

Media (1)

  • Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak criticized David Muir's ABC news tease for its disjointed topic transitions and story repetition, contrasting it with what they considered NBC's more effective opening teases by Tom Yamas.

Politics (8)

  • Vice President J.D. Vance held a White House press briefing, an unusual role for a VP, where he expertly managed the press corps and delivered a less adversarial message than previous press secretaries.
  • J.D. Vance defended the Trump administration's economic record by citing manufacturing job rebounds and explained the Iran conflict as a short-term operation aimed at a negotiated settlement, not a "forever war."
  • Tucker Carlson stated he withdrew support for Donald Trump due to the Iran war, which he believes doesn't serve U.S. interests, and accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of pressuring Trump into the conflict.
  • Former CIA operative Michael Waller connected the Castro indictment to completing the Bay of Pigs operation, while the U.S. Southern Command noted the Nimitz Strike Group's presence in the Caribbean, raising speculation of potential military action.
  • Axios reported Cuba acquired up to 300 military drones and discussed attacking Guantanamo Bay or the U.S. mainland if hostilities erupted, a claim that Adam Curry suggested could be part of a "false flag" pretext for U.S. intervention.
  • Online betting markets, Polymarket and Kalshi, facilitated hundreds of millions in "perfectly timed wagers" related to the Iran war, raising insider trading concerns, especially given Donald Trump Jr.'s advisory roles with both platforms.
  • U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Besson called on G7 allies to disrupt Iran's financing, with the "Economic Fury" program freezing nearly $500 million in cryptocurrency and targeting London-domiciled UK shipping companies on the OFAC list.
  • The U.S. delegation to Beijing employed strict anti-espionage protocols, discarding all Chinese-provided items into trash bins on Air Force One, due to documented Chinese tactics of embedding tracking and malware in common objects.

Business (4)

  • Texas Children's Hospital settled with Attorney General Ken Paxton for $10 million over alleged improper billing for transgender care, agreeing to revoke privileges for several doctors and establish a "detransition clinic."
  • John C. Dvorak theorized that Donald Trump's over 3,700 stock trades, frequently preceding his public endorsements of companies like Dell and Apple, indicated high-frequency trading run by an algorithm rather than direct insider trading.
  • The Trump Mobile T1 phone, marketed as an "American-made" patriotic alternative, was delayed, and its final version featured an American flag with only 11 stripes and appeared to be a Taiwanese-made Android device, rather than domestically produced.
  • A CNBC segment highlighted a societal misalignment where college degrees are highly valued despite a shortage of skilled trade workers like HVAC technicians, electricians, and fiber technicians, advocating for vocational training over traditional university paths.

Tucker Responds to the Israel Lobby Defeating Thomas Massie and Killing MAGAMay 21

  • Carlson recalls Miriam Adelson bypassing security and entering Trump's inauguration church service ahead of everyone else. He saw this as an early sign of foreign influence priorities displacing domestic ones.
  • Carlson and Charlie Kirk believed Trump’s core promise was that the U.S. government should serve American citizens exclusively. They thought this would reshape the Republican Party toward figures like Thomas Massie.
  • Trump’s pivot to covering up the Epstein files and cheerleading a regime-change war in Iran represented a 180-degree shift from his America First campaign promises, which Carlson calls a 'cold-hearted globalist betrayal.'
  • Carlson argues Jeffrey Epstein's 2019 arrest and murder under Trump's Attorney General Barr, combined with unexplained financial windfalls like a $30 million Powerball win, symbolize a rigged, two-tier justice system.
  • Carlson cites an Israeli newspaper headline calling the Kentucky primary 'the most consequential Republican primary for Israel,' proving foreign interests directly shape U.S. elections.
  • AIPAC publicly celebrated defeating Massie, tweeting 'pro-Israel Americans are proud to help defeat anti-Israel candidates.' Carlson says this admission confirms a foreign lobby dictates U.S. politics.
  • Pollster Rich Baris says the Kentucky primary saw over $35 million spent, making it the most expensive House primary ever. Massie was clobbering his opponent with millennials 3-to-1 before the money influx.
  • Baris notes Republican boomers drove Massie’s defeat, while younger voters who supported Trump feel their presidency was hijacked by foreign policy. This generational split is fracturing the MAGA coalition.
  • Baris states the Epstein cover-up and the Iran war were a 'one-two combo' that broke MAGA's bond with Trump. Post-July 2025, Republican generic ballot polling flipped from a lead to an 11-point deficit.
  • Carlson says Trump’s Justice Department, led by Leo Terrell, is conducting a multi-city 'anti-antisemitism' tour, effectively criminalizing criticism of Israel as hate speech.
  • Baris argues the Israel-first donor class doesn’t care which party controls Congress; they only need a bipartisan majority to preserve the special relationship and foreign aid spigot.
Also from this episode: (2)

Politics (2)

  • Thomas Massie was the only Republican in Congress who never took money from the Israeli lobby. His principled stance was opposing all foreign aid, especially to Israel, due to the U.S. debt crisis.
  • Baris observes that voters never prioritized stopping Iran’s nuclear program. Foreign policy has ranked 7th in importance throughout Trump’s term, with over 60% feeling the administration is too focused abroad.

Bibi, one more time? Israel’s election launchesMay 20

  • Israel's parliament will vote on a dissolution bill, triggering elections that may occur in early September or by late October.
  • Anshul Pfeffer says the immediate trigger is Netanyahu's failure to pass a law exempting ultra-Orthodox seminary students from army service, breaking a promise to coalition partners.
  • Pfeffer argues Gaza will dominate the campaign but focus on October 7th and its preceding failures, not the war's conduct or Gaza's civilian casualties.
  • Pfeffer notes Netanyahu faces corruption charges and health rumors but doubts he will resign, given his 40-year career and 12th election campaign.
  • Pfeffer says polls show Netanyahu's coalition lacks a majority, but the opposition must also form a viable coalition to replace him.
Also from this episode: (7)

Politics (4)

  • Tom Gardner describes Operation Flintlock as an annual American-led special forces training exercise in Africa, running since 2005 with about 1,500 soldiers.
  • Gardner reports Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger declined to participate in Flintlock despite recent American outreach, having severed ties with Western governments since 2020.
  • Gardner says Flintlock introduced drone surveillance training and counter-propaganda efforts this year, responding to jihadist tactics and Russian amplification.
  • Gardner argues decades of Western counter-terror investment have failed to stop jihadism's spread from the Sahel to coastal nations like Ivory Coast, Togo, and Benin.

Culture (1)

  • John Fasman notes Cape Verde is a small archipelago with a population just over half a million, competing in its first World Cup this summer.

Sports (2)

  • Fasman highlights defender Roberto Lopez joined Cape Verde's squad via a LinkedIn message, helping secure qualification last October.
  • Cape Verde will play Saudi Arabia, Uruguay, and Spain in the group stage, with supporters hopeful for a strong showing.

5/18/26: Thomas Massie Rips Israel Lobby, US Preps Cuba War, Trump Pumps StocksMay 18

  • Republican Thomas Massie's Kentucky primary is the most expensive House race in history at over $35 million in total spending, eclipsing prior record races against Jamal Bowman ($25.4M) and Cori Bush (~$18M).
  • Krystal notes the three most expensive congressional races all targeted incumbents who ran afoul of the Israel lobby: Thomas Massie, Jamal Bowman, and Cori Bush.
  • Saagar says the median Republican primary voter is 55 years old, with the 65+ cohort being the largest block after the 45-64 group, making youth turnout critical for Massie.
  • Massie’s primary opponent Ed Golliver, a former Navy SEAL, runs on a classified background and anonymous endorsements, which Ken Klippenstein reported as a 'deep state' persona.
  • Marjorie Taylor Greene tweeted that Trump targeted her, Thomas Massie, Nancy Mace, and Lauren Boebert after they signed the discharge petition to force a vote on releasing Epstein files.
  • Saagar argues Trump enforces personal loyalty, not policy alignment, citing examples like Lindsey Graham who ran against Trump but now receives endorsements, while dissenters on Epstein or Israel get primaried.
  • Krystal says Trump’s financial disclosures show hundreds of millions in stock trades during Q1 2026, including in companies like Nvidia, Palantir, Paramount, and Boeing whose executives accompanied him to China.
  • Trump purchased up to $630,000 of Palantir stock in early 2026 and later praised the company's 'great war fighting capabilities' on Truth Social, highlighting brazen conflicts of interest.
  • Krystal notes Trump's trades involved companies directly affected by his administration, like Intel where the US took a 10% stake, Boeing which secured a 200-plane deal with China, and Paramount whose merger is under regulatory review.
Also from this episode: (4)

Politics (4)

  • Axios reported Cuba acquired over 300 military drones, which US intelligence suggests could be used against Guantanamo Bay, US vessels, or Key West - a possible pretext for US military action.
  • FBI Director Kash Patel faced scrutiny for using Navy SEAL boats to snorkel at the USS Arizona memorial at Pearl Harbor, violating the site's solemn dress code and respect guidelines.
  • Katie Miller, wife of Trump adviser Stephen Miller, is in talks for a podcast deal with MAGA-aligned CBS owners who seek approval for a $111 billion merger, despite her show's modest viewership.
  • Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy took seven months off to film a reality show, which Krystal contrasts with the criticism Pete Buttigieg received for shorter paternity leave.