Categories
Politics

Trump’s ability to counter Netanyahu’s spoiler tactics in public may have been key to advancing a ceasefire in Gaza

President Donald Trump walks with Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Ben Gurion International Airport, near Tel Aviv, on Oct. 13, 2025. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

After two years of devastating war between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas forces in the Gaza Strip, President Donald Trump declared an end to the war on Oct. 14, 2025. The peace plan includes a Hamas commitment to return all hostages and a withdrawal of Israeli forces.

In late October, both sides said they remained committed to peace, despite Israeli retaliation for the death of an Israeli soldier that killed 104 people, and despite the fact that the remains of 11 deceased hostages remain in Gaza.

Those setbacks aside, the new peace push is the most serious attempt so far to end the escalation of conflict that followed the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Palestinian militants on Israelis.

But what are the circumstances and actions that helped Trump advance such an agreement, the likes of which eluded former President Joe Biden? And what enabled Trump, working with a few close advisers and with mediators like Qatar and Egypt, to overcome the reluctance of Israel and Hamas?

The answer may have much to do with how Trump countered a phenomenon that political scientists call “spoiling.”

“Spoiling” in peace negotiations is defined by political scientist Stephen Stedman as actions employed by “leaders and parties who believe that peace emerging from negotiations threatens their power, worldview, and interests, and use violence to undermine attempts to achieve it.”

In regard to the Middle East, critics have long accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of playing this spoiler card throughout the war.

Netanyahu was seen by many observers to be not interested in reaching a peace agreement because of risks to the political survival of his governing coalition. And it’s evident in attempts to postpone the investigation of the colossal failure of Israel to defend its citizens on Oct. 7, 2023.

For two years, Netanyahu engaged in this kind of spoiling by, for example, staging high-level assassinations of Hamas leaders at a timing detrimental for any negotiation’s success.

Yet, Netanyahu also employed a more sophisticated method of spoiling, one that political science scholar Ehud Eiran and I are exploring in our research.

We argue that leaders can spoil negotiations not just by resorting to violent means, or by posing hard-line positions within the negotiation room. Additionally, spoilers can work in broad daylight and make the diplomacy less likely to succeed through a careful use of rhetoric and media. This decreases their own constituencies’ and the enemy’s likelihood of accepting This decreases the likelihood of their own constituencies or the enemy accepting a compromise. It’s what we call “public spoiling.”

Spoiling in broad daylight

Netanyahu used these public spoiling tactics again and again during ceasefire negotiations.

In early May 2024, for example, when ceasefire negotiations were getting into high gear and indications mounted that Hamas may accept the deal on the table, a statement from Netanyahu attributed to “a senior diplomatic source” – known in the Israeli media to mean the prime minister himself – stated that “the IDF will enter Rafah and destroy the Hamas battalions remaining there, whether there is a temporary truce for releasing the hostages or not,” referring to the Israel Defense Forces.

Hundreds of mourners attend a funeral.
Mourners attend the funeral of Israeli American hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin in Jerusalem on Sept. 2, 2024. Goldberg-Polin was killed in Hamas captivity in the Gaza Strip.
Gil Cohen-Magen/Pool via AP

Such declarations signaled to Hamas that Israel did not intend to keep its side of a deal. And it led the Palestinian militant organization to harden its position and further insist on a formal end of the war before all hostages were released.

In September 2024, Netanyahu used the Israeli military in another spoiler tactic after pressure mounted on him to yield to protesters’ calls for a ceasefire

After Hamas operatives murdered six Israeli hostages as soldiers approached their hiding place, the Israeli public erupted in protests against its government, blaming it for sending soldiers instead of negotiating. High-level officers in the prime minister’s office then stole a document from Israeli intelligence, allegedly written by Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, forged some of it, and leaked it to the German newspaper Bild.

Netanyahu then cited the document in a speech, claiming Sinwar designed his policy to use public pressure on Netanyahu. In short, he used this false publication, leaked allegedly by his own people, to suggest that the protesters were doing Hamas’ bidding. The protests subsequently decreased dramatically, and the pressure on Netanyahu to compromise subsided.

This pattern continued into the Trump administration.

‘No daylight’

U.S. decision-makers, from the president to negotiators in the Biden and Trump administrations, were no doubt aware of these practices. So why did they allow them to continue?

The answer is complicated. What has become clear, I believe, is that at the heart of the problem stands a single phrase: “no daylight.” It’s an oft-cited position of U.S. politicians to mean that, publicly at least, Israel and the United States act as if they are in complete agreement or alignment, with no policy differences between them.

Though a longtime ally of Israel, the U.S. used to be more forceful with Israel when the latter was deemed by Washington to have crossed the line or threatened important American interests in the region. That was evident when the U.S. imposed a ceasefire in the 1973 Arab-Israeli War despite Israeli opposition. It was also clear when the U.S. prevented an Israeli response to missiles that Iraq launched at it during the Gulf War in 1991.

But in the past few decades, a perception has taken hold in U.S. foreign policy circles that pressure on Israel’s government should only be done in private and that it should never include strong public rebuke.

A bomb explodes on a crowded enclave.
Smoke and explosions rise inside the Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel, on March 17, 2024.
AP Photo/Ariel Schalit, File

Thus, even when, in June 2024, the Biden administration knew full well that Netanyahu was thwarting efforts to reach a ceasefire, former Secretary of State Antony Blinken came out with a statement blaming Hamas. And when Netanyahu breached a ceasefire in March 2025 and ordered the military to return to fighting, the Trump administration blamed Hamas.

Netanyahu, with his knowledge of U.S. politics, was well aware that Washington would be unlikely to publicly blame Israel. And he took full advantage of this fact to promote his spoiling of the ceasefire negotiations in broad daylight.

No choice but to sign

So what changed in October 2025 that allowed Trump to overcome Netanyahu’s actions as a spoiler and secure a ceasefire?

In short, Trump simply decided to play the same game. He publicly announced that the deal existed and left Netanyahu no choice but to sign it to preserve the perception that there is “no daylight” between Israel and the U.S. As a former Netanyahu aide suggested, “Trump is unpredictable and will not fall in line with the Israeli position.”

Trump’s announcement of the deal, before many of the details were agreed upon, enabled the ceasefire agreement, Israel’s partial withdrawal from Gaza and Hamas’ release of the Israeli hostages.

The road to an actual end of the war, not to mention Trump’s lofty declarations of a historic peace, is still in the far distance. But the ceasefire, if it holds, is a critical step, in my view, to end this terrible chapter of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The Conversation

Boaz Atzili is related to two Israeli citizens who were held hostage by Hamas following the Oct. 7, 2023, attack.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

Categories
Politics

The shutdown – and the House’s inaction – helps pave Congress’ path to irrelevance

Where’s Congress? The institution is unwilling to assert itself as an equal branch of government. 4X6, iStock/Getty Images Plus

Many Americans will be voting on Election Day – or have already cast votes – in races for statewide office, local positions and on ballot initiatives with major implications for democracy.

Congress is not on the ballot this November, but it will be in the 2026 midterms. A year from now, Americans in every state and district will get to vote for whom they want representing their interests in Washington.

But right now, Congress isn’t giving the American people much to go on.

As the shutdown of the federal government passes the one-month mark, the U.S. House of Representatives has been in recess for over 40 days. That’s the longest it’s ever stayed out of town outside of its typical summer recesses or the weeks leading up to their own elections.

Notably, the shutdown does not mean that Congress can’t meet. In fact, it must meet to end the shutdown legislatively. The Senate, for example, has taken votes recently on judicial nominations, a major defense authorization bill and a resolution on tariff policy.

Senators have also continued to hold bipartisan behind-the-scenes negotiations to end the shutdown impasse.

But with dwindling SNAP benefits, skyrocketing health care premiums and other major shutdown impacts beginning to set in, the House has all but abdicated its position as “The People’s Chamber.”

Long ‘path to irrelevance’

In addition to not meeting for any votes, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson has refused to swear in Democratic U.S. Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva of Arizona. Despite Johnson’s assurances, the shutdown does not prevent the House from meeting in a brief session to swear in Grijalva as a member for Arizona’s 7th District, which has been without representation since March.

Along with Casey Burgat and SoRelle Wyckoff Gaynor, I am co-author of a textbook, “Congress Explained: Representation and Lawmaking in the First Branch.” In that book, it was important to us to highlight Congress’ clear role as the preeminent lawmaking body in the federal government.

But throughout the shutdown battle, Congress – particularly the House of Representatives – has been unwilling to assert itself as an equal branch of government. Beyond policymaking, Congress has been content to hand over many of its core constitutional powers to the executive branch. As a Congress expert who loves the institution and profoundly respects its constitutionally mandated role, I have found this renunciation of responsibility difficult to watch.

And yet, Congress’ path to irrelevance as a body of government did not begin during the shutdown, or even in January 2025.

It is the result of decades of erosion that created a political culture in which Congress, the first branch of government listed in the Constitution, is relegated to second-class status.

A man in a suit with a blue tie, holding a folder with a white document in it.
President Donald Trump holds one of the many executive orders he has signed during his second term.
Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images

The Constitution puts Congress first

The 18th-century framers of the Constitution viewed Congress as the foundation of republican governance, deliberately placing it first in Article 1 to underscore its primacy. Congress was assigned the pivotal tasks of lawmaking and budgeting because controlling government finances was seen as essential to limiting executive power and preventing abuses that the framers associated with monarchy.

Alternatively, a weak legislature and an imperial executive were precisely what many of the founders feared. With legislative authority in the hands of Congress, power would at least be decentralized among a wide variety of elected leaders from different parts of the country, each of whom would jealously guard their own local interests.

But Trump’s first 100 days turned the founders’ original vision on its head, leaving the “first branch” to play second fiddle.

Like most recent presidents, Trump came in with his party in control of the presidency, the House and the Senate. Yet despite the lawmaking power that this governing trifecta can bring, the Republican majorities in Congress have mostly been irrelevant to Trump’s agenda.

Instead, Congress has relied on Trump and the executive branch to make changes to federal policy and in many cases to reshape the federal government completely.

Trump has signed more than 210 executive orders, a pace faster than any president since Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Republican Congress has shown little interest in pushing back on any of them. Trump has also aggressively reorganized, defunded or simply deleted entire agencies, such as the U.S. Agency for International Development and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

These actions have been carried out even though Congress has a clear constitutional authority over the executive branch’s budget. And during the shutdown, Congress has shown little to no interest in reasserting its “power of the purse,” content instead to let the president decide which individuals and agencies receive funding, regardless of what Congress has prescribed.

Many causes, no easy solutions

There’s no one culprit but instead a collection of factors that have provided the ineffectual Congress of today.

One overriding factor is a process that has unfolded over the past 50 or more years called political nationalization. American politics have become increasingly centered on national issues, parties and figures rather than more local concerns or individuals.

This shift has elevated the importance of the president as the symbolic and practical leader of a national party agenda. Simultaneously, it weakens the role of individual members of Congress, who are now more likely to toe the party line than represent local interests.

A brown-haired woman in a red jacket stands at a microphone in front of three American flags, speaking.
U.S. Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva, an Arizona Democrat who won a special election on Sept. 23, 2025, has not been sworn in by House Speaker Mike Johnson.
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

As a result, voters focus more on presidential elections and less on congressional ones, granting the president greater influence and diminishing Congress’ independent authority.

The more Congress polarizes among its members on a party-line basis, the less the public is likely to trust the legitimacy of its opposition to a president. Instead, congressional pushback − sometimes as extreme as impeachment − can thus be written off not as principled or substantive but as partisan or politically motivated to a greater extent than ever before.

Congress has also been complicit in giving away its own power. Especially when dealing with a polarized Congress, presidents increasingly steer the ship in budget negotiations, which can lead to more local priorities – the ones Congress is supposed to represent – being ignored.

But rather than Congress staking out positions for itself, as it often did through the turn of the 21st century, political science research has shown that presidential positions on domestic policy increasingly dictate – and polarize – Congress’ own positions on policy that hasn’t traditionally been divisive, such as funding support for NASA. Congress’ positions on procedural issues, such as raising the debt ceiling or eliminating the filibuster, also increasingly depend not on bedrock principles but on who occupies the White House.

In the realm of foreign policy, Congress has all but abandoned its constitutional power to declare war, settling instead for “authorizations” of military force that the president wants to assert. These give the commander in chief wide latitude over war powers, and both Democratic and Republican presidents have been happy to retain that power. They have used these congressional approvals to engage in extended conflicts such as the Gulf War in the early 1990s and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan a decade later.

What’s lost with a weak Congress

Americans lose a lot when Congress hands over such drastic power to the executive branch.

When individual members of Congress from across the country take a back seat, their districts’ distinctly local problems are less likely to be addressed with the power and resources that Congress can bring to an issue. Important local perspectives on national issues fail to be represented in Congress.

Even members of the same political party represent districts with vastly different economies, demographics and geography. Members are supposed to keep this in mind when legislating on these issues, but presidential control over the process makes that difficult or even impossible.

Maybe more importantly, a weak Congress paired with what historian Arthur Schlesinger called the “Imperial Presidency” is a recipe for an unaccountable president, running wild without the constitutionally provided oversight and checks on power that the founders provided to the people through their representation by the first branch of government.

This is an updated version of a story that first published on May 15, 2025.

The Conversation

Charlie Hunt does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

Categories
Entertainment

Cardi B Confesses Major Hygiene Lapse, Shares Plans to Fix It

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Cardi B has something to confess.

The pregnant rapper is opening up about personal hygiene after a considerable lapse.

Usually, the mess is confined to Cardi’s personal life and her epic celebrity feuds.

But, after months without washing, it’s her hair that’s currently in a sorry state. Cardi’s sharing her plans to fix things up.

Cardi B in June 2025.
Cardi B arrives at the 2025 ASCAP Rhythm & Soul Awards at Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills on June 08, 2025. (Photo Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

How long has Cardi B gone without washing her hair?

During a recent Instagram livestream, Cardi B opened up about her hair hygiene.

She revealed to fans and followers that she has not washed her hair in months.

Specifically, Cardi shared that she has not “washed my s–t” in around two or three months.

She has plans, however, to oil her scalp and then to wash and braid her hair in the coming days.

As for her hair’s current state, Cardi doesn’t paint a positive picture.

“I probably got all types of roach eggs, mosquito eggs, everything in this,” Cardi suggested.

Just for the record, mosquito larvae develop and thrive in standing water, such as a puddle or birdbath, not on the human scalp.

We are less familiar with roach eggs, but we looked it up. Roaches lay eggs within a protective sac and may leave them in crevices around a household.

Even if Cardi’s home has roaches, which is possible but feels unlikely, they would not seek her hair as a nesting ground.

However, the statement was likely a reference to how her scalp feels at present. In the livestream, as you can see, she was wearing a wig cap.

Cardi B in October 2025.
Cardi B attends MISTR’s National PrEP Day at The Abbey on October 09, 2025. (Photo Credit: Amy Sussman/Getty Images for MISTR, Free Online PrEP)

Hair is politicized and policed, and she’s spoken about this before

Many people of color, and especially Black women, find that their hair seems to be singled out due to our culture’s white supremacist beauty standards.

Cardi B, who has lineage from both Trinidad and the Dominican Republic, is very well aware. And she has spoken about the politics of her hair before.

“I been posting pics of my hair journey for years and being mixed don’t mean your hair is always long and curly, that wasn’t my case,” she emphasized back in 2021.

“I want women of color with tighter curl patterns to know that you don’t have ‘bad hair,’” she affirmed.

Cardi correctly continued: “There’s no such thing as bad hair, and ‘good’ hair don’t mean a certain texture. All hair is good.”

Like many celebrities, Cardi often appears in public while wearing a wig.

This past summer, her wigs made headlines because she was the defendant in a lawsuit.

(In fact, we strongly recommend that you watch comedian Josh Johnson’s stand-up about her trial — particularly when it comes to her interactions with opposing counsel)

Simply put, Cardi did not merely wear a wig to her trial. She wore different wigs each day, ranging from a black pixie cut to a curled blonde hairstyle.

The rapper changed her hair like she changed her outfits. She even cracked jokes about it to reporters after the fact.

Cardi B in February 2025.
Cardi B attends the 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards at Crypto.com Arena on February 02, 2025. (Photo Credit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

Hygiene lapses can and do happen — even to celebrities

Mental health, poverty, natural disasters, and more can cause people to go without basic hygiene upkeep in part or all of their body for unthinkable periods of time.

In some cases, the consequences can be dire and long-term.

However, Cardi B has the determination and the means to remedy what is probably a pretty unpleasant scalp situation. We’re sure that she’ll manage a full recovery.

As we mentioned, Cardi was at the center of a lawsuit just a couple of months ago. She has also been under stress due to the chaos of her personal life. Oh, and she’s pregnant.

Any of these factors could make someone struggle to address a key part of their daily upkeep, including hair and scalp hygiene. Removing the stigma from lapses like these can help people to more easily recover from them.

Cardi B Confesses Major Hygiene Lapse, Shares Plans to Fix It was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

Erika Kirk Criticized For Comparing J.D. Vance to Charlie Kirk Just Weeks After …

Reading Time: 3 minutes

On Thursday night, Erika Kirk addressed a crowd of students at the University of Mississippi.

Before bringing Vice President J.D. Vance onto the stage, the Turning Point USA CEO opened up about her feelings seven weeks after the murder of her husband, Charlie Kirk.

“You guys have no idea how helpful it is to have all of you in my life … you make me feel even more connected to my husband,” Erika told the crowd at one point, adding:

Erika Kirk, widow of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, speaks during a Turning Point USA event where U.S. Vice President JD Vance is expected, at the Pavilion at Ole Miss at the University of Mississippi, on October 29, 2025 in Oxford, Mississippi.
Erika Kirk, widow of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, speaks during a Turning Point USA event where U.S. Vice President JD Vance is expected, at the Pavilion at Ole Miss at the University of Mississippi, on October 29, 2025 in Oxford, Mississippi. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst-Pool/Getty Images)

“He didn’t leave us empty-handed. He built a machine. And all of you are a part of that.”

Erika Kirk takes the stage with J.D. Vance

After a speech of nearly an hour, Kirk introduced Vance. And her comments about the vice president have received a fair amount of criticism.

“When our team asked my dear friend, Vice President JD Vance, to speak today, I really prayed on it because, obviously, it’s a very emotional, emotional day,” Kirk said.

“But I could just hear Charlie in my heart. I could just hear him say, ‘Go reclaim that territory, babe.’ The battle’s already won. God’s love conquers. And that’s why I’m here today.’”

Kirk went on to say that while no one could “replace” her husband, she saw important “similarities” between Charlie and Vance.

US Vice President JD Vance (R) greets Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk's widow, during a Turning Point USA event at the University of Mississippi, in Oxford, Mississippi, October 29, 2025.
US Vice President JD Vance (R) greets Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, during a Turning Point USA event at the University of Mississippi, in Oxford, Mississippi, October 29, 2025. (Photo by JONATHAN ERNST/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

For his part, Vance praised Kirk for his political ability, noting that the podcast host urged the Trump administration not to strike nuclear sites in Iran.

Trump did so, but Vance claims that Charlie was pleased when the plan worked out.

“I really believe that one of the reasons why the president of the United States knocked out the Iranian nuclear facilities, but never got the United States into a protracted military conflict and never lost a single American in a Middle Eastern conflict is because we had the wisdom and the good sense to recognize that the American people are done with American troops dying in unnecessary foreign conflicts … but Charlie Kirk reminded me of that,” Vance said.

The crowd responded with chants of “48,” a clear endorsement of Vance as Donald Trump’s successor in the White House.

Erika Kirk, widow of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, speaks during a Turning Point USA event where U.S. Vice President JD Vance is expected, at the Pavilion at Ole Miss at the University of Mississippi, on October 29, 2025 in Oxford, Mississippi.
Erika Kirk, widow of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, speaks during a Turning Point USA event where U.S. Vice President JD Vance is expected, at the Pavilion at Ole Miss at the University of Mississippi, on October 29, 2025 in Oxford, Mississippi. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst-Pool/Getty Images)

There was a wide variety of criticism of the Kirk-Vance event, with some arguing that it’s inappropriate for Erika to compare her late husband to another man, and others complaining about the continued politicization of Charlie Kirk’s death from those who seek to gain office.

“Publicly simping over another man one month after husband’s murder. The American values MAGA wants to preserve,” wrote one X user.

“This is sick… it’s been barely a month since Charlie passed,” another tweeted, alongside a photo of Kirk and Vance embracing on stage.

“Starting with ‘no one can ever replace my husband… but JD Vance’ is a very deliberate choice,” a third chimed in.

“No one will ever replace her husband, though she seems to be giving it a solid try,” a fourth remarked.

Neither Vance nor Kirk has publicly responded to the criticism of their onstage interaction.

Erika Kirk Criticized For Comparing J.D. Vance to Charlie Kirk Just Weeks After … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

Ryan Seacrest’s Dad Passes Away; Beloved Host is “Heartbroken”

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Ryan Seacrest has opened up about a heartbreaking loss.

The legendary host and television personality’s father, Gary Seacrest, has passed away after battling prostate cancer.

Seacrest himself confirmed this very sad news in a statement on October 31.

Ryan Seacrest speaks on stage during the ‘Stage Architects: Nations × Festivals × Awards x Media’ panel at the 2025 Joy Forum at SEF Arena on October 17, 2025 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Amal Alhasan/Getty Images for GEA)

“It is with a heavy heart that I share with you that my loving father peacefully passed away earlier this week,” he captioned an Oct. 31 Instagram post. “My mom, sister and I have peace knowing he is in a better place and free of any pain or suffering. We are heartbroken.”

Earlier this year, the Wheel of Fortune emcee had revealed that his dad had been diagnosed with the aforementioned disease.

Continued Seacrest in his emotional statement:

“He was a devoted husband for 56 years, an incredible Papa to my niece Flora and my best friend. Dad, you will live in our hearts forever. I love you.”

Ryan Seacrest speaks on stage during the 2025 iHeartRadio Music Festival at T-Mobile Arena on September 20, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images for iHeartRadio)

Included alongside Seacrest’s social media caption were photos of Gary with his family, including wife Constance Marie Zullinger, Ryan’s sister Meredith Seacrest, her husband Jimmy Leach and their daughter Flora Leach.

Later on Friday, Ryan recalled his final moments with Gary during the Friday broadcast of his iHeartRadio show.

“It’s so vivid in my mind, but as he said without much strength or energy that he loved us and that he was going to miss us,” Seacrest told listeners.

“He looked over at me — and the power in the contact — he said, ‘Take care of your mom.’ And he said to my sister [Meredith, and her husband,] Jimmy, ‘Take care of Flora, my granddaughter.’ Then, literally a few seconds later he closed his eyes and said, ‘I’ve got to go.’ He knew. He was at peace.”

Ryan Seacrest attends YES Scholars 25th Anniversary Gala on September 4, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for YES Scholars)

Back on July 21, Seacrest said the following during a segment on On Air with Ryan Seacrest:

“My dad is about 80 years old, and I have a very close relationship with my father. And my father was diagnosed with prostate cancer years ago and started his treatment. And he, it didn’t get better. It got worse and it spread. It didn’t go well for him.”

According to Seacrest, his father’s illness took a turn during the most recent season of American Idol.

“I was on an American Idol show live during last season and my sister called me and she said, ‘Dad is in the ICU. How fast can you get here?’” Ryan remembered, noting Gary had contracted pneumonia.

“I finished the show. We were almost done. I couldn’t even, I didn’t even remember what I was saying was on the show. It was, like, robotic at that point.”

After flying to his father’s bedside, Ryan made sure to treasure of some family memories.

“I watched [my parents] over the weekends send photos of smiling and happiness and being together,” he said at the time.

“They’ve been married for 55 years. And they’ve got each other. They’re just happy to sit together looking at an ocean. I want to share that because I’ve been holding that in for a long time.”

Ryan Seacrest’s Dad Passes Away; Beloved Host is “Heartbroken” was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

Virginia Giuffre: Family of Late Prince Andrew Accuser Celebrates Royal’s Downfall

Reading Time: 3 minutes

On Thursday, King Charles took unprecedented action by stripping his brother, Prince Andrew, of all royal lands and titles.

The decision comes after years of controversy surrounding Andrew’s alleged sexual misconduct.

The most prominent accuser was an American woman named Virginia Giuffre, who claimed that she was sexually assaulted by Andrew while being trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein.

Giuffre took her own life in April, but today, her loved ones are celebrating the news that Andrew has essentially been ousted from the royal family.

Prince Andrew, Duke of York walks behind the coffin during the ceremonial procession of the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall on September 14, 2022 in London, United Kingdom.
Prince Andrew, Duke of York walks behind the coffin during the ceremonial procession of the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall on September 14, 2022 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Martin Meissner – WPA Pool/Getty Images)

Virginia’s brother Sky Roberts and sister-in-law Amanda Roberts broke down in tears while discussing Andrew’s downfall on the BBC show Newsnight.

“This normal girl from a normal family has taken down a prince,” Sky said through tears.

The family echoed those comments in a statement to People magazine:

“Today, an ordinary American girl from an ordinary American family brought down a British prince with her truth and extraordinary courage,” they wrote.

“Virginia Roberts Giuffre, our sister, a child when she was sexually assaulted by Andrew, never stopped fighting for accountability for what had happened to her and to countless other survivors like her,” the statement continues.

Family members of Virginia Roberts Duffey, Scott Roberts (C), his wife Amanda Roberts (R) and brother Daniel Wilson, speak at the Stand with Survivors Rally in support of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's victims, in Washington, DC on September 3, 2025.
Family members of Virginia Roberts Duffey, Scott Roberts (C), his wife Amanda Roberts (R) and brother Daniel Wilson, speak at the Stand with Survivors Rally in support of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s victims, in Washington, DC on September 3, 2025. (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP via Getty Images)

“Today, she declares victory.”

News of Andrew’s expulsion comes just days after the posthumous publication of Virginia’s memoir, Nobody’s Girl, in which she recounts the night when she was 17, and Ghislaine Maxwell instructed her to have sex with

“When we get home, you are to do for him what you do for Jeffrey,” Virginia quotes Maxwell as saying.

“Back at the house, Maxwell and Epstein said goodnight and headed upstairs, signaling it was time that I take care of the prince, In the years since, I’ve thought a lot about how he behaved.

“He was friendly enough, but still entitled – as if he believed having sex with me was his birthright.”

A copy of the book "Nobody's Girl - A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice" by Virginia Roberts Giuffre, is pictured in central London on October 21, 2025, on the day of its release in the UK.
A copy of the book “Nobody’s Girl – A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice” by Virginia Roberts Giuffre, is pictured in central London on October 21, 2025, on the day of its release in the UK. (Photo by NIKLAS HALLE’N/AFP via Getty Images)

Virginia first came out with her allegations several years ago, and for a long time, it looked as though the royals would take no action.

But this week, Charles stunned the world with an announcement about his brother’s future:

“His Majesty has today initiated a formal process to remove the Style, Titles and Honours of Prince Andrew,” reads the statement issued by Buckingham Palace.

“Prince Andrew will now be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor. His lease on Royal Lodge has, to date, provided him with legal protection to continue in residence.”

Andrew has not yet publicly responded to the Palace’s decision.

Virginia Giuffre: Family of Late Prince Andrew Accuser Celebrates Royal’s Downfall was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Could Be Next to Lose Titles After Prince Andrew: Report

Reading Time: 3 minutes

On Thursday, millions were stunned by the news that Prince Andrew had been stripped of his land and titles by order of his brother, King Charles.

The decision was a result of ongoing controversy surrounding Andrew’s friendship with Jeffrey Epstein and his alleged sexual misconduct.

After years of dithering on the part of the royals, it initially looked as though Andrew would not suffer any consequences.

Prince Andrew, Duke of York, attends the Christmas Day service at St Mary Magdalene Church on December 25, 2022 in Sandringham, Norfolk.
Prince Andrew, Duke of York, attends the Christmas Day service at St Mary Magdalene Church on December 25, 2022 in Sandringham, Norfolk. (Photo by Stephen Pond/Getty Images)

Now, many are speculating that Charles will continue cleaning house by removing Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s titles.

Is this the end of the royal line for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex?

In fact, Daily Mail columnist Maureen Callahan claims that with Andrew out of the way, Harry and Meghan’s days are “surely numbered.”

“It is now a question of when. Not if. The sun begins to set over Montecito — permanently,” firebrand journalist writes, adding:

“If the late Queen’s favorite son can be coldly ejected and stripped of his birthright — if William can have convinced the infamously conflict-averse Charles to renounce his own brother — well, Harry’s days as prince and Duke of Sussex are surely numbered.

“As for Meghan? Like Fergie, she would just be collateral damage. An afterthought.”

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex attend the closing ceremony of the Invictus Games Düsseldorf 2023 at Merkur Spiel-Arena on September 16, 2023 in Duesseldorf, Germany.
Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex attend the closing ceremony of the Invictus Games Düsseldorf 2023 at Merkur Spiel-Arena on September 16, 2023 in Duesseldorf, Germany. (Photo by Chris Jackson/Getty Images for the Invictus Games Foundation)

It’s odd that the piece is written with such a tone of moral righteousness, considering the author is essentially saying that underage sex trafficking is as bad as moving to a different country.

Yes, for years now, the British tabloid press has been comparing Andrew to Harry and Meghan, even though he (allegedly) committed actual, heinous crimes and they just relocated to California.

Callahan seems positively giddy at the thought of Harry and Meghan losing their royal titles and privileges.

So we have to take her with a grain of salt when she claims that an insider assured her it’s really gonna happen this time.

Royal source says Andrew is just the beginning of ‘bigger unraveling’

The source tells Callahan that the royals have begun the process of “picking away at the edges [of the family]” and that “a bigger unravelling is coming.”

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex attend the 2022 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Ripple of Hope Gala at New York Hilton on December 06, 2022 in New York City.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex attend the 2022 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Ripple of Hope Gala at New York Hilton on December 06, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for 2022 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Ripple of Hope Gala)

“That bigger unraveling is, to my mind, Harry and Meghan’s royal titles, status and honors,” Callahan helpfully explains.

“The role William has — to try to forge something sustainable — is now in stark relief. And no, Charles isn’t up to that job,” the insider continued.

“Once Andrew stops being the convenient cover, then where will people look next?”

Look, it’s certainly possible that Harry and Meghan might lose their titles someday — maybe even someday soon.

That doesn’t make it any less gross that Maureen Callahan is comparing their situation to that of an accused sexual predator.

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Could Be Next to Lose Titles After Prince Andrew: Report was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Politics

Graham Platner’s finance director resigns in latest personnel shakeup

The finance director for Graham Platner’s Senate campaign announced his resignation on Friday, the latest in a series of personnel departures for the Maine hopeful’s high-profile bid that has been marred by controversies over old social media posts and his tattoo with Nazi connotations.

Ronald Holmes, who had served as Platner’s national finance director since August, announced in a post on LinkedIn that he’s leaving the operation. He follows campaign manager Kevin Brown, who stepped down after less than a week on the job citing family reasons, and political director Genevieve McDonald, who resigned in a fiery fashion earlier this month, saying she could not look past some of Platner’s previous Reddit posts, where he self-identified as a communist and downplayed sexual assault in the military.

“I joined this campaign because I believed in building something different — a campaign of fresh energy, integrity, and reform-minded thinking in a political system that often resists exactly those things,” said Holmes in his post on Friday. “Somewhere along the way, I began to feel that my professional standards as a campaign professional no longer fully aligned with those of the campaign.”

Holmes did not immediately respond to messages Friday morning. His previous work included the campaigns of Michigan Democratic gubernatorial hopeful Chris Swanson and Rep. Josh Riley.

Platner’s campaign was off to a hot fundraising start, raising more than $3.2 million in his first six weeks as a candidate, largely from small-dollar donors.

In a statement, a campaign spokesperson pointed to the campaign’s focus on those small donors and said fundraising efforts will continue.

“Ron helped the campaign reach out to big dollar donors, and we appreciated his efforts. But the reality is our campaign’s fundraising success has come largely from small dollar donors,” said the spokesperson. “Nearly 90 percent of what we’ve raised has come from small dollar donations and online donors, which has been and [continues] to be run by our digital fundraising director.”

Platner, who went from an unknown oysterman to a high-profile Senate candidate endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in just a few weeks, apologized for his controversial Reddit posts and covered up his tattoo, saying he only learned after launching his campaign that it could be a Nazi symbol.

He has continued to campaign in recent weeks despite the controversies, holding town halls across the state. His campaign launched an ad this week urging voters to reject a voter-identification measure on Maine’s ballot this November.

Recent polls, though wildly different from one another, have shown Platner as a strong candidate in the Democratic primary that also includes Gov. Janet Mills — who is national Democrats’ preferred candidate in the race — along with a handful of other contenders including former congressional staffer Jordan Wood.

​Politics

Categories
Politics

Trump and Carney’s diplomatic dance | The Playbook Podcast

Trump and Carney’s diplomatic dance | The Playbook Podcast

lead image

​Politics

Categories
Politics

McConnell pans Heritage Foundation for its defense of Tucker Carlson’s Nick Fuentes interview

Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) ripped the Heritage Foundation on Friday, as conservatives clash over the organization’s continued embrace of Tucker Carlson in the wake of his friendly interview this week with Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes.

“Last I checked, ‘conservatives should feel no obligation’ to carry water for antisemites and apologists for America-hating autocrats,” McConnell, the former Republican Senate majority leader, wrote in a post on X. “But maybe I just don’t know what time it is…”

In the interview, Carlson said Republican supporters of Israel have been “seized by this brain virus.” And Fuentes told Carlson that “organized Jewry” poses the main obstacle to keeping the country together.

But Kevin Roberts, the Heritage Foundation’s president, defended Carlson in a video posted to X Thursday, and even spoke out against deplatforming Fuentes while adding he disagrees with and abhors “things that Nick Fuentes says.”

The real enemy force, Roberts contended, is “the vile ideas of the left.”

In a post on X Friday, Roberts sought to clarify his stance on Fuentes, denouncing among other things, “his vicious antisemitic ideology, his Holocaust denial, and his relentless conspiracy theories that echo the darkest chapters of history.” But counsel, and not cancellation, is the best way to respond, he said.

“Our task is to confront and challenge those poisonous ideas at every turn to prevent them from taking America to a very dark place,” Roberts wrote. “Join us — not to cancel — but to guide, challenge, and strengthen the conversation, and be confident as I am that our best ideas at the heart of western civilization will prevail.”

But McConnell, who has spent the past several months sinceleaving leadership working to safeguard his foreign policy and ideological worldviews within the Republican Party, panned the conservative think tank’s stance.

“The ‘intellectual backbone of the conservative movement’ is only as strong as the values it defends,” he said.

The Heritage Foundation did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

But McConnell isn’t the only Republican senator taking aim at Carlson for his interview.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) also went after the former Fox News host while speaking at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s annual summit Thursday in Las Vegas. Cruz has long clashed with Carlson over Israel, including on an episode of Carlson’s podcast in July.

“If you sit there with someone who says Adolf Hitler was very, very cool, and that their mission is to combat and defeat global Jewry, and you say nothing, then you are a coward and you are complicit in that evil,” said Cruz.

​Politics