🚨 JUST IN — Thomas Massie concedes the race:
“I would've come out sooner, but I had to call my opponent and concede.”
“And it took a while to find Ed Gallrein in Tel Aviv.”
That line is going to detonate across Washington.
Massie just turned his concession speech into a missile aimed directly at the flood of outside money and foreign policy influence that consumed this race.
The most expensive House primary in U.S. history ends with one final message:
This wasn’t just Kentucky voting.
This was the political establishment making an example out of someone who refused to fall in line.
🚨 THE FINAL RADIO CALL EVERY LINEMAN FEARS - AND AN ENTIRE IBEW CREW BREAKS DOWN
They gather around his truck. Silent. Still. Every man bracing himself for what they’re about to hear.
Then the dispatcher’s voice comes through the radio:
“Clear the airway.”
“This is the last and final call for Kyle Ferree.”
“He has climbed his last pole. His hooks are hung.”
“After six years of service, his work here on earth is done.”
“Kyle, may you rest in peace. Although you are gone, you will never be forgotten.”
“Kyle, you are now clear of duty.”
“Rest in peace, brother. Go with God. We will take it from here.”
And then - one by one - the crew checks out over the radio:
“2:08 checking out.”
“2:11 checking out.”
“2:17 checking out.”
“3:30 checking out, little buddy.”
“3:35 checking out.”
“3:36 checking out.”
And on and on… each man saying goodbye in the only way linemen know how.
Kyle Ferree was an IBEW brother.
A father of two with a third on the way.
A husband. A friend.
Gone in seconds during routine line work.
No reporters.
No speeches.
Just raw loyalty from the workers who climb in storms, ice, and darkness - and know this could have been any one of them.
Who’s really looking out for the people who do this job?
Tim Walz says that Jimmy Kimmel’s firing is “North Korea style-stuff.”
Here’s Tim Walz deploying the National Guard to prevent families from leaving their homes during the COVID lockdowns.
Hey, Tim this is “North Korea style-stuff.”
🚨NEW: Stephen A. Smith on Erika Kirk's tribute:
"What man wouldn't want his wife to represent him the way that she just did? She spoke glowingly about him as a husband, as a father, as a leader for his organization. And she also vowed to continue his work."
"And when you see something like that, that's reminiscent of individuals that have suffered an assassin's bullet in years past that was represented by their spouses in very heroic fashion. So we appreciate that. "
@DailyCaller