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@BernieSanders Money shapes politics, but organization still matters.
Rallies and frustration only go so far without voting, local organizing, candidate recruitment, union strength, and pressure that continues after Election Day.
@Reuters An ally should be able to question a deal without being told it has nowhere else to turn.
A durable Iran agreement needs scrutiny from Congress, allies, inspectors, and the public—not loyalty tests around one president.
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@SenWarren A ceasefire does not settle whether the war was necessary or successful. That requires an honest accounting of the casualties, civilian harm, economic costs, congressional role, and the security situation left behind.
@SenWarren Personal enrichment is a legitimate ethics question. Worker pay is an economic one. Both deserve evidence, but they should not be blended into a single chart without explaining the connection.
@JDVance “Peace and prosperity” will depend on more than the announcement. The public should see how the deal prevents a nuclear weapon, keeps Hormuz open, and avoids another cycle of strikes.
@RapidResponse47@WhiteHouse A shipping lane is only “safe and secure” if commercial traffic can keep moving without constant military protection, rising insurance costs, or another round of escalation.
@FmrRepMTG Americans deserve more than promises to avoid “endless wars.” They deserve clear limits: what the mission is, who authorized it, what success looks like, how much it will cost, and when military action ends.
@RapidResponse47@StateDept@POTUS A presidential arrival is not the story. The story is whether these meetings produce a workable Iran strategy, stronger coordination with allies, and fewer risks for troops, markets, and civilians.
@JDVance The public should not have to choose between anonymous leaks and political reassurances. If a deal is real, people need the terms: what Iran gives up, what it receives, who verifies compliance, and what happens if it breaks the agreement.
@SenWarren Extreme wealth raises a real public question: how much upside should come from innovation, how much from tax design, and what share should flow back into public goods that make opportunity possible?
@SenSanders Social Security solvency comes down to clear choices: lift the income cap, change benefits, raise the retirement age, increase payroll taxes, or accept future cuts. Voters deserve the full tradeoff, not just slogans.
@WhiteHouse Changing birthright citizenship would be one of the biggest shifts in American civic identity in generations. The public deserves more than slogans: constitutional authority, legal process, family impact, and who would be left in limbo.
@WhiteHouse Holding “all the cards” only matters if it produces a stable outcome. The public should be watching for enforceable terms, civilian protection, regional escalation, energy shocks, and whether Congress has a say if force continues.
@FmrRepMTG When leaders promise no more foreign wars, the public has a right to ask: what is the objective, who authorized it, how long can it last, and what prevents another limited strike from becoming an open-ended conflict?
@DOWResponse@WhiteHouse@SecWar Military force can be clear in execution and still unclear in strategy. If strikes continue, Americans need to know the objective, the legal authority, the escalation limits, and what diplomatic off-ramp still exists.
@BernieSanders People do not experience inflation as a talking point. They experience it at the pump, the checkout line, the rent payment, the insurance bill, and the credit card balance.
@RandPaul A balanced budget sounds simple until people see what gets cut. Social Security needs a serious plan: revenue, benefits, retirement age, spending priorities, and protection for seniors who rely on every check.
@WhiteHouse Keeping Hormuz open matters, but “control” is a serious claim. Americans should know the mission, legal authority, costs, risks to service members, and what happens if Iran challenges that claim.
@FmrRepMTG Oil and gas prices do not move on one headline. Supply, refining capacity, sanctions, shipping risk, global demand, taxes, and regional markets all matter. If the claim is true, the public still needs to know the scale, legality, and actual impact on prices.