Speaker
Vince Coglianese
Appearances over time
1 episodes
Episodes
1Podcasts
Quotes & moments
The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that states can count mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day but received up to 5 days after, with Barrett and Roberts joining liberal justices.
Roughly 10,000–15,000 Haitians on Temporary Protected Status live in Springfield, Ohio, making up approximately 20% of the city's population of 58,000.
According to reporting cited in the episode, approximately 350,000 Haitians currently hold Temporary Protected Status in the United States.
Vince Coglianese claimed that 80% of the American people support election integrity measures like voter ID, arguing Senate inaction defies the popular will.
Coglianese estimated senators earn approximately $200,000 per year while spending very few weeks doing legislative business, criticizing their resistance to passing the Save America Act.
DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin offered Haitians losing TPS a voluntary departure package including a plane ticket home plus roughly $2,100–$2,600 to help them reestablish in Haiti.
The chairman of the South Dakota Republican Party confirmed on camera that Senate Majority Leader John Thune personally requested that conservative activist Scott Pressler be barred from attending the state GOP convention.
The South Dakota Republican Party voted by voice vote to reject a formal censure resolution against Senate Majority Leader John Thune, though Coglianese noted the vote was close.
American Financing advertised that customers consolidating high-interest debt with mortgage rates in the 5s are saving an average of $800 per month.
Former President Jimmy Carter, as part of the bipartisan Carter-Baker Commission in the early 2000s, concluded that mail-in ballots are the primary source of fraud in elections.
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine argued that Haitians with TPS are disproportionately employed in healthcare, including nursing homes and Alzheimer's care facilities.
Coglianese noted the Haiti earthquake occurred in 2010, arguing TPS protection linked to that disaster has long since outlived its intended purpose.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune has the tools to pass the Save America Act — committee assignments, fundraising dollars, vacation scheduling — and won't use a single one. He's acting like a weatherman reporting on the weather he controls.
John Thune personally arranged to have conservative activist Scott Pressler barred from the South Dakota Republican Convention. They even placed a photo of him at the entrance to make sure it happened — treating a grassroots ally like a security threat.
Senator John Cornyn publicly mocked Save America Act supporters as 'keyboard warrior geniuses and grifters.' Vince's response: Cornyn was just fired by Texas voters, and the very thing he says demoralizes the base is the thing HE is doing — blocking the bill.
The Carter-Baker Commission — a bipartisan election study — concluded that mail-in ballots are the primary source of fraud in American elections. Democrats used to acknowledge this. Now they embrace it because it benefits them.
Senator Thom Tillis argued that pushing for the Save America Act in the next 4 months before midterms would undermine voter confidence. Vince's verdict: Tillis sounds like Chuck Schumer, and voters noticed — Tillis retired before they could fire him.
Without Trump voters, Republicans don't control the Senate or the House. Those voters didn't just vote for Trump — they voted for election integrity, border security, and the Save America Act. Pretending otherwise is a betrayal of the mandate.
DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin went on national TV and told Haitians they could apply for green cards, visas, or other legal pathways to stay in the United States. Coglianese found this deeply wrong: his job is to protect sovereignty, not offer legal roadmaps to people the administration is trying to remove.
There are no big donors, no PAC money, and no astroturfing behind the Save America Act pressure campaign. It's entirely grassroots, which means it can only survive if listeners keep the energy alive. That's the ask.
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine argued that Haitians on TPS are integral to Ohio's healthcare and manufacturing sectors, calling the TPS termination a mistake and urging the Trump administration to reconsider. Coglianese called the argument weak and dishonest.
The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that states can count mail-in ballots received up to 5 days after Election Day if postmarked on time. Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote the majority, joined by Chief Justice Roberts and the liberal wing. Alito called it inconsistent with two centuries of historical practice.
The South Dakota Republican Party came close to formally censuring Senate Majority Leader John Thune over his failure to pass the Save America Act. The voice vote was rejected, but it was tight — and the state party chairman issued a public apology to Scott Pressler.
The Supreme Court's TPS ruling means roughly 1 in 5 people in Springfield, Ohio — a city of 58,000 — lost their legal status overnight. MSNOW frames it as a crisis. Coglianese frames it as a restoration.
Analysis
What they talk about
- Government 83%
- News 17%