On a warm and cloudy Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, DEI abuses are still going on.
From FrontpageMag, the Trump administration has fired one out of every seven immigration judges.
From Townhall, the reason why thousands more Afrikaners are not taking up President Trump's offer of refugee status.
From The Washington Free Beacon, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) claimed to have a "moral duty" to release his tax returns while in public office, but hasn't done so since 2022.
From the Washington Examiner, Republicans praise a video challenging congresscritter Ro Khanna (D-Cal) about sex trafficking crimes committed by illegal aliens.
From The Federalist, congresscritter Eric Swalwell (D-Cal) suspends his campaign for California governor after accusations of sexual assault.
From American Thinker, the "rights of Englishmen", which led to the American Revolution.
From NewsBusters, ABC and NBC have gone Sergeant Schultz over the hospice fraud in California.
From Canada Free Press, place your bets on who will be this year's alleged Anti-Christ.
From TeleSUR, over 52,000 people in Peru are given an extra day to vote.
From TCW Defending Freedom, articles about the coronavirus that twist the facts.
From Snouts in the Trough, Trump should be taken seriously, but not always literally.
From EuroNews, five takeaways from Hungarian Prime Minister-elect Péter Magyar's press conference.
From Daily News Hungary, world leaders react to Magyar's electoral victory.
From Hungary Today, Magyar's victory speech is "a rambling of an angry narcissist drunk on power".
From Free West Media, Iran now has a reason to acquire nuclear weapons. (Disclaimer: this article does not reflect the opinions of yours truly.)
From ReMix, Magyar is now trapped between his promises to Hungarian voters and the expectations of the E.U.
From Balkan Insight, Balkan leaders congratulate Magyar, while allies of outgoing Prime Minister Viktor Orbán are regretful.
From The North Africa Post, Libya reaches a unified budget agreement after years of political division.
From The New Arab, did the tech company Apple erase the names of Lebanese villages from its maps?
From the Daily Mail, according to two NGOs, Iran executed at least 1,639 people in 2025.
From Free West Media, two Algerian men attempt an "Allah Akbar" at a restaurant in Mauléon-Licharre, France, but are subdued by diners and later arrested. (If you read French, read the story at Sud Ouest.)
From The Jerusalem Post, millions of people are reportedly surviving on just one meal a day in Sudan.
From The Times Of Israel, the number of Jews outside Israel killed in antisemitic attacks in 2025 was the highest in 30 years.
From Arutz Sheva, will all of Europe become no-go zones?
From Gatestone Institute, why the Qatari media network Al-Jazeera should be banned. (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)
From The Daily Signal, what does the aforementioned Viktor Orbán's loss to Magyar mean for Hungary?
From The American Conservative, acting Venezuelan President Delcy Rodríguez settles in.
From The Western Journal, Trump warns China against providing any weapons to Iran.
From BizPac Review, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's 100-day-in-office propaganda victory lap is regarded as coming from "massive insecurity".
From the Daily Caller, Trump's request for the military budget is, as he would say, "yuuuuge".
From the New York Post, the House Ethics Committee opens an investigation of the aforementioned Eric Swalwell.
From Breitbart, Trump claims not to care if Iran doesn't return to talks.
From Newsmax, a judge dismisses Trump's lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal over its story about his ties to the late Jeffrey Epstein.
And from The Babylon Bee, Pope Leo XIV shares an AI-generated picture of himself dressed as Trump.