On the last Monday of February, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Republican National Committee chairwoman Ronna McDaniel decides to resign.
From FrontpageMag, left-wing prosecutors are building a new kind of police state.
From Townhall, lessons from the elections of 1980.
From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter and senatorial candidate Barbara Lee (D-Cal) is accused of illegally coordinating with a super PAC.
From the Washington Examiner, some Democrats don't want President Biden to run for reelection, but find the alternatives even less desirable.
From The Federalist, a bill offered by Republican state legislators in Indiana would allow Democrats kick any Republican attorney general off the ballot.
From American Thinker, University of Iowa basketball player Caitlin Clark exposes racism in the media.
From NewsBusters, while appearing on Meet the Press, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) lies about pro-life laws.
From Canada Free Press, yes, there is racism by blacks against whites in America.
From TeleSUR, Argentinian teachers begin a nationwide strike against President Javier Milei's policies. (I don't think that TeleSUR has reported on Milei's delivering a monthly surplus, the first for Argentina in 12 years.)
From TCW Defending Freedom, the scandal of social care migrants to the U.K. who disobey the rules of their visas.
From Snouts in the Trough, has the Irish government revealed its plans for the near future?
From EuroNews, the Hungarian parliament ratifies Sweden's bid to join NATO.
From Voice Of Europe, Lithuania considers joining the E.U.'s operation to protect commercial ships in the Red Sea.
From ReMix, Polish farmers stage a 24-hour blockade of the A2 highway at the border with Germany near the village of Ĺwiecko.
From Balkan Insight, the Greek party SYRIZA faces new internal divisions but rejects holding a new leadership contest.
From The North Africa Post, Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali consider discontinuing the West African franc, a legacy of colonization by France. (France got rid of its own franc in favor of the Euro about 20 years ago.)
From The New Arab, according to rights groups, Egypt has been harassing activists reporting about construction of an area allegedly earmarked for refugees from Gaza.
From the Daily Mail, Welsh singer Charlotte Church leads a 100-member choir in the song From the River to the Sea.
From Gatestone Institute, the Palestinians don't need new governments but new leaders.
From The Stream, is another Armenian genocide in the near future?
From The Daily Signal, challenging the "racial profiteers".
From The American Conservative, will former First Lady Michelle Obama become a "September savior" or go on a "suicide mission"?
From The Western Journal, in the South Carolina Republican presidential primary, former Governor Nikki Haley can't even beat former President Trump in her home county.
From BizPac Review, don't mess with former NFL quarterback Cam Newton.
From The Daily Wire, according to an investigation, at least 16 universities promote a book on how to blow up an oil pipeline.
From the Daily Caller, according to a poll, Biden is barely beating Trump in one bloc that normally favors Democrats.
From the New York Post, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg asks for a gag order in Trump's hush money trial.
From Breitbart, actor Jerry Steinfeld is harassed by anti-Israel protesters.
From Newsmax, Biden and Trump both reportedly have plans to visit the Mexican border in Texas this coming Thursday.
From USA Today, the U.S. Air Force member who set himself on fire in front of the Israeli embassy has died of his injuries. (via Not the Bee)
And from The Babylon Bee, facing low approval ratings, Biden promises to pretend to care about the southern border.
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