World
Florida’s two US House races offer early verdict on Trump agenda
As Mr. Weil finished his stump speech, people lined up to ask questions. One presented herself as a retired Veterans Administration nurse whose retirement checks suddenly stopped coming. Another, a public school bus driver, said she had seen recent funding cuts affect the special education students she ferries to and from classes. Worries about the future of Social Security abound in this gathering. Florida ranks second after Maine among states with the highest percentage of residents over 65.Another close race that has tightened is in District 1, near Pensacola, where Republican Jimmy Patronis is fending off Democrat Gay Valimont to fill a seat vacated by Matt Gaetz, who resigned his House seat in 2024 in a failed foray at a Trump Cabinet post.“Our goal right now is to put the fear of God in them that no seat is safe,” he says.
Why We Wrote This
While most Florida Democrats run as centrists, Mr. Weil – a transplanted New Yorker – has embraced a progressive label. He plays up his role as a hockey dad who makes his two young boys’ school lunches. In December, as the race began, the Weil family picked up a “campaign cat” from a rescue shelter. They dubbed it “Chatterbox.” One campaign sign at the town hall is of Mr. Weil holding Chatterbox.
Dressed in jeans, a suit jacket, and spit-polished black shoes, Josh Weil has the cool and familiar air required of his job as a public school math teacher.“When there’s not much on the menu, people are going to gobble up anything that is there,” says Christopher Cooper, a Southern politics expert at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina. “The question [that the elections can help answer] is, does what appears to be growing discontent lead to any sort of electoral change?”To date, Mr. Weil’s bid is the longest of long shots in a district where Republicans outnumber Democrats 2-to-1 and President Donald Trump won by over 30% in November. Yet recent polling suggests that Mr. Weil is making a race of it against State Sen. Randy Fine, a Republican whose endorsement from Mr. Trump is his main calling card. The election is to fill the vacancy left when Mike Waltz resigned to become White House national security adviser.
For many concerned Floridians – including those who attended a town hall at a Silver Springs community center last week – the election is an opportunity not just to push for a check on the Trump administration, but also to craft winning messages for other races. That it’s happening in Florida – the epicenter of Republican Party power and funding – only adds to the drama.“Our Constitution is being crushed – that’s not hyperbole,” Mr. Weil says. “Now, America gets a chance to speak. Now, Silver Springs gets a chance to take it all back.”As of a week ago, Democrats held a slight advantage over Republicans in early voting with 46,377 votes cast. That makes the race far tighter than previous contests here at that stage.
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In Mr. Weil’s view, that neglect fits a trend of Republicans “trashing the basic infrastructure of our nation – everything that makes America great.
Mr. Weil has raised over million compared with Mr. Fine’s 0,000. Senator Fine, a casino operator, has injected another 0,000 of his own money. On Thursday, as Republicans fretted over the Florida races, New York Rep. Elise Stefanik agreed to remain in her seat, bowing out as the administration’s nominee for United Nations ambassador in order to protect Republicans’ razor-thin House majority.“You’re going to hear a lot about ‘Jihad Josh’ from my opponent,” says Mr. Weil. Senator Fine has suggested that Mr. Weil’s conversion to Islam in 2011 makes him unfit for office. Mr. Weil has said that his conversion came as he and his now-ex-wife, who is Muslim, were looking for a mosque for her, and that he found a supportive community there. But in Mr. Weil’s view, such biased statements only underscore the existential political struggle at play.“Just the fact that Democrats can say that Republicans are having to work hard is something,” says J. Miles Coleman, the associate editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, the University of Virginia Center for Politics’ political newsletter. “The mentality [of Democrats] is being able to beat the spread.”
In an interview, Mr. Weil says he hopes that a win by a new Democrat would weaken the power of a Trump endorsement, allowing moderate Republicans to join Democrats in boosting oversight of the Trump White House.
Here in Silver Springs, the recent Weil campaign event drew a crowd of mostly older, white residents, dotted with military veterans.
“There is a lot of energy in the district right now,” says recent Connecticut transplant Hilary Platen, who has canvassed the district for Mr. Weil. “People are looking for someone they can relate to and help end the chaos.”Some voters are responding to the Trump administration’s funding cuts with calls for accountability. Two House elections this week suggest a nation looking for less chaos and more moderation.
“I disagree with Josh on some things, and I’m sure I’ll disagree with him if he gets elected,” the Republican said. “But we need a government where it’s up to Democrats and Republicans to hash things out together. That’s not where we are now. In my view, that’s what a vote for Josh could accomplish.”The campaign has gotten nasty, with Mr. Fine two weeks ago demanding that police arrest his opponent after one of Mr. Weil’s canvassers was arrested on a stolen bicycle. (Mr. Weil was not arrested.)Rudderless after last year’s presidential loss, Democrats managed to flip a state Senate seat in a Pennsylvania special election last week and may be able to tack well enough to add a liberal judge to the Wisconsin Supreme Court in a vote tomorrow, despite a massive infusion of money on the other side from Elon Musk.
A win in either district, Professor Cooper adds, “would probably be the biggest upset in a congressional election in the last decade, certainly. I can’t think of anything that would challenge that.”
“What I am going to do is I am going to stand with President Trump,” Mr. Fine told The Daytona Beach News-Journal recently. “The Trump agenda is on the line in this election.” (His campaign did not return emails from the Monitor requesting comment.)
The only person other than Mr. Weil wearing a suit jacket was a middle-aged man from Marion County, who says he is active in Republican politics. He asked to remain anonymous in an interview “so they won’t kick me out.”Already, the energy around the two elections suggests that the Trump administration’s aggressive launch, marked by a rapid overhaul of the federal government, could be damaging the Republican Party’s electoral prospects. Democrats are clamoring to make a statement deep in Trump country that President Trump and his team are hurting the nation, and Republicans are determined to protect the president’s legislative leverage and agenda.

Here in Silver Springs, the recent Weil campaign event drew a crowd of mostly older, white residents, dotted with military veterans. “Our goal right now is to put the fear of God in them that no seat is safe,” he says. “When there’s not much on the menu, people are going to gobble up anything that is there,” says Christopher Cooper, a Southern politics expert at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina. “The question [that the elections can help answer] is, does what appears to be growing discontent lead to any sort of electoral change?”
Why We Wrote This
“Just the fact that Democrats can say that Republicans are having to work hard is something,” says J. Miles Coleman, the associate editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, the University of Virginia Center for Politics’ political newsletter. “The mentality [of Democrats] is being able to beat the spread.”
“There is a lot of energy in the district right now,” says recent Connecticut transplant Hilary Platen, who has canvassed the district for Mr. Weil. “People are looking for someone they can relate to and help end the chaos.” Rudderless after last year’s presidential loss, Democrats managed to flip a state Senate seat in a Pennsylvania special election last week and may be able to tack well enough to add a liberal judge to the Wisconsin Supreme Court in a vote tomorrow, despite a massive infusion of money on the other side from Elon Musk. “You’re going to hear a lot about ‘Jihad Josh’ from my opponent,” says Mr. Weil. Senator Fine has suggested that Mr. Weil’s conversion to Islam in 2011 makes him unfit for office. Mr. Weil has said that his conversion came as he and his now-ex-wife, who is Muslim, were looking for a mosque for her, and that he found a supportive community there. But in Mr. Weil’s view, such biased statements only underscore the existential political struggle at play.
In an interview, Mr. Weil says he hopes that a win by a new Democrat would weaken the power of a Trump endorsement, allowing moderate Republicans to join Democrats in boosting oversight of the Trump White House. Already, the energy around the two elections suggests that the Trump administration’s aggressive launch, marked by a rapid overhaul of the federal government, could be damaging the Republican Party’s electoral prospects. Democrats are clamoring to make a statement deep in Trump country that President Trump and his team are hurting the nation, and Republicans are determined to protect the president’s legislative leverage and agenda. The only person other than Mr. Weil wearing a suit jacket was a middle-aged man from Marion County, who says he is active in Republican politics. He asked to remain anonymous in an interview “so they won’t kick me out.” While most Florida Democrats run as centrists, Mr. Weil – a transplanted New Yorker – has embraced a progressive label. He plays up his role as a hockey dad who makes his two young boys’ school lunches. In December, as the race began, the Weil family picked up a “campaign cat” from a rescue shelter. They dubbed it “Chatterbox.” One campaign sign at the town hall is of Mr. Weil holding Chatterbox. In an interview with the Monitor, Mr. Weil says that the 6th District – a grapefruit-shaped lump in east-central Florida comprised of national forest, cattle ranches, and bits of suburbs from the larger cities of Orlando, Ocala, and St. Augustine – is an opportunity because “it has been neglected.”
Some voters are responding to the Trump administration’s funding cuts with calls for accountability. Two House elections this week suggest a nation looking for less chaos and more moderation.
Dressed in jeans, a suit jacket, and spit-polished black shoes, Josh Weil has the cool and familiar air required of his job as a public school math teacher. In Mr. Weil’s view, that neglect fits a trend of Republicans “trashing the basic infrastructure of our nation – everything that makes America great. To date, Mr. Weil’s bid is the longest of long shots in a district where Republicans outnumber Democrats 2-to-1 and President Donald Trump won by over 30% in November. Yet recent polling suggests that Mr. Weil is making a race of it against State Sen. Randy Fine, a Republican whose endorsement from Mr. Trump is his main calling card. The election is to fill the vacancy left when Mike Waltz resigned to become White House national security adviser.
The campaign has gotten nasty, with Mr. Fine two weeks ago demanding that police arrest his opponent after one of Mr. Weil’s canvassers was arrested on a stolen bicycle. (Mr. Weil was not arrested.)
“I disagree with Josh on some things, and I’m sure I’ll disagree with him if he gets elected,” the Republican said. “But we need a government where it’s up to Democrats and Republicans to hash things out together. That’s not where we are now. In my view, that’s what a vote for Josh could accomplish.”
“What I am going to do is I am going to stand with President Trump,” Mr. Fine told The Daytona Beach News-Journal recently. “The Trump agenda is on the line in this election.” (His campaign did not return emails from the Monitor requesting comment.)Mr. Weil, who prides himself on breaking down complex concepts so 12-year-olds can understand them, is in an unexpected spot as he attempts to win one of two special congressional elections in Florida on Tuesday.
Mr. Weil has raised over million compared with Mr. Fine’s 0,000. Senator Fine, a casino operator, has injected another 0,000 of his own money. On Thursday, as Republicans fretted over the Florida races, New York Rep. Elise Stefanik agreed to remain in her seat, bowing out as the administration’s nominee for United Nations ambassador in order to protect Republicans’ razor-thin House majority. As Mr. Weil finished his stump speech, people lined up to ask questions. One presented herself as a retired Veterans Administration nurse whose retirement checks suddenly stopped coming. Another, a public school bus driver, said she had seen recent funding cuts affect the special education students she ferries to and from classes. Worries about the future of Social Security abound in this gathering. Florida ranks second after Maine among states with the highest percentage of residents over 65.A win in either district, Professor Cooper adds, “would probably be the biggest upset in a congressional election in the last decade, certainly. I can’t think of anything that would challenge that.”
“Our Constitution is being crushed – that’s not hyperbole,” Mr. Weil says. “Now, America gets a chance to speak. Now, Silver Springs gets a chance to take it all back.”
As of a week ago, Democrats held a slight advantage over Republicans in early voting with 46,377 votes cast. That makes the race far tighter than previous contests here at that stage.
For many concerned Floridians – including those who attended a town hall at a Silver Springs community center last week – the election is an opportunity not just to push for a check on the Trump administration, but also to craft winning messages for other races. That it’s happening in Florida – the epicenter of Republican Party power and funding – only adds to the drama.
World
Trump Allegedly Urged El Salvador President to Accommodate U.S. Criminals: Are ‘Homegrowns’ Next?
In a recent Oval Office meeting, President Donald Trump and El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele tackled a surprising topic: the idea of sending U.S. criminals to El Salvador. The conversation also touched on a Maryland father, Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, who was wrongly deported to El Salvador alongside Tren de Aragua prisoners due to a […]

In a recent Oval Office meeting, President Donald Trump and El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele tackled a surprising topic: the idea of sending U.S. criminals to El Salvador. The conversation also touched on a Maryland father, Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, who was wrongly deported to El Salvador alongside Tren de Aragua prisoners due to a clerical error. Despite a Supreme Court order to bring Garcia back to the U.S., the issue seemed overshadowed during Monday’s talks, with Trump focusing on a bold proposal to relocate American prisoners abroad.
El Salvador’s Mega-Prison: A Model for Tough-on-Crime Policies
El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) in Tecoluca took center stage in the discussion. Opened in January 2023, this high-security mega-prison is the largest in the Americas, capable of holding up to 40,000 inmates. Built under Bukele’s leadership, CECOT houses the country’s most notorious gang members and terrorists. With its imposing electric fences, 19 watchtowers, and over 1,000 armed guards, the fortress symbolizes Bukele’s tough-on-crime approach, which has slashed violence in a nation once dubbed the “murder capital of the world.”
A viral video circulating online captured Trump urging Bukele to expand facilities like CECOT to accommodate “homegrown” U.S. criminals. The former president doubled down during a joint press conference, leaving little room for doubt about his stance. “I’d like to go a step further,” Trump said, addressing Pam Bondi. “I don’t know what the laws are—we always have to obey the laws—but we also have homegrown criminals that push people into subways. I’d like to include them in the group of people to get them out of the country.”
This unexpected proposal has sparked debate about the feasibility and legality of sending American convicts overseas. As the conversation between Trump and Bukele gains traction, many are left wondering: could U.S. prisoners soon find themselves behind bars in El Salvador?
World
Pennsylvania Governor’s Residence Targeted in Arson Attack: What We Know
A shocking arson attack rocked the official residence of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro in Harrisburg early Sunday, April 13, 2025, forcing the governor, his wife Lori, their four children, two dogs, and another family member to evacuate.

A shocking arson attack rocked the official residence of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro in Harrisburg early Sunday, April 13, 2025, forcing the governor, his wife Lori, their four children, two dogs, and another family member to evacuate. The blaze, which caused significant damage to the historic 29,000-square-foot Georgian-style mansion, has left the community reeling and authorities scrambling to uncover the motive behind this targeted act of violence.
Suspect Arrested in Harrisburg Arson Case
Pennsylvania State Police arrested 38-year-old Harrisburg resident Cody Balmer in connection with the fire. According to officials, Balmer scaled a nearly 7-foot iron fence, evaded state troopers, and broke into the residence, where he allegedly set the fire using homemade incendiary devices. Balmer turned himself in on Sunday afternoon and now faces serious charges, including attempted murder, terrorism, aggravated arson, and aggravated assault. An affidavit reveals Balmer expressed anger toward Governor Shapiro, even stating he would have attacked him with a hammer if they had crossed paths.
A Terrifying Wake-Up Call
The ordeal began around 2 a.m. when state troopers, part of the governor’s security detail, pounded on the family’s door to alert them to the flames. “We woke up to bangs on the door, and thanks to the quick actions of law enforcement, we got out safely,” Shapiro said during an emotional press conference. The fire, which started in a room often used for public events and art displays, left behind charred walls, destroyed furniture, and ash-covered floors. Photos released by the state show remnants of a Passover Seder the family had hosted just hours earlier, including a singed “Passover Crafts” sign.
Shapiro Vows Resilience Amid Tragedy
Governor Shapiro, a prominent Democrat elected in 2022, addressed the attack with a mix of gratitude and defiance. “This wasn’t just an attack on my family—it was an attack on the entire Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,” he said, choking back tears. He expressed deep appreciation for the first responders who extinguished the blaze and for the outpouring of support from across the state and nation, including messages from Vice President JD Vance and Senator John Fetterman. Shapiro also reaffirmed his commitment to his Jewish faith, noting that the family would celebrate their second Passover Seder that evening. “No one will stop us from living our faith proudly,” he declared.
A Historic Residence Scarred
Built in 1968 along the Susquehanna River, the Pennsylvania Governor’s Residence has housed eight governors and serves as both a home and a cultural hub, showcasing art exhibits on its first floor. The fire caused extensive damage, with images revealing torched ceilings, blackened walls, and a devastated piano. Despite the destruction, Shapiro promised, “We’ll rebuild stronger than ever.” Authorities, including the FBI’s Philadelphia field office, are assisting with the investigation, and a security review is underway to prevent future incidents.
Questions Linger as Investigation Continues
While Balmer’s arrest marks a significant step, many questions remain unanswered. Officials have not yet determined a specific motive, though Shapiro described the attack as “targeted.” Balmer’s prior run-ins with the law, including a 2016 guilty plea for forgery and theft and a pending 2023 simple assault case, have raised concerns about his background. The Dauphin County District Attorney’s Office has indicated that federal charges may also be filed.
A Call for Unity and Healing
In the wake of the attack, Shapiro called for an end to the rising tide of political violence. “This kind of violence is not okay—it’s becoming far too common, and it has to stop,” he urged. The incident comes amid heightened tensions, with elected officials across the country facing increasing threats. For now, the Shapiro family is safe, and the community is rallying around them, but the scars of this terrifying night will take time to heal.
This article is based on information from trusted sources and will be updated as new details emerge.
World
Northwest Austin Explosion: Multiple Homes Damaged, Several Injured in US Blast
On a quiet Sunday morning, a devastating explosion tore through a Northwest Austin neighborhood, leaving a trail of destruction and uncertainty. Around 11:25 a.m., a powerful blast at 10407 Double Spur Loop, near Spicewood Springs Road and US 183, leveled a two-story home and rattled houses for miles. The incident, described as an “unknown event” […]

On a quiet Sunday morning, a devastating explosion tore through a Northwest Austin neighborhood, leaving a trail of destruction and uncertainty. Around 11:25 a.m., a powerful blast at 10407 Double Spur Loop, near Spicewood Springs Road and US 183, leveled a two-story home and rattled houses for miles. The incident, described as an “unknown event” by the Austin Fire Department (AFD), has left residents shaken and emergency crews scrambling to piece together what happened.
Northwest Austin Blast Leaves Neighborhood in Shock
Firefighters arrived swiftly at the scene, rescuing one person trapped in the rubble of the collapsed home. The individual was quickly handed over to Austin-Travis County EMS for medical care, though details about their condition remain undisclosed. According to local reports, multiple people were injured in the blast, but authorities have yet to confirm the full extent of the injuries.
The explosion sent shockwaves through the community, with nearby homes suffering significant structural damage. Burned insulation littered the streets, and images shared online showed residents navigating piles of debris as emergency teams cordoned off the area for safety. Neighboring properties were evacuated as a precaution, leaving families displaced and anxious about what comes next.
“I was just sitting at home when everything started shaking—it felt like something crashed into my house,” one resident shared online. Another described the moment, saying, “Did anyone else in Northwest Austin feel that huge boom? It was terrifying.”
Witnesses reported hearing a deafening roar followed by thick smoke rising from the site. The blast was so intense that it was felt in nearby cities like Leander and Cedar Park, prompting local police to clarify that the incident occurred in Austin. “We know many of you heard and felt the loud explosion, but it`
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