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Morning Minute: Ballroom Blitz – RedState

Friday, October 24, 2025

Good morning, and welcome to RedState’s “Morning Minute” — a brief glimpse at which stories are trending at the moment and a look ahead at what the day may bring. Consider this your one-stop shop for news to kickstart your day. 





TOP O’ THE MORNIN’

Red-Hot at RedState 

Hoo Boy: Chelsea Clinton Jumps Into the White House Ballroom Debate, and She Really Shouldn’t Have

If there was one family in presidential history who should sit all the way down about how the White House was treated, it’s the Clintons. 

New: DOJ Warns Pelosi to ‘Stand Down’ or Face Ramifications After She Threatened to Arrest ICE Agents

Democrats continue to support illegal aliens while viewing law enforcement as the true criminals deserving of arrest. They are sick.

Schiff Isn’t Going to Like This: Todd Blanche Pours Cold Water Over New Report About DOJ Case

But there was a small problem with this story, according to Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. The meeting “never happened,” he said. He completely obliterated the story. 

Trending Across Townhall Media

Bizarre Incident in D.C. Suburb Highlights Importance of Our 2A Rights

It could be that this was just meant to be a prank, but these individuals caused legitimate fear and terror to their targets.

White House Rebuts Democrat Freakout With the Perfect Troll

Obama adds a basketball court to the White House, adding an urban flair. But Trump is adding a ballroom? It is the same as crapping in a baptismal font. 

Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, and Graham Platner: The Rise of the New Age Nazis

Weird, huh? After ten-plus years of calling Trump a Nazi (and Elon Musk… and Steve Bannon… and JD Vance…. and pretty much every non-Democrat), Democrats now have a senate candidate with a literal Nazi tattoo on his chest!





Fat Loser Generals Can Get Bent

There’s been a change of command, with a new command climate. If you can’t stand the Hegseth heat, get out of the Pentagon.

‘It Do Be Like That’: Will Stancil Launches a Viral Meme Storm Over White House Renovations

Just like Hakeen Jeffries and his sombrero, ‘It do be like that’ is now stapled to Stancil for the foreseeable future, if not forever.

WHAT’S ON TAP?

Today on Capitol Hill…

Day 24 of the Schumer Shutdown, and the critters have taken their leave. The Senate held a vote yesterday on Sen. Ron Johnson’s (R-WI) bill to pay essential government workers, but that measure failed as well. 


READ MORE: Meting Out the Pain: Senate Dems Nuke Pay Bill for Government Workers


The Senate did manage to confirm Stephen Meredith as U.S. District Court Judge for the Eastern District of Kentucky before they skedaddled. And they’re set to vote Monday on two more judges: Rebecca L. Taibleson to be United States Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit; Bill Lewis to be United States District Judge for the Middle District of Alabama.

White House What’s Up

President Trump’s schedule is fairly open on Friday, but he’s set to leave late Friday night for his trip to Asia. First stop: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Just as the president is leaving town, Vice President JD Vance is returning from his trip to Israel.





Keeping Up With the Cabinet

Sec. Labor – Lori Chavez-DeRemer — Chavez-DeRemer shared her recent appearance on Mornings With Maria on Fox Business to push Senate Democrats to reopen the government so her department can get back to work on “Making America Skilled Again.” 

Full Court Press…

Not as many court rulings of note on Thursday:

  • ❌ Media Matters v. FTC (restricting press freedom) — D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals DENIES admin’s motion for stay pending appeal.

But there was a big win for Tennessee (and 14 other states…and science) as a district court struck down Biden-era regulations regarding the Affordable Care Act that redefined “sex” to include “gender identity.” 


READ MORE: TN Scores Big Win – Court Strikes Down Biden Title IX Rule Expanding ‘Sex’ to Gender Identity


COMING ATTRACTIONS

President Trump heads out tonight for his trip to Asia.

I still think we’ll see a ruling from the Supreme Court on the application for stay in the Illinois National Guard case soon.  

MORNING MUSING

It’s Friday, so I’m going to indulge my tendency to think in lyrical/musical terms: All this hubbub over the construction of the new ballroom at the White House is a hoot, and it calls to mind a song I was introduced to very early in my law school career by a punk rock, bada** gal from L.A. with short, spiky, magenta hair, multiple piercings, and Doc Martens. Felicia, one of my new classmates, intimidated the heck out of me — until I got to know her. Then I learned she was a real sweetheart. Sadly, she passed away several years ago. But I will never forget watching her rock out to this song I’d never heard before in the bar in our dorm — yes, law school had its perks. (We won’t get into the fact that one of my other classmates was none other than JB Pritzker.) 





Anyway, the point I’m trying to get to here is that, at first blush, Felicia was tough and full of sharp edges — she was a slam dance, not a waltz. But then I came to see her as the beautiful, fun, quirky, clever soul she actually was. 

And the man at the back said, “Everyone, attack”
And it turned into a ballroom blitz

All the conniptions the Dems and the professional Left are throwing over the demo part of the renovations at the White House…

…what’s going to happen when the rubble is cleared — when the new ballroom is actually complete and looks fabulous? When the White House hosts large, elegant events no longer in tents? I know, I know, they’ll refocus their energy on griping about the style of it and the way it was funded (even though not at taxpayer expense). 

It’ll always be something for them. 

Well, that’s fine. They can have their little freakout over a People’s House upgrade. Me? I look forward to maybe dancing there one day. (Probably not slam dancing, though.) 

LIGHTER FARE 

Whee

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On April 12, 2021, a Knoxville police officer shot and killed an African American male student in a bathroom at Austin-East High School. The incident caused social unrest, and community members began demanding transparency about the shooting, including the release of the officer’s body camera video. On the evening of April 19, 2021, the Defendant and a group of protestors entered the Knoxville City-County Building during a Knox County Commission meeting. The Defendant activated the siren on a bullhorn and spoke through the bullhorn to demand release of the video. Uniformed police officers quickly escorted her and six other individuals out of the building and arrested them for disrupting the meeting. The court upheld defendants’ conviction for “disrupting a lawful meeting,” defined as “with the intent to prevent [a] gathering, … substantially obstruct[ing] or interfere[ing] with the meeting, procession, or gathering by physical action or verbal utterance.” Taken in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence shows that the Defendant posted on Facebook the day before the meeting and the day of the meeting that the protestors were going to “shut down” the meeting. During the meeting, the Defendant used a bullhorn to activate a siren for approximately twenty seconds. Witnesses at trial described the siren as “loud,” “high-pitched,” and “alarming.” Commissioner Jay called for “Officers,” and the Defendant stated through the bullhorn, “Knox County Commission, your meeting is over.” Commissioner Jay tried to bring the meeting back into order by banging his gavel, but the Defendant continued speaking through the bullhorn. Even when officers grabbed her and began escorting her out of the Large Assembly Room, she continued to disrupt the meeting by yelling for the officers to take their hands off her and by repeatedly calling them “murderers.” Commissioner Jay called a ten-minute recess during the incident, telling the jury that it was “virtually impossible” to continue the meeting during the Defendant’s disruption. The Defendant herself testified that the purpose of attending the meeting was to disrupt the Commission’s agenda and to force the Commission to prioritize its discussion on the school shooting. Although the duration of the disruption was about ninety seconds, the jury was able to view multiple videos of the incident and concluded that the Defendant substantially obstructed or interfered with the meeting. The evidence is sufficient to support the Defendant’s conviction. Defendant also claimed the statute was “unconstitutionally vague as applied to her because the statute does not state that it includes government meetings,” but the appellate court concluded that she had waived the argument by not raising it adequately below. Sean F. McDermott, Molly T. Martin, and Franklin Ammons, Assistant District Attorneys General, represent the state.

From State v. Every, decided by the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals…

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