• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers

{{ 'now' | timezone: 'America/New_York' | date: '%b %d, %Y' }}

The Best & The Brightest
Association of American Railroads
Peter Hamby Peter Hamby

Welcome back to The Best & the Brightest. I’m Peter Hamby. Tonight, I go deep on the mayor’s race in Los Angeles, where Spencer Pratt, perhaps America’s first fully formed influencer candidate, is forcing Democrats to confront the city’s enduring problems of homelessness and crime. But Pratt’s unexpected rise may ultimately—somehow—save the career of Mayor Karen Bass, who remains deeply unpopular in the aftermath of the L.A. wildfires. I explain how down below. Plus, Marianna has details on House Democrats’ plans to punish the slackers among them, and Leigh Ann has news from the Problem Solvers Caucus as well as exclusive new farm-state polling.

Also mentioned in this issue: Nithya Raman, Hakeem Jeffries, Kamala Harris, Brian Fitzpatrick, Tom Suozzi, Katherine Clark, Mike Johnson, Rick Caruso, Magic Johnson, Marqueece Harris-Dawson, Harvey Levin, Jon Favreau, Brett Ratner, Dan Loeb, Haim Saban, Adam Schiff, Daniel Lurie, Adam Scott, Mindy Kaling, Ari Emanuel, and more…

 

The Cloakroom

Marianna Sotomayor  Marianna Sotomayor
  • Democrats move to punish their own: Rank-and-file House Democrats are so frustrated with their colleagues that they want leadership to punish the slackers—and leadership is listening, I’m told by several people familiar with the discussions. Those on the watch list include entrenched senior lawmakers who have grown too comfortable in their positions, as well as brand-name Democrats in safe seats who haven’t donated to the D.C.C.C. or campaigned alongside their colleagues. Possible punishments include internal campaigns against ranking members seeking their committee’s top slot, as well as blocking members from coveted committee assignments.

    I’m told Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries floated these possibilities in response to complaints from lawmakers in difficult races who still manage to contribute money to their colleagues. “If you want to lead in the majority, then you should contribute to getting the majority,” Rep. Susie Lee told me.

    Of course, some lawmakers pushing for accountability have ulterior motives: They, too, want to move up, and have grown tired of archaic rules that reward seniority over collegiality. The pressure campaign took on new urgency after the Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Callais cleared the way for Republican-led Southern states to go on a redistricting spree ahead of the midterms. Democratic leaders are now arguing publicly and privately that winning in November will require a full-court press to protect vulnerable incumbents, elect candidates in Trumpy districts, and help members whose districts are being erased. Minority Whip Katherine Clark has made the point repeatedly in leadership, committee, and caucus meetings. One member told me they noticed a “much more forceful tone” from leadership in recent days.

    It remains unclear whether these expectations will be formally incorporated into caucus rules or simply become a guiding principle when the Steering Committee considers applications. Either way, members have been put on notice.
Leigh Ann Caldwell Leigh Ann Caldwell
  • Problem Solvers vs. gerrymandering: The redistricting arms race is already reshaping life on Capitol Hill, accelerating the collapse of whatever comity still existed between the parties. Speaker Mike Johnson has aligned himself with the White House’s gerrymandering push, and Jeffries has promised retaliation.

    Now the bipartisan duo of Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick and Democratic Rep. Tom Suozzi, co-chairs of the Problem Solvers Caucus, is launching an effort to end all partisan gerrymandering, which they argue is contributing to the crumbling of democracy. “We’re uniquely situated to step out,” Fitzpatrick told me, acknowledging that Jeffries and Johnson are obligated to protect their parties’ interests. The caucus hosted a closed-door meeting with its 46 members today, where leaders unveiled a draft framework. Granted, it’s hard to see how this goes anywhere in the current environment. But Fitzpatrick and Suozzi contend that, with more than 20 percent of their members representing states that have already undergone redistricting this cycle or soon could, enough people have skin in the game to create an opening for reform.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

Association of American Railroads
Association of American Railroads

Freight Rail Safely Moves America Forward

 

Safety is the foundation of America’s freight rail network—and 2025 was a record-breaking year. Federal data show the train accident rate fell 14%, with derailments reaching historic lows. These results are thanks to skilled railroaders working alongside advanced technology every day. Across 135,000 miles of track, millions of sensors and high‑speed imaging systems help detect issues early—building a safer, more resilient rail system that keeps America moving into the future.

 

Learn more at aar.org/freight-rail-safety/

Poll Watch

Leigh Ann Caldwell Leigh Ann Caldwell
  • Anger is spreading through farm country. A new Farm Journal poll of nearly 1,000 farmers—most of them in the Midwest—found mounting economic anxiety, according to results shared exclusively with Puck. Eighty-eight percent of respondents said tariffs have hurt business, 70 percent said healthcare costs have gone up “significantly” in the past year, and 94 percent believe the war in Iran will negatively impact their farming business. Farmers skew heavily Republican, but the survey revealed that 7 percent of respondents plan to vote for a different party in the midterms, 8 percent said they’ll back a third-party or independent candidate, and 20 percent remain undecided. That uncertainty could matter in battleground states like Iowa, which accounted for the largest share of respondents at 16 percent.
The Pratt Pack

The Pratt Pack

Spencer Pratt, the former MTV reality villain, is surging in the final sprint of the L.A. mayoral race as an unlikely coalition of Republicans and bashful Democrats gravitate toward his rants about drugs and homelessness—and the failure of polite progressivism to do anything about it.

Peter Hamby Peter Hamby

Last week, with their eyes on this year’s World Cup and the 2028 Olympics, Los Angeles officials celebrated a major new expansion of the city’s subway line—yes, we have a subway!—opening three new stops along Wilshire Boulevard and extending the rail line west toward UCLA. The D Line is a much-welcomed addition to the traffic-addled city, and a source of pride to the many civic leaders who took part in a victory lap.

But the project, which arrived years overdue and overbudget, has also stood as an emblem of L.A.’s slow-moving civic culture. It was originally conceived almost six decades ago, broke ground in 2014, and only came to life after years of tedious construction headaches, environmental reviews, labor issues, and jurisdictional conflicts between the various political fiefdoms that occasionally manage to govern the region. For Karen Bass, though, the subway opening was a sign of something else: plodding but tangible progress for the city of Los Angeles—a theme that happens to rhyme with that of her troubled reelection campaign this year. “This is the kind of infrastructure that shapes a city’s future,” Bass said of the opening.

Spencer Pratt, one of Bass’s opponents in the mayor’s race, visited the D Line the same day and saw something different: Poop. “Transportation is a beautiful idea when there is no human urine, human poop on there. A drug addict’s butt hanging out!” Pratt said on the All In podcast this week, one of his many stops on the anti-woke audioverse circuit. “Who cares how many Metro lines it connects to? It could connect to the moon right now. But if drug addicts are smoking fentanyl next to your kid, you aren’t going to the moon on it.” Pratt said he can’t even open his phone anymore because “every single person in L.A.” now sends him photos of drug addicts, fentanyl “zombies,” human feces on the street, homeless people sleeping next to school entrances. “I’m like 311 now,” Pratt said. “It’s crazy.”

Harsh? Amusing? Trumpy? Sure. All of the above. But this is precisely the kind of unvarnished real talk about L.A.’s visible squalor that has propelled Pratt—the former MTV reality show villain turned hummingbird influencer turned Palisades fire victim—into unlikely contention in the mayoral race this spring. An attention hustler with instinctive Millennial social media talents, he has broken through with straight-to-camera rants and statistics about the city’s most visible pain points—and the failure of polite progressive politicians to do anything about them. For all the talk in Washington about new media tactics, Pratt has arrived on the scene as the country’s most fully formed influencer candidate, running in a political moment when authentic, off-the-cuff content creation has become the coin of the realm.

Pratt films everything on his phone and posts constantly on his social media accounts—2.4 million followers on TikTok and 1.5 million on Instagram, many more on X and Snapchat—which is how he managed to stay quasi-relevant long after MTV packed up its cameras. In his endless stream of videos documenting the city’s various tent encampments and open-air drug dens, Pratt often calls the mayor “Karen Basura”—basura being the Spanish word for trash. As anyone who has followed him on social media since the Palisades fire knows, Pratt’s contempt for city leadership, and their inability to save his house from the blaze, is deeply personal. He blames Bass for a range of managerial sins and absentee leadership, including leaving the Santa Ynez reservoir empty before the wildfire, depriving the Palisades of precious water to fight back. Like many fire victims, Pratt blames city and state leaders for mishandling recovery funds and failing to accelerate the rebuilding process. And he blames Democrats for even more: slow police response times, animal abuse on Skid Row, homeless drug addicts showing up next to schools and playgrounds. Angry moms, he says, are the backbone of his campaign.

At some point over the last year, more and more people in Los Angeles started listening to Pratt instead of the mayor. The attention he garnered from angry locals, as well as Republicans on Capitol Hill who brought him to testify about the fire response, soon blossomed into his campaign to “Save Los Angeles.” And when billionaire developer Rick Caruso decided not to run again against Bass, leaving the law-and-order lane wide open, Pratt decided to flip a switch and turn his social media accounts into a new kind of political campaign. “I was hoping someone else would step up and fix this mess,” Pratt told the crowd at his February announcement event. “But now you have entrusted me to do the job. I take this responsibility seriously.”

The Guy You Loved to Hate

It might sound discordant for people who know him from his dickhead star turn on MTV’s The Hills alongside his now-wife, Heidi Montag, or as the guy who spent years posting videos of hummingbirds buzzing around his old house, but Pratt’s audience takes him quite seriously. Yes, it’s dominated by wealthy white people on the city’s Westside with nannies and gardeners and anti-woke tendencies galore. But for all the Trump comparisons, Pratt is more likely to invoke San Francisco’s popular Democratic mayor, Daniel Lurie, who has won centrist plaudits for cracking down on homelessness, than the culture warrior in the White House.

Pratt is a registered Republican, but the race is officially nonpartisan, and he is aggressively reaching out to Democrats as he yaps his way through interviews and campaign stops. “The progressive left paints anyone that wants to vote for Pratt as MAGA,” said one well-connected Democrat who is rushing to organize a fundraiser for Pratt. “That could not be further from the truth. We are doing it for our kids and our safety. It’s personal. It has nothing to do with politics.”

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

Association of American Railroads
Association of American Railroads

Freight rail is investing in America’s future

 

America’s Class I railroads invest $25 billion each year to strengthen the national rail network—driving historic safety gains. In 2025, equipment‑ and track‑caused accidents reached record lows, human‑factor incidents dropped nearly 20% year-over-year, and employee injury rates hit an all‑time low.

 

Freight rail's private investments upgrade critical infrastructure, expand workforce training, and accelerate safety innovations. From deploying advanced technologies and securing physical and digital networks to supporting first responders and local partners, freight rail is building a safer, faster, and more resilient supply chain.

 

Learn more at aar.org/freight-rail-safety/

Still, like plenty of moderate Angelenos I talked to for this story, this person didn’t want me to attach their name to a quote. At least not yet. “It’s easier to quietly vote for Pratt than convince our friends that it’s time to wake up,” this Democrat told me. Pratt might be surging in the polls, and the city’s left is dangerously divided heading into an open primary on June 2. But Los Angeles remains overwhelmingly liberal—Bernie Sanders outran Joe Biden in the city back in the 2020 primary—and the city is spectacularly diverse beyond the Westside whites and Republican base gravitating toward Pratt.

Some of Pratt’s big (and vague) ideas around public safety sound draconian and impossible. Last weekend, for instance, he told a small gathering in Brentwood that his plan for homelessness included building a massive “campus” on the outskirts of the city, funded by a friendly billionaire, where people on the street could be moved. The person who was there and recounted this story to me rolled his eyes. But to other voters, Pratt is speaking with a much-needed dose of common sense. Which is why a lot of people in Los Angeles are starting to wonder whether Speidi can really make it to City Hall.

All About That Bass

It was Pratt’s surprising performance in an NBC4 debate last week that confirmed his status as the change candidate in a race against two status-quo Democrats on the stage next to him. There was Bass, the beleaguered incumbent mayor whose approval ratings tanked after her hapless response to the wildfires, forever defined by her trip to Ghana despite very public warnings about the fire threat. And there was Councilwoman Nithya Raman, the homelessness advocate and progressive darling from Silver Lake.

Raman, backed by friends in the entertainment industry (Adam Scott, Mindy Kaling) and some qualified support from the local Democratic Socialists of America movement, was supposed to be this year’s exciting alternative to Bass. The New York Times heralded her as the next Zohran Mamdani when she jumped into the race in February. But Raman has stalled out, failing to clearly articulate why she’s running beyond her own ambition, and looked unprepared on the debate stage while Pratt razzed her as a “random city councilwoman” whose tolerant solutions for street homelessness are out of touch with reality. “Councilwoman Raman’s plan for ‘treatment first’?” Pratt said. “I will go with her below the Harbor Freeway tomorrow and we can find some of these people she is going to offer treatment for. She will get stabbed in the neck. These people don’t want a bed. They want fentanyl or super-meth.” Raman looked rattled and never recovered, complaining to reporters after the debate that she was getting attacked by both of her opponents. Pratt, meanwhile, was going viral.

Pratt and Raman are clawing at each other because both are gunning for a second-place finish and the chance to face Bass in a head-to-head race in November. Because of the city’s blue lean, Bass would much rather run against Pratt, a registered Republican, than Raman. It’s now an open secret in L.A. that Bass and her supporters very much want Pratt to lap Raman in the primary—and are happy to join with Pratt in calling out certain Raman votes on the City Council. “Nithya Raman is running a citywide campaign for mayor like it’s just a big Silver Lake DSA campaign,” Bass strategist Doug Herman told me. “She’s doubled down, voting recently to cut the police force and to allow homeless encampments near schools.”

If Bass wins again, it won’t exactly be a political comeback—it will be a miraculous feat of survival. The mayor’s support in the city collapsed after the fires, and most prognosticators (including me) figured her career was toast. A UC-Berkeley/Los Angeles Times poll in March put her job approval at just 31 percent, close to her share of support in recent horserace polls. A Bass victory—whether against the outsider rascal or the upstart progressive—will be testament to the power of Democratic coalition politics. Both of her rivals have a certain appeal with educated white people of different political stripes, but neither has much of a reputation in Black or Latino communities outside of their home turf. Bass has been a fixture in South Los Angeles politics and organizing since the 1980s. “The most common question I get about the mayor’s race in South L.A. is, ‘Who are these people running other than the mayor?’” said Marqueece Harris-Dawson, the City Council president, who has endorsed Bass. “‘Who is this city councilwoman? Who is this guy from the Westside?’ The mayor has been there.”

Despite her overall unpopularity, Magic Johnson re-endorsed Bass this week, a reminder that nonwhite voters might feel squeamish about kicking the city’s first Black female mayor out of office. Major unions and activists from the Latino community are also backing Bass, along with big names like Kamala Harris and Adam Schiff, as well as the police union that opposed her campaign four years ago. Bass has started to air television ads during Dodgers and Lakers games, pointing to her successes: a two-year reduction in homelessness, hiring more police officers, reducing violent crime, and standing against ICE raids. But as she approaches the primary, Bass is stressing to voters that she hears their concerns about public safety. “Statistics are great,” she said Tuesday at an event flanked by LAPD officers. “But what is important is how people feel in their communities. We still have work to do.”

Raman, meanwhile, called Pratt a fascist this week as her allies began to ramp up their attacks on social media, hoping to make him unpalatable to voters. Given that Pratt has been on camera for more than 20 years, there is material to work with. The Hollywood writer Travis Helwig recently surfaced clips of Pratt palling around on a beach with conspiracy-monger Alex Jones after the Sandy Hook shooting. And TMZ reported this week that Pratt has been staying part-time at the pricey Hotel Bel-Air, not in the Airstream trailer on his Palisades property that he featured in his first campaign ad. (Pratt FaceTimed into TMZ to joust with Harvey Levin after the story posted, saying that he’s been working nonstop during the campaign and reminding viewers that yes, his house burned down.)

Jon Favreau of Crooked Media, who is supporting Raman, has been groaning at the Pratt hype machine. “There’s nothing especially new or impressive about a rich celebrity looking to get even more fame and attention by preying on people’s legitimate anger with the political establishment,” Favreau told me. “It’s a lot harder to actually fix shit, which he’s demonstrated zero ability to do, which is why the most plausible outcome of his campaign could be reelecting Karen Bass.”

Raman has a lot of work to do. She lacks much of a political base beyond her district, stretching herself thin as she tries to appease the various factions of the city’s left: pragmatic moderates fed up with Bass, Abundance reformers and YIMBY housing advocates, and the DSA purists who think Raman isn’t enough of a class warrior. As for the Zohran comparisons? It turns out Pratt is the one with Zohran’s skill set, not Raman.

Association of American Railroads
Association of American Railroads

The Long Shot

The previous mayor’s race between Bass and Caruso, in 2022, captivated the press with a running storyline about a divided Tinseltown. Celebrities and Hollywood power players were choosing sides, raising money, and available for comment on why Bass or Caruso was better prepared to confront the city’s many challenges. Ari Emanuel, J.J. Abrams, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Donald Glover, Magic Johnson, and Steven Spielberg lined up for Bass—the lifer Democrat who ultimately won the race with Barack Obama’s endorsement. Caruso, the independent-turned-Democrat and self-styled reformer, had the backing of Ted Sarandos, Kim Kardashian, Gwyneth Paltrow, Katy Perry, Scooter Braun, Bryan Lourd, and Dana Walden.

This year, few A-listers want to be anywhere near what has become a joyless campaign. A few big names are back again for Bass, but Katzenberg, who ran an independent expenditure campaign for her in ’22, and also defended Joe Biden until the bitter end, is licking his political wounds. Last year, Emanuel told me Bass was guilty of  “dereliction of duty” for traveling abroad just before the fires. But he didn’t respond this week when I reached out to him to get his latest thinking. Elsewhere, Bass is just too unpopular—borderline toxic—among the many well-connected people who lost homes in the Palisades.

Raman, meanwhile, has connections with a younger generation of entertainment types—her husband is a screenwriter—but none of the megastars who played ball in the 2022 campaign. And Pratt is too Republican and too populist for many rich libs in Hollywood, even the ones who may privately agree with his crusade. It’s not hard these days to find Pratt-curious Democrats who are done with Bass—but many of them just don’t want to say it publicly. Here’s what one quite famous person said when I texted over the weekend asking if they, or anyone they know, would want to be quoted supporting Pratt: “Nobody who would go on the record. But everyone hates Bass.”

Pratt’s schedulers have been telling new donors interested in hosting events that his fundraising itinerary is booked up through the primary, reflecting the surge of new interest. In the last week, Pratt has raised nearly half a million dollars from small donors online, an eye-popping sum for a long-shot mayoral candidate in a liberal city. Among Pratt’s recent donors: filmmaker and Trump wingman Brett Ratner, former Activision C.E.O. Bobby Kotick, Lakers owner Jeannie Buss, hedge fund manager Dan Loeb, the father-son music executives Lucian and Elliot Grainge, Tinder co-founder Sean Rad, L.A. nightlife honcho John Terzian, and John Shahidi of Nelk Boys fame.

Another big name surfaced this week in Pratt’s donor reports: Haim Saban, the entertainment magnate and friend of the Clintons who, along with his wife Cheryl, has given tens of millions to Democratic candidates and causes over the years. Saban is also a major supporter of Israel and pro-Israel causes in a city where Jewish voters have drifted rightward since the Hamas attacks of October 7, with many citing rising antisemitism on the left. Support for Trump, for instance, surged in many Jewish neighborhoods in Los Angeles in 2024.

While Pratt plainly doesn’t have Bibi on speed dial, he recently called antisemitism “a mind virus” and promised to put more LAPD officers near synagogues. Several Jewish Democrats have told me that their friends and colleagues were quietly backing Pratt. “In this post-October 7 world, many of my otherwise politically sophisticated Jewish cohorts would not usually be taken in by Spencer Pratt,” said one prominent Jewish entertainment executive active in political circles. “Now, he is the choice du jour of every Jew from south of Pico to the Hollywood Hills.”

Pratt has been working the Westside H.N.W.I. circuit hard lately, holding gatherings in backyards and living rooms, hoping to capitalize on his new momentum and convince skeptics that he can pull off a miracle and unseat Bass. At a recent small event in Brentwood with about 20 wealthy Westsiders, I’m told, Pratt acknowledged his long odds against Bass in a head-to-head race, but expressed some hope that he could catch Democrats by surprise by winning outright on June 2. (That’s far-fetched, of course. A candidate would need to reach 50 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff. In the most recent Emerson poll, Pratt is sitting at 22 percent.) With early voting underway in California—ballots are sent out by mail—Pratt told the group that campaign supporters are helping to chase down ballots and get them in before the primary.

But it’s a heavy lift. Back in 2022, Caruso also ran against Bass by promising to “clean up L.A.,” funding his campaign with his own billions, supported by celebs, and campaigning alongside validators in Black and Latino neighborhoods where he has long done philanthropic work. Unlike Pratt, he ran as a Democrat—and still came up 10 points short in the runoff. “I don’t think Spencer is going to win, but Karen has been feckless,” one person who attended the Brentwood gathering told me. “The question is whether people in East L.A. are as mad at her as rich people in Brentwood. But it’s also crazy we are having this conversation. Spencer Pratt?”

Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news.

You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with {{customer.email}}. To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St., New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Washington

Donald Trump
Julia Ioffe • May 15, 2026
The Greenland Mile
After claiming the “framework of a deal” to expand America’s presence on the world’s largest island, Trump has dropped his threats to invade Greenland. Thank God, because a direct assault on Greenland wasn’t going to be a cakewalk.
Donald Trump
Leigh Ann Caldwell • May 15, 2026
Trump’s G.O.P. Greenlanditis
With his Davos speech, the president reassured jittery Republicans that invading Greenland is, for now, off the table. But conversations on the Hill have escalated, as even Trump’s G.O.P. allies warn that any move that blows up NATO could end his midterm hopes—and lead to impeachment, too.
ICE protest
Peter Hamby • May 15, 2026
Inside the Democratic ICE Storm
A remarkably candid conversation with Adam Jentleson, the founder and president of the Searchlight Institute, about the rhetorical fight over abolishing ICE that’s raging inside the Democratic Party.


Amy Klobuchar
Abby Livingston • May 15, 2026
Klobuchar’s Minnesota Succession Mess
Two days before the killing of Renee Good, news leaked that Senator Klobuchar was weighing a bid to succeed Tim Walz as governor of Minnesota. But while the chatter about Klobuchar has receded from the headlines, Democrats are quietly discussing the political impact of a second open Senate seat in 2026.
Kristi Noem
Leigh Ann Caldwell • May 15, 2026
Will Democrats Impeach Kristi Noem?
While House Democrats are divided over how to challenge Trump, leadership is quietly building a case against the Homeland Security secretary—beginning with potential shadow hearings, outside the official committee structure, that would gather the evidence against her.
Tulsi Gabbard
Julia Ioffe • May 15, 2026
The Havana Hangover
After years of denials, Washington is finally reckoning with new reporting that would seem to confirm the existence of the alleged Russian directed-energy weapon that causes Havana syndrome—or what the U.S. government now calls “anomalous health incidents.” But will Tulsi Gabbard be allowed to release the O.D.N.I.’s own findings?


Donald Trump, John Thune
Leigh Ann Caldwell • May 15, 2026
John Thune Has the Hardest Job in Washington
Can the Senate leader preserve his majority, manage his members’ competing agendas, and protect his institution—all while placating the president?


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Washington

minneapolis ice shooting protests
Peter Hamby • May 15, 2026
Support for ICE Is Collapsing
Outside the right-wing echo chamber, polls tell the true story of an unprecedented drop in support for Trump’s immigration agency, which has swung 30 points in 12 months.
Nancy Pelosi
Abby Livingston • May 15, 2026
Pelosi Succession Chatter & Gavin-mander Aftershocks
Nancy Pelosi’s retirement in San Francisco, an Obama alum’s generational challenge in L.A., and a redrawn Orange County could end careers and launch new California stars.
Rand Paul, Lindsey Graham
Leigh Ann Caldwell • May 15, 2026
The Ballad of Rand & Lindsey
The changing definition of “America First” has exploded tensions between two senators at opposite ends of the conservative foreign policy spectrum: the libertarian Rand Paul and the interventionist Lindsey Graham. If Paul won the ideological battle in the first term, Graham seems to have Trump’s ear in the second.


Nancy Pelosi, Hakeem Jeffries
Abby Livingston • May 15, 2026
The Wolves of First Street
The once quixotic, bipartisan crusade to ban congressional stock trading is gaining real momentum—but in the least productive Congress in history, getting Washington’s best-informed traders to give up their Robinhood accounts may be a long shot.
Lew Olowski
Julia Ioffe • May 15, 2026
The Big Olowski Has Left the Building
Lew Olowski, the State Department’s wacky, polarizing head of H.R., is said to have imploded at his farewell party when he learned that he wasn’t getting a coveted assignment.
Donald Trump
Leigh Ann Caldwell • May 15, 2026
Trump’s Mile-High Revenge Tour
The president’s bizarre decision to wage a retaliatory political war on Colorado—including the MAGA stronghold that elected Lauren Boebert—could wind up costing him the House.


trump supporters gen z young men voters
Peter Hamby • May 15, 2026
Manospheres of Influence
The disaffected young men who helped elect Trump are fed up with high prices, worried about A.I., and frustrated by the president’s neocon turn. And, according to exclusive new polling data, they’re souring on Trump just as they turned on Joe Biden.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Washington

Donald Trump
Julia Ioffe • May 15, 2026
Neocon Don
Trump’s largely consequence-free projection of military power in Iran and elsewhere laid the groundwork for last weekend’s shocking action in Venezuela—and validated a new framework for MAGA-style interventionism. But what happens when Xi starts playing by the same rules?
Mike Johnson chuck schumer Hakeem Jeffries
Leigh Ann Caldwell • May 15, 2026
The Four Horsemen of Capitol Hill’s Apocalypse
A close look at the challenges, opportunities, and curveballs awaiting the Big Four congressional leaders in the new year: the M.T.G. mutiny, G.O.P. majority shrinkage, another shutdown, A.C.A. headaches, and Trump.
Ezra Klein
John Heilemann • May 15, 2026
The World According to Ezra
The Times columnist, podcast impresario, and would-be Democratic Party uber-reformer recaps the past year in politics—and explains why, despite his ongoing sense of alarm, he’s closing out 2025 feeling moderately hopeful.


april McClain Delaney
Abby Livingston • May 15, 2026
The Real House Members of Potomac
Ready or not, the midterm primary season is just days away. And, as analyst Jacob Rubashkin explains, just about anything can happen… including a congressional surprise in Texas and a Senate upset in Michigan.
Republicans
Leigh Ann Caldwell • May 15, 2026
The G.O.P.’s Midterm Polling Paradox
A few months ago, Republicans thought they had the country on autopilot. Now the party is stuck with a souring economy, beholden to Trump for turnout—whether they like it or not—and staring down an increasingly unpredictable midterm map.
Jim McDonnell
Peter Hamby • May 15, 2026
The ICE Storm
A candid conversation with L.A. police chief Jim McDonnell about the complicated reality of ICE raids, hyperbolic crime narratives, and preparing for the World Cup and 2028 Olympics in the second Trump era.


Dan Goldman
Abby Livingston • May 15, 2026
“The Mini Mamdanis Are Coming”
Dan Goldman, the popular resistance-lib congressman repping downtown Manhattan and much of brownstone Brooklyn, was a star on MSNBC. But in a year in which his rival was just endorsed by Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, Democrats fear he could be among the biggest names to fall in a Tea Party–style reckoning.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover