<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="/rss-styles.xsl" type="text/xsl"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>The Hardest Right</title><description>American politics through the lens of duty, country, and the working class.</description><link>https://thehardestright.com/</link><language>en-us</language><item><title>Redrawing the Map Mid-Term Is How Republics Lose Their Footing</title><link>https://thehardestright.com/posts/redrawing-the-map-mid-term-is-how-republics-lose-their-footing/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thehardestright.com/posts/redrawing-the-map-mid-term-is-how-republics-lose-their-footing/</guid><description>South Carolina Republicans moved in May 2026 to extend their legislative session for the sole purpose of redrawing the state&apos;s congressional map — a maneuver reported by The Hill as occurring under pressure from President Trump, with Rep. Jim Clyburn, the state&apos;s lone House Democrat, as the clear target.

Said Clyburn: &quot;Republicans in the South Carolina state legislature began the process of extending their session to allow for the redrawing of the state&apos;s congressional map. We cannot let them succeed.&quot;

The Founders did not design the constitutional order so that the party in power could engineer its own permanence between census cycles. Redrawing lines to erase a sitting member&apos;s seat — whatever one thinks of that member — is the kind of move that corrodes the republic&apos;s foundation long after the immediate victor is forgotten. The oath is to the Constitution, not to the map that best serves the party holding the pen.</description><pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 20:38:51 GMT</pubDate><category>Redistricting</category><category>ArticleI</category><category>2026 Midterms</category></item><item><title>Germany Has Enjoyed Our Shield. It&apos;s Time They Pay for It.</title><link>https://thehardestright.com/posts/germany-has-enjoyed-our-shield-its-time-they-pay-for-it/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thehardestright.com/posts/germany-has-enjoyed-our-shield-its-time-they-pay-for-it/</guid><description>President Trump announced plans to cut American troop levels in Germany beyond the Pentagon&apos;s previously stated withdrawal of roughly 5,000 soldiers. Speaking to reporters in Florida, Trump said: &quot;We&apos;re going to cut way down. And we&apos;re cutting a lot further than 5,000&quot; — offering no timeline or final number.

The announcement sharpens an ongoing dispute with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz over who bears the cost of European security. Germany, the continent&apos;s largest economy, has spent decades sheltering behind American soldiers and American taxpayers.

Eisenhower warned in his farewell address that permanent overseas commitments — built to serve contractor balance sheets as much as national defense — would hollow out the republic from within. The question worth asking is not how many troops we pull back, but whether Congress, under its Article I war powers, has ever formally authorized this posture — or whether the boardroom and the bureaucracy simply kept renewing it without asking the American people.</description><pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 20:27:45 GMT</pubDate><category>Foreign Policy</category><category>NATO</category><category>War Powers</category></item><item><title>When the Pardon Power Becomes a Price Tag</title><link>https://thehardestright.com/posts/when-the-pardon-power-becomes-a-price-tag/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thehardestright.com/posts/when-the-pardon-power-becomes-a-price-tag/</guid><description>Democratic Sen. Peter Welch (Vt.) and Rep. Dave Min (Calif.) sent letters to 17 recipients of Trump pardons or commutations this week, asking whether clemency was exchanged under pay-for-play circumstances, The Hill reported May 7.

The pardon power sits in Article II of the Constitution — placed there by the Founders as an instrument of mercy and justice, not a revenue stream. Whether the allegations prove out or collapse under scrutiny, the question itself demands an answer the republic can trust.

The Cadet Honor Code holds that a soldier neither lies, cheats, nor steals — nor tolerates those who do. That standard doesn&apos;t retire when a man leaves the field and enters public office. The republic&apos;s long memory is watching.</description><pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 20:17:04 GMT</pubDate><category>Executive</category><category>Anti-Corruption</category><category>Rule of Law</category></item><item><title>July 4 Is a Deadline Now — Europe Had Better Believe It</title><link>https://thehardestright.com/posts/july-4-is-a-deadline-now-europe-had-better-believe-it/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thehardestright.com/posts/july-4-is-a-deadline-now-europe-had-better-believe-it/</guid><description>President Trump announced Thursday via Truth Social that the United States will give the European Union until July 4 to reach terms on trade or face significantly higher tariffs, according to reporting by The Hill. Trump described a prior call with European Commission leadership as &apos;great,&apos; suggesting negotiation channels remain open — for now.

The date chosen is not accidental. July 4 is the republic&apos;s founding compact made visible — a reminder that American sovereignty, including sovereignty over its own commerce, was bought at a price no Brussels bureaucrat was present to pay.

The Founders vested the power to regulate foreign commerce squarely in Congress under Article I — a power too long delegated away to executive agencies and trade tribunals. Whatever one thinks of the leverage strategy, the underlying demand — that foreign markets treat American workers as equals, not marks — is the older and harder right.</description><pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 20:01:39 GMT</pubDate><category>Foreign Policy</category><category>Economy</category><category>Executive</category></item><item><title>A Virus Crossed 28 Countries. Here&apos;s What the WHO Actually Found.</title><link>https://thehardestright.com/posts/a-virus-crossed-28-countries-heres-what-the-who-actually-found/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thehardestright.com/posts/a-virus-crossed-28-countries-heres-what-the-who-actually-found/</guid><description>A hantavirus outbreak aboard the MV Hondius — a cruise ship carrying passengers from at least 28 countries — is now a full-scale international health operation. The ship is docking off Tenerife after Spain agreed to admit it at WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus&apos;s personal request. Roughly 145 people from 23 countries remain onboard. Three confirmed cases, including the ship&apos;s own doctor, were already evacuated to the Netherlands.

The working theory: a couple infected before boarding — during a bird-watching trip through Chile, Uruguay, and Argentina — brought Andes virus onto the ship. Andes is the only hantavirus known to spread person to person. The largest prior outbreak hit Epuyén, Argentina in 2018–2019: 34 confirmed cases, 11 dead.

Said WHO&apos;s Abdi Mahamud: &quot;We are in a similar situation right now, a cluster in a confined space with close contact.&quot; Real public health work — contact tracing, genetic sequencing across labs in South Africa, Switzerland, and Senegal — is running. This is what functional disease response looks like. Pay attention.</description><pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 19:41:11 GMT</pubDate><category>MAHA</category><category>CDC</category><category>Healthcare</category></item><item><title>20 — States Actually Ready When the Next Health Crisis Hits</title><link>https://thehardestright.com/posts/20-states-actually-ready-when-the-next-health-crisis-hits/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thehardestright.com/posts/20-states-actually-ready-when-the-next-health-crisis-hits/</guid><pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 19:26:20 GMT</pubDate><category>Healthcare</category><category>MAHA</category><category>HHS</category><category>Public Health Infrastructure</category></item></channel></rss>