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From Texas Gerrymandering to the Epstein Bill: Why Public Pressure Is Breaking the GOP | David Pepper & Lisa Senecal LIVE

Texas’ redistricting collapse shows how authoritarian projects fail when the people running them can’t execute their own schemes.
  • The Comey indictment fight exposes what happens when a government swaps legal expertise for personal loyalty.

  • The Epstein bill’s loopholes make transparency a political choice, not a legal guarantee.

  • Cratering polls signal a party trapped between its own economic cruelty and a leader who’s becoming a liability.


Lisa Senecal and David Pepper open the door to a bigger truth: authoritarianism doesn’t just rely on bad motives—it relies on people who know how to carry them out, and the current crew can’t. The Texas mess is a reminder that when a regime obsesses over power, it stops investing in competence, leaving behind evidence trails they’re too sloppy to cover. The Comey debacle takes that further, showing how show-trial politics collapse the moment they collide with even the lowest procedural bar. And the Epstein bill reinforces that nothing about this government’s transparency problem is structural—it’s intentional, built on the assumption that loopholes and loyalists can smother any threat. That’s why the political backlash forming around these failures feels less like a reaction and more like an early breaking point.

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