Voters delivered another surprise in Texas, the Olympics set off an unexpected cultural debate, and newly released Epstein records are reopening uncomfortable questions about power and access.
A Blue Upset in Deep-Red Texas
Democrats scored another unlikely victory over the weekend, this time in a Texas State Senate district that Donald Trump carried by double digits three times.
Taylor Rehmet, a union leader and Air Force veteran, defeated Trump-endorsed Republican Leigh Wambsganss in a Saturday special election for Texas Senate District 9, which covers parts of Fort Worth and Arlington. With nearly all votes counted, Rehmet won 57.2% to 42.8%, according to the Associated Press.
The seat had been held by Republican Kelly Hancock until his resignation earlier this summer, and under its current boundaries, the district backed Trump by 17 points in 2024, 13 points in 2020, and 23 points in 2016.
Rehmet ran as a working-class candidate focused on public schools, affordable housing, and labor issues. Wambsganss, a conservative activist and communications executive for Patriot Mobile, received a last-minute endorsement from Trump, who warned on Truth Social that “Radical Left Democrats” were spending heavily to flip the seat.
Despite that boost, the district broke sharply in Rehmet’s favor. Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett quickly celebrated the win, calling Rehmet a friend, while national Democrats pointed to the result as part of a broader pattern. In 2025 alone, Democrats have flipped multiple state legislative seats in Pennsylvania, Iowa, and Georgia that Trump also carried decisively just a year earlier.
Olympics, Identity, and a Nordic Backlash
A new Associated Press report is drawing attention—and criticism—for questioning why Winter Olympic rosters aren’t “diverse” enough.
The AP story and accompanying video focus heavily on Sweden, noting that while immigration from Africa and the Middle East has reshaped the country’s demographics, its Olympic teams remain “almost entirely” ethnically Swedish. The piece focuses on Maryan Hashi, a Somali-born woman who took up snowboarding after immigrating to Sweden, describing her feelings of isolation on the slopes and her hope that more migrants will eventually participate in winter sports.
The report argues that high costs, geographic distance from ski hubs, and socioeconomic barriers help explain why winter sports remain predominantly white, even as diversity is more visible in European soccer and basketball. It points to New York Rangers star Mika Zibanejad—born in Sweden to an Iranian father and Finnish mother—as a rare exception on Sweden’s Olympic hockey roster.
A Trump administration State Department official mocked the framing on X, while conservative activists accused the outlet of imposing American racial politics on countries where winter sports have long been culturally and economically exclusive. Both responses drew more engagement than the AP’s original video.
Roughly 73% of Sweden’s population identifies as ethnically Swedish, and less than 1% is of Somali descent.
Epstein Files Reopen a Window Into Elite Circles
The Justice Department’s release of more than three million pages of records tied to Jeffrey Epstein is renewing scrutiny of how the disgraced financier interacted with powerful figures across politics, business, and international diplomacy.
Released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the documents show extensive communication between Epstein and former Trump strategist Steve Bannon after Bannon left the White House. Texts and emails from 2018 and 2019 detail frequent exchanges on global politics, media strategy, and travel, along with Epstein offering access to his private jet and luxury properties.
The records also reveal years of attempted outreach to Elon Musk. Emails show Epstein repeatedly invited Musk to dinners, trips, and Caribbean visits, though Musk consistently declined and there is no indication the two ever met in person. After the files became public, Musk emphasized that real justice would only come through prosecutions and arrests—not document dumps.
The files outline Epstein’s ties to foreign diplomats and former heads of state, including references to meetings with European leaders and coordination with ambassadors and international intermediaries.
One set of emails shows Epstein communicating with future Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in 2012 about a lunch near Epstein’s Caribbean compound while Lutnick vacationed nearby with his family. Lutnick has since said he spent “zero time” with Epstein.
The records underscore what many suspected for years: Epstein’s influence flowed less from secrecy than from proximity—maintained through persistent outreach, elite access, and the willingness of powerful people to keep answering his messages.
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