The two parties don't just run the game — they run the refs. In this News Nation panel conversation, Paul Rieckhoff makes the case that America's closed primary system isn't merely broken, it's rigged: party-run, party-refereed, and engineered to push both sides to the fringe while the 90-million-strong angry middle gets locked out. With independents now giving Donald Trump an approval rating in the twenties and an independent senator like Angus King already shaping Maine politics, the 2026 midterms are shaping up to be a referendum the MAGA machine can't spin its way out of.
From there, the conversation moves to the powder keg in the Middle East — forty percent of the U.S. Navy in the region, tens of thousands of troops exposed, and what Paul calls 'the worst ceasefire ever' still producing live fire. Add a three-year inflation high, a president openly saying he 'loves the inflation,' fresh Epstein testimony from Bill Gates, and a Maine Senate race that just got a lot more interesting, and you've got the full picture of a summer of violence, volatility, and political pressure. Independents are going to decide what comes next. This is the briefing on why.
In this episode
- Why Paul says the closed primary system isn't broken — it's rigged, with parties acting as both players and referees
- How open, voter-driven primaries in California, Washington, and Alaska point to a fairer playing field
- Maine, Angus King, and why independents — not progressives — will decide the Collins–Platner Senate race
- The 'worst ceasefire ever': forty percent of the Navy in the region and missiles still flying
- Why Trump still hasn't made the actual case to the American public on Iran
- 'I love the inflation' — unpacking the quote heard at a three-year inflation high
- The Trump–Sanders parallel: populism rising on both the left and the right
- Bill Gates, the Epstein emails, and what real accountability would actually look like
- Why anyone connected to Epstein is going down — and why Americans across the spectrum want answers
- A summer of volatility at the pump, in the markets, and on the ballot