Is Dem Fundraising in Trouble? Talking Republican Vibe-cession (w/ Dave Levinthal & Karol Markowicz)

Is Dem Fundraising in Trouble? Talking Republican Vibe-cession (w/ Dave Levinthal & Karol Markowicz)

Author: Justin Robert Young February 20, 2026 Duration: 1:27:02

President Trump says he will decide within 10 to 15 days whether to continue diplomatic efforts with Iran or authorize military action. On paper, talks in Geneva have been described as “positive.” In practice, the military posture tells a more urgent story. Significant naval assets are in place, including carrier strike groups positioned to project air power quickly.

What stands out is the operational framing. The buildup appears geared toward air and naval strikes, not large-scale ground deployments. Bombs in, not boots in. That distinction matters politically and strategically. A rapid, targeted operation is easier to message and easier to contain. A prolonged engagement is not.

I have no inside knowledge of what comes next. But the reporting suggests that every preparatory step short of execution has been taken. That does not guarantee action. It does mean the window for decision is real. If a strike happens, the political fallout will depend almost entirely on duration. Days are one thing. Weeks are another.

Politics Politics Politics is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Prince Andrew and the Epstein Fallout

Across the Atlantic, the Epstein document releases are producing consequences that are less sensational but more legally concrete than many expected. Andrew Montbatten-Windsor, formerly Prince Andrew, was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office and later released. The scrutiny centers not on lurid allegations alone, but on claims that confidential trade documents may have been shared with Jeffrey Epstein during Andrew’s tenure as a trade envoy.

That is the pattern emerging from the latest tranche of disclosures. The most actionable material involves documents, authority, and institutional misuse, not the more speculative narratives that dominate online conversation. Trade secrets and official privilege are prosecutable. Rumor is not.

If these allegations hold, the implications extend beyond Andrew personally. They could destabilize broader political relationships in the United Kingdom and intensify scrutiny of other high-profile Epstein associates. The sensational headlines grab attention, but it is the paper trail that moves prosecutors.

DHS Funding and Pre–State of the Union Brinkmanship

Back home, the Department of Homeland Security funding fight remains stalled. Democrats are demanding immigration enforcement reforms, including stricter warrant requirements, ending certain patrol practices, and unmasking field agents. Republicans have labeled those proposals red lines and accuse Democrats of leveraging the shutdown for political positioning ahead of the State of the Union.

Nothing substantive is likely to move before the president addresses Congress. The incentives run the other way. Democrats want to be seen as fighting. Republicans want to frame the impasse as obstruction. In the meantime, DHS operates in partial shutdown conditions, with essential personnel continuing work but long-term uncertainty hanging over the department.

The broader dynamic is familiar. Shutdowns are blunt instruments. They energize bases but rarely deliver maximal outcomes. Eventually, one side cuts a deal and angers its most committed supporters. The only open question is who blinks first and how much rhetorical damage accumulates before they do.

Chapters

00:00:00 - Intro

00:02:11 - Dave Levinthal on Dems’ Midterm Fundraising

00:27:24 - Update

00:29:00 - Iran

00:33:30 - Former Prince Andrew Arrested

00:35:10 - DHS Funding Talks

00:38:20 - Karol Markowicz on Republican Vibes

01:21:35 - Wrap-up



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.politicspoliticspolitics.com/subscribe

In a media landscape often defined by partisan shouting, Politics Politics Politics offers a different kind of conversation. Host Justin Robert Young brings a clear-eyed focus on the mechanics of power, cutting through the noise to examine the strategies, historical patterns, and personal ambitions that actually determine outcomes. This isn't about rehearsing talking points or telling you which side to be on. Instead, each episode digs into the tangible factors that signal who is positioned to succeed in a given race or policy fight and, crucially, the reasons behind that momentum. You'll find a blend of current news dissection and historical context, treating today's headlines as part of a longer story about how political power operates. The analysis aims for a straightforward clarity that feels increasingly rare, providing listeners with a foundational understanding of events that goes beyond the day's reactive hot takes. For anyone trying to make sense of the constant churn, this podcast serves as a reliable guide to the underlying forces at play.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Politics Politics Politics
Podcast Episodes
Eric Swalwell's Dramatic Fall from Grace (with Juliegrace Brufke) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:04:36
The fall of Eric Swalwell feels less about the details of any single allegation and more about how quickly everything around him collapsed once those allegations hit. The shift is immediate. He goes from being a serious…