Frontlines across three provinces in southwest Syria have remained mostly quiet nearly 24 hours after an internationally brokered ceasefire took effect. Former Pentagon official Jed Babbin joined Dan Proft and John Kass with reaction the ceasefire in Syria, and also the growing problem with North Korea:
[xdownload icon=”fa-youtube-play” text=”Watch the interview with Jed Babbin” url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DLhWUcjJZ4″ target=”1″]
Counselor to President Trump, Kellyanne Conway, debated CNN host Chris Cuomo on Monday about allegations that Donald Trump Jr. talked to a Russian person in June 2016 published this weekend by the New York Times. Andrew Klavan joined Dan and John with reaction to the latest fight between CNN and the Trump administration:
[xdownload icon=”fa-youtube-play” text=”Watch the interview with Andrew Klavan” url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W56VHsrjhkw” target=”1″]
On Monday night, The Story host Martha MacCallum took a moment to tell “her story” on Congress’s ongoing struggle to pass health care reform, which she titled a “Failure to Launch.”
In a heated exchange on WFAN where he is filling in as a host, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie mixed it up with “Mike from Montclair,” a frequent caller to the station. Mike brought the heat right out of the box, and it resulted in 90 seconds of sports radio gold.
Donald Trump Jr. will give an interview to the Senate Intelligence Committee regarding his meeting with a Russian lawyer. He met with the lawyer during the presidential campaign, after she promised dirt on Hillary Clinton, the New York Times reported Sunday.
A judge at London’s High Court ruled against the hospital and in favor of the parents of baby Charlie Gard–who is suffering from a rare genetic disorder–that they may present new scientific evidence concerning their son’s treatment, which will be reviewed this Thursday and could possibly lead to Charlie receiving treatment in the United States.
Republicans and Democrats offer starkly different assessments of the impact of several of the nation’s leading institutions – including the news media, colleges and universities and churches and religious organizations – and in some cases, the gap in these views is significantly wider today than it was just a year ago.
A battle is brewing at Western Michigan University this summer between a group of hungry goats and a labor union. The 400-member American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees has filed a grievance contending that the work the goats are doing in a wooded lot is taking away jobs from laid-off union workers.


