Every Friday morning, I join the Cardle & Woolley Show on Talk1370 Radio in Austin to announce the week’s Winners & Losers. This morning’s news that the Strait of Hormuz is now open will change a lot of things that we are all watching, but here’s who made this week’s list:
WINNER: Strait of Hormuz is Open — Trump Gets the Win
It is a big win this morning when Iran announced that the Strait of Hormuz is “completely open” for commercial vessels for the remaining period of the ceasefire. Oil prices immediately dropped and the stock market soared. President Donald Trump cheered the news, but made it clear that the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports will remain in place until we reach a peace deal. The president believes this is a signal that the war with Iran will be over soon. We’ll all be watching as the news continues to unfold.
WINNER: Clarence Thomas Gives Historic Speech at UT
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is an American icon — a man who rose from poverty in the Jim Crow South and turned to the law because he understood the simple truth that segregation violated the Constitution and the promise of the Declaration of Independence. Speaking at the University of Texas at Austin this week in what will undoubtedly go down as an historic address, Thomas made clear the same clarity of purpose that shaped his upbringing also shapes his jurisprudence — he remains grounded in the enduring principles of the nation’s founding documents.
Thomas stated it succinctly — the revolutionary principle of the Declaration of Independence is that our rights come from God, not government, and the Constitution means what it says it means.
Justice Thomas talked about the many principles at play in the current debate, but at a time when Democrats proudly espouse their “progressive wing,” Thomas provided some important historical perspective about the roots of progressivism in America. He called progressivism “the first mainstream political movement — with the possible exception of the pro-slavery reactionaries on the eve of the Civil War — to openly oppose the principles of the Declaration of Independence.”
Unlike America’s founders, progressives insist our rights come from government, which is why it is alarming that progressive policies pervade so many of our institutions today — especially the media and higher education.
Justice Thomas lauded the University of Texas for the work it has done to return free inquiry and open debate to its campus. It was an amazing speech. You can listen to it all here.
LOSERS: Former Congressmen Eric Swalwell and Tony Gonzales
Two congressmen stepped down this week after Americans made it clear that slimy sexual predators in Congress have to go. There’s no excuse for the behavior of Eric Swalwell or Tony Gonzales, and no one is sad they are gone.
But just so everyone remembers, the bipartisan unity around the resignations we saw this week is not the norm. Congress has repeatedly allowed all kinds of offenders to stick around because either Democrats or Republicans needed their vote. Recall former Sen. Bob Menendez, D-New Jersey, the guy who had the gold bars in his suit jacket. First indicted in 2015, he hung around for years, in and out of court, always on the brink of conviction for bribery. He finally left Congress in 2023. So did U.S. Rep. William Jefferson, D-LA, who had hidden $90,000 in bribery money in his freezer. U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel, D-NY, was chair of Ways and Means, and he had to give up his chairmanship, but he stayed in Congress for a while because they needed his vote.
On the Republican side, U.S. Rep George Santos, R-NY, who was charged with identity fraud and lots of different kinds of theft, wasn’t pushed out immediately because the GOP vote margin was so thin. The same was true of U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Florida, who was accused of sex trafficking. Keep that in mind if any member of Congress insists they have “zero tolerance” for corruption.
LOSER: Faith and War Debate
Pope Leo XIV weighed in on the war in Iran during Holy Week, declaring that God rejects the prayers “of those who wage war,” and insisting that “stability and peace are not built with weapons.”
Popes have been weighing in on wars for a couple thousand years, and it is certainly the Holy Father’s prerogative, but it seemed to annoy President Trump at first and produced some backlash against the president. Bishops of Fort Worth and San Antonio called on the President to apologize.
But you can’t invoke moral authority on a war, immigration, and global order, as Pope Leo has done, and then claim immunity from political criticism. Once you enter the arena, you’re part of the fight. President Trump understands this and said this morning that he wants the Pope to say what he thinks, even if they disagree.
It may or may not be relevant that a CBS Poll released this week found that Trump’s approval rating among Catholics is 58% — higher if they only count Catholics who regularly attend mass. Just saying.
LOSER: Texas Democrats’ War on Western Civilization
Take a look at this report in the San Antonio Express-News lamenting a new reading list, approved by the State Board of Education (SBOE), that includes over 300 books and readings from Thomas Jefferson, to Harriet Tubman, to the story of Spindle Top. It also includes 14 brief excerpts from the Bible. According to the news report, the excerpts “will mark the first time in modern history that a religious text is made compulsory in public school.”
If that’s true, and I doubt it, it is because this is the first time that it has been necessary to provide students with knowledge that should be the foundational baseline for any educated person in America.
Unless young Texans understand that our principles of individual rights, freedom, independence, equality, justice, law and moral responsibility all come from Judeo-Christian teachings, they won’t be able to understand why the Pilgrims came to America or what motivated Thomas Paine to write Common Sense, or Thomas Jefferson to write the Declaration of Independence, or Harriet Tubman to lead hundreds of slaves to freedom, or Martin Luther King, Jr., to demand civil rights.
Texas Democrats are treating the inclusion of the Ten Commandments, the story of the Good Samaritan, the Sermon on the Mount and other short passages from both the New and Old Testament in the reading list for Texas school children as a Republican plot to proselytize Christians. They are ignoring the fact that any educated person should know the Lord’s Prayer and the story of the creation of Adam and Eve, regardless of what they believe. The SBOE voted to move the reading list forward. Every Democrat member of the board voted against it.
LOSER: The Canadian Equity Card Story
In case you missed this, the New Democrat Party in Canada — a real political party with a half-dozen members in Parliament — recently held a convention where they launched an “equity card” system. As reported by the Toronto Sun and a ton of American comedians, on the first day of the Convention there were lots of policy debates where any delegate could make their ideas known. At the beginning delegates were told there were yellow cards next to the microphones that they should grab and hold up “to signal to the Chair that they have a gender identity other than ‘man.’” The yellow cards would allow them to cut the line and speak ahead of any guy.
Chaos broke out immediately as other colored cards began to appear. People challenged the yellow card flashers, holding red, blue and pink cards, insisting they were “more oppressed” than other yellow card people as a result of some gender, racial, ethnic or non-binary or disability designation. The whining continued for a couple days and is funny to watch. The antics are all anti-merit, so we have no idea who won any of the debates or what any of these people wanted to say — other than they should have a better place in line.
WINNERS: Rory McElroy and “The Summer of 1983”
I was wrong last week when I said the Masters Tournament in Augusta wouldn’t contain any buzzer beaters. The three-day tournament went right down to the wire with 11 lead changes including six lead changes in the final round on Sunday. It was a nail-biter. Rory McElroy ultimately won the first back-to-back victory since Tiger Woods in 2001 and 2002. It was stunning to watch.
Meanwhile, the SEC Network has released a new movie “Summer of ’83: Texas vs. Tide” that tells the story of the 1983 College World Series and the Texas and Alabama teams that included such greats as Roger Clemens, Calvin Schiraldi, Barry Bonds and David Magadan. It airs on ESPN.
Have a great weekend!
Sherry Sylvester is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and the former Senior Advisor to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick.