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We have some significant developments this afternoon from Trump overhauling America's election systems via executive order to Iran to Donald Trump's ballroom and really everything in between. This afternoon, Donald Trump signed an executive order restricting mail in balloting across the United States of America, ordering the creation of a list of all US Citizens that will be compiled and tracked by the Department of Homeland Security and in an effort to curb the number of individuals who submit vote by mail, despite the fact that he himself voted by mail in recent elections in Florida. Now, at the same time, we have news in the courts as a federal judge blocked Donald Trump's ability to continue building his White House ballroom. Now, Trump seemingly suggested this afternoon he may defy that order. Let's see. And more. Make sure to like, comment, share and subscribe. Subscribe to my substack. Click the link below to support my work if you can. Through the threats, through the attacks, I will never stop. And on that note, a lot of you have reached out asking me my thoughts on other creators, on other journalists, on other reporters, on salacious material, on back and forth online. I don't do that. I will never do that. I'm not going to pine on it. My job is to deliver you the news and that's it. And also I personally believe not using my platform to attack or comment on other people's work. I really think we need to build community in this space. We need to lift people up rather than bring people down. And I love working with anyone and everyone who wants to work with me to get the truth out and we'll continue to do so. So my platform will stay positive no matter what. So that's kind of my thoughts on all of the back and forth with creators on the Internet and all that jazz. That's not for me to comment on now. At the same time today we learned that Donald Trump is signing an executive order to crack down on mail in voting. Executive order will require the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Mark Wayne Mullen, to compile a list of verified United States citizens in each state who are eligible to vote. DHS would undertake the effort with the Social Security Administration. The U.S. postal Service would be required under the order to send or only mail in ballots to voters who appear on the list. Election authorities typically send out mail in ballots to voters, not the postal service. So now you essentially have to go from the elections office to the postal department to then individual voters. The USPS would have a massive undertaking here. Trump has long sought in an effort to restrict mail in voting following his loss in the 2020 election to former President Joe Biden. Remember, he hasn't been able to pass the SAVE act in Congress. He himself uses mail in voting to vote, and now he's trying to restrict that ability for others. And advocates say that these planned restrictions would literally disenfranchise millions of Americans. It's going to be challenged in court. But take a listen to more about what this means and what you should expect in the executive order.
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As you said, you have in front of you an executive order that deals with a number of issues relating to election integrity, as you've consistently identified. Two of the biggest problems we have with election integrity in this country are one, inaccurate voter rolls that allow ineligible people to vote in various federal and state elections all over the country. Then, secondarily, you've consistently identified that vote by mail in this country has become rife with fraud. People returning ballots who aren't eligible to return ballots. Ballots being sent to people who aren't confirmed to be eligible for voters. So what this executive order is going to do is one, we're going to take federal data, we're going to ensure that each state's election officials are provided with a comprehensive view of who the eligible voters in their jurisdiction actually are, allowing them to properly verify that everybody voting in their elections is legally able to vote. And then it orders the Postmaster General, the U.S. postal Service, to take bold new measures to verify that ballots both being sent to people.
A
So you signed that executive order and, well, we'll see when it is challenged in court. Speaking of being challenged in court, this afternoon, a federal judge in Washington, D.C. blocked Donald Trump's ability to continue constructing his ballroom if he does not go through Congress first. He seemingly suggested possibly defying that order. Take a listen.
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He also said, but this is positive for us. I'm allowed that, meaning we are allowed to continue building as necessary to. Let's see, what is that? To cover the safety and security of the White House and its ground. So it says here very carefully, that the safety and security have to be protected of the White House grounds. Well, that's what we're doing, because everything is bulletproof glass, et cetera, et cetera, including the ballroom. And then it goes construction and all of the things necessary. It says personal safety of the president and his staff are a part of that. So it talks about that we're allowed to continue building. In other words, you put an order on. And even that he gave 14 days. We don't need it because that's what we're doing. He's allowed to continue building as necessary. And when it talks about the safety and security of the White House and its grounds. So just so you know, I wrote some of the thing down. We have a drone proof roof and it talks about the president and his staff. Well, we don't have a lot of bulletproof glass. The White House was built a long time ago. This has the highest level of. In fact, they call this graph, this grass, this glass. It's bulletproof and it's ballistic proof. It's very thick. It's like that and it's going 45ft high.
A
So he's essentially suggesting that he could theoretically keep building this ballroom because it's in the national security reasons. Now, we didn't know until recently that the United States military is actually building a massive industrial complex underneath the White House through this ballroom. That's the national security aspect. The question is, are the taxpayers footing that bill? Seemingly they are. They may not be footing the bill of the ballroom, but they may be footing the bill of what's underneath the ballroom. And to build the ballroom, you need a build underneath the ballroom. And so he may try to get around it. Now, he did also comment on the war in Iran. Take a listen to what he said in terms of it ending soon.
C
But if they want something. But I would say that within two weeks, maybe two weeks, maybe three, we're hitting them very hard. Last night we knocked out tremendous amounts of missile making facilities, as you probably read or wrote. We knocked out, excuse me, pardon me for interrupting.
A
Will be the US Will be gone or done with the war.
C
I think with two or three weeks,
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we'll leave two or three weeks until we are done with the war. So it's a very interesting time right now here at home and then overseas. There were some salacious stories about Kristi Noem's husband as well that were circulating on the Internet today. I summarized them below on my sub stack. But to me it's not. What people do in their private lives is none of my business. But I will say this on that front at least. Kristi Noem has attacked the LGBTQ community repeatedly, and so calling her out for her anti LGBTQ views is fair game. So let me know what you think in the comments below. Like comment, share and subscribe. If I look tired, many of you have asked. I'm tired. Yeah, I have a newborn and so I'm not sleeping too much lately. But I'm still getting you the news. Subscribe to my substack. Click the link below to support my work and I'll see you soon. Hey folks, thanks so much for watching. Feel free to add this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or anywhere you watch for the latest breaking news and daily hits throughout the day. Make sure to follow subscribe. See you soon for more.
Episode: Breaking: Bombshell as Trump Overhauls Elections and Orders Creation of List of Americans
Date: March 31, 2026
Host: Aaron Parnas
In this timely episode, Aaron Parnas addresses major political stories of the day, focusing intently on former President Donald Trump’s sweeping new executive order on U.S. elections. The episode unravels the potential impact of restricting mail-in voting and ordering a national list of eligible voters. Additionally, Aaron covers judicial developments surrounding Trump’s planned White House ballroom and provides brief commentary on U.S. military actions in Iran and a viral story concerning Kristi Noem’s husband. Aaron maintains a professional, fact-forward tone, with a commitment to positivity and nonpartisanship.
Highlights:
Host’s Analysis:
Notable Quote:
Guest/Expert Insight:
Judicial Development:
Analysis & Commentary:
Notable Quote (Trump, paraphrased by contributor):
| Timestamp | Segment Description | |-----------|----------------------------------------------------------------------| | 00:00 | Breaking news headline: Trump order limits mail-in voting, DHS list | | 01:06 | Aaron’s commentary on media culture and platform positivity | | 02:08 | Trump’s contradiction: mail-in voting use vs. crackdown attempts | | 03:05 | Guest outlines executive order rationale and implementation | | 04:32 | Contributor quotes Trump on national security justification for ballroom construction | | 06:10 | Aaron discusses taxpayer funding, White House’s underground build | | 06:49 | Trump’s statement on timeline for the end of the U.S. campaign in Iran | | 07:29 | Aaron addresses Kristi Noem rumors and critiques anti-LGBTQ rhetoric |
Aaron Parnas:
Trump (as cited):
Aaron maintains a clear-eyed, analytical approach—delivering concise, insider-informed commentary while emphasizing civility and positive journalism. He remains focused on legal and political implications, intentionally sidestepping the more sensational aspects of online discourse.
This summary captures the breadth, tone, and significance of key discussions for listeners seeking an in-depth but accessible briefing on the episode’s major stories.