Morning Wire - Trump-Walz Détente & Anti-ICE Protest Network Exposed | 1.27.26
Episode Date: January 27, 2026Governor Tim Walz and President Trump have a “productive conversation” as Tom Homan heads to Minnesota, the Minneapolis protests reveal an organized network, and the FDA moves to bring more medica...tion out from behind the counter. Get the facts first with Morning Wire. As hundreds of thousands remain affected by this week’s winter storm, Morning Wire is coming to you as audio-only. We look forward to coming back to video as soon as safely possible! - - - Ep. 2601 - - - Wake up with new Morning Wire merch: https://bit.ly/4lIubt3 - - - Today's Sponsor: DeleteMe - Get 20% off your DeleteMe plan when you go to https://joindeleteme.com/ WIRE and use promo code WIRE at checkout. - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy morning wire,morning wire podcast,the morning wire podcast,Georgia Howe,John Bickley,daily wire podcast,podcast,news podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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As organized rioting destabilizes Minneapolis, Trump sends in his borders are, while Governor Tim Walls signals a willingness to work with the president.
Governor Walls and President Trump are having a conversation, a constructive and productive conversation to end the chaos and the lawlessness that has taken place in Governor Walsh's state.
I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire Executive Editor John Bickley. It's Tuesday, January 27th, and this is Morning Wire.
More details come to light about the anti-ice protest effort.
revealing a sophisticated network behind the demonstrations.
We've actually found groups and individuals responsible for funding it because it's not happening organically.
And the FDA launches a new initiative aimed at moving more medication from behind the counter to store shelves.
This is a common sense reform that makes sense.
And if you think about it, it can also save lives.
Thanks for waking up with Morning Wire.
Stay tuned. We have the news you need to know.
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amid continued riots, Minnesota Governor Tim Walts called President Trump, and both parties have called it a productive conversation.
Meanwhile, the president has sent his borders our Tom Holman to help head up the operation in Minneapolis.
Daily Wire immigration reporter Jenny Tair joins us now with the latest morning, Jenny.
So first, what is the situation now on the ground in Minneapolis?
Have things calm down at all?
Yeah, good morning, John.
You know, it would be hard to describe the situation as calm.
As we've reported, the riots have sort of ebden flowed.
And as this viral footage from just yesterday shows,
rioters continue to wreak havoc in some areas.
In one particularly wild situation in St. Paul,
a group of anti-ice agitators attempted to break into a home to sweets hotel
where they thought immigration agents were staying.
And there was only one officer there to fend off the mob
that Bureau of Prisons officer ended up bloodied
and asking where in the world were the local police.
So, you know, it's amid all of this chaos that President Trump announced a big change coming
to the operation there.
Right.
So he sent in Tom Homan, that's the border czar.
Is this a major move?
How significant is this?
Yeah, I've spoken with several sources within the federal government who say that they're
happy Homan will be coming because, frankly, they're losing trust in Department of Homeland
Security Secretary, Christy Noam.
And it's because of not only her response here.
to rush to say that Alex Pready was a, quote, domestic terrorist, but also that he showed up,
armed with ammo on Saturday, quote, to inflict maximum damage on individuals and to kill law
enforcement. It's also drawn some criticism from congressional Republicans like Senator Tom Tillis,
who came out against Noam's response and have also expressed higher confidence in Homan's ability to
carry on this operation. You know, the truth is with this video of the shooting, it's not as clear
cut as the ones that emerge after the ice-involved shooting of Renee Good. And some of the details
of what led up to this latest shooting are so murky and the federal government is investigating that.
Right. And a lot of people are very interested to see what the findings of that investigation are.
So does this signal a change in strategy or approach for the operation?
Yeah, it will likely lead to some changes. You know, Homan and Noam have been sparring over how
the mass deportation campaign should look.
Homan, who's a law enforcement guy who started in Border Patrol, and then he later headed to
ICE, wants ICE leading the campaign, and he wants them to be making more quality arrest,
meaning their focus more on finding the worst criminal illegal immigrants.
But on the other hand, Noam wants numbers, and she doesn't seem as concerned with who they're
getting as long as they're here in the country illegally.
So that's why you see more aggressive figures like Border Patrol commander Gregory,
Bovino out there in front of the cameras more than you see Holman, really, and it's more of a showy
operation going on.
You know, multiple reports also indicate that Bovino will be leaving Minneapolis this week,
and he's taking some of his fellow agents with him.
So we are starting to see some of those changes being made.
Despite this, President Trump says he's very happy with Noam's leadership, and several reporters
at Monday's White House press briefing asked if deploying Homan was a sign that Trump was growing
dissatisfied with Noam. Caroline Levitt, the press secretary said not at all. No, Mr. Holman is doing an
exceptional job, and he has been working with Secretary Noem and President Trump over the course of the
last year. Secretary Noem still has the utmost confidence in trust of the President of the United
States. So still expressing a lot of confidence in Noam. Finally, we have this call from Walls to
Trump reported yesterday. Is this a sign of progress? Yeah, so both the president and Walls said the call
was productive, Trump specifically said they seemed to be on, quote, a similar wavelength and
that Walls appeared to be happy with Homan coming to the city. And for his part, Wall said
the Trump agreed to look at reducing the number of federal agents in Minnesota and working
with the state in a more coordinated fashion on immigration enforcement. But we know just days
before that we had the governor comparing immigration enforcement to Nazis. So it's hard to really
know what to make of this more cordial tone here. Right. The proof will be if we actually see cooperation
from walls and local officials.
Ginny, thank you so much for reporting.
Thank you.
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After the shooting of 37-year-old ICU nurse Alex Pready, questions are mounting about the sophisticated
network behind these demonstrations. Daily Wire Culture reporter Megan Basham is here now to answer some of
those questions, hey, Megan? So we've heard claims about outside groups and funding, influencing,
or supporting these mobilizations. What can you tell us about that? Yeah, John, I would say that
the picture coming into focus here is less scattered and spontaneous outrage, and it's more
structured activism that's operating through layered networks on the ground in Minneapolis.
So some of these are local, some are regional, and some are indeed actually tied to national
left-wing movements. So according to investigative journalists at Fox News and some other outlets,
these networks that Preddy was involved with rely pretty heavily on encrypted messaging platforms,
especially signal, to coordinate their movements in real time. So essentially what they're doing
is sharing locations of federal vehicles. They're sharing hotels that are housing,
agents and they're sharing enforcement activity. Now, these protesters' roles are clearly defined
within the chat groups with emojis as identifiers. So to give you some examples, a car with
exhaust represents mobile patrols who hunt for ice vehicles. A runner symbol is for foot patrols,
and a phone for dispatchers running constant calls. Now, according to the signal materials that
were leaked over the weekend from these groups, protesters are taking shifts and operations are
running 24-7 with dispatch calls maxing out at 50 people at a time. And they're dividing their
patrol zones into districts guiding quote-unquote ice chasers on positioning. And in some of
these chats, members are openly acknowledging that they're also fighting a sort of propaganda war.
And the strategies for that include filming escalations, reframing incidents as, quote, executions
or murders. And they're also using inflammatory terms like ice Gestapo or not. And they're
Nazi-like. And that's the same kind of messaging that you're hearing from Governor Tim Walz,
who invoked the name of Anne Frank during a press conference on Sunday.
We have got children in Minnesota hiding in their houses afraid to go outside.
Many of us grew up reading that story of Anne Frank. Somebody's going to write that children's
story about Minnesota. Certainly some strident rhetoric there to say the least. So this coordination
seems incredibly detailed. It's almost like a military command.
structure or something. What about funding? Do we know who's bankrolling these efforts?
Yeah, that is really the key question here, and it is one that federal investigators are now asking.
So publicly, organizers are claiming that these donations come from small donors and community
fundraisers, and that is partly true. But according to Fox's investigation, it is also backed
by American-born billionaire Neville Roy Singham, who is a self-proclaimed Marxist Leninist who's now
living in China. Now, Singham has poured money into a group called the People's Forum since 2017.
That's a nonprofit that supports entities like Breakthrough News, which is a left-wing propaganda
outfit that has been heavily creating content centered on Minneapolis. They're doing things like
sharing videos and publishing graphics demanding things like abolishing ICE. FBI director Cash Patel
said on Monday morning that his office is taking a close look at these organizations for potential
charges. Now, to be clear, not for the propaganda, because that's, of course, protected by the
First Amendment, but for this coordinated interference. We will also ensure that civilians have the
ultimate protection of the First and Second Amendment. But it is my job to adjudicate the
difference when there is a breaking of federal statute or state law in the furtherance of a crime
or violence against law enforcement officers. And that's when we step in. So we've all seen
that these protester networks are having a lot of success in the goal of interfering with ICE. But what a
this propaganda arm of the networks? Is it having an impact? You know, it's hard to determine how
these materials impact public perception. You have to try to divine whether it's an organic reaction
to circulating video or if it's just effective propaganda. But I will say that going by the
trends on social media, particularly on platforms like Instagram, it looks pretty effective.
Just to give you a couple of examples, I spent the weekend reviewing the accounts of a lot
of major fashion and lifestyle influencers,
none of whom typically post political content,
and a lot of them are repeating
the abolish ice talking points nearly verbatim,
and they're also linking to fundraising efforts to these groups.
One prominent example,
plastic surgeon Dr. Tony Yown, for instance,
urged his 1.6 million followers
not to believe, quote, lying politicians,
and he said that immigration enforcement
in Minneapolis is not okay.
And then also some major fashion influence
like Grache Parcell, Julia Berylheimer, and Nina Evans. I'm sure you know these names, John.
Of course.
But they all have many millions of followers from various accounts. And they're also promoting
these anti-ice sentiments that echo breakthrough news. So that kind of thing, I would guess,
is likely swaying those who may not be following these issues very closely, but who are
forming an opinion based on their favorite influencers.
Well, wherever you fall on the issue of immigration, not sure that fashion influence
are the best source of information on this issue.
Megan, thank you so much for reporting.
My pleasure.
The FDA has launched a new initiative to get more drugs available over the counter,
moving away from the current prescription-only system.
Here to discuss is Daily Wire reporter Amanda Presto Giacomo.
So Amanda, prescriptions are obviously a safeguard.
So what kind of alternative model are they suggesting?
Yeah, so I was able to speak to FDA Commissioner, Dr. Marnie McCarrie,
and he reassured me that there will still be safeguards on drugs that need that.
this is going to apply to the many drugs that could be safely access over the counter but currently
aren't. The goals here are to lower health care prices by cutting out middlemen and to just make it
simpler to get the medications you need. McCarrie said the initiative is a common sense reform
that's long overdue and it addresses an archaic system, that prescription only system, that he said is
simply not working. That system of doctors are only able to give you a medication by prescription
failed us with the opioid epidemic.
It failed us with the overprescribing of antibiotics.
Most antibiotics are unnecessary.
So the system is not working as designed.
And now that we have a very educated public,
a public that's getting empowered with health information
like we've never seen before,
this is an opportunity for us to do some common sense reforms.
As for implementation, there's going to be a process
where companies can apply their drugs
and they can be tested against certain criteria to earn this over-the-counter status.
The FDA is working to finalize these criteria, but McCarrie said that drugs that will qualify
will be safe, they'll have no abuse potential, they can't be used in some nefarious way,
and they won't require ongoing laboratory testing.
The commissioner noted that some obvious drugs that could fit the bill here would be
naloxone, commonly referred to as narcan, and anti-naugia drugs.
The frustrations of sitting in an emergency room just to get some anti-nausea medication, getting put in a funny-looking gown and having to wait on a stretcher for hours and hours on end.
I mean, these are expensive health care utilization touchpoints.
And what are we worried about?
Somebody taking an anti-nauzia medication that they actually didn't really need?
We've got to use common sense.
So clearly avoiding the emergency room as a cost saver, will the drugs themselves also be cheaper with this new model?
Yeah, so currently true costs are hidden with this PBM model.
Dr. McCary explained that cutting out PBMs or pharmacy benefit managers, they're the middlemen that run the prescription drug benefit for health insurance plans.
This is going to make the whole system less wasteful.
The pharmacy benefit managers who are notorious for playing a money shell game,
behind the pharmacy counter.
And you only get rung up for what's called the copay,
but your employer or your health plan may be charged an exorbitant amount of money
for a basic medication.
So many of the modern day medications that can be over the counter are actually less
than the co-pay charged when you get them behind the counter.
Now, before you go, Amanda, there's another initiative from the FDA on the horizon
relating to gluten.
What is this new proposal?
Right.
So the FDA wants to amp up the food packaging standards for maximum transparency when it comes to gluten.
They want labels to be clear and in plain English.
The goal here is obviously to make life easier for people who have celiac disease or a gluten sensitivity,
which includes millions of Americans.
Now, to that point, I asked McCary why there are so many Americans with gluten intolerances.
This seems to have spiked significantly when I was growing up.
Here's what McCarrie told me.
Well, there's definitely a clear rise in gluten intolerance and ciliac, and it may be because of the
changes to the gut lining called the microbiome. The microbiome in the modern era gets
injured and affected in so many ways because of ultra-processed foods, because of the overuse of
antibiotics, which carpet bombs some of the microbiome bacteria. And even from things like
C-section births over vaginal.
birth because the types of bacteria that anchor and colonize that microbiome are different.
All right. Well, very hopeful that these changes will be improvements, particularly for those
drug prices. Amanda, thanks for reporting. You're welcome. Another story we're tracking,
the massive winter storm continues to wreak havoc across half the country, with millions impacted
by power outages and road closures and dozens of reported deaths. Due to the frigid temperatures
locking in the ice and snow, at least 5,000 more flights were canceled or delayed Monday
that follows some 11,000 cancellation Sunday. Officials are encouraging people to stay home,
if possible, and off the roads. Thanks for waking up with us. We'll be back later this evening
with more news you need to know.
