The Megyn Kelly Show - Trump Pushes SAVE Act, Antifa Cell Sentenced, Camp Mystic Files for Bankruptcy: AM Update 6/25
Episode Date: June 25, 2026President Trump ramps up pressure on Senate Republicans to pass the SAVE America Act, delaying a bipartisan housing bill as lawmakers explore new ways to advance the election overhaul legislation. Ei...ght members of a North Texas Antifa cell receive a combined 450 years in federal prison for an organized armed attack on an ICE detention facility that left a police officer shot in the neck. Camp Mystic files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy nearly one year after the deadly Texas floods, temporarily pausing wrongful-death lawsuits as victims’ families vow to continue their fight for justice. A magnitude 5.6 earthquake rocks Northern California, cutting power to thousands and ranking among the strongest recorded in the region since 1900. Lean: Discover why LEAN is becoming the choice for real weight‑loss results—shop now at https://TAKELEAN.com use code MK. Cozy Earth: Visit https://www.CozyEarth.com & Use code MEGYN for up to 20% off Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Good morning, everyone. I'm Emily Jishinsky, host of After Party and the Megan Kelly wrap-up show on SiriusXM Channel 111. It's Thursday, June 25, 2026. And this is your AM update.
I think we had a really great meeting, and we're very proud of the party.
President Trump escalating pressure to pass the Save America Act, meeting with Republican senators on the Hill to push for the election overhaul legislation.
Eight members of a North Texas Antifa cell receiving a combined 440.
50 years in prison after prosecutors detailed an armed, organized attack on an ice facility.
Camp Mystic filing for bankruptcy nearly one year after the deadly Texas floods,
as families suing the camp vow the legal fight is far from over.
All of a sudden, everything just shuts the curtains, the bed, the refrigerator, everything just
shoved. A powerful earthquake rattling northern California, triggering widespread alerts, knocking
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President Trump abruptly canceling plans yesterday to sign a bipartisan housing legislation package passed by Congress.
Instead, demanding lawmakers first delivered the election overhaul.
He has made a centerpiece of his second-term agenda.
The president announcing just 90 minutes before the scheduled ceremony that the event was off,
writing on Truth Social, quote,
Today's housing news conference and signing is hereby canceled until such time as we pass the desperately needed Save America Act,
which I consider to be a national emergency.
The delayed legislation, known as the 21st Century Road to Housing Act,
designed to address the nation's housing shortage by clearing regulatory barriers,
accelerating construction, and limiting the number of existing single-family homes
large institutional investors can acquire.
U.S. Senator from Massachusetts, Democrat Elizabeth Warren,
a co-author of the legislation,
blasting President Trump yesterday following the cancellation of the ceremony.
We should be here today to celebrate.
because we should have a housing bill that is now law.
This may be a battle, but I guarantee we will get this bill passed.
We will get it passed while the Republicans are still in control, or damn it, the Democrats will
take over, and we will get it passed with the Democrats in control.
The president has not said he will veto the housing bill.
House Speaker Mike Johnson telling reporters after speaking with Mr. Trump that he still expects
the president to sign it within the Constitution.
permitted 10-day window. Absent a signature or veto, the measure would become law automatically
once that period expires, provided Congress remains in session. The sudden cancellation marks the
latest and most dramatic step in the president's campaign to force the Save America Act
through a resistant Senate. The bill would require Americans registering to vote in federal
elections to present documentary proof of citizenship. The measure would also establish a nationwide
photo identification requirement for federal voting,
impose new identification rules on mail-in ballots,
and direct states to take additional steps
to locate and remove ineligible voters from their registration lists.
Democrats remain firmly opposed,
arguing the requirements would create new barriers for eligible voters.
A recent attempt to advance the Save America Act as an amendment failing 48 to 50,
with Republicans Mitch McConnell of Kentucky,
Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska,
and Tom Tillis of North Carolina joining Democrats in opposition,
leaving the legislation short of even full Republican support
and far below the 60 votes normally required to advance.
The president nevertheless pressing Senate Republicans to find a way to pass it,
bringing that pressure campaign directly to Capitol Hill yesterday
during a lunch with GOP senators.
CNN reporting lawmakers discussed several possible paths,
including breaking the legislation into smaller pieces
or using budget reconciliation, a special process allowing qualifying legislation to bypass the
Senate's usual 60-vote threshold as long as it meets strict budgetary requirements.
The lunch reportedly growing tense at times, with the president also confronting several
Republican senators over recent votes against his agenda, though Mr. Trump offering a far more
upbeat assessment as he left the Capitol.
I think we had a really great meeting, and we're very proud of the party.
We like our leader. We like everybody really in the room. I don't like a few people, but that's okay. I think you know who they are.
But I'll give you that information someday. But for the most part, we have a really well-unified party.
On the House side, Speaker Johnson, yesterday outlining how Republicans might give the Save America Act the budgetary connection needed to qualify for reconciliation.
We believe that if you create a grant program that ties it to reconciling the budget and you allow blue states if they come,
come to their senses and they want to avail themselves to election integrity proposals and ideas and policies,
they can draw down from a federal fund and use those funds. We're willing to, we're willing to invest
heavily in that. And House Republicans will put together a reconciliation bill, reconciliation 3.0,
that will have that. I've talked the president through that in detail this morning as I have in
the past, and he said, can we do it? I said, we can. If the Republicans will stand together.
Speaker Johnson set to meet with the president on this topic later today.
Eight members of what prosecutors identified as a North Texas Antifa cell,
receiving a combined 450 years in federal prison Tuesday for an armed ambush at an
ICE detention facility that left a local police officer shot in the neck.
The sentences following the defendant's convictions in March on charges involving
rioting, explosives, material support for terrorism, obstruction, and in one case, attempted
murder.
The attack unfolding late on July 4th of last year at the Prairie,
attention center in Alvarado, Texas, near Dallas. According to testimony, roughly a dozen people
dressed in black military-style clothing arrived carrying firearms, body armor, and medical kits
equipped to treat gunshot wounds. Members of the group setting off fireworks and vandalizing the
facility, attempting to lure officers outside, according to prosecutors. When Alvaredo police
lieutenant, Thomas Gross arrived and began issuing commands, Antifa operative Benjamin Song, could be heard
on police body camera footage yelling, quote,
get to the rifles.
Song then opening fire,
striking Gross in the neck
as two unarmed detention officers ran for cover.
Gross has since made a full recovery.
Song escaping the scene and remaining on the run
for 11 days before his capture.
A federal jury ultimately convicting nine defendants
following a 12-day trial,
featuring 46 witnesses and more than 210 exhibits.
The Justice Department calling these the first
sentencings of defendants affiliated with Antifa since President Trump designated it a domestic
terrorist organization last fall. The AP describing Antifa as, quote, not a single organization,
but rather an umbrella term for far-left militant groups that confront or resist neo-Nazis and white
supremacists at demonstrations. That broad characterization, however, does not capture the level of
organization prosecutors documented within this particular North Texas cell. Trial evidence showing the group
had an identified leader, recruited members, provided firearms and combat training, and held a
gear check the night before the attack. Participants also conducting reconnaissance at the facility,
concealing their identities, and disabling or shielding their phones to prevent tracking.
The group arriving with 11 firearms, body armor, and 11 military-grade medical kits equipped
to treat gunshot wounds. Chief U.S. District Judge Reid O'Connor calling their actions,
quote, an assault on democracy.
Song, who was convicted of attempted murder, discharging a firearm during a violent crime,
rioting providing material support to terrorists, and carrying explosives during the attack,
receiving the longest sentence at 100 years.
One defendant receiving 70 years, five receiving 50 years each, and another receiving 30 years.
A ninth defendant convicted alongside the group is scheduled to be sentenced July 1st,
along with seven others who pleaded guilty before the trial, to providing material support to terrorists.
each faces up to 15 years in prison.
Sog's attorney, Philip Hayes, speaking to the Associated Press after the sentencing.
Our issue with this case has always been, this isn't a bunch of terrorists.
This is a bunch of kids and young adults who really have a really big heart and really wanted their voice to be heard.
It was never intended anybody to get hurt.
It was never intended that any shots would be fired.
They really just wanted their voice to be heard.
and to make the people who they felt were unjustly in prison, make them feel about it.
Make them know that they've got people out there.
Hayes says his client will appeal the sentence.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche releasing a statement, quote,
The sentences handed down today will make clear that Antifa terrorists who attack law enforcement
and federal facilities will face swift and uncompromising justice.
Coming up, Camp Mystics seeking bankruptcy protection as lawsuits mount over the deadly Texas flood
and victims' families promise to keep.
fighting for justice. And a strong earthquake rocking Northern California, sending tremors across
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Camp Mystic filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection yesterday, almost one year after the
devastating flooding that killed 25 campers, two.
teenage counselors and the camp's owner and director, Richard Dick Eastland. The case filed in
U.S. bankruptcy court in the Southern District of Texas after months of investigations and multiple
wrongful death lawsuits accusing the camp of failing to protect campers and counselors.
Chapter 11 allows a business to keep operating while it works out how to pay what it owes under the
supervision of a bankruptcy judge. Per court records, Camp Mystics managers, authorizing the company
to pursue either a financial reorganization or the same.
of its assets if the business cannot continue. The filing covers Camp Mystic and several related
companies, reporting between $10 million to $50 million in debt and between $1 million and $10 million
in estimated assets. The documents providing little additional detail about the camp's finances.
Camp Mystic is currently facing five wrongful death lawsuits brought by families of children
and counselors who died in the July 4th flood. The cases each seek more than $1 million
dollars in damages, accusing the Eastland family, which has owned and operated the camp for generations,
of ignoring known flood dangers and failing to move campers out of the lowest areas before the
Guadalupe River overwhelmed the property. Investigators finding Camp Mystic had no written
plan for evacuating during a flood. Counselors had received little emergency training,
and camp leadership had become complacent about a danger the property had faced for decades.
Previous hearings detailing warnings that want unnoticed or unanswered.
and the decision to leave girls inside their cabins until rising water made a safe evacuation
nearly impossible. In March, a Travis County judge ordering Camp Mystic not to demolish repair
or rebuild the flood-damaged cabins and several other areas along the Guadalupe River.
The ruling requiring the camp to preserve those locations as potential evidence while the family's
lawsuits move forward. That order did not prevent Camp Mystic from reopening another part of its
property that escaped the worst of the flooding. The Eastland family was preparing to welcome
nearly 900 campers back this summer. However, that plan provoking outrage from victims' families.
Lawmakers also questioning whether the camp could safely reopen as legislative, state,
health, and law enforcement investigations remained underway. Camp Mystic ultimately deciding in
April to abandon plans to reopen. Now, the bankruptcy filing could dramatically change how the
family's legal cases proceed. Sarah Foss,
the global head of legal and restructuring at Debtwire, telling NBC News the lawsuits are now
temporarily paused. Foss explaining, quote, whether those lawsuits ultimately proceed in the bankruptcy
court or the courts where they are pending, victims' families will be treated as creditors who must
seek compensation from a limited pool of money in the bankruptcy case rather than through individual
jury verdicts. Attorneys for the families making clear they intend to keep fighting. Paul Yetter,
who represents seven families suing over their daughter's deaths,
telling the Austin American statesman, quote,
bankruptcy will not stop all responsible parties from being held accountable.
These innocent girls deserve justice.
Mark Lanier, representing six families, telling the outlet his firm anticipated the filing
and is now reviewing whether it can ask the bankruptcy court to allow the lawsuits to continue.
Lanier accusing Camp Mystics owners of trying to avoid scrutiny, adding, quote,
for fighting them every step of the way.
A magnitude 5.6 earthquake rattle
northern California yesterday morning, striking Mendocino County about 115 miles northwest of San Francisco.
The U.S. Geological Survey placing the epicenter roughly seven miles north of Redwood Valley.
The shaking beginning at 8.10 a.m. Pacific time, about five miles beneath the surface.
A magnitude 2.5 aftershock following roughly seven minutes later,
with several additional smaller earthquakes subsequently recorded in the same area.
Residents reporting, feeling the initial jolt across a wide.
wide stretch of Northern California, from Eureka, roughly 115 miles north of the epicenter,
to Sacramento about 110 miles southeast.
The earthquake triggering smartphone warnings for nearly 657,000 people across the region.
Ukiya resident Daniel Alonzo describing the moment the shaking reached his home to KTVU,
Fox 2, San Francisco.
All of a sudden, everything just shook the curtains, the bed, the refrigerator, everything
just shook and it was very severe, almost where I got very busy.
And it was like very, like scary.
Almost like a freight train was running right through our house.
So, yeah, it was very, it was very, like a scary incident.
And then we had a little aftershock about maybe about a minute later after that.
The earthquake knocking out power to more than 7,400 homes and businesses across Mendocino County.
yesterday's earthquake ranking among the strongest recorded in that region since 1900,
according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
The only larger quake on record was a magnitude 5.9 near Legget in Mendocino County in 1931.
That'll do it for your AM update.
I'm Emily Dishinsky, host of After Party.
Catch the Megan Kelly Show live on SiriusXMs,
the Megan Kelly Channel 11 at New Neathe on YouTube.com slash Megan Kelly
and all podcast platforms.
