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SAVE America Act Advances, Vance Refers Walz to DOJ: Top Conservative News

June 9, 2026

SAVE America Act Advances, Vance Refers Walz to DOJ: Top Conservative News

Here's what's trending in conservative news on June 9, 2026.

  1. New: Senate Vote-a-Rama Boosts Trump's SAVE America Act — Score: 95/100

    A bruising Senate vote-a-rama nudges Trump's flagship SAVE America Act one critical step closer to passage.

  2. "Fraud Czar" VP JD Vance REFERS Radical MN Gov. Tim Walz to DOJ for Full Criminal Fraud Investigation — Score: 89/100

    VP Vance formally refers Minnesota Governor Tim Walz to the DOJ for a criminal fraud investigation.

  3. Sudanese national suspect attempts to behead UK citizen — but police beg public not to share images — Score: 86/100

    A Sudanese national nearly beheaded a man in North Belfast — and UK police want the images buried.

  4. Calif.: Case suspended against man accused of killing San Diego 'Trump House' owner — Score: 71/100

    California courts halt the murder trial of the man accused of beating the "Trump House" owner to death.

  5. WATCH: Jim Jordan Drops BOMB, Reveals SPLC Coordinated with Biden Regime and Paid $4 MILLION to Manufacture Hate Groups, Incite Violence — Score: 71/100

    Jim Jordan exposes the SPLC allegedly paying $4 million with Biden officials to fabricate right-wing extremist threats.

  6. JUST IN: "The United States Must, of Necessity, Respond to This Attack" – Trump Reveals Downed Apache Helicopter Was "Shot Down" by Iranians, Vows Response — Score: 71/100

    Trump confirms Iran shot down a U.S. Army Apache helicopter and vows an American military response.

  7. Dirty Voter Rolls Exposed: Homeless Registered at Fake LA Shelter Addresses — Score: 68/100

    Investigators expose Los Angeles voter rolls packed with homeless people registered to nonexistent shelter addresses.

  8. Texas Tech QB who gambled on his own team for years will still be allowed to play: 'It's f**king bulls**t' — Score: 59/100

    Texas Tech QB Brendan Sorsby, caught gambling on his own NCAA games, faces zero suspension from the Big 12.

  9. Man, 41, confronts teen about talking too loudly on phone aboard Bronx bus — then teen shoots him to death: Police sources — Score: 59/100

    A Bronx teen fatally shot a 41-year-old man who asked him to quiet down on a public bus.

  10. Boom: DHS Chief Mullin Crushes New Jersey Gov's Hot Take on Newark ICE Facility — Score: 56/100

    DHS Secretary Mullin fires back hard at New Jersey Governor Sherrill's grandstanding visit to the Newark ICE facility.


The Day in Review

Tuesday, June 9, 2026, was a day defined by a single unmistakable current running beneath every headline: accountability. The Trump administration is no longer just holding the line — it is going on offense. From the Senate floor to the DOJ's referral desk to the halls of a House Judiciary hearing, the machinery of conservative governance is grinding forward with a momentum that even the media's daily crisis rotation can't fully obscure.

Start at the top. The SAVE America Act's progress through a Senate vote-a-rama is the kind of procedural story that produces eyes-glaze-over responses from casual readers — and that's precisely why it matters more than its modest headline suggests. Vote-a-ramas are legislative warfare. Every amendment is a trap, a test, or a talking point, and the fact that Trump's flagship bill survived this gauntlet even incrementally is a signal about Senate dynamics that shouldn't be dismissed. The GOP is holding together in ways it couldn't two years ago. Meanwhile, VP JD Vance's formal referral of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz to the DOJ for criminal fraud investigation lands like a thunder crack. Vance has leaned hard into the "Fraud Czar" mantle — and he's using it. Whatever one thinks of the eventual legal outcome, the political message is deafening: the era of Democratic governors playing fast and loose with public money without consequence is over. Walz, who was last cycle's failed vice-presidential pick, is now the face of exactly what Vance was appointed to hunt. That is not a coincidence. That is a strategy.

Then there's Jim Jordan's bombshell hearing testimony, which deserves far more attention than it's receiving. If Jordan's evidence holds — that the Southern Poverty Law Center coordinated with the Biden administration and spent $4 million to manufacture right-wing extremist threats — it would represent one of the most serious abuses of civil society infrastructure in modern American political history. Think about what that actually means: a nominally independent nonprofit allegedly weaponized with federal cooperation to fabricate a political threat landscape that then justified surveillance, deplatforming, and media hysteria. This isn't a minor scandal. It's the connective tissue between dozens of stories conservatives have been tracking for years — the sudden explosion of "domestic extremism" rhetoric in 2021, the targeting of parents at school board meetings, the suspicious timing of "hate group" designations. Jordan is pulling a thread that, if it unravels, exposes an entire garment. Watch this hearing closely. The follow-up subpoenas will tell you everything about whether Congress has the stomach to see it through.

The Iran-Apache story is the wild card that could reorder everything else on this list by tomorrow morning. Trump's blunt confirmation that Iran shot down a U.S. Army helicopter — and his explicit warning that "the United States must, of necessity, respond" — is the kind of statement that doesn't leave room for diplomatic walk-backs. This is not the language of a administration seeking to de-escalate. Iran has spent months probing American resolve through proxies; this appears to be a direct act. How Trump responds — and how quickly — will define the next chapter of his foreign policy legacy. A surgical strike? A naval escalation? Coordinated sanctions? The options are all on the table, and America's adversaries from Beijing to Moscow are watching the clock. The NBA Finals backdrop, oddly, only underscores how fast the world can shift: one moment Trump is leaving Game 3 in Queens, the next he's confirming an act of war.

Zoom out and the day's deeper story snaps into focus: the left's institutional infrastructure is cracking simultaneously on multiple fronts. The SPLC exposure, the Walz referral, the LA voter roll scandal, the Newark ICE standoff — these aren't isolated brushfires. They are different faces of the same reckoning. For years, blue-state governors, legacy nonprofits, and compliant local bureaucracies operated with the assumption that scrutiny would never come. That assumption is now rubble. DHS Secretary Mullin's public demolition of New Jersey Governor Sherrill's ICE grandstand and the exposure of phantom voter registrations in Los Angeles aren't just good politics — they are proof that the conservative movement has finally learned to fight on the terrain its opponents built. Tomorrow, watch for Iran's response to Trump's vow, the first subpoenas out of the SPLC hearing, and whether Senate leadership can keep the SAVE America Act coalition from splintering when the real amendment battles begin. Today was a day of momentum. Whether it becomes a turning point depends entirely on what the next 24 hours bring.