Senate Votes 51-46 — Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer’s Plan Backfired…
Senate Confirms Rodney Scott To Lead Customs And Border Protection

The U.S. Senate has confirmed Rodney Scott as head of Customs and Border Protection.
Scott formerly served as Border Patrol Chief and currently commands the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) biggest enforcement department, which has approximately 65,000 workers.
CBP consists of two divisions: the Border Patrol, which is in charge of protecting the nation’s borders between ports of entry, and the Office of Field Operations (OFO), which is in charge of security at ports of entry.
Scott was confirmed on a 51-46 party-line vote, with all Republicans in favor and all Democrats opposed.
Scott was forced out of his post as Border Patrol Chief during the Biden administration after opposing politically motivated changes at CBP. In April 2021, Acting CBP Commissioner Troy Miller informed Scott that the agency would use the phrase “undocumented immigrant” instead of the legally accurate “illegal alien.”
At the time, Chief Scott sent an internal memorandum to Miller arguing that, “The U.S. Border Patrol (USBP) is and must remain an apolitical federal law enforcement agency…Despite every attempt by USBP leadership to ensure that all official messaging remained consistent with law, fact, and evidence, there is no doubt that the reputation of the USBP has suffered because of the many outside voices. Mandating the use of terms which are inconsistent with law has the potential to further erode public trust in our government institutions.”
Scott will retire as Chief of the Border Patrol in August 2021.
After leaving the Border Patrol, Commissioner Scott remained a major advocate on the need to protect our borders, repeatedly calling for a return to Trump-era practices. In the autumn of 2021, he will begin working as a Distinguished Senior Fellow for Border Security at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.
Scott spoke in front of Congress on many occasions and made countless media appearances advocating for tougher immigration enforcement.
Along with Safe Third Country agreements and the Remain in Mexico program, which requires asylum applicants to wait in Mexico for court proceedings, Scott backed border wall building, which remains a top objective in a second Trump administration.
Commissioner Scott sounded a positive note following the Senate vote. In a statement, Scott said: “I’m honored that the United States Senate has confirmed me, and I want to thank President Trump and Secretary Noem for their trust and unwavering leadership. I started my career on the front lines, and now I am ready to lead my CBP family with integrity and a clear mission to defend our sovereignty, enforce the law, and put America first.”
President Donald Trump likewise praised Scott when announcing his nomination.
“Rodney served nearly three decades in the Border Patrol, building vast experience and knowledge in Law Enforcement and Border Security. Rodney served as the 24th Chief of the U.S. Border Patrol, where he implemented Remain-in-Mexico, Title 42, Safe Third Agreements, and achieved record low levels of illegal immigration,” Trump said.
Scott’s confirmation comes at a critical time for CBP.
As the country struggles to recover from four years of open-borders policy, the agency plays a crucial role in fulfilling President Trump’s promise to restore order at the border.
In the next weeks and months, FAIR hopes to collaborate closely with the Trump administration and CBP to undo the damage caused by the Biden administration’s practices.
Recently, the Supreme Court approved the Trump administration’s request to pause a lower court injunction that had blocked deportations of individuals to third countries without prior notice.
The decision marks a near-term victory for the administration as it aims to implement its immigration crackdown swiftly.
The Court ruled 6-3 in favor of staying the injunction, with Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissenting.
The case involved a group of migrants contesting their deportations to third countries—nations other than their countries of origin.
you know WHEN LORETTA LYNN AND CONWAY TWITTY SAID GOODBYE WITHOUT KNOWING IT: Their Final Duet And Emotional Words To Fans Became A Moment That Would Later Leave Country Music Lovers In Tearsyou

There are certain moments in music history that only reveal their true emotional weight years later. At the time, they seem ordinary — another concert, another duet, another warm exchange with loyal audiences. Yet with the passing of time, those same moments begin carrying an entirely different meaning, transforming into painful reminders of how quickly life changes without warning.
That is exactly what happened during the final duet shared by Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty.
For decades, the two country legends had created one of the most beloved musical partnerships in American music history. Their voices blended with remarkable emotional chemistry, balancing humor, tenderness, heartbreak, warmth, and realism in ways that made audiences feel they were listening to two people who genuinely understood the emotional complexities of ordinary life. Together, they produced songs that became part of family memories, road trips, dances, heartbreaks, and quiet evenings across generations of country music listeners.
Yet during one particular performance near the later years of their time together on stage, something quietly unforgettable unfolded — though no one present fully realized it in that moment.
The audience initially responded the way they always had whenever Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty appeared together: with admiration, familiarity, and affection built through years of shared musical history. There was laughter, applause, warmth, and the comforting feeling of watching two legendary voices reunite once again before devoted admirers.
But what audiences did not know was that this would become their final duet together.
That realization only arrived later, after time transformed the performance into something heartbreaking.
As the two legends stood side by side singing together one last time, there was reportedly an unusual emotional tenderness in the atmosphere. Their interaction carried visible warmth and mutual respect developed through decades of collaboration and friendship. Nothing about the performance appeared theatrical or overly dramatic. In fact, part of what makes the moment so emotional today is precisely how natural and sincere it seemed.
Near the end of the performance, both artists reportedly offered heartfelt words of gratitude to the fans who had supported them throughout the years.
At the time, those remarks sounded like the kind of affectionate appreciation longtime performers often express toward loyal audiences. But after Conway Twitty’s passing, listeners returned to those final words with entirely different emotions. Suddenly, what once sounded ordinary began feeling painfully symbolic — almost like an unintended farewell none of them realized they were witnessing.
That emotional shift transformed the performance forever.
For many country music admirers, revisiting the duet today feels almost unbearable because of the innocence contained within the moment itself. Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty smiled, sang, joked gently, and thanked the crowd without knowing they were creating a memory that would later become associated with goodbye, absence, and the end of an irreplaceable musical era.
There is something deeply human about that realization.
Life rarely announces its final moments clearly while they are happening. Most people do not recognize the last conversation, the last song, the last embrace, or the last shared stage until long afterward. That universal truth is part of what makes this final duet resonate so powerfully even decades later.
For older audiences especially, the emotional impact remains profound.
Many listeners who grew up with Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty understand how closely music becomes tied to personal memory over time. Their songs accompanied marriages, heartbreaks, family struggles, celebrations, and entire lifetimes of emotional experience. Watching the final duet now often feels like revisiting not only the end of a musical partnership, but also the passing of an entire chapter of life itself.
What made Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty so beloved together was never technical perfection alone.
Their performances felt emotionally genuine. They understood how to sing about love, conflict, humor, regret, and devotion in ways that reflected the emotional realities ordinary people recognized from their own lives. Audiences trusted them because they sounded authentic — never distant from the experiences they were describing through music.
That authenticity made their final duet even more heartbreaking in retrospect.
There was no dramatic farewell speech. No announcement signaling finality. No attempt to create historical significance. Instead, there was simply music, gratitude, and two legendary performers sharing one more evening with the audience that had loved them for so many years.
And perhaps that quiet simplicity is precisely why the memory continues affecting country music lovers so deeply today.
Because beneath the applause and familiar melodies stood something timelessly human: two friends and musical partners unknowingly saying goodbye to one another, to the audience, and to an extraordinary era of country music history without realizing the moment would never come again.
Long after the final notes faded away, the emotional meaning of that duet only grew stronger.
What once felt like another beautiful performance eventually became something far more powerful — a final shared memory preserved forever through music, carrying the bittersweet reminder that some of life’s most important goodbyes happen softly, without anyone recognizing them until it is already too late.