Fox News Latest Headlines
Taylor Sheridan's new war movie gets major update, legendary director attached
Taylor Sheridan's upcoming war movie will hit theaters in 2028.
The "Yellowstone" creator's empire continues to rapidly expand, and he secured a deal that reportedly is worth more than $1 billion to join NBCUniversal.
Most of his focus remains on the "Yellowstone" universe, with spinoffs in the works or already airing. However, he's also taking his talents to the big screen with an upcoming "Call of Duty" film.
TAYLOR SHERIDAN SAYS HOLLYWOOD DIDN’T BELIEVE IN YELLOWSTONE, NOW IT’S A TV EMPIRE
It was announced at CinemaCon on Thursday that the upcoming film based on the video game series will premiere June 30, 2028, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
Sheridan is responsible for writing the script, and Hollywood legend Peter Berg will direct the film. Berg has multiple major films to his credits.
He's responsible for "Friday Night Lights," "Lone Survivor" and "Patriots Day." Now, he's linking up with the most talented creative mind in Hollywood for a "Call of Duty" film.
Given Sheridan and Berg's record, it's hard to imagine the film won't go insanely hard. Look at what Sheridan did with "Wind River" and "Sicario" for examples of what happens when he goes dark and gritty.
MICHELLE PFEIFFER FOUGHT 'BATTLE' WITH TAYLOR SHERIDAN BEFORE SURRENDERING TO HIT SHOW 'THE MADISON'
"Call of Duty" is also one of the most popular video game franchises ever built. THR reported that more than 500 million copies have been sold of the first-person shooter series.
It's not known at this time what the plot of the film will be, but hopefully, it follows the realistic games and not the futuristic and black ops storylines.
Nobody wants to see a futurist war movie with Berg and Sheridan at the helm. Stick to the hits. Stick to what works.
Sheridan also has "Dutton Ranch" coming out in May on Paramount+ and several other major projects in the pipeline, including season three of "Lioness." Lots of great content on the way, and I have no doubt "Call of Duty" will meet expectations. Let me know your thoughts on the upcoming movie at David.Hookstead@outkick.com.
Ilhan Omar not out of the woods despite financial disclosure revision, top Republican warns
An updated financial filing from Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., aimed at addressing scrutiny over her previously reported income isn't satisfying Republicans — and House Minority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., says the revisions only raise more concerns.
"Ilhan Omar is even more clueless than I thought if she thinks this financial disclosure revision clears her of suspicion," Emmer exclusively told Fox News Digital on Tuesday.
"She can backtrack, obfuscate, and distract all she wants but she’s made clear who she is: A fraud-enabling, racist antisemite who espouses anti-American rhetoric every chance she gets," Emmer charged of his fellow Minnesota lawmaker.
EMMER WARNS WALZ COULD END UP 'IN CUFFS' AMID MINNESOTA FRAUD CLAIMS
Emmer went on to claim Omar is "entirely unfit to be a member of Congress" if it's true she was "involved in fraud or improper financial gain in any capacity."
"She should be held accountable to the fullest extent," Emmer said. "My colleagues on the House Ethics Committee have my full backing for any and all investigations into Ilhan and her potential misdealings."
An amended filing reviewed by The Wall Street Journal shows Omar and her husband’s assets were between $18,004 and $95,000, a sharp drop from an earlier disclosure that estimated their holdings between $6 million and $30 million.
"The amended disclosure confirms what we’ve said all along: The congresswoman is not a millionaire," Omar spokesperson Jacklyn Rogers told the Journal, adding that the filing was corrected "as soon as the discrepancy was identified."
The amended filing shows Omar reported between $102,503 and $1,005,200 in income in 2024 from assets she and her husband own, according to the Journal. Documentation attached to the attorney’s letter showed $213,200 in distributions to her husband from his venture capital management firm and $3,000 from a winery.
A 2025 email between Omar’s husband and his accountant valued the venture capital firm at $7.9 million and the winery at $1.5 million, though he owns roughly one-third of both businesses, according to tax documents cited by the Journal.
ILHAN OMAR DEFENDS MEALS ACT DESPITE TIES TO MASSIVE MINNESOTA FRAUD SCHEME
The discrepancy over how much money Omar has raked in during her time in Congress has sparked intense criticism from Republicans in Washington, D.C., as well as conservatives in Minnesota.
"I don’t buy it," Townhall columnist Dustin Grage posted on X. "Investigate, expose, and prosecute the fraud."
House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., similarly criticized Omar on Sunday, telling "Fox & Friends Weekend" that he has been pushing for the panel he leads to investigate the matter because of alleged links to the Somali fraud scheme in Minnesota.
"We're not supposed to do that [investigate it] on the Oversight Committee, but because she's a person of interest in the Somali fraud, I've been trying to get that," Comer said, referencing Omar’s associations with individuals implicated in the unfolding Minnesota fraud scandal.
The controversy swirling around Omar comes at the same time her colleague, Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., is rebuffing calls to resign as she faces possible expulsion after being found guilty of more than two dozen ethics violations involving financial misconduct.
Fox News Digital reached out to Omar’s office for comment.
Fox News Digital’s Michael Dorgan and Taylor Penley contributed to this report
Ella Langley fans rally to her defense after Morgan Wallen duet sparks political backlash
Ella Langley's fans rushed to her defense after the country star faced online backlash over her upcoming collaboration with Morgan Wallen.
The 26-year-old Alabama native and Wallen, 32, joined forces for the song "I Can't Love You Anymore," which will be released on Friday.
On Saturday, Langley made her debut as an opener on Wallen's "Still The Problem Tour" during his show in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Langley later returned to the stage, where she and Wallen surprised fans by announcing their collaboration and performed the duet for the first time.
MORGAN WALLEN POKES FUN AT ELLA LANGLEY’S ONSTAGE MIX-UP, THEN REPEATS IT
After the duet was revealed, social media users vented their fury at Langley for teaming up with Wallen, with some slamming both singers over their purported political beliefs and accusing them of being "MAGA."
"Now that she's collabing with Morgan Wallen we can assume she's MAGA so wdc [what the crap]," wrote one X user.
"Did you think a country singer from Alabama was not going to be MAGA? Hell Morgan Wallen is likely less right wing than her," another critic chimed in.
TIM MCGRAW STOOD FIRM AGAINST INDUSTRY ELITES WHO TRIED TO CANCEL HIS 'CONTROVERSIAL' HIT
"Casting a curse on ella langley for collabing with morgan wallen," another added.
"She's friends with and collabing with Morgan Wallen. A known racist and maga," one social media user commented, while another wrote, "Hitler and Stalin announce collab."
However, many of Langley and Wallen's fans swiftly came to their defense and blasted their critics.
"Morgan Wallen is not even MAGA. He's rejected invitations to perform for Trump. He even indicates in an album track that he doesn't support either party lol," one fan wrote.
"There is No need for explanations for they hear nothing you say and are just blinded by some sort of sickness," one X user replied. "Keep up the good work MW and Ella! I thought both had great music way before their popularity grew."
"They are just sad miserable ppl," another added. "Pretty sad they can’t support Ella on this generational run she’s on."
"Who cares bama girl on top," one fan wrote.
"I’m so sick of people politicizing f---ing everything," another chimed in. "Can we just enjoy a collab between two solid country artists without everyone f---ing crying about it, PLEASE?!"
Other fans predicted that "I Can't Love You Anymore" would become a major hit for the duo.
"I just saw them in concert last night & got to see them sing this in person. This is the biggest male & hottest new female Country artist & all of music actually. This'll be big!" one X user wrote.
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
"The biggest male artist of the 2020s and the princess of country!! Cannot wait!!" another commented.
"This is gonna be the ‘I Had Some Help’ of 2026, you can bet on it," another wrote, referring to Morgan's chart-topping 2024 collaboration with Post Malone. "It's gonna be YUUUUGGEEE."
"I love Ella Langley. She deserves success. And Morgan is already there so this new song is prolly gonna top some chart somewhere," one fan added.
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER
Fox News Digital has reached out to Langley and Wallen's representatives for comment.
The backlash comes after Langley's new album "Dandelion" became a massive hit. Released on April 10, "Dandelion" became Langley's first chart-topping album when it debuted at the top of the Billboard 200 chart. The album also soared to No. 1 on iTunes almost immediately after its release.
Meanwhile, "Choosin’ Texas," the lead single from "Dandelion, notched its seventh consecutive week on top of the Billboard Hot 100 and dominated the Hot Country Songs chart for the 20th consecutive week. "Choosin' Texas" is the best-selling song of 2026 so far, with over 525 million global streams.
"Be Her," another song from "Dandelion," joined "Choosin' Texas in the Billboard Hot 100's top 10 this week, claiming the No. 8 spot.
Hegseth announces end to military flu vaccine requirement
War Secretary Pete Hegseth announced the end of the Pentagon's long-running flu vaccine mandate for U.S. troops.
"The War Department is once again restoring freedom to our Joint Force," Hegseth announced in an X post, linking to a video statement of his signing the new policy. "We are discarding the mandatory flu vaccine requirement, effective immediately."
Hegseth said service members would no longer be forced to take the annual flu shot, and instead could decide for themselves whether it was in their best interest, casting the move as part of a broader rollback of what he called overly aggressive medical mandates imposed under the Biden administration.
"Our new policy is simple," Hegseth said. "If you, an American warrior entrusted to defend this nation, believe that the flu vaccine is in your best interest, then you are free to take it, you should."
HEGSETH VOWS TO REBUILD MILITARY DETERRENCE SO ENEMIES 'DON'T WANT TO F--- WITH US'
"But we will not force you."
The announcement appears to go further than a Pentagon policy shift disclosed last fall, when an internal memo showed the department had already begun scaling back the flu shot requirement, at least for some troops.
Hegseth framed the change as a matter of personal liberty, religious freedom and military readiness. In the video, he accused the Biden administration of forcing troops to choose "between their conscience and their country" and said that period was over under President Donald Trump.
DAVID MARCUS: IN TRUMP'S DEPARTMENT OF WAR, IT'S SOLDIERS — NOT EXPERTS — CALLING THE SHOTS
"In this case, this includes the universal flu vaccine and the mandate behind it," Hegseth said. "The notion that a flu vaccine must be mandatory for every service member everywhere in every circumstance at all times is just overly broad and not rational."
The Pentagon had required annual flu vaccinations across the force for years, arguing that widespread immunization helped protect readiness, especially in close-quarter military settings where illness can spread quickly. A memo obtained by The Associated Press and reported in September 2025 showed the department had already softened that stance.
That memo, signed May 29 by Deputy Defense Secretary Steve Feinberg, said reservists would only be required to get the flu shot if they were on active duty for 30 days or more. It also said the military would no longer pay for reservists or National Guard members to get vaccinated on their own time.
HEGSETH WORKS OUT WITH US TROOPS IN MALAYSIA AS WAR DEPARTMENT VOWS 'WE WILL BE FIT, NOT FAT'
At the time, the policy change was not publicly announced, and the memo itself sent mixed signals. While it said the department would require seasonal flu vaccination "only when doing so most directly contributes to readiness," it also appeared to leave the annual requirement in place for active-duty service members.
Hegseth’s new announcement suggests the administration is now moving beyond those limited exemptions and ending the universal mandate altogether.
The move fits into a broader Trump administration effort to revisit military vaccine policy, particularly after the bitter fight over the COVID-19 vaccine. Hegseth explicitly linked the flu shot decision to that earlier controversy, saying, "You know what I’m talking about, what happened [with] COVID-19 and the vaccine. No more."
HEGSETH SHREDS SOVIET-STYLE BUREAUCRACY AND 'FIVE-YEAR PLANS' GOVERNING PENTAGON
"That era of betrayal is over," Hegseth declared.
The administration has already offered back pay to service members discharged for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine under Biden, and has encouraged them to return to uniform.
Hegseth made clear the administration intends for the change to be a sharp break from past policy.
"Your body, your faith, and your convictions are not negotiable," he said. "It’s common sense."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sean Hannity, Riley Gaines shows among podcasts joining FOX One's expanded streaming portfolio
FOX One announced a significant expansion of its podcast portfolio on Monday that includes eight series from FOX News Media and Red Seat Ventures, inaugurating a curated offering on the streaming service.
Fox Corporation's direct-to-consumer streaming service, FOX One, will add "Hang Out with Sean Hannity," "Ruthless," "The Riley Gaines Show," "Planet Tyrus" and "Will Cain Country," among others to its curated podcast offering.
The expanded lineup from Red Seat Ventures will feature "The Brett Cooper Show," "Keeping It Real: Conversations with Jillian Michaels," and "The President’s Daily Brief with Mike Baker."
FOX One began populating new episodes of the different series on April 20.
HOW TO WATCH THE 'HANG OUT WITH SEAN HANNITY' PODCAST
"This podcast expansion is a great example of how we’re working across FOX to bring together best-in-class content from our businesses in new and exciting ways," Reagan Feeney, SVP, Content Strategy and Planning at FOX One, said in a statement. "By leveraging the strength of our partners at FOX News Media and Red Seat Ventures, we’re able to offer subscribers even more compelling voices and perspectives, all in one place, while continuing to build a platform that delivers real value to our audience."
This launch allows FOX One subscribers to stream video podcasts directly through the FOX One platform.
Hannity's podcast will air twice a week on Tuesdays and Thursdays, delivering long-form, unfiltered conversations with compelling figures across culture, business, sports, politics and beyond from the Fox News personality's studio in Florida.
JILLIAN MICHAELS TELLS HANNITY SHE IS DONE WITH DEMOCRATS, SAYS THE LEFT 'KEEPS EATING ITS OWN'
The "Ruthless" podcast, hosted by Josh Holmes, Comfortably Smug, Michael Duncan and John Ashbrook, will populate new episodes three times a week on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays.
"Will Cain Country" debuts episodes daily, Monday-Friday, "The Riley Gaines Show" posts new episodes on Wednesday and Fridays, and "Planet Tyrus" releases episodes on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
"The Brett Cooper Show" publishes content Tuesday-Friday, Jillian Michaels' podcast releases episodes on Wednesdays and Fridays, and "The President's Daily Brief" will run on Saturdays.
Trump attacks 'Fake News CNN,' accuses media of failing to credit US troops for Iran operation
President Donald Trump ripped "Fake News CNN" in a post to Truth Social on Monday about retrieving nuclear material from Iran.
Trump also slammed "other corrupt Media Networks and Platforms" in the post.
The president wrote, "Operation Midnight Hammer was a complete and total obliteration of the Nuclear Dust sites in Iran. Therefore, digging it out will be a long and difficult process. Fake News CNN, and other corrupt Media Networks and Platforms, fail to give our great aviators the credit they deserve — always trying to demean and belittle — LOSERS!!!"
CNN's Anderson Cooper spoke to Alex Plitsas, a national security analyst, as well as Andrew Weber, a former assistant secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical and biological programs, during his show on Monday about the possibility of the U.S. removing Iran's highly enriched uranium.
WHITE HOUSE AGAIN DEFENDS SUCCESS OF B-2 RAID ON IRAN AMID NEW REPORT SOME URANIUM SURVIVED
CBS News' "60 Minutes" also did a segment with Weber on Sunday, where he discussed a mission he was involved in the 1990s to retrieve highly enriched uranium left behind in Kazakhstan after the fall of the Soviet Union.
Cooper asked both guests about the viability of a similar mission in Iran to retrieve the remaining highly enriched uranium. Both Weber and Plitsas indicated it would be a much bigger lift and effort.
"So, you'd have to have some sort of large blocking force to protect the facility," Plitas said. "The specialist that he was just talking about would have to then go inside. Condition unknown. Tunnels have obviously been hit. It could be a lengthy operation. Some of this is leaked out to the press, which is why some of these details are available. You could be looking at a sizable operation, which is why at this point, the president was talking originally about maybe leaving it at persistent stare for right now, and is trying to work this out through a negotiated settlement."
IRAN'S CEASEFIRE PUSH MAY BE A 'CYCLE OF DECEPTION,' ANALYSTS WARN AS SHADOWY FIGURE GAINS POWER
Weber told "60 Minutes" that it could take thousands of U.S. troops to carry out a mission to retrieve Iran's uranium.
"In Iran, we couldn't send a team in to do this unilaterally without great risk," he said. "You would need to set up in the middle of the country a secure perimeter. It would probably take thousands of U.S. troops to secure the facility while our experts excavated the HEU that's located inside deep tunnels at a place called Isfahan."
Appearing on "Jesse Watters Primetime" Monday night, retired U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus, a former CENTCOM commander, also warned about such an operation, saying, "This would be a very, very tall order, it would be exceedingly risky. And the casualties could potentially be quite substantial."
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE
CNN did not immediately return Fox News Digital's request for comment.
Cory Booker can't decide if he's a tough guy or Jesus follower
Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., is once again facing criticism for deploying aggressive, "bombastic" rhetoric that critics argue contradicts his self-professed commitment to loving his enemies as dictated by his Christian faith.
During a Michigan Democratic Women’s Caucus fundraiser over the weekend, a passionate Booker delivered an anecdote about an elderly man guiding drivers through road hazards during a storm. He then pivoted to a high-volume call to action, urging "foot soldiers of our democracy" to defy the Trump administration.
"Ladies and gentlemen, there is a storm in our nation! There is darkness and wind. People are getting hurt. What we need is not from on high. We need foot soldiers of our democracy who, in times of trial, are willing to stand up," Booker shouted. "Will you stand for our democracy? Will you stand to get out the vote? Will you stand for our children? Will you stand up for our elders? And will you stand together, unified, strong, be the hope that people need? We are Democrats! It’s time for a new deal! It’s time to redeem the dream of America!"
JONATHAN TURLEY: 'SAY HER NAME' BECOMES RADICAL RALLYING CRY FOR DEMOCRATS' MOB RULE
This rhetorical style is familiar to many of his critics, who have long accused the senator of engaging in tone-deaf grandstanding. For years, opponents have labeled him "Spartacus," a moniker born from his conduct during the 2018 Supreme Court confirmation hearings for Judge Brett Kavanaugh. At the time, Booker claimed he was risking Senate expulsion by releasing documents he believed were confidential—an act he dramatically described as his own "I am Spartacus" moment. It was later revealed that the documents had already been cleared for public release.
Critics point to this incident as part of a larger, ongoing contradiction: Booker frequently emphasizes a message of love and unity, yet simultaneously embraces fiery, combative language when discussing political adversaries.
Booker has spoken often over the years about his Christian faith and inspiration from Jesus Christ. In 2018, he said in an interview, "The life of Jesus is very impactful to me and very important to me. He lived a life committed to dealing with issues of the poor and the sick." During his Democratic presidential campaign in 2020, he said Christ was at the center of his life and believed in "radical love" for all.
In March, NBC’s Kristen Welker pressed Booker on this apparent dichotomy, playing a clip from 2016 in which the senator declared, "I love Donald Trump. I’m going to say that. I don’t want to answer his hate with hate. I’m not going to answer his darkness with darkness. I love him."
When Welker asked, "Do you still love Donald Trump?" Booker replied, "I’m a Christian, and my faith is very clear: Love your enemies, love your adversaries. Never let someone pull you so low as to hate them. That doesn't mean I won't fight him with ferocity to try to defend and protect people's healthcare and public education."
HOMAN FIRES BACK AT BOOKER AFTER SENATOR VOICES 'OUTRAGE' OVER ICE AIRPORT DEPLOYMENTS
However, this "ferocity" is precisely what his detractors find problematic. Last year, Booker accused fellow Democratic senators of complicity for failing to take a harder line against Trump, labeling him an "authoritarian leader."
"That is complicity with an authoritarian leader who is trashing our country," Booker argued at the time. "It is time for Democrats to have a backbone. It's time for us to fight."
The approach has not always resonated with his peers or political commentators. During an appearance on MSNBC’s "Morning Joe," contributor Mike Barnicle dismissed the performance, remarking, "Well, it’s great theater that we just saw. Cory Booker, a good guy, standing up and yelling on the floor of the United States Senate."
Booker's office didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
America must choose between faith, order and a culture of lawlessness
There are two very different messages that are battling for the soul of our nation right now. One message lifts us up. The other message drags us down. The question of which message succeeds depends on whether we have the strength to repair the torn fabric of our society or whether we have weakened to the point where we are content to watch it unravel even further.
The first message came from NASA astronaut Victor Glover, the mission specialist on Artemis II. When this accomplished American hero returned home, still in his flight suit, he was greeted by his entire neighborhood. He stood before them and spoke words straight from Scripture: "Let’s be this more. Let’s be neighbors. God told us to love Him with all that we are and love our neighbors as ourselves."
That is the message America desperately needs. It is humble. It is biblical. It is unifying. It calls every one of us, regardless of race, background, or neighborhood, to the kind of neighborly love that builds strong families, safe streets, and thriving communities.
Victor Glover represents what is possible when faith, discipline, excellence, and personal responsibility come together. He is living proof that the ladders of opportunity are still there for anyone willing to climb them.
Yet sometimes the simplest and truest of all messages is the hardest to follow. Why is that?
The second message is the one playing out far too often on the streets of Chicago. Just weeks ago, 25-year-old Alexander Kazanowski, a young father expecting his second child, already raising a little girl named Thea, was brutally beaten to death outside a bar in the Avondale neighborhood. He was an entrepreneur who started his first company at 19, a wrestler, a model, a man full of vigor and promise. Now his unborn son will grow up without a father, and his family is left to grieve a life stolen in a moment of senseless violence.
Police are still searching for the suspects, four people of interest, including three men and one woman. Another innocent life gone. Another family shattered. Another reminder that evil does not care about skin color, political slogans, or excuses.
I'VE SEEN THE BODIES ON MY BLOCK — AND I KNOW WHAT REALLY STOPS THE KILLING
This is the deadly result when we choose dysfunction over discipline. When we protect violence instead of confronting it. When we make excuses for those who violate the most basic social contract: that we do not harm the innocent, that we do not destroy what others have built, that we do not turn our neighborhoods into war zones.
As a pastor who has buried too many young men on Chicago’s South Side, I say this plainly: we cannot keep tolerating or excusing the culture of lawlessness and then act shocked when it claims more victims, whether they are teens in Englewood or a young father in Avondale. Real justice is biblical justice. It protects the innocent. It punishes the guilty without apology. It demands accountability from every citizen, no matter their background.
CHICAGO'S DEADLY SANCTUARY MADNESS IS COSTING INNOCENT AMERICANS THEIR LIVES
We need a sanctuary for all, we need safe communities where fathers can walk home at night, where children can play without fear, where families can build futures instead of burying them. That sanctuary will never come from more government programs, more victimhood narratives, or more soft bigotry of low expectations. It comes only when Victor Glover’s message wins out: Love God. Love your neighbor. Speak truth. Enforce consequences. Reject excuses.
My Walk Across America showed me that most of this country still believes in Glover’s vision of faith, family, hard work, and genuine neighborly love. But in too many of our cities, a different current flows: one of instant retaliation, fatherlessness, glorification of the streets, and a refusal to call evil by its name.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION
We must reverse that current. The choice is that simple and it is a hard one.
Victor Glover's son will grow up knowing his father. Alexander Kazanowski's son will not. That is the difference between these two messages. That is what is actually at stake.
Glover said it plainly: Love God. Love your neighbor. That is not a slogan. It is the only foundation on which real sanctuary — for every race, every family, every child — has ever been built.
Choose that. Fight for that. God bless you, and God bless America.
Name of Walz's new 3-word PAC draws immediate online mockery
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz launched a federal political action committee on Monday and the name of the new venture quickly created a stir on social media among conservatives.
Walz’s PAC, first reported in Politico Playbook, is named the "Small Town PAC." The governor said he wants to "show up in small towns" and "organize in places too many people have given up on, and build power with the folks who call these places home."
"If Democrats want to win in more places, we’ve got to start showing up in more places," Walz wrote in an X post.
Walz was widely mocked by conservatives when he ran for vice president in 2024 for his attempts to make inroads with rural voters — like touting his blue-collar roots and hunting hobby.
"Small towns and townships overwhelmingly voted against you, Tim," Townhall columnist Dustin Grage posted on X. "We think your policies are despicable."
"Small towns across Minnesota loathe @Tim_Walz," state Rep. Kristin Robbins, Minnesota Republican gubernatorial candidate, posted on X.
"He infamously disparaged them as @RocksAndCowsHQ and his left-wing policies are opposed by most!"
Daniel Turner, executive director of Power the Future, wrote on X, "Good Lord small town America hates everything you stand for: open borders, trans insanity, defund the police, rampant crime, Somali fraud."
"If Democrats want to win in small towns again, this is the last person they should listen to. In eight years as Governor, he has shown voters across Greater Minnesota that the DFL no longer represents them," Minnesota state Rep. Harry Niska, R-Ramsey, posted on X.
Others on social media, including Grage, dusted off the 2024 campaign trail nickname "Tampon Tim," which conservatives used to mock Walz’s much-maligned support of a bill to put free menstrual products in all school restrooms, including boys' rooms.
"Oh look, Tampon Tim wants to expand the fraud," conservative radio host Gregory Jon posted on X.
Walz didn't miss an opportunity to take a swipe at one-time rival Vice President JD Vance while announcing the new PAC.
"Republicans like JD Vance like to portray their small-town neighbors as petty, resentful, and small-minded. I disagree. I think the problem facing small towns are Republicans like JD Vance," he said.
Vance’s office hit back with: "The problem facing many small towns in Minnesota is that Tim Walz gives their money to fraudulent daycares."
Fox News Digital did not hear back from Walz’s office when reached for comment.
Walz's new political venture comes roughly four months after mounting pressure over the massive fraud scandal under his watch forced him to drop his bid for re-election as governor.
Small Town PAC's website suggests that after leaving office at the end of the year, Walz will be working with Democrats to "build the future" by "investing in people with fresh ideas, energy, and integrity" to "strengthen the Democratic Party from the ground up."
WWE star Danhausen reflects on first months with company, gives update on Danhausenettes
Danhausen made his debut at Elimination Chamber in February when he appeared out of a mysterious box that was set up on the stage.
The pro wrestling star’s entrance came with a puzzled fan base and questions about who this guy was and how he was going to fit on a crowded roster filled with talented wrestlers all vying for championships and time on the major premium live events, "Monday Night Raw" and "Friday Night SmackDown."
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Danhausen came out with his faced painted and several women, known at the time as the Danhausenettes. It was his first appearance since he left All Elite Wrestling, where he had the same gimmick – putting a "curse" and emerging as more of a comedy act than anything.
In the weeks leading up to WrestleMania, Danhausen caught on with the fans. He "cursed" The Miz, Kit Wilson, Dominik Mysterio, the New York Mets and Stephen A. Smith in between his debut and WrestleMania 42. In Las Vegas, his T-shirts were everywhere and dozens of fans painted their faces to match the "very nice, very evil" superstar.
"I’ve only been here for about two months, and look at the impact Danhausen’s made," he told Fox News Digital before WrestleMania Night 1. "He’s got a merchandise stand at WrestleMania. He’s going to be at WrestleMania. And his face is on everything. Gotta get it on the side of the truck still. But what was your question? I was talking about how great I am."
ROMAN REIGNS, CM PUNK PUT ON PROFESSIONAL WRESTLING MASTERCLASS AT WRESTLEMANIA 42
Danhausen also provided an update on the Danhausenettes, who haven’t been seen since they were dancing and performing on the stage at Elimination Chamber.
"Well, we gave them a vacation," he said. "A great reception. We gave them their human monies to go off and do whatever they want for the time being. Perhaps we’ll see them again. Perhaps we won’t. I don’t know. It’ll be a surprise."
Danhausen appeared at WrestleMania Night 2 – his first WrestleMania.
He came out to a huge reaction in a segment that involved John Cena, The Miz and Wilson. He was accompanied by pro wrestlers from Micro Wrestling. They also got involved as Danhausen struck The Miz in the groin. The Micro Wrestling performers carried The Miz out of the ring.
It was one of the funniest moments of the weekend. One thing is for sure, Danhausen is in WWE to stay.