David Pfaff Victorious In Irving City Council Race
According to the official election night report, Pfaff received 5,591 votes to Porres' 5,011, improving his May 3 general election performance, when he secured 5,230 votes to Porres' 4,987. Both candidates gained supporters during the runoff campaign, but Pfaff ultimately widened his lead.
Notably, The Dallas Morning News reported that it was not allowed inside the Porres campaign's watch party Saturday night — though The Dallas Express was. Inside the room, Porres' allies reflected on the campaign's broader significance, including its effect on other council races and the city's ongoing casino debate.
'Sergio's race kinda carried this whole campaign,' said attorney Cliff Riley, a close ally of the Families for Irving PAC, which backed Porres. He credited the Place 2 challenger's candidacy with creating a surge of opposition to casino development, which he said also boosted turnout for candidates John Bloch and Adam Muller — both of whom won their respective races earlier in May.
Riley likened Porres' insurgent bid to that of former State Sen. Don Huffines' 2022 primary challenge to Gov. Greg Abbott, explaining that Porres was the one pulling the Overton window to the 'right.' He specifically pointed to Pfaff's decision to include 'no casinos' in his campaign mailers as evidence that the issue had become politically 'toxic.'
'We've won a big battle,' Riley said. 'Sergio made [the casino issue] utterly toxic for the other side.'
Riley also emphasized the diverse coalition Porres built, saying his campaign was effective 'because of our Muslim friends' and other religious voters who had long felt alienated by Irving's political class.
At the party, Porres personally thanked former general election opponents like Vicky Oduk, who endorsed him the day after the May election and campaigned with him in the runoff. He also thanked Elena Blake, president of the Irving Republican Women, who was among his earliest backers, among many others.
'We have done a really incredible thing,' Porres told supporters.
Porres expressed optimism about his future political prospects, suggesting Saturday's results had only laid the groundwork for a potential rematch.
'This was a warm-up fight,' he said. 'We are going to be unstoppable.'
He also pointed to shifting demographics in Irving, saying the city's Catholic and Muslim populations — including many large families — are aligned on key cultural issues and increasingly frustrated with the status quo.
'The demographics are on our side,' Porres said.
For his part, Pfaff appeared elated in a video posted to his campaign's Facebook page shortly after the result was called. In the video, Pfaff is seen smiling broadly as he approaches a projector screen displaying the vote totals, then embraces his supporters. The caption read: 'THANK YOU, IRVING!'
The election capped months of tension over the city's stance on casinos — an issue that dominated political discourse even after a proposed rezoning effort was formally withdrawn. Pfaff's backers included the Lone Star Conservative Action Fund, a political group linked to Las Vegas Sands, which spent nearly $200,000 supporting his campaign and others.
Pfaff publicly distanced himself from the group during the campaign, saying in a video, 'I cannot be bought.'
Porres, meanwhile, campaigned aggressively on an anti-casino message and frequently questioned why casino-affiliated groups were still involved in city races if the issue was truly 'dead.'
The campaign also exposed shifting alliances in Irving's Muslim community. Though CAIR Action Texas initially backed Pfaff, it later withdrew its endorsement. Other Muslim civic organizations moved to support Porres, culminating in the formation of the Irving Muslims PAC, which endorsed him exclusively.
Saturday's result means Pfaff will take the Place 2 seat on the Irving City Council — a seat previously held by Brad LaMorgese, who did not seek reelection. With Pfaff's victory, the composition of the council now includes a complex blend of pro- and anti-casino voices, but momentum appears to remain with casino skeptics — a movement Porres helped galvanize, even in defeat.
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New York Post
35 minutes ago
- New York Post
Pope Leo must stand up to Muslim immigrants seeking to remake Europe
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They reveal the Vatican's role in encouraging open borders and exempting migrants from accountability. Advertisement In Europe's case, that involves deliberate blindness to the violent, totalitarian nature of Islam and many of its followers. This Catholic approach toward Islam reflects the ideas of Louis Massignon, a French scholar from the early 20th century. Massignon described Islam as 'the faith of Abraham revived with Muhammad,' and asserted that Muslims 'have the right to equality among the monotheisms descended from Abraham.' French Catholic scholar Alain Besançon described the results. 'An entire literature favorable to Islam has grown up in Europe, much of it the work of Catholic priests under the sway of Massignon's ideas,' he wrote. Advertisement Asylum seekers from Afghanistan set up tents inside of the Church of Saint John the Baptist at the Beguinage in Brussels on Jan. 7, 2014. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir Besançon attributed that posture to 'an underlying dissatisfaction with modernity, and with our liberal, capitalist, individualistic arrangements,' a dissatisfaction that the Vatican embodies. 'Alarmed by the ebbing of religious faith in the Christian West, and particularly in Europe,' Massignon's advocates 'cannot but admire Muslim devoutness,' Besançon wrote. 'Surely, they reason, it is better to believe in something than to believe in nothing, and since these Muslims believe in something, they must believe in the same thing we do.' Advertisement The Catholic Church officially embraced Massignon's ideas at the Second Vatican Council in two documents. One, Nostra Aetate, focused on the church's relationship with Judaism but additionally addressed Islam: 'The Church regards with esteem the Muslims. They adore the one God . . . they take pains to submit wholeheartedly to even His inscrutable decrees, just as Abraham, with whom the faith of Islam takes pleasure in linking itself, submitted to God. Though they do not acknowledge Jesus as God, they revere Him as a prophet.' The other, Lumen Gentium, declared that 'the plan of salvation also includes those who acknowledge the Creator. In the first place among these there are the Muslims, who, professing to hold the faith of Abraham, along with us adore the one and merciful God.' That passage made the Catholic catechism. But what Besançon called 'indulgent ecumenicism' toward Islam goes beyond words. During John Paul II's papacy, the church embraced outright appeasement. Catholic bishops sold underutilized churches and schools to Muslim groups; many of the churches became mosques. 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An Afghan refugee seen at the altar of the Church of Saint John the Baptist at the Beguinage on Jan. 30, 2014. REUTERS Advertisement In May 2006, more than 30 Belgian churches served such a purpose. About 300 Africans occupied Antwerp's Magdalena Chapel. Other churches held as many as 700 squatters. At Our Lady of Succor Church in Brussels, squatters lived in small tents donated by Catholic relief agencies, conducted Muslim services, erected computer tables near the pulpit and even set fires on the floor. Friar Herwig Arts described a scene at Antwerp's Jesuit chapel: migrants 'removed the tabernacle [and] installed a television set and radios, depriving us of the opportunity to pray in our own chapel and say Mass.' He went on, 'For me, the place has been desecrated. I feel I cannot enter it anymore.' Advertisement Belgium's bishops were not amused. Arts was chided by Belgium's leading clergy. 'Solidarity cannot be limited to one's own nation, said the late Cardinal Godfried Danneels, then the country's leading prelate. Monsingor Luc van Looy, then the bishop of Ghent, even said 'illegal fugitives' were 'entitled to a good place in our society. Arts has been silent on the topic ever since. But two decades later, Kazakhstan's Bishop Schneider refuses to stay silent: 'This is a global political agenda by the powerful of the world to destroy Europe.' Leo thus faces an existential challenge, one that blissful sentimentality cannot answer: Will he allow a church that played a pivotal role in creating European civilization to perform a more decisive part in destroying it? This article first ran in The Spectator's US edition.


American Military News
3 hours ago
- American Military News
DNC considering resolution banning US military aid to Israel
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Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
What we know about alleged ex-detective Duane Lee Proctor, who claimed Trump 'was not shot' in assassination attempt
According to an online rumor in August 2025, a retired police detective lieutenant named Duane Lee Proctor alleged U.S. President Donald Trump applied fake blood from a "blood capsule" during the assassination attempt that famously bloodied his ear at a July 13, 2024, outdoor campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, and declared Trump "was not shot at all." The claim marked one of the latest in a series of conspiracy theories beginning just after the shooting, when then-FBI Director Christopher Wray remarked in front of a congressional hearing, "There's some question about whether or not it's a bullet or shrapnel that, you know, that hit his ear." Wray did not, however, cast doubt on the reality of Trump's ear being struck by the gunman. Many left-leaning social media users did. On that day, 20-year-old Thomas Crooks fired eight rounds from a rooftop near the rally, including one bullet veteran New York Times photographer Doug Mills captured speeding past Trump's head in a photo. The FBI later confirmed one of Crooks' bullets grazed Trump's right ear. Video showed Secret Service officials surrounding Trump as he knelt, while photos captured him facing the ground with blood dripping down from his ear to his cheek. Other rounds struck attendees, including 50-year old former volunteer fire chief Corey Comperatore, who was killed, and two others who were wounded. A Secret Service sniper fatally shot Crooks. Before Secret Service agents rushed Trump away from the scene, he stood, raised his fist and mouthed, "Fight!" Days later, he appeared with a bandaged ear at the Republican National Convention. A fair number of users on Bluesky, Facebook (archived), Reddit (archived), Instagram (archived), Threads (archived) and X (archived) shared the rumor about the assassination attempt in a meme displaying a picture of Trump's bloodied ear. The image, authentically captured by longtime Associated Press photographer Gene J. Puskar, shows blood both streaming down Trump's face and visible in some hair behind and above his right ear. The meme's quote, attributed to Proctor, alleged Trump opened a blood capsule filled with fake blood to stage the incident. One reader asked Snopes, "Does Duane Lee Proctor exist?" Another person asked, "I can't find information on the cited Ret. Police Det. Lt., Duane Lee Proctor, although the quote about Trump's blood splatter makes complete sense. Can you verify?" (@thetonymichaels/X) According to online searches, in particular on Facebook and the newspaper archives on this quote genuinely originated from a Facebook account matching the name of a retired police detective lieutenant named Duane Lee Proctor. However, Proctor's claims featured inaccurate and unfounded information about the attempt on Trump's life. We located no credible evidence Trump used a blood capsule or otherwise staged the assassination attempt. Snopes attempted to reach Proctor by email, Messenger and phone. We will update this story if we receive further information, including responses to our queries asking the White House if they wished to comment. Finding Proctor's original post A Facebook search displayed several accounts under the name Duane Proctor. None of the accounts displayed the middle name of Lee. However, one of the accounts did, in fact, feature a bio mentioning the full name of Duane Lee Proctor. That account, showing the handle of contains numerous posts bearing the "retired police detective lieutenant" signature line — the same one shown in the meme. The meme itself originated from an Aug. 11 post on Proctor's Facebook account that included the photo of Trump's bloodied ear with a text caption reading mostly the same as the meme. In other words, the majority of the meme truly originated from Proctor's original post, with the exception of a sentence that only appeared in the meme reading, "We all know it's FAKE just like everything about him." FYI...A Bullet moving Front to Rear would leave a blood blowback ... not blood on the Face. Notice there is "NO BLOOD" in his Hair behind his ear!!He Was Not Shot at All!! This is a Blood Capsule Bobby given to him by his secretary of education, the owner of the WWE wrestling!-Duane Lee Proctor-Ret. Police Det. of Major Crimes The post was set to display only to Proctor's friends. To users not accepted as Proctor's friends, the post link displayed the text, "This content isn't available right now. When this happens, it's usually because the owner only shared it with a small group of people, changed who can see it or it's been deleted." (Duane Proctor/Facebook) Examining the claims Proctor's claim about fake blood on Trump's face failed to account for the fact that the Trump knelt on the ground — face down — as Secret Service officers shielded him. The Getty Images media-licensing website credited staff photographer Anna Moneymaker with capturing close-up pictures showing Trump on the ground and looking down, as blood dripped from his ear and down his face. Also, Proctor's assertion claiming an absence of blood in Trump's hair was false, considering the visibility of blood both to the left and upper-left corners of Trump's ear in the same picture appearing in the meme. Meanwhile, contrary to the post and meme, Education Secretary Linda McMahon does not own World Wrestling Entertainment. She did, however, co-found WWE with her husband, Vince McMahon — from whom she is now separated — and also served as the WWE's chief executive from 1997 through 2009, and as its president from 1993 to 2000. In 2009, she resigned to pursue a career in politics, including two unsuccessful bids for U.S. Senate in Connecticut in 2010 and 2012. Again, we found no credible evidence of Trump using a blood capsule or staging the assassination attempt. We also found no proof that crane operators lowered the large American flag for Trump, as some users have claimed, as part of a preconceived and coordinated photo opportunity for Trump's raised-fist gesture while leaving the scene. Researching Duane Lee Proctor's history In a different friends-only post from April, Proctor posted a picture of Trump playing golf. In Proctor's caption, he claimed he earned a master's degree in criminal justice and described himself as a retired detective lieutenant and police academy instructor in South Carolina. He also said he spent 20 years as a licensed private investigator. After citing those credentials, he added of the golf photo, "I can tell you, with absolute certainty where you'll find Donald today while America Burns to the ground!" Our search of found records about a man named Duane L. Proctor serving decades earlier as a police detective in Georgetown, South Carolina. The Sun News newspaper, based in the Palmetto State's famous town of Myrtle Beach, also reported Proctor served in the Vietnam War, achieved the rank of detective lieutenant following several years of police service and left the force in 1983. According to other articles, he then worked in the private detective and security business for around two decades. Proctor's Facebook bio — and some of the newspaper articles — also mentioned a music career, including reporting that the International Country Music Association awarded him a male vocalist of the year prize in 2008. For further reading, we previously reported about numerous other claims involving the Trump assassination attempt occurring in July 2024. Armor, Joyce. "Private Eye Has 'eye' on Music Industry." The Sun News via 27 May 2004, p. 1, "Bandaged Trump Gets Rapturous Welcome at Republican Convention." BBC, 16 Jul. 2024, "City Clears Former Policemen." The State via 21 Oct. 1983, pp. 3–C, Colvin, Jill, et al. "FBI Says Trump Was Indeed Struck by Bullet during Assassination Attempt." The Associated Press, 26 Jul. 2024, Dayton, Kathleen. "Detective's Life Rarely Imitates Art." The Charlotte Observer via 31 May 1999, p. 2Y, Flint, Joe. "WWE Chief Quits, Eyes U.S. Senate." Los Angeles Times, 17 Sep. 2009, Ismay, John. "Photo Appears to Capture Path of Bullet Used in Assassination Attempt." The New York Times, 14 Jul. 2024, "Linda McMahon." Ballotpedia, Masih, Niha. "Who Is Linda McMahon? Trump Donor, WWE Co-Founder Is Education Secretary Pick." The Washington Post, 20 Nov. 2024, Moneymaker, Anna. "Donald Trump Injured During Shooting At Campaign Rally In Butler, PA." Getty Images, 13 Jul. 2024, O'Donoghue, Gary. "'It Didn't Have to Happen': Wife of Man Killed at Trump Rally Struggles with Loss." BBC, 4 Oct. 2024, Puskar, Gene J. "Focused amid the Gunfire, an AP Photographer Captures Another Perspective of Attack on Trump." The Associated Press, 28 Jul. 2024, Santana, Rebecca. "One Year after Trump Assassination Attempt, Changes at Secret Service but Questions Remain." The Associated Press, 13 Jul. 2025, Santana, Rebecca, and Kevin Freking. "House Oversight Panel Subpoenas Secret Service Director to Testify on Trump Assassination Attempt." San Diego Union-Tribune via The Associated Press, 17 Jul. 2024, Spangler, Todd. "Vince McMahon Sells $250 Million of TKO Shares to Endeavor Group Holdings." Variety, 4 Jun. 2025, The Associated Press. "Former Georgetown Police Detective Suing Charleston Television Station." The Columbia Record via 20 Dec. 1983, pp. 16-A, "Three Georgetown Officers Leave Force after Investigation." The Columbia Record via 24 Jun. 1983, pp. 13-A, "Video Shows Moment of Trump Assassination Attempt at Rally." YouTube, ABC News, 13 Jul. 2024, Ward, Susan. "Lawsuit Aimed Only at Obtaining Money." The Sun News via 14 Jun. 2000, pp. 12-A, Wendling, Mike. "Bandaged Trump Gets Rapturous Welcome at Republican Convention." BBC, 16 Jul. 2024,