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Higbie Slams Democrats for Bowing to Global Elites

Carl Higbie’s latest segment on his Newsmax program didn’t pull any punches — and good. Higbie, a familiar face on Newsmax who now anchors a prime evening hour, watched Democrats stumble through platitudes about “peace and stuff” while cozying up to an international class of elites, and he called it out bluntly on-air. The American people deserve straight talk about who’s making decisions and whose interests they really serve.

Watching self-described champions of the working class smile and hobnob with Davos-style globalists should disgust every patriot who pays taxes and loves this country. The World Economic Forum’s annual meetings bring together heads of state, CEOs, and policy makers to shape multilateral agendas, and yet our domestic politicians often treat these gatherings like red carpet photo ops rather than sober forums for defending American sovereignty. Voters see the disconnect between talk of “peace” and the reality of global elites tightening their grip on trade, regulation, and culture.

Make no mistake: these aren’t harmless meet-and-greets. The people who convene in Davos and similar forums set priorities that tilt toward global solutions — not national interests — and Democrats enthusiastic about that world reveal where their loyalties lie. When CNBC and other outlets list the who’s who of corporate and political actors at these summits, it makes clear this is the playground of the internationalist class, not Main Street America. Conservatives should be furious that our leaders recycle feel-good slogans while abandoning concrete commitments to American workers.

Contrast this scene with the new reality of serious American leadership that puts country before ceremony. Even when presidents or delegations attend global forums, the question should be whether they come as salesmen for America or supplicants seeking approval from the globalist cliques. Recent reporting on high-profile attendances at Davos underscores how these events are major diplomatic and economic stages — the distinction is whether our representatives go to defend American interests or to polish their own résumés.

Higbie’s mockery of “peace and stuff” wasn’t just cheap heat; it was a necessary jolt to remind voters that platitudes are a poor replacement for policy that secures our borders, protects our jobs, and preserves our values. News outlets like Newsmax and commentators on the right are rightly holding these elites and their political allies to account, demanding substance over optics and patriotism over pampering. The fight is simple: America first, or global governance first — there is no neutral middle ground.

Patriots reading this should do two things: pay attention and act. Tune out the hollow sermonizing at elite galas and test every politician by how they vote on trade, immigration, and sovereignty, not how charmingly they sip champagne beside a bank CEO. If conservatives stay loud and organized, we can make sure the next time our leaders go abroad they carry America’s interests, not the talking points of the globalist set.

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