
Hour 3 of The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show is anchored by an extended, substantive interview with Congressman Jim Jordan of Ohio, followed by in‑depth analysis of birthright citizenship, congressional gridlock, ICE funding, U.S.–Iran military operations, oil markets, NATO friction, midterm election dynamics, and global energy security, with lighter listener interactions closing the hour. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton open the third hour continuing the fallout from the Supreme Court oral arguments on birthright citizenship, pressing Jordan on whether Congress has any realistic ability to act if the Court rules that President Donald Trump lacks executive authority to curb birth tourism.
Jordan argues that the strongest constitutional case lies in the “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” language of the 14th Amendment, contending that individuals who enter the United States illegally are not fully subject to U.S. jurisdiction and therefore should not automatically confer citizenship through childbirth. While acknowledging common‑sense concerns about large‑scale birth tourism—particularly involving Chinese nationals—Jordan expresses skepticism that legislation alone could survive Supreme Court review, reinforcing the need to secure the border, dismantle sanctuary jurisdictions, and fully fund ICE and Border Patrol enforcement instead.
A significant portion of Hour 3 is devoted to the ongoing DHS and ICE funding standoff, with Jordan sharply criticizing Senate Democrats for attempting to fund most of DHS while excluding ICE. He explains that House Republicans rejected the Senate resolution to avoid establishing a precedent where immigration enforcement is selectively defunded, praising President Trump for reallocating resources to keep operations functioning while Congress remains deadlocked. The hosts and Jordan agree that this funding battle has become a flashpoint illustrating broader institutional dysfunction and partisan hostility toward immigration enforcement.
The discussion then shifts to Iran, with Jordan strongly backing President Trump’s military campaign aimed at neutralizing Iran’s nuclear ambitions. He frames the action as consistent with Trump’s long‑standing promise to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, while acknowledging widespread concern over high gas prices and the desire for the conflict to end swiftly. Clay and Buck situate the Iran strikes within a larger geopolitical context, anticipating that Trump’s 9:00 p.m. national address will sharply criticize European allies for failing to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, despite their heavy dependence on Middle Eastern energy transit.
Hour 3 includes extensive analysis of energy markets and oil pricing, with Buck emphasizing that the United States is relatively insulated from disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz due to domestic energy production, while Europe and Asia remain highly vulnerable. They cite remarks from Secretary of State Marco Rubio underscoring that interference with international shipping constitutes terrorism and violations of maritime law. Clay and Buck suggest that Trump’s leverage strategy involves pressuring Iran to allow open shipping lanes in exchange for a de‑escalation, framing a potential ceasefire as conditional and transactional.
The hosts also assess market reactions and political consequences, noting that despite the conflict, the stock market has rebounded sharply. Clay introduces prediction market data showing Republicans as underdogs to retain control of both the House and Senate, warning that a Democratic takeover would effectively immobilize Trump’s legislative agenda through investigations, impeachments, and judicial blockades. This leads to a broader discussion about Supreme Court succession, with concern that aging conservative justices may risk repeating past strategic retirements that shifted the Court’s balance.
The latter portion of Hour 3 turns to listener talkbacks, reinforcing themes from earlier hours. Callers share firsthand examples of how other countries handle citizenship strictly by bloodline, underscoring how rare U.S. birthright citizenship policies are globally. Other callers weigh in on the Supreme Court outcome, favorite space movies, cultural debates, and even comedic arguments about fashion norms such as ties and wool suits, providing comic relief to close the program.
Overall, Hour 3 blends hard‑nosed political analysis, constitutional debate, national security strategy, and electoral forecasting, culminating in a clear warning from Clay and Buck: if Congress remains paralyzed and voters disengaged, executive power will continue expanding by default, while unresolved issues like immigration enforcement, birthright citizenship, and fiscal stability will only intensify ahead of the 2026 midterms.
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