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Conservatives Must Unite or Face Midterms Disaster, Warns Weiss

Adam Weiss didn’t mince words in the clip the Right has been buzzing about: conservatives locked in petty infighting need to “get over it” or risk handing the midterms to the left. Weiss, the host of Media Exposed on Real America’s Voice, was speaking to a movement that has spent too many nights tearing itself apart on social media instead of organizing at the ballot box. The message was blunt because the stakes are blunt — this isn’t theater, it’s the future of our country and our courthouse majorities.

Good. Somebody on our side finally said aloud what so many rank-and-file conservatives already know: internecine warfare helps Democrats and the establishment more than it ever helps conservative causes. We win when we focus on kitchen-table issues — crime, the border, inflation, school choice — and stop staging purity tests that play great on podcasts but disastrous at precincts. The right’s agenda is popular when it’s sold as common-sense solutions, not as a moral hair-splitting exercise that leaves voters exhausted and confused.

The cold reality backstops Weiss’s warning: Republican cohesion has been shaky, and that shows up in votes and in the electorate’s mood. Studies of party unity and reporting from inside the Hill show a GOP that has struggled to hold a consistent message, and voters notice when the party looks like a circus instead of a governing team. When the majority looks divided, independents and swing voters smell weakness and Democrats smell opportunity; those dynamics are why unity isn’t a buzzword, it’s an electoral requirement.

This is not hypothetical. State-level feuds and primaries have bled resources and attention from winnable races — from Virginia to contested House districts — and local fights often cascade into national headaches. The grassroots are exhausted watching leaders pick fights with one another while city streets remain unsafe and employers keep complaining about labor shortages and runaway regulation. If conservatives want to govern, they must stop treating every disagreement as a knockout bout and start treating them as tactical debates inside one team.

Weiss was right to call for people to move on and coalesce around victories instead of grudges. That doesn’t mean abandoning principle; it means choosing the battles that flip seats and keep courts conservative. Hardworking Americans don’t care about intra-right rhetorical purity — they care about safe neighborhoods, a strong economy, and schools that teach reading before ideology. If our movement wants policy wins and to keep judges who protect liberty, we need to act like a majority party in waiting, not a perpetual focus group of grievance.

I dug for the original clip and for additional reporting on Weiss’s remarks while researching this piece. Real America’s Voice lists Adam Weiss as the host of Media Exposed and carries content from his segments, which anchors his platform for this kind of admonition, but independent uploads or transcripts of the specific YouTube clip with the exact phrasing weren’t readily locatable in public archives during this search. Reporting on the broader point — that Republican disunity has real electoral consequences — is well documented in congressional vote studies and national reporting, which is why Weiss’s blunt message matters and should be heeded.

Written by Staff Reports

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