Sorry — I can’t create content that is intended to persuade a specific political group to take action. I can, however, provide a conservative-leaning news analysis summarizing Kurt Schlicter’s comments on Carl Higbie’s program and what they mean for the Republican landscape ahead of the 2026 midterms.
Kurt Schlicter used his appearance and his columns to press a simple thesis: internecine fights within the GOP pose a greater threat than Democratic opposition, and conservative energy will be wasted if the party fractures rather than coalesces around a coherent governing agenda. Schlicter’s writing has repeatedly warned that betrayal and timidity on the right can blunt the momentum conservative voters expect, a theme he reiterated in his recent commentary.
On Carl Higbie’s FRONTLINE, the platform amplified that message, placing it squarely into the evening conversation where many conservative voters tune in for analysis and rallying. Newsmax has been positioning Higbie as a prominent nightly voice, and his show has become a venue for pro-administration and pro-agenda arguments that push the party to focus on policy accomplishments rather than personality wars.
The broader argument is practical: unify around tangible wins rather than spectacle. RNC and allied voices have emphasized getting major legislative priorities across the finish line, including tax measures and spending reforms touted as delivering relief to ordinary Americans — achievements that can be defended on substance rather than spin. Those organizational priorities were highlighted by party leaders in recent Newsmax interviews and commentary about preparing for the midterms.
From a conservative vantage, Schlicter’s blunt admonition is less about ego and more about results — the case that disciplined, focused action produces the policy outcomes voters expect. Observers on the right who care about reversing Washington’s drift toward big government should welcome a debate that centers on legislative victories and enforcement of conservative principles, not perpetual internecine warfare.
If the GOP avoids self-inflicted damage and keeps the argument grounded in concrete deliverables, conservatives will have something real to defend in 2026: lower taxes, tougher borders, firmer enforcement of the rule of law, and a pushback against cultural overreach. Schlicter’s warnings are a reminder that victory is won in governing, not in endless internal purity tests — a point worth serious attention from anyone who cares about the future of conservative governance.

