Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:21):
All right, good to have you here on the radio show.
Jimmy is my name, Pleasured, pleased and thrilled I am.
Happy day to all of you. Thanks for being here
on the show. Let's dive into the conversation. Election day
in America. Pleasure to have you here. If you haven't voted,
to get out and vote and just google your county
Larimer County, Weld County, Boulder County, Broomfield County, Denver County,
(00:41):
wherever it is you're going to be voting Adams County.
Make sure you know where to drop off your ballt.
If you don't know, you should let me. Welcome to
the program as we continue election day conversation. Mister Bill Pasco.
He's with the Tea Party Patriots, and he's a man
about Washington. Bill Pascoe, welcome to the program.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Good morning, Good morning, good to be with you, Jimmy.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
It's election day. Excitement in the air. Is your panic
in Washington, DC? Give me the tenor on the ground.
Are they afraid that the Orange guy could be coming
back to town?
Speaker 2 (01:10):
You're exactly right. There is a sense of fore voting
all throughout Washington. It's been going on for the last
week to ten days because what's been going on is
Republicans are showing up for early voting. This is something new.
The Democrats are kind of freaking out. We saw Jim
Messina and David Axelrod, to alumni from the Obama campaigns
(01:30):
back in two thousand and eight and twenty twelve. Messina
was actually the campaign manager. Axelrod, of course, was the
senior strategist, and I saw both of them on TV
over the weekend saying the early voting numbers are scary.
The reason they're scary is because if Republicans are actually
adding to their arsenal. This is something Democrats have been
(01:52):
doing for the last several cycles. So if Republicans are adding,
this is a new weapon. We know that Republicans turn
out out on an election day, but if you can
get the Republican vote to begin to turn out early,
then you don't have to worry that This is the
key the reason you ought to vote early. If you
want to be helpful to your party, to your team,
to your candidate, vote as early as you can because
(02:15):
they'll know that you voted. Every day they get an
update on who voted that day. Tens of thousands of
voters state by state, we get updates, and if they
see that you have voted, they take you off the
bother that guy and make sure he votes list right.
You get all these phone calls. Towards the end of
the campaign, you get door knocks, you get mail showing
up saying please go vote, Please go vote. They'll take
(02:37):
you off that list and they'll save the effort. We
saw one study I saw a study earlier this year.
This says the difference between a guy who shows up
to vote on the first two days of early voting
in any state, if you show up in the first
two days of early voting versus if you wait until
election day, you know how much they got to pay.
It's an average of eighty eight dollars a voter that
(03:00):
they are spending, that the campaigns are spending to try
to chase that vote all the way to election deck.
Save them the eighty eight dollars, Save yourself the time
and trouble, save yourself all those annoying phone calls. Go
vote early. But that's why Democrats are freaking out, because
they're seeing that Republicans have in fact turned out early,
and they don't know, they don't know what to do
(03:22):
about it.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
I gave this number out earlier to my listeners. But
in twy twenty twenty, the last election of general election,
if you only counted the election of the early voting,
early voting, Joe Biden won every state in early voting
by a landslide. He only did not win Alabama when
it comes to early voting forty nine state landslide. If
(03:43):
you took day of voting in twenty twenty, just the
day of the election day, Donald Trump won every state
except Connecticut and Vermont, so he had a forty eight
state landslide. So there's been a huge disparity going back
to the COVID year of twenty twenty of this early
voting versus day of voting. It's going to be interesting
to see because some talkie as well Republicans, they show
(04:03):
up the day up, so they're just going to be
cannibalizing their own show up vote. And yet the Democrats
also kind of freaked out, going, wait, our people aren't
showing up early. Are they going to show up election day?
They don't have the propensity to do that. So the
twenty twenty numbers are telling and if nothing else, this
year is throwing everything on both parties kind of up
in the air.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
Well, here's the other thing that we've got to look at.
The target voter for each campaign, for each side is
a different voter. Remember, Donald Trump has totally upended American
politics in so many ways. We've talked about this over
the years, Jimmy. One of the ways that he has
upended American politics is he has remade the focus of
(04:44):
the Republican Party. Who is a Republican who feels calling
himself a Trump supporter and a Republican. It used to
be that the higher income and the higher educated that
you became, the more likely was it that you were
going to be a re Publican, And if you were
a working class voter, the greater the chance that you
were going to be a Democrat. That's now been turned
(05:06):
on its head. We've now got higher income, higher educated
voters in the Democrat Party, and we've got white working
class voters are now the base of the Republican Party. Well,
this has implications for who turns out to vote, because
we know that the single greatest predictor of the likelihood
to vote of any of any voter is the education level.
(05:28):
The more education you have, the higher your chances that
you're going to go vote on your own. So that's
now the Democrats, right, what's been going on is Republicans.
That means that the target voter is different. In order
for Trump to win, he's got to turn out low
propensity voters. In order for Harris to win, she's got
to turn out high propensity voters. Fact that the Republicans
(05:51):
have already been able to deliver a lot of low
propensity voters means that on election Day, the remaining high
propensity voters who are Republicans, I think we can count
on them to get to the polls on their own.
On the flip side, the Democrats haven't been able to
get high propensity voters to get to the polls yet,
(06:13):
so they're going to have to try very hard to
work on this. As you point out, this group that
isn't used to voting on election day, they're used to
having three weeks to vote. It's going to be very
interesting to see whose turnout operation in the final literally
the final twelve hours, is going to be the better
turnout operation.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
Give me your thoughts, Bill Pasco, my guest. He's with
Tea Party Patriots Citizen Fund at Tea Party Patriots dot Org.
He's the man in Washington for Tea Party Patriots Bill.
I've always we put so much emphasis on polls. Some
talk shows spent months talking about polls in the daily
Polls and the real clear polypic takes polls. I'm not
a big fan of the polls because unless you read
(06:54):
page forty eight of the poll, you don't know whether
the polls accurate. Don't just read the headline. But it's funny.
The polls had Donald Trump ahead, then they had to
Kamala Harris ad and almost right on a queue, they've
all come back to it's forty ninety nine. Do you
believe the polls did all of them kind of sync
up there? I mean, how many of them were just
trying to save face because they've been fooled the last
(07:15):
two elections.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
That's a great question. I know. I've got good friends
who are posters. Some of them are even Democrats, believe
it or not. They've all been trying to figure out
for nine years now. They've been trying to figure out
how do you pull the Trump voter. Even though the
most recent over the weekend in New York Times, Siena
College came out with their final poll, and there's this note,
(07:37):
and you're exactly right.
Speaker 3 (07:38):
It's on page forty eight.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
You got to go all the way to the bottom
of the bottom of the poll, and there's this line
in there that says, white working class voters. I'm sorry,
not not white working class, white Republican voters. They actually
said white Republican voters were sixteen percent less likely to
answer the survey's questions sixteen percent. Wait a minute, you're
(08:00):
telling me there's a gap of sixteen percent on the
Republican side. Well, is that sixteen percent? It could be
nicky Haley Bodeis voters who simply don't want to vote
for Donald Trump, but they're good Republicans so they don't
want to telepost for that. It could be sixteen percent
who are super Trump supporters who say, you know what,
you posters have been lying for years. I'm not talking
(08:22):
to you. I don't want to waste my.
Speaker 4 (08:24):
Time with you.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
We have no idea what that sixteen percent is. Yet
you're exactly right. They go ahead and they publish the
results of their survey anyway without making that the headline.
Why isn't that the story? Why can't you get sixteen
percent of white Republicans To answer your question, isn't that
more interesting? Isn't that as a sociological phenomenon? What is
going on here? Because you're exactly right, A poll is
(08:47):
just like anything else. You put garbage in, you're going
to get garbage out. If you don't have a representative sample,
then you don't have a poll worth talking about. But
you're right, everybody, everybody comes down to it's a we've
got the smallest set of battleground states, only seven battleground states.
(09:07):
I remember the two thousand election, which is another election
that everybody thought was going to be close. Al Gore
against George W.
Speaker 3 (09:14):
Bush.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
Remember that on when we ended up five hundred and
thirty seven votes in Florida. Was the difference in that election.
We all knew it was going to be close, but
oh goodness, we had I think we had twenty two
battleground states. Oregon was a battleground state, Washington was a
battleground state in two thousand. We've only got seven battleground states.
(09:36):
So we've got the smallest group of battleground states that
anybody can remember, and it's been essentially it's been a
margin of error race in all seven battleground states for
the last two months. I don't know what's going to happen.
I got a feeling about what's going to happen. I
think we may be on the cusp of seeing a
Trump blowout. I think that that's one of the possibilities.
I think either Trump wins pick Trump, could win small,
(09:59):
or could win small. I don't think there's any way
in the world we see a Kamala blowout. So I
think I think there are three possibilities. And right now,
if I were betting, I'm seeing things that indicate to
me we could be looking at a Trump blowout.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
You know, from your lips to God's ears. I will
let the voting happen, and the ballot counting happened. Everybody's
got to get out there and vote. Bill Pasco's my guest, Bill.
I guess the post mortem in this. Obviously, in the
next day or so, we're going to know who the
next president is. Hopefully everybody behaves themselves. That we have
inauguration day in January the twentieth, and do we have
the changing of the guard et cetera. We have all that,
(10:36):
here's the question. We still have a problem out there
and it's not in Washington.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
D C.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
It's in the studios of New York, the studios of DC,
the television, the medium. If there's a Trump victory, is
there any time that the media that you believe is
going to do some naval gazing and say, wow, maybe
we should try to understand what the phenomena is here
rather than just attacking or do they double down? I mean,
we obviously have media that is very disrespected, not believed
(11:03):
they're propaganda's non journalists out there. Is there any I
guess correction on the horizon as to how politics get
reported in America? Are they just going to continue to
be the Pravda of our day?
Speaker 2 (11:14):
Well, this is a great question. We've begun to see
stirrings of this. Keep in mind all of these major
media institutions that were captured decades ago by the hard left,
not just liberals, but a hard left. They're all profit
making enterprises. CNN exists because it makes money for its shareholders.
(11:34):
Even the New York Times exists because it makes money
for a shareholders. We saw we saw a week ago
that the billionaire, multi billionaire owner of the Washington Post,
Jeff Bezos, made a decision that the Washington Post was
not going to endorse a candidate for president. He had
a newsroom revolt. He had two hundred and fifty thousand subscribers,
(11:57):
they cancel my subscription, and he had three members of
his editorial board quit in disgust. Now they were immediately
picked up by other left wing publications. The Atlantic was
one of them. But you've got the beginnings here of
the profit side of the enterprise recognizing, wait a minute,
we're not giving our consumers what they want. The fact
that The Washington Post lost two hundred and fifty thousand
(12:19):
subscribers because of this decision, well, maybe Jeff Bezos decided,
you know what, I don't want the kind of subscribers
that would quit if we don't endorse Kamala Harris. I
want to actually produce a newspaper that treats both sides fairly.
Maybe there are two hundred and fifty thousand people in
the country who will subscribe to The Washington Post because
(12:41):
we decided we weren't to endorse a presidential candidate, because
we were going to play it right down the middle.
I think that could be the beginning of the kind
of reckoning. After the fact that you're talking about, and
you're absolutely right, it is absolutely needed.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
What does it tell you about our voters that every
wind down here are voters und the electorate, that we
all want a necho chamber. You've got conservatives that only
want their news from let's say Fox News or Hannity,
or they only want the Newsmax or whatever feed they get.
You've got Democrats that think all that's heresy and they
only want to listen to MSNBC. And you've got two
hundred and fifty thousand people to say, if my newspaper
doesn't give me the propaganda that I want and reinforce
(13:19):
my opinion, that I'm going to unsubscribe, that's kind of problematic,
not just in the newsroom, but that's problematic in the
ballot box.
Speaker 4 (13:25):
That we have people that.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Have are uneducated that just vote for the r just
vote for the ded, just vote for whoever they've been
told to vote for. That's even more problematic, maybe than
the media being biased.
Speaker 2 (13:38):
This is a problem in modern society. We have how
many different hundreds of channels of information that we can watch,
cable television, the internet, streaming, it's on your phone, it's
on your tablet, back in the day. You and I
grew up at a time when there were three, not
even four. There were three major broadcast networks, and the
(13:59):
evening news, the half hour even news. Whether you chose
to watch Walter Cronkite or you watched Huntley and Brinkley,
those three evening news broadcasts got ninety million viewers every night,
five days a week. Think of that, we were sending
essentially the same message to ninety million people at a time,
five days a week. Now, I think most the largest
(14:25):
audience newscast in the country, I think is doing around
about ten or eleven million viewers per night. There is
no Walter Cronkite. There is no chet Huntley or David
Brinkley that everybody recognizes is a credible journalist. Journalism has
egg on its face and has had egg on its
face for a number of years. I don't know what
(14:47):
we do about that, I really don't. But when we
can't all argue, when we can't all debate and discuss
the issues of the day from the same starting point
because we all have the same set of facts to
work off, that's a real problem. You're exactly right. People
aren't seeking facts. They're seeking reinforcement of the beliefs that
they already have. Nobody challenges themselves. I mean, I spend
(15:12):
ninety minutes a day reading the other side so that
I know what all sides are saying. But I hate
to say I get paid to do this for a living.
I can afford to spend ninety minutes a day. Who
can spend ninety minutes a day just reading news?
Speaker 4 (15:27):
Yeah, I get paid to do it as well.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
As a matter of fact, some of this news I
have to read, they have to pay me more just
to read it. I'm I'm in a contract battle right now,
so you know, I think they should pay me more
to read the news that I have to read. Bill Pasco,
it's a pleasure election day. How do you Is there
a big election party you go to in Washington, d C.
You're gonna sit at Pasco, a state, what do you do?
Speaker 2 (15:47):
I'm going to be I'm gonna be watching the returns
from Pasco County, Florida, because that's gonna tip me off.
There's a lot of Midwest retirees. Pasco County, Florida is
just north of Tampa on the Gulf Coast. You get
a lot of Midwest retires there. Florida closes early, and
they are really good at counting and reporting their votes.
So that's going to be one of the first places
(16:08):
that we're actually going to have numbers that we can
look at. Pasco County is going to give me a
tip as to what I'm likely to see later on
in the evening when we get returns from Wisconsin and Michigan.
I'm going to be watching Northampton County in Pennsylvania, which
is a little unny nobody knows about. It's the home
of Bethlehem. The old Bethlehem Steel Plant closed in two
(16:28):
thousand and three. That place has been economically devastated. Northampton
County in Pennsylvania has correctly predicted the winner of the
state in every presidential election since nineteen seventy two. So
if you want to know who's going to win Pennsylvania,
look to see who's going to win Northampton County. I'm
such a nerd. I want to be watching this at home.
I'm going to have my TV and my computer and
(16:50):
my tablet, so I got three different screens to look at.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
I will be doing the same thing. Fortunately, I have
a cigar room in my home professionally, and I will
be doing that with cigar and maybe maybe a cocktail.
I'm not gonna maybe so, Bill Pasco, are you are
you a tweeter? Are you doing this live stream or
just you know, if somebody wants to follow you out there.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Yeah they can. They can follow me on X at
W pasco at w P A s c o E.
It'll be that simple, and I'll be tweeting.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
You got a tea party Patriots dot org. Tea party
Patriots dot org. Bill Pasco, it's a pleasure happy election
day and maybe we'll get together and have reason to
celebrate very soon. Bill Pasco, Tea Party Patriots dot o
r g W pasco on the old X machine or
the Twitter. All right, everybody, everybody stand by Lakey. It's
election day. Good to have you here. I hope you're
(17:44):
happy to be here as well. It's six hundred k
c o L. Everybody stand by Jimmy Lakey again. Say
it with me, News Talk six hundred k c o L. Hey, guys,
(18:32):
to be Lakey back here in the studio real quick.
Before we go to my next guest, I want to
remind you that if you are a fellow and maybe
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to volunteer on campaigns, go door knock and you're like,
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Maybe you've lost that libido, that sex drive. All of
(18:54):
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(19:15):
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Speaker 4 (19:36):
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Get tested for low T Low testosterone. Rocky Mountain Men's
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Rockymountain Men's Clinic dot Com. All right, let me bring
up a next guest of the morning. It's mister Mark
Mix and as we deal with election day in America,
we talk about the votes and how it might change
(19:58):
this year.
Speaker 4 (19:59):
First of all, Mark, welcome back to the program. Sir,
how are you, Jimmy.
Speaker 3 (20:03):
I'm doing fine. I heard snow in your forecast? Is
that real?
Speaker 1 (20:07):
Yeah, that's real. It's it's real. It's a yeah, it's real.
Don't don't remind me, but yes, it's real.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
It's got all right, all right, yeah.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
Yeah, Marc, let's dive in here. First of all, let
me remind everybody who you are. You are the president
of the National Right to Work Committee two point eight
million or so members public policy. Also the president of
the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
Marc.
Speaker 1 (20:30):
As we head into election day, everybody's kind of trying
to parse where the Hispanic vote goes, where the black
vote goes, where the women vote goes, where Pennsylvania goes,
where the male vote goes. Everybody's trying to parse it.
It's been kind of interesting though, following the labor Union's
a traditional block that votes solid for the Blue team Democrat,
and it seems as if if I'm following this correctly,
(20:52):
that it could be a little bit different this year.
That could be one of the persuading, altering things in
this election cycle as to how the Union vote goes.
Give me your out while you're inside.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
Yeah, Jimmy Will, I think you're right. I think if
you look at states like Wisconsin and Michigan and Pennsylvania,
I think that's going to be a big factor in
those street states. And Jimmy, those three states are the
battleground states. I think one of those going one way
or the other, is going to decide who the president
of the United States is. And then there's also Senate
races in those three states, the open seat in the
open seat in Michigan, and then two incumbent being challenged
(21:26):
in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. So there's a lot of stake
in those States. But to your point, I mean, I
think we've got plenty of evidence. First and foremost, We've
had it for a long time, going back to Reagan
when they really started doing exit polls on union households
and how they were voting. And there is, Jimmy, there's
a growing dichotomy between what the union officials say and
what rank and file workers say. We're seeing that with
(21:46):
the Teamsters. You know, I think you and I talked
about this, Jimmy. They actually did a poll of their membership.
They asked a question they didn't know the answer to,
and when the poll numbers came back, it was something
like fifty eight to fifty nine percent of Teamster said
they wanted to support Donald's. And that's why the teams
are decided to do the courageous thing and stay out
and not indoors. And we saw other unions that have
done that. And the steel Workers, I think there were
(22:08):
steel workers that showed up at a Trump rally in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
what two nights ago, and their United steel Workers union
is spending literally millions to get Kamala Harris elected. So
you're seeing that disconnect and I think it's real and
I think it's going to manifest itself in the election
returns whenever we get them, whether it be tonight or
tomorrow or next week.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
I'm looking at a press release from the White House
dot gov side dated November the first, just a couple
of days ago. It said President Biden travels to Philadelphia
today to announce over twenty nine thousand union workers and
retirees covered by the Pennsylvania based pension plan will have
their benefits protected. He traveled to Pennsylvania to announce that
they're protecting more than one point two million pensions because
(22:47):
of the American Rescue Plan. He goes on, that's kind
of an interesting action by the current president and the
current Vice president, dead right around the election time. You say, hey,
union members in Pennsylvania, we just happened to have baz
zillions of dollars here to make sure that you're taking
care of vote. The correct way is this is this
obviously an election election hearing play here?
Speaker 3 (23:10):
Well, it is, Jimmy, and there's some history there. The
United States taxpayers are on the hook for ninety four
billion dollars through the year twenty fifty one to bail
out the cost of these private sector pensions. The biggest
recipient of that is the Teamsters union. They so far
they've received over forty five billion dollars of taxpayer money
to bail out these multi and floyer pension funds that
(23:32):
the unions are involved in that were either in solvent
or going critical status. In Pennsylvania that one you're talking
about where he was there last week, that was six
hundred and eighty four million dollars of federal tax money
going to bail out a private pension. And it's no
surprise to me to your point that this comes right
before an election in the key battleground state like Pennsylvania.
That day the federal government handed out eight hundred and
(23:54):
eleven million dollars of pension bailouts to these private sector pensions.
July Sue, the Acting Secretary of Labor, was in Nevada
talking granting seven hundred thousand dollars to a building trades
union out there to get women involved in the building trades.
She also went to Michigan twice, she went to Ohio once.
All of this happened within the last couple of weeks.
(24:14):
So to your point, Jimmy, there are no coincidences, and
this is this is pretty political.
Speaker 4 (24:20):
I wet hidden end here. I think everybody needs to
hear this.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
The Biden administration with at white House dot gov right
from their website, says that the pensions are being protected
because of the American Rescue Plan.
Speaker 4 (24:31):
Let me back you up.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Back in twenty twenty one, that was a one point
nine trillion dollar economic stimulus bat package that not one
Republican voted for, and it was supposed to go to
stave off the effects of the COVID pandemic and really
help us get through COVID. Well, COVID is, COVID's not.
We're no longer in a pandemic, and the government just
happened to still have trillions of dollars or billions of
(24:53):
dollars sitting around for COVID, and rather than putting those
back into general fund to say, hey, we told you
this is for COVID relief, we don't need it, you
can keep it, they go all of us go doling,
get out to unions. So it's interesting that they're saying
that they're going to spend this COVID money, if you will,
for sixty five thousand Pennsylvania's eighty thousand Michiganders seventy eight
thousand New Yorkers, seventy three thousand Illinoisians, sixty three thousand
(25:15):
Ohio and sixty three thousand Californias, Florida's, Missourians and Texans.
COVID money going to save private unions. I'm guessing they
didn't announce that back in twenty twenty one, that they
would save private union pensions with your COVID money.
Speaker 3 (25:31):
No, it was part of that debate, but to your point,
it got through, and it got through without any It
was very very partisans and so far, I think the
Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation has spent sixty nine point five
billion dollars of that money, a lot of it this
year and a lot of it recently. There's been a
flurry of that, and there's still about ninety I think
(25:51):
the total bill for this was ninety four billion, so
there's still about thirty billion out there to kick around
and to dole out in this situation, Jimmy, it's really
outrageous some of the stuff that happened in Washington. That's
why Washington needs to change. And I think the American
people are getting wrestless about that, and we should get
an indicator at some point, like I said, either it's
a night or tomorrow or next week that people are
paying attention to this stuff.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
Yeah, I just think thirty billion dollars, it was supposed
to emergency, we have to pass this.
Speaker 4 (26:17):
Now for covid CO.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
It's twenty twenty four, almost twenty twenty five, and they're
still holding on a thirty billion dollars of taxpayer dollars
that they say, well, we're going to spend it, but
we're not really sure how we're going to spend it yet,
and it's just sitting there. And again, it was an emergency,
we had to pass it. Then it was a rescue plan,
and four years later, five years later, they're still holding
on to it, waiting for it. I guess the next
person to buy off. Give me your thoughts, any predictions,
(26:40):
thoughts on this election. Pennsylvania obviously is a heavyly unionized state.
Give me your thoughts on the it's a swing state.
Speaker 4 (26:50):
What do you think?
Speaker 3 (26:51):
Yeah? I think, well, if, like I said, if one
of those states Michigan, Wisconsin, or Pennsylvania don't do what
Kamala Harris would like it to do, then I think
this presdential race is going to be extremely close and
very exciting. I think the Senate races in those states,
it looks like the Republicans will probably pick up seats
in the United States Senate. That's West Virginia and Montana,
those two, Ohio probablys coming that direction. There are four
(27:12):
other states we're watching on the presidency. I don't know
if we're going to know Jimmy Wats Pennsylvania. There's a
couple of counties in Pennsylvania that will give a pretty
good indicator of what's happening in the presidential race, and
probably what's happening in that Senate race there too.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
Mark Mixed, President of the National Right to Work Committee
and of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation,
as always give the quick plug. Where do they find
you on the web on.
Speaker 3 (27:34):
The internet, Yeah, for legal rights nrtw dot org, RTW
dot org for questions about your legal rights in the workplace,
and for legislation following what's going on and legislators around
the country NRTWC dot org.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
Mark makes always a pleasure, my friend. Happy election day,
and God bless America. We'll talk to you again very soon.
Mark Makes again appreciate you being on the program. It's
Laky on the radio. Good morning to you, my friends.
Six at K cool. Don't forget this. How of the
show brought to you by Dan Kaplis, Dan Camplas law
a serious firm for serious cases.
Speaker 4 (28:07):
Coming up on the program.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Will continue our election day Coverage're gonna be talking to
candidate Dan Wug in his final hours before the ballots
starts casting. We'll also talk to Lawrence DeMarco on the program.
As I said, Dan Wug gonna be on the show.
Professor John Ellis, Bill Walton going to be on the program.
It is a big time radio show Election Day. If
you want to jump in, let me read some emails
as well. Send me one Jimmy Lakey at iHeartMedia dot com.
(28:32):
Jimmy Lakey at iHeartMedia dot com. Jimmy Lakey at iHeartMedia
dot Com. Let's take a break. Six hundred kcol all right,
(29:06):
I got to turn that mic cut I forgot. Welcome
to the program, everybody, Good to have you here. Jimmy
Lakey is my name.
Speaker 4 (29:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
If you hear that forecast, snow is in the forecast
tomorrow this time in the morning. Could be a little
bit messy out there.
Speaker 4 (29:19):
That's not good. Is it not good at all?
Speaker 1 (29:21):
I don't like that nary a bit, but hey, it
is what it is, and it's that time in Colorado. Hey,
it's also time for your furnace to start running. And
if your furnace has not been operating this season, it's
gonna be. I finally broke down and turned mine on
last week and tomorrow, right after the show. I thought
it was today, but it's tomorrow. Right after the program
(29:42):
the folks had won, I were heating and air conditioning
going to come to the house of Lakey and do
the seasonal tune up.
Speaker 4 (29:46):
It's called a maintenance check.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
And what they're going to do is just even though
the furnace is already on, they're going to make sure
that it's running effectively, efficiently, cleaned up. And they can
oftentimes spot with the maintenance check something that hey, that's
a weak part of the system and that could break down.
And you don't want your furnace to break down on
the coldest part of the year, especially as I travel
a little bit this winter. I don't want to break down,
not be working when I'm away, into the pipes freeze
up and all disaster happens. Listen, you got to trust
(30:09):
Corey Clinton the team in one Hour Heating and Air
Conditioning to do your service on your home. Again, if
you have a repair that needs to be done in
your HVAC system, it's Corey Clinton one Hour Heating and
Air Conditioning. If you do want to do that maintenance check,
which I recommend. I haven't come out right before the
air conditioning comes on, right at the beginning of the
furnace season as well. Have them come out and do that.
They've been serving Colorado for thirty five plus years and
(30:32):
they'll take care, good care of you. The best customer service.
You're going to find, best technicians, you'll find, best guarantees
and warranties in the business. They are the best of
the best. My guys one hour Heat and Air dot
Com slash Jimmy Lakey one Hour Heat and Air dot
Com slash Jimmy Lakey. Make sure you mentioned my name.
They take care of everybody, but they love hearing my name.
One Hour Heat and Air dot Com slash Jimmy Lakey
(30:52):
or eight five five one hour, eight five five one hour.
All right, it's election day in America. I'm looking forward
to watching the results. I'm getting a lot of messages
from friends. I had to put my phone inside of it.
I said, where you watching the results at tonight? Where
are you watching the results at? It's a work day
for me. I was texting last night with a friend
and he said, are you coming up to Windsor. There's
(31:13):
a big watch party for Republicans in Windsor for northern Colorado.
Some of you may have heard about that. No, I
will not be there. First of all, that's up way
too late for me. I'll probably be up late tonight,
but I'm not going to be driving back to Windsor.
And that's way too much at night. And by the way,
it's work time for me and I twenty sixteen, I
watched it at a party and that was exciting, but
(31:35):
I know I'm over that. And again it's just a
little bit far for me to drive back and forth
when you have to wake up as early as I do.
So I will be sitting at the house of Lakey,
probably in my cigar room with the ventilation going, and
I will pick out this afternoon, hopefully what will be
a celebratory cigar into a celebratory bottle of something that
I will have and if it's not a celebration. Then
(31:57):
I will be pouring it to ease my pains. That's
the plan tonight, So I will not be out and
about and all the friends going up to windsor God
bless you be safe out there because the weather's going
to be changing here soon.
Speaker 4 (32:08):
You heard that.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Yeah, I'm not looking forward to it at the time.
Tomorrow could be some nasty, ugly commute time, and there's
some speculation that some of the storm could possibly linger
past tomorrow morning, so keep an eye on the forecast.
And I think that's still developing, but there's some people
out there that say that it could be lingering for
a couple of days of winter type weather in northern Colorado.
(32:32):
So welcome to Welcome to winter. You thought we just
hit fall, not we're in the throes of winter. But
it is what it is, my friends, It is what
it is, all right. Let me read some emails in
the next hour. So got great guests coming up. Jimmy
Lakey at iHeartMedia dot com. Jimmy Lakey at iHeartMedia dot com,
Facebook dot com, slash Jimmy lankyfan page, Facebook dot com
(32:53):
slash Jimmy Laky fan page. You got to be in
your bonnet, burn your saddle, feel free to jump in. Also,
let me open up a Twitter machine that is just
my name, the X machine. That's Jimmy Lakey on truth Socials,
Jimmy lake And by the way, on all the platforms
on social media, you can send a private message. Yeah,
you can keep it clean though, my friends, it's not
that kind of private message. I don't want those. I'll
(33:15):
be back laky. Good Morning News Talk six hundred KCl