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November 6, 2024 • 33 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
All right, I got a lot of good emails coming in, Dave.
God bless you, my friend. I appreciate you're always a
prolific emailer. Dave said, well, we won. I hope you're
feeling right now. Has started chemotherapy yesterday he did, so,
God blessed Dave. We're praying for you. Everybody pray for Dave.
One of my regular emailers and a regular listener out there,
and he's started the old chemo. God bless you. Dave.

(00:34):
All right, walking to the show. Good to have you here.
Jimmy Lakey is my name. It's News Talk six hundred K.
Col Let me bring into the conversation the former chairperson
of the Colorado GOP. He has escaped to the Great
State of Texas, the Motherland. His name is Jeff Hayes.
He joins me on the hotline, Jeff Hayes, Good morning

(00:55):
to you, sir. How are you good?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
More? Jimmy, I'm pretty excited, but you know I'm always
tempered with to those who much is given, much is expected,
and so you know, we probably have to give ourselves
twenty four to forty eight hours to celebrate. But then,
you know, the Trump transition team and really the entire Congress.
They've got to figure out how to you know, start
hitting the ground running. You got to be really well

(01:19):
prepared to execute as the American people, or at least
a little over half of them, expect a lot of
really good things out of them.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Yeah, And I was telling my listeners earlier that you've
got to temper your expectations. I mean, Donald Trump on
ninety one, yes, but really he's going to have this
first year. He's going to have both houses of Congress
it looks like, and then you're going to end up
with a people starting to all the members of Congress,
and does one third of the Senate's going to be

(01:47):
up for reelection. You're going to hit election year, and
then after that you're going to hit the presidential election.
So there's going to be a lot of ground. If
Donald Trump was to accomplish a lot of stuff, he's
going to have to do it early on because things
in Washington, our gut, the the the uh, the spokes
are going to get gummed up here in about twelve
to eighteen months.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
Absolutely. And I you know, you were talking about something
I was thinking about this morning, and some of your
listeners know what the pareto rule is. But you know,
especially eighty twenty, which twenty percent of things can they
get done, that's going to cause eighty percent of the
six because there's so much out there. You know, there's
the DoD, there's a Department of Justice, there's you know,

(02:29):
economic issues, there's it's just an entire landscape of things
that the Democrats really have boogered up during the Obama
and the Biden era, and you know, the Trump four
years was a bit of a blip. The thing that's
kind of exciting to me is that, you know, you
don't run in from reelection. He's a he's a one
term president. And boy, what we've seen when that guy,

(02:52):
when he bites down on a bone, he does not
let go of it. And so I hope that he
will be able to kind of drag kicking and screaming
some of the congressional members that might be tempted to
get off beam a little bit, you know, and start
pursuing their own kind of crazy agendas. Then I don't
probably have to work who they are, but you know
they're going to be because people go to Congress for

(03:13):
different reasons. But you know, there has to be a
tremendous amount of focus, the tremendous amount of hard work,
and you know the other there's so many things that
they could work on. But you know, one of the
things that Democrats seem to be remarkably focused on is
how to maintain their political power. And so I think
on the Republican side, we need to be a little

(03:35):
bit rootless in trying to be couple. Some of those
things are to get you know, we talk about election integrity.
You know, there's lots of processes that happened at the
state party level, but or not to state party level,
state government level in terms of elections. But you know,
whatever they can do at the federal level to ensure

(03:55):
election integrity, that's going to be really important because there
really do think I think on our side, especially these days,
we don't want cricket elections so we can win. I
think we leave and that renting naively, but I think
we believe that our ideas are better and that people
who can respond to the freedom, liberty, economic success and
things like that, and they'll vote for us if the

(04:16):
election's fair. So I hope that'll be a big part
of what we try to do. And I got to
tell you, Jimmy. You know, there's a lot of people,
a lot of your listeners probably think, well, what does
an r NC do? You know what those are? What
does a party do? Well? I think this this iteration
of the party has done a really good job and
you know, developing them and working with a Trump campaign

(04:36):
to develop the ground game to execute get out the
vote efforts. Uh, they've been totally instinct, and they were
very aggressive and doing some legal challenges before the election
because you know, after the elections over the courts don't
have the guts to overturn an election. So they were
really good about going after things that looked kind of
shady or kind of skeevee before the election. So I

(04:59):
really applaud them on that. You know, Donald Trump, I mean,
he ended up winning this election. Uh, you know, running
away to a great extent, should consider what people thought
was going to happen, and he got outspent. I mean,
I don't know what the final im is going to be,
but it's it's probably not going to be two to one,
but it might be close. The Democrats raising the ungodly

(05:21):
amount of money and you know, they spent an ungodly
amount of money, right down here in Texas, and it
was still a ten point victory. Anyway, I'm rambling a
little bit, but I wanted to make sure that I
left people in Colorado know how grateful I did import
Governor Greg Abbot here in Texas. Governor Abbot was the guy.

(05:42):
And then, you know, I think Ron is saying, it's
following I'm may have my cycle or my sequencing off,
but he was the one that nationalized the border crisis
with all the bussing and all was a little bit
of grand scheme, but it surely made people aware that
this is not just a bunch of border states. This
is not just Texas and Arizona b lining about your

(06:04):
legal immigration. This is a national problem. And what he
did is he stuck his still right in the eye
some of these sanctuary states, the sanctuary cities, and said, okay,
here's you know you're going to be all sanctimonious. Let's
go ahead and see how you deal with it the
same way we've got to deal with it every day.
And so I do give Greg Abbott and Tim Pashton

(06:24):
down here are Attorney general a heck of a lot
of credit for nationalizing that issue, because I think it
was a big part of the victory.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
Yeah, I think that's going to be interesting. Guys. We
you know, spike your footballs. Everybody celebrate today. You're a
Trump fan and those who hate Trump you can go
morn and cry and do whatever you want to do.
That's fine, But we the nations still here. We still
got America, and I think everybody's got to do a
post mortem. Democrats need to do a post wartem, not
just how did you lose the presidency, but how was

(06:51):
it that you have lost seats in the Senate and
probably going to Republicans maintain the House. You've got to
do some naval gazing. I think Republicans need to do
some naval gazing as well. You mentioned the transition. I
hope that Donald Trump over that last eight years has
done some naval gazing as to his transition before. I
knew somebody on the transition team, well in Wisconsin, that

(07:14):
transition team, and he messaged me and I said, how's
a transition going. He goes, you can tell no one's
done this before. And he was like in the inner
circle and he was like horrified because Trump didn't go
to DC eight years ago with a list of names
he just a lot of advice. I knew this stuff.
I hope he spent some time and make some better
picks than he did last time, because I'll be honest,

(07:36):
some of his picks last time sucked. It took him
a while to get it right. Then he didn't have
a lot of cooperation in the US Senate for confirmation.
So hopefully this transition is going to be better. Do
you have any names that you would like to see
put into this administration?

Speaker 2 (07:52):
No, I really know. I do feel good because he's
got pretty ecumenical group that has been part of the
privately funded transition team. Say, and I've got really smart people,
you know, you think about people like Caulfie Gabbert, She's
really I think, very thoughtful, very bright. You got the
vek RAMOSLAMI, You've got Elon mush. I mean, there's so

(08:13):
many people that are of that caliber that seem to
be on this team right now. And I think they've
got a lot more focus, you know. To address what
you just said, I think that I don't think he
fully understood what you'd be getting into. You know, I
don't think he understood. You know, he punched the swamp
and it just didn't want to let go. And yeah,

(08:33):
you know, the guy is smart. Uh, he's savvy. I
think he has learned a lot. I think he was
a much better candidate this go around. You know, he
couldn't untrump Trump. He still had to make his heels snorty,
biting comments and you know, trashing people. I mean, he
just does that. But I thought he was a much
more focused, you know, much better at staying on the

(08:53):
message than he was the last time. And so that
to me is you know, obvious proof that the guys
learned the kind of understands how the political games played
a little bit more, you know. I And you just
kind of think if if he enacts this integrated s
of economic policies number one, I mean it's all integrated,

(09:14):
you know, if you really pay attention to what he
was talking about, everything from the border to defense to
you know, international policy to you know, basically the tax
code changes that he's proposing. If we can get those
things and the and the tide lifts all these boats,
you just got to think that this coalition is going

(09:35):
to keep growing because you know, all the pundits on TV,
they're making a big deal out of black males voted
for him in a you know, much higher rate and
all this kind of stuff. Hispanics. Well, maybe we're turning
the corner a little bit and that we're treating people
like Americans instead of filling the blank Americans. You know,

(09:55):
I think that's one thing. A lot of people they
really have gotten fit pigued about it, unless you're in
that space, you know, unless you're one of those race
grifters that's making a living off of trying to create
a racial division. But you know, I just think that
we can start treating people more like Americans because the
coalition that Donald Trump has built, you know, especially like

(10:18):
the the lower third, let's say, the socioeconomic wrong. A
lot of laborers, a lot of people that you know
don't have higher degrees. People are out there just you know,
using their hands to make a living that transcends color,
that transcends race in the national organ and origin and
all those kind of things. And you know, I wouldn't

(10:39):
continue to elevate those folks. The entire country is going
to be better. So we'll see how the Democrats are.
Fun You're you're dead on the money. Many they're not
going to take twenty four hours off to Bomo, and
you've got people that are already trying to figure out
what went wrong and what they need to do next.
Because they're all about power, you know, they're all about

(11:01):
trying to regain that position. They probably are dead to
terrify that people are going to smoke them out and
try to figure out ways that they can't corrupt the
system so they can continue to win elections. Yeah, I'm
sure they're terrified, but they're not going to quit. They're
they're going to go away. It's unfortunate because you know,
it just am your grandfather's Democrat party.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
I guess, I guess that's the question is do the
Democrats do anything to kind of go okay, how did we?
If you kind of look at eve the last ten
twenty years, the Democrats were the party that wanted Dick
Cheney hung up and strung from the Hague because of
war crimes and war mongoring and things like that. This
is just an honest observation. I don't have a red

(11:45):
jersey and blue jersey on It's now the Republicans under
Trump that have become the anti war party. They have
become the uneducated, working class, blue collar party. That's been
a transition that's happened literally in the last ten to
twenty years. You would think that the other party would
want to say, how did we lose that block of people?

(12:05):
And there's obviously some Republicans wondering how did those people
get in our neighborhood? How did they show up in
our party? We don't like those folks. Now we've really watched,
I guess, a transformation of metamorphosis of the Republican Party,
and it's happened right underneath our nose. And you would
like to wonder if the other party is recognizing the
metamorphosis happen on their party and if they're going to

(12:27):
do some I call it the navel gazing. Are they
going to try to figure out what happened?

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Oh, I'm sure they will. You know, some of the
tactics that they've used for let's let's talk about that
lower one third of our economic demographs. You know, one
of the ways the Democrats in the past had done
that is through racial division. They had really tried to
hone different racial groups, you know, they didn't one against another,
kind of a divide and conquerence strategy. And the Donald

(12:56):
Trump approach has been very unifying and not really addressing
people by their skin color or their national origin. It's
obviously you know that you talk about those things in
political campaign almost because people expect you to. But again,
when you're talking about uplifting the entire nation economically, and

(13:16):
you have evidence that that happens when you vote. When
you voted for this guy and you allowed those policies
to work, people did better, and then you had four
years of juxtaposition. The problem is that, you know, the
American electric has got a very short memory. And so
going back to what you said earlier, if we have
too many people in Congress that are trying to push

(13:37):
things that are like anti federalism and you know, things
like a national abortion ban. I mean, Jimmy and I
we're dead on the money. We know what we believe,
and I think we believe correctly on abortion, but it's
not it's a federalism issue. And we did a terrible
job in trying to message to people that you know,
Donald Trump didn't want a national abortion ban. It's properly

(14:01):
at the state level. This is this is the correction
in bad law. And I don't know, we'll see, you know,
you go back and look, I'm not sure that there
weren't people on the Democrat side were looking at the
same data that the Republicans were looking at. It looked
like Trump was going to win when Biden was the

(14:24):
president or was the candidate, excuse me, it looked like
we were going to stop them. They may have just said, well,
let's run her because she's terrible anyway and you know,
probably not going to win, but maybe we can pull
on out of the hat. The thing that is counter
to that is the amount of money that they were
able to raise the amount of people that believe that,
you know, she probably had a chance to win. Either
that or they were just doing it so they're doing

(14:46):
that at a self defunct But yeah, you know, she
was really bad candidate. I don't think that there are
some people on the Democrat side. I think he has
been much more effective candidates. But they might not have
wanted to run this time because they thought they were
going to get Yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
Gretchen Whitmer is one of those. Yeah, Gretchen whitmerg Gavin Knws.
Some immediately said no, we're not the running mate, because
I think they said gosh, and again they're not going
to say it publicly, but they knew that if Kamala
did win, uh, they were eight years out from running
because she would be able to run for reelection and
eight years is an eternity in politics. So again they
immediately disqualified themselves. I think when the book is written,

(15:24):
there's gonna be a couple of interesting behind the scenes
stories that are told. Number One, the decision to choose
Tim Waltz, who's probably the dumbest dude and goofiest man
ever to be a VP candidate. I mean, I think
he was a disaster and what he was really awful.
I mean again, I didn't make fun of him with
your you know whatever he's tampon Tim or what. He

(15:44):
was a bad He was a bad choice. So Josh
Shapiro would have been better. But again, I think that's
the story that's going to be told, is why didn't
she choose Josh Shapiro because that would have helped her
in Pennsylvania, which she obviously did need. But she chose
Timmy Waltz, who was I mean, there's no other way
to describe him as just a horrible, horrible VP candidate.
As the post mortal. I want to hear that story

(16:06):
when it's told. I also want to hear this story
about old Joe Biden. We only have about sixty ninety
seconds left here, but Joe Biden, Joe Biden this morning
has to be going. I told you guys, I could
beat him because there's no love loss between the Bidens
and Kamala Harris. They kissed on the stage, but behind
the scenes, everybody's known for four or five years that

(16:28):
the Bidens, especially doctor Joe Biden, does not lock Kamala Harris.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
Well, Joe's ego and arrogance blew this thing too. If
you just said I'm a four year candidate and that's it,
and everybody would have known that could a plan. Instead,
he tried to take it out there and he based
some guy out over his keys. You know, his age
and with mental health just declined too rapidly for him
to be a viable candidate, so he stayed on there
too long. So really the fish kind of rocks at

(16:52):
the head. I think he started with that. If he
had gotten out early and some of the other more
talented candidates could have gotten chance to throw their elbows
in there and they would have had a legitimate primary,
I think it would have been a tougher race for
Donald Trump. I really do, but there's just too much momentum.
They still would have had the you know, the Biden Harris,

(17:13):
you know, you know the result because they would had it.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
But anyway, yeah, I got hey, Jeff Hayes, I got
a couple of messages this morning saying congratulations Ambassador Lakey.
And how does that ring dound sound.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
Good to you? I think that's sounds great.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
We'll see you. Never know. I thought it was going
to be Ambassador Lakey after Romney, but he screwed that
election up. That was a guaranteed thing. Everybody stand by
Lakey on the radio side, A small chance six hundred casey,
Well all right, there will be a lot of post

(18:35):
mortem today. It looks like immigration and the economy were
big deals in the election last night. Good to have
you here on the show, Jimmy Lacky, my name, News
Talk six hundred and k. Col Hey, fellows, can I
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(20:24):
me welcome in our good friend from INVESTUSA dot org.
We'll talk about that organization here in just a moment,
I have Michael Letz. I believe Michael or you there?
How are you.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
Well?

Speaker 1 (20:36):
Maybe I don't have Michael Letz on the phone. I
think we're supposed to have Michael Lettz, So we'll wait
for that connection to happen here in just a moment.
News Talk six hundred kcol glad to have you here.
On the radio show the post mortem of the election
last night, thirty nine percent of the voters said that
almost forty percent said that it was the It was
the economy that was that was a big deal. The

(21:01):
economy was a top issue. I knew. Yesterday was kind
of an interesting exit poll. Exit polls doesn't usually kind
of swing for the Republican out there, but a lot
of folks said that exit pole. CNN did the coverage
yesterday after the original exit poll, which there's not really
an exit everybody's mailing in their ballots now, but the
original polling came out yesterday on CNN that well, the

(21:26):
original polling came out that they were that people were
not satisfied with the direction of the country, and even
some of the CNN analysis came in yesterday that when
you have an incumbent, which Kamala Harris is, that is
viewed to be well, the question on CNN became it
yesterday afternoon, are they going to take out their frustration

(21:47):
about the direction of the country on Kamala Harris, who's
the immediate incumbent, or they say, hey, it started with
Donald Trump? Are they going to And obviously, I think
last night and what is probably going to once it's
all said and done, be deemed as an electoral landslide,
especially now that it looks like Trump is still ahead,
well ahead in the popular vote. This was a this

(22:12):
was really a referendum on the last four years in
Joe Biden, and I think yesterday they said in the
extit pulling Joe Biden's approval rating was still about forty percent,
and so with Kamala doing very little, which surprised me. Honestly,
it surprised me that she did so very little to
separate herself from Biden when she was asked. They cited

(22:33):
this on the CNN panel yesterday. When she was asked
on the view the very easy question what would you
do different in the last four of four years, she says,
I can't think of anything. That was really, according to
some of the analysts on scen and kind of a
nailing the coffin because that was the opportunity. That was
the Volney kind of set up for her to spike

(22:53):
the ball is to say what she would do differently.
And again I've said this on the radio. She didn't
have to throw old Joe under the bus. She could
have been kind to the old geezer. She could have
been very nice and said, you know, he did his best.
We've done our best. But now that we know what
we know, here's what I would do differently, And she
could have phrased it in a very kind way and
not felt like she was betraying Joe Biden. But she

(23:16):
didn't even do that. She just kind of said, I'm
going to stick with the same thing. And I think
when the book is written again, right now, the wound
is sore. People feel the pain, they feel the agony
of this whole thing. They're mad that Trump won, or
they're upset that Kamala didn't win. But I think when
the book is written, you just have to recognize she
was not a great candidate. She failed the opportunity a

(23:38):
couple of times to separate herself. And you can say
you're a new way forward, but if you're doing the
same thing you've always done, then you're not a new
way forward. If you're not going to separate yourself from
the old guy, how do you say you're new way forward.
She had the chance to do that, she did not
do that. And I think when the book is written

(23:58):
at the end, they will look at Waltz as probably
absolutely one of the goofiest picks you could have had. Again,
I don't mean to be personal. I didn't get personal
even I thought it was a bad pick. I've said that,
but looking back, I think when they do the post
mortem on this thing, they're going to go Tim Walltz,
what the hell was she thinking? That was her first

(24:18):
decision to pick that guy? He's he was a he
just look at his record in Minnesota. You wonder what
the people in Minnesota were smoking or snorting when they
chose that guy. He was bad. He was a bad pick.
There were other candidates that had they And again, I
think the post mortem of this thing will be written
that when they squeezed old Joe Biden out, the way

(24:41):
Joe Biden got retribution on them was within an hour
of that mysterious letter being tweeted out, no confiment, no
press conference, no White House addresses, this random tweet, Joe
Biden said, Okay, you're gonna squeeze me out of here
with Nancy Pelosi. Then he endorsed Kamala. They did not
expect that endorsement of Kamala. And then the Bidens circled

(25:01):
back and excuse me, the Clinton circle back and say
we are in Kamala's court as well. Because Obama, I believe,
wanted this primary process to play. I remember twenty four
to forty eight hours before Obama jumped on the Commada
bandwagon because he wanted to put another candidate in there,
whether it was Michelle or somebody else, but the Bidens
and the Clintons blocked the Obama's wishes and then just dutifully,

(25:23):
all these Democrats jumped on and says, she's our girl.
They I mean, we're talking months ahead of time. They
had been talking about replacing her on the ballot. How
do we replace her and get somebody else in there
because she was very unlike But just dutifully the Democrats
started drinking the kool aid and putting on the bumper
stickers and said she's our girl, and she has never

(25:43):
been your girl. They were talking about replacing her on
the ballot up until the time that she became the
top of the ballot. Then they said, oh, she's our savior.
So it's going to be interesting the honesty. And I
think anytime you have an election, whether you or lose,
you gotta be honest and do the analysis. And I'm
just not sure. I don't know where that will come,

(26:06):
but I think there's gonna be some honesty that happens.
I think that the choice of Tim Waltz was not
a positive thing for Kamalom, and I think just the
inability to separate herself, and again she should have hired me.
I would have told her how she could separate herself
from Joe, and if she did feel some duty to
Joe or some respect for the elders, I don't know what.
I don't think it's a great relationship. But if she

(26:27):
did feel that, I could have coached her how to
do that and answer that question. I think that would
have gone a long way. Instead, they went to Slogan's
New Way Forward and a new generation. But there's no
way that you could argue that there was actually a
new generation out there at all, no way. It just
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these insurance companies, they see Dan Caples on the case,
they know that a big time lawyer is there for you.
Dan Capless, c A P l I S. Dancapalislaw dot com,
dan Caaplis Law dot com, dankaplis Law dot com. Meshao
out to him. They got an office in Fort Collins
one in Loveland as well, dankaplis Law dot com. Tell

(27:57):
them that Jimmy Lakey told you to be in touch.
All right, let me read to emails coming in a
lot of you emailing me your thoughts on the election
last night. It's News Talk six hundred KCl standby more
to come. Hey, you know what happens right after the

(28:33):
show today? Literally when I sign off the radio, I
will rush to the House of Laky. I'll zipping you
do out there because one hour Heating and air Conditioning
is coming. That's right, one hour Heat and air dot
com slash Jimmy Lakey. They're going to finally do my
seasonal tune up maintenance check. They'll be in the House

(28:58):
of Lakey. This is who I use. I've used them
for a long time at the House of Leaky. I've
used them for almost a decade. I had to have
the HVAC systems replaced a few years ago. They did that.
They come out right before heater season, furnace season, right
at the beginning of that, right before the air conditioning season,
the beginning of that, and they do maintenance check and
what they do with that, especially for winter, it's very
important that they're going to get it all tuned. That

(29:20):
makes sure it's running as effective and efficient as possible.
And if they see kind of a week link in
the system, they can go ahead and preventive maintenance on that.
And that makes sure that when I'm traveling over the
winter months, which I try to escape the cold as
much as I can. My furnace does at break while
I'm gone, pipes freeze up, disaster happens. Listen one hour
Heat and Air dot com. If your furnace was struggling

(29:40):
last winter season, you gotta get on their schedule. If
you know it's time to replace it, you got to
talk to Corey Clinton to the team at one hour
Heating There dot com slash Tommy Laky eight five five
one hours of phone number. Listen again, this is who
I use at the House of Leaky. If I can
trust them in my house, and I've done it for
right around a decade, you can trust them as well.
But if I that's that's the only people I would

(30:01):
trust to do this. They do such great work. One
hour Heat and Air dot com slash Jimmy Leaky eight
five five one hour eight five five one hour, eight
five five one hour And you be sure, now do
you tell them that Jimmy Lakey told you to be
in touch eight five five one hour, one hour Heat
and Air dot com slash Jimmy Lakey and Corey Clinton
and the team will take good, good care of you

(30:22):
as they do me eight five five one hour. All right,
good to have you here on the radio show. My
name is Jimmy, as you might have gathered, Jimmy Lakey.
A pleasure to have you here. What do you have
going on after the show? And I had friends yesterday
as I was heading away from a meeting, and I
went to a shop and picked up a celebratory cigar
anticipating celebration, and my first cigar the night was a

(30:47):
Hi May Garcia successor. It's by the himI Garcia company.
That was my first cigar the night of this cigar
palace that I have at my home. And then as
the night went on and I realized that the real celebration.
I'm a simple man. I'm a real simple guy. I
don't need a five one hundred dollars cigar. One hundred
dollars cigar. I had an a leave of v Milanio

(31:09):
Maduro and I had that one as well, and my
friend came over. I had one person come over to
the house and we enjoyed cigars together. He had a
couple of pores left in his bottle of Blanton's and
if you know Blanton's, it's if you can find it.
It doesn't cost you that much, but it's hard to find.
And he brought a few pores of Blanton's and we
had Blantons and Dets Final. So I had two cigars

(31:30):
last night. One was just the nervous I gotta have
a cigar in the cigar palace, and then the other
one was my celebratory cigar, which is Anna Leave of
v Milanio. Good to have you here on the show.
Thanks for tuning in this morning. Let me take your
thoughts here, will read some emails and have conversation here
throughout the course of the morning. Uh. Again, it's natural
to want to spike the ball, it's natural to want

(31:51):
to jump up and down. But now it's time to
get to get down to business. And it's time for
the Trump administration, the transition to get down to business.
It's time for or Democrats to kind of figure out
is the party going to continue to be this party
of Alexandria Cassio Cortez or is it going to go
back to I don't know they answered all these questions,
but I do know that everybody's going to have to

(32:13):
have that. You got to get past the Trump rally,
and now you've got to get into Trump governance. And
I would suggest that the Democrats might want to do
a little gut check and say, Okay, what happened here
and how did we end up us losing to the
Orange guy? And a lot of that is just border policy.
And you can't go out when things aren't working say

(32:34):
Bidenomics are great and then say, oh, by Bidenomics suck
and I'll fix it again. There's always a great opportunity.
And again, I know the first couple of days you
want to lick your wounds or spike the football. You
got to do that. But I think it's it's going
to be interesting to see kind of the pendulum swing
back now. Again, Trump doesn't have a lot of time here.

(32:54):
It's a short term presidency. He's going to be a
lame duck from day one. But there were some big
victory said there's no way that. I mean, guys areheading
the popular vote as well. Yeah, I'll be back. Laky
Final hour coming up, six hundred KSE col Glad to
have you a news talk six hundred k c l
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