Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Go to America's Voice Live. Our Real America's Voice team
is going places others' woes.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
We need to take over that was coming into Israeli territory.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
To show you what they don't want you to see.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
It's still a disaster. What's the latest they call these
street releases.
Speaker 4 (00:18):
We've got hundreds of people being dropped off.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
It's getting worse, and we're the nation's fastest growing news
program for a reason.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Real journalize that they're all marching down to the White
House sounds to me and MAdM it won't be happy
until Israel doesn't exist.
Speaker 5 (00:31):
Real American News America is under chemical warfare attack.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
That film is the weapon.
Speaker 6 (00:36):
Thank you for everything you're doing.
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I appreciate you guys, very very much.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
This is America's Voice Live with Steve Grouper.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
Welcome to America's Voice Line. I'm see great. It is Wednesday,
the twenty sixth of March. Let's get today's top strace.
Thank you for being here. Has always been spending part
of your day with Real America's Voice. Elon Muskin. President
Trump never quit when it comes to cutting waste, fraud,
and bure to continue to do it every day. We'll
talk about that. Also, the economy is still a big
issue for many Americans, but the less still continues to
(01:08):
fight President Trump. While Trump is right to put more
money in americans pockets. Go figure. And then President Trump
just cut over three hundred million dollars going to research
projects that include trans mice. That's right, transgender mice. All
of that and more coming up on America's Voice Live.
Well we begin here today. And earlier today, members of
(01:30):
the House Intelligence Committee held the Annual Threat Assessment Hearing
for twenty twenty five, where they questioned members of the
Trump administration. This comes after a staffer at National Security
Advisor and as Security advisor at Mike Waltz's office included
an Atlantic reporter, Jeffrey Goldberg, in a signal text group
with senior level Trump officials. Taulsea Gabbert, John Ratcliffe and
others from the Trump administration already testify that nothing top
(01:53):
secret was in there, nothing particularly important. Goldberg himself, at
least the transcripts earlier today, debunking most of what he
had claimed about being war plans. I've looked at it.
I did not see war plans. In fact, I saw
nothing classified and basically a pros and cons list? Is
it well? Here with me to discuss This is the
(02:13):
congresswoman from Wyoming, Harriet Hageman, congress Woman, Nice to see
you again. Obviously the Democrats want something. They want anything
to get Jasmine Crockett off the front page and off
the television set. So they are I mean, the only
signal that I'm getting here is that they're desperate. Am
I wrong?
Speaker 7 (02:31):
I was going to use that exact word. Thank you
for having me today. I think it is a show
of desperation that they have glommed on to this the
way that they have. I know Mike I served with
him in the House prior to him being appointed to
this position. He's one of the smartest men I know.
He's just absolutely fabulous when talking about and addressing our
national security issues. I have a great amount of trust
(02:54):
in him. Was this a snap fo? I think that
that's fair to say. But also I think the administration,
unlike the previous administration, is being incredibly transparent and getting
the information out to the American people. We just need
to have a better understanding of exactly what was disclosed.
I haven't yet had a chance to look through all
(03:14):
of the messages.
Speaker 6 (03:15):
That we're sent back and forth. But again, Mike is
a good man. Mike Walts is a good man.
Speaker 7 (03:20):
I'm glad he's there. I know that he has the
best interests of America at heart.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
Yeah. Look, you've got Democrats senators screaming for Pete hegset
to resign, scream from your former colleague Mike Waltz to resign.
None of that makes sense based on anything that I've
seen so far. Congresswoman, again, this seems like it seems
to me like they're cleaning pans together, trying to distract
the American people. Look, Donald Trump has had the best
of them for sixty five days now. He's been on
(03:48):
a fast track delivering on promises. You've been part of
that effort as well, obviously, and they need something to
slow him down because right now his polling is very
good and the popular closing the border, bringing down inflation,
trying to end the war in Ukraine, trying to end
the confidence in Gods, all of these things are resonating
with the American people. They need something, don't.
Speaker 6 (04:09):
They, Yes, they do.
Speaker 7 (04:10):
This is about deflection from what the Trump administration is doing.
And as we all recognize, one of our biggest national
security threat relates to the open border from the last administration,
and that's where the Trump administration has been absolutely stellar
in terms of closing that border, providing additional security, and
addressing the risk and the threats from many of the
(04:32):
criminals that came over that border over the last four years.
So again, he's doing what the American.
Speaker 6 (04:38):
People sent him to Washington, d C. To do.
Speaker 7 (04:40):
I'm proud to be a part of it as a
member of Congress. I think Mike Waltz is doing a
great job. Egseth is doing a great job. The Vice
president is This was a discussion, and it was a
discussion about various options that they had in terms of
addressing what they perceived as the threat. We're probably sitting
(05:01):
more than perhaps they've wanted us too. But at the
same time, I think that now they're being very transparent.
I think there's most likely going to be an investigation
to find out exactly what happened.
Speaker 6 (05:10):
But let's keep our eye on the ball. Let's focus
on what is in the best interest of America.
Speaker 3 (05:15):
And I think everybody's fine with the investigation. Have the
investigation was a mistake made, obviously somebody included Jeffrey Goldberg
where he did not belong. Okay, but it wasn't classified information.
It was not war plans as he claimed. We've now
seen the text messages and so forth, so it's not
anything that he claimed, not that I can tell, at
least not so far. So that's what got in. The
good news is the Huthies have paid a very high price.
(05:38):
Nothing was stopped, The operation came off without a hitch,
and for the first time in four years, Americans are
asserting their power to make sure those shipping lanes are open,
to not tear us back into their holes, and to
take them out if necessary. I mean, it has been
a success so far. We should be saying that, shouldn't we?
Speaker 6 (05:56):
I think so as well. Let's focus on.
Speaker 3 (05:59):
The outcome, absolutely all right, So, Wyoming energy state, let's
talk about Donald Trump's energy policies. Obviously important once to
move forward, refiring up coal fired power plants, maximizing coal production.
You've got a lot of coal, and Wyoming a lot
of natural gas. So LNG going to Europe would be
a big thing for Wyoming and for several states. How
(06:20):
important are these energy practices? And with the new Energy
secretary moving forward, full speed ahead as well. What does
that mean for the people of Wyoming and for America.
Speaker 6 (06:30):
Energy security is national security.
Speaker 7 (06:33):
Under the previous Trump administration, for the first time in
over fifty years, the United States was energy independent and
a net exporter, and we.
Speaker 6 (06:41):
Need to get back to that.
Speaker 7 (06:42):
Not only because it's the right thing to do in
terms of creating jobs right here in the United States,
but it also helps our allies around the world. Why
are you look at someone like Germany and Germany and
many of the European countries have been essentially funding both
sides of the war went between Russia and Ukraine, because
while they're supporting Ukraine and sending some funds that direction,
(07:04):
they're also having to buy fuel from Russia.
Speaker 6 (07:07):
So it doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 7 (07:09):
We have a lot of enemies that under the Biden
administration were able to substantially increase output because we were
not producing right here. Just looking at Iran when we're
talking about the Middle East and the destabilization there.
Speaker 6 (07:22):
We can trace all of that back to Iran.
Speaker 7 (07:24):
Iran made one hundred and ten billion dollars over the
last four years in oil and gas sales because of
Joe Biden lifting the sanctions so that they were able
to fund the October seventh, twenty twenty three attack. They
were able to fund the Huthis and the Hesme lot.
And so as a result of that, you've destabilized the
(07:47):
Middle East. Whereas if we produce domestically, it creates fabulous
jobs in Wyoming and the surrounding states, and it provides affordable,
reliable energy, So it reduces energy poverty.
Speaker 3 (07:59):
Yeah, certainly, does you know? And you make this great point. Look,
Germany and these other countries in Europe, we're paying Russia
more than they were paying to fund the war in Ukraine.
It made no sense at all. They're funding both sides
once again, and we find ourselves in that strange position
where you're funding both sides of the war. Twenty five
hundred people on average are dying every week. We'd like
(08:19):
to see the war come to an end. Donald Trump
is working with Steve Witcoffe and others that try to
make that happen. Not easy so far, but I think
we've made progress there. But the first thing is, let's
enrich Wyoming, Let's enrich Pennsylvania, let's enrich Alaska. Let's not
enrich Russia. Right, Well, and let's make.
Speaker 7 (08:37):
Sure that the American citizens can keep more money in
their pockets and that they're not overpaying at the pump
or to heat their homes. Wyoming's the largest coal producer
in the nation. We have clean, reliable, affordable coal. We
are incredibly environmentally sensitive in terms of taking care of
the environment, protecting our water resources, air quality, land quality,
(08:57):
et cetera. We're the eighth largest oil and gas sir.
We have one of the highest high quality reserves of
uranium in the United States. We do a fabulous job
of providing resources, that energy resources that people in this
country need. I have long been railing against the idea
that we have to adopt policies that result in energy poverty,
(09:18):
in other words, impoverishing our fellow American citizens because of
failed energy policy. So Wyoming is ready willing and able
to produce whatever we need to make sure that people
who can keep the lights on, we can domesticate more.
In terms of manufacturing, we can produce more right here
across the board. It makes us a safer, more prosperous
(09:38):
country if we do that.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
I believe you're right on that. Let me shift gears
a little bit here for you, because look, a lot
of people in Washington and the Eastern Seaboard things that
they know what is best for Wyoming and Montana, and
I do on all the Western states because they've seen pictures,
but they don't understand how it really works in Wyoming,
now do they. They've seen pictures and they visited Yellowstone
National Park a couple of time, so they know how
everything works. But the fact of the matter is the
(10:03):
reintroduction of the wolf has had impact on the Western
United States and on the ranchers. And you have just
put together some legislation on the reintroduction of the Grizzly
Bear State Management Act, meaning the state of Wyoming would
have management authority over this apex predator. Doesn't sit well
with a lot of people, but for people in the
(10:23):
washingnized age, you get it. Please explain well.
Speaker 7 (10:28):
The grizzly bear was listed as threatened in nineteen seventy five.
The recovery goal was approximately five hundred bears. We have
over eleven hundred grizzly bears and the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem
alone we have more than double the number of bears
that even the Fish and Wildlife Service says is appropriate
or necessary and they recognize that they have completely saturated
(10:50):
Yellowstone National Park and now they're moving into other areas
that were never really part of the critical habitat for
the Greater Yellowstone grizzly bear. So I have filed a
bill to delist the grizzly bear because the Fishient Wildlife
Service whenever they do delist the grizzly bear, which they
have a couple of times, the radical environmental groups come
(11:12):
in and find a judge that is sympathetic to their
cause and they relist the grizzly bear. Wyoming, in fact,
does manage the grizzly bear already. That's who is responsible
for the Fisient Wildlife Service oversees it.
Speaker 6 (11:24):
The question has to do.
Speaker 7 (11:26):
With how we manage that bear and whether we're able
to do things such as protect our livestock producers and
protect our other wildlife species. Both the gray wolf and
the grizzly bear are apex predators, meaning that they're at
the top of the food chain and as a result,
they can have an enormous impact on our other wildlife resources,
whether it's moose or elk, on our livestock industry, So
(11:47):
it is important to properly manage these.
Speaker 6 (11:49):
But another thing for people to keep in mind when
we keep.
Speaker 7 (11:52):
Species like the grizzly or the gray wolf on the
Endangered Species Act or list, what we're doing is we're deflecting,
and we are diverting resources that could actually be used
to recover and protect those species that needs need help.
I mean, you can talk about the California condor, you
can talk about the hooping and create. There are species
that are endangered and thereat and we need to be
(12:14):
spending the resources to address that. I would perhaps do
it a little differently sometimes than the Fish and Wildlife
Service does or the courts do, But the fact is
we are deflected resources to a recovered species when we
should be focusing on those species that actually need assistance.
Speaker 3 (12:31):
Now, I think you missed the most famous indager's piece
in Wyoming, the blackfooted another success story. I mean, the
grizzly bear has been a success story. The ferret's been
a success story. The point is that the wildlife biologists
and scientists, they've done their job. The grizzly bear population
double their target. I mean they've succeeded. It's time to
unhandcuff the states to do what they need to do.
(12:53):
I've only got about thirty seconds for this, but Jelles
would like to do some reforms on the Endangered Species
Act codifying the Gulf of America and a big part
of that. Just real quickly tell us what that's about.
Speaker 6 (13:03):
We had hearings yesterday.
Speaker 7 (13:04):
I am the chairman of the Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife
and Fisheries, and yesterday we had a hearing on several
bills that would do in just exactly what you're saying,
much needed Endangered speci ZACH reform as well as renaming
the Gulf to the Gulf of America, which there are
a variety of reasons for doing that, but I would
encourage people to go to They can go watch the video.
(13:26):
It was in the Natural Resource Committee, the Subcommittee on Water,
Wildlife and Fisheries.
Speaker 3 (13:32):
Tom someone, you're one of my favorites, There's no question about.
I always enjoy talking to you. You come from a
wonderful state, and I think it's beautiful that you look
out for Wyoming every day. Thank you for being here.
Thank you really appreciate it. I do just like her
a lot. She's full of that thing that we call
common sense. We'll have more after the break here in
(13:53):
America's voice life. Well, President Trump and Elon Musk continue
to slash government waste and fraud. US Atorney General Pam
(14:13):
Bonnie recently sent a very clear message for those engaged
in fraud against our government using your tax dollars. Listen
to this.
Speaker 6 (14:21):
Thank you President.
Speaker 8 (14:23):
As far as the we are hearing a lot about fraud,
waste and abuse, a lot of waste and abuse, but
there is a tremendous amount of fraud.
Speaker 6 (14:30):
And Elon, thank you for your partnership. Thank you for
your team.
Speaker 8 (14:34):
You have uncovered so much fraud in our government and
we will prosecute you. We have an intern or task
force now working with every agency sitting here at this table,
and if you've committed fraud, we're coming after you.
Speaker 5 (14:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:49):
Well, here's ben Elon Musk's doze that saved over one
hundred million dollars. The estimates seemed to vary some and
that was from a couple of weeks ago, so the
number keeps growing, which is good news the American taxpayer.
Here's me to discuss this and the efforts of Doze
and Attorney General Pam Bondy. Cograph Josh Keen of Oklahoma
tidin thank you for being here. Look, thank you waste,
(15:11):
fraud and abuse. For some reason, it makes the Democrats'
heads explode if we save the taxpayer money. It's weird
to me, but it's it's It is a strange reaction,
isn't it.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Yeah, it's odd. I had did a town hall last
night and it was it's interesting that anyone could be
against making sure that their tax dollars, the fine not
resource of taxpayer funds are used spent most efficiently. Anyone
having an objection to that has to have more than
(15:43):
a common sense objection. It has to be partisan in nature.
Speaker 3 (15:48):
Yeah, let's talk about this. We're saving money, we're and
we're not cutting spending, but we're reducing the rate of
increase in many cases, Josh, I mean, that's the way
it works. And every time, even if you reduce the
rate of increase, those on the life go craze and
accuses Downfow being a dictator and a lot of other
crazy things. Right, So here's what people are curious about.
(16:10):
We got the Continuing Resolution through which laid the groundwork,
the foundation, if you will, for this big, beautiful reconciliation bill.
People want to know how close. Is that, what's going
to be in it? What kind of changes can they expect.
It's a big deal and it takes a lot of work,
as I know. So tell us where we are.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
Yeah, so I'm on the House of Budget Committee. Great
thanks to a great chairman, Jody Arrington, who led a
good number of us into a great result the framework
that if we fulfill what the framework we were able
to get out of our committee then passed the House.
If we're able to fulfill what we brought forward, then
we will bring about enough change we have to have
(16:51):
in an environment where our credit rating, you know, two
of our three major agencies have downgraded us in the
last ten to fifteen years to double A from triple
and we've got some questions in the bond market right
now that people are shopping around, you know, in other countries.
There's a lot of depth that's maturing across the globe,
and we as the Budget Committee, are convinced we've got
(17:12):
to do something to make sure the full faith in
the credit of the United States is not questioned and
that we show the American people we're serious about as
a conssation talks about preserving the blessing of liberty not
just for ourselves but also for posterity. And so you know,
a big part of this is going to be clawing
back the Inflation Reduction Act President Trump called the Green
(17:34):
New Scam. I come from an energy state top five
producer of natural gas, and we have wind and solar
that are displacing natural gas on the electric grid across
the country in the last several years. Energy Information Administration
Steve says that the majority of the increase, a super
majority of the increase that is undergoing our electric grid
(17:56):
electricity production is coming from wind and solar.
Speaker 4 (18:00):
And I want everyone.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
Just to pause and think that is displacing and proportionate
natural gas role. And it's moving us to the place
where Europe, who started to go green years ago, the
same Europe that has now been importing fossil fuels from
Russia two of dollar wise, more than the dollars they've
been contributing to help Ukraine. It is a threat to
(18:24):
our sovereignty, It is a threat to our economic prowess,
and it is a threat to not have cheap, reliable
energy if we go down the pathway of other countries.
Let me just say one more thing of this. China
is more than happy to let us go green. Will
they continue to send us battery components and solar components.
And we are cutting off our nose to spot our face,
undermining and unleashing.
Speaker 3 (18:44):
True energy dying. And one more thing, China is building
more than one coal fired plant that's the power every
single day. They're not even changing them. You probably know this.
They're just building them and setting them for future reference.
They know what the future is. But talk of the
big energy states, Oklahoma, Texas, Wyoming has more coal than anybody, Pennsylvania, Alaska.
(19:05):
We have more natural resources, Josh, than any piece of
real estate in the world. When it comes to energy,
we need to use it. And when you look at
a windmill or a turbine that they prefer that are
five and a half million dollars, have a life of
about ten years, that never returned the electricity that are
costs to put the thing in the air. That's foolishness,
that's a fool's Errand we need to sell LNG to Europe.
(19:27):
We need to be a coal to our own coal
fired power plants. Like Donald Trump just said, Chris Wright
and the Secretary of Energy, we need to continue on
this path to make America not just energy independent, but
determine it. Would you agree? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Look, I saw somebody today, and I'm trying not to
be flipping when I say this. I saw somebody walk
into the Capitol Building today that had the word energy
dominance on their lapil. I said, oh, great, where are
you from? What groups are you representing? We're here to
represent solar. They are trying to wordsmith their way to
keep their tax credit in place. And I want the
(20:03):
American people to understand this again, the large components we
are importing solar specific from China. China, to your point,
is doing everything they can to go the opposite of
the direction of making sure that they have reliable and
affordable energy. When you look at states, even apart from
the subsidization that the IRA, the Green New Scale as
President Trump called it, when you look at the state incentives,
(20:25):
look at what the cost doubling in states like California
have done when they start adding state incentives for kill
What our costs at California's pay compared to the twelve
cents for killa what hour in Oklahoma? And so we
have absolutely have got to return to common sense, liquid
gold underneath our feet four hundred year supplies. President Trump
(20:47):
has talked about, and we've got.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
Some special interest groups who want.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
To protect their one of the eight different components in
the IRA. And as I'm encouraging my colleagues, if you
protect one, what is the standard principle that you have
to say to everyone else who wants to protect their deal.
Republicans have to be about the free market rain, not
protect a few at the expense of the of many Americans.
Speaker 3 (21:10):
Absolutely, I'm going to give you two crazy examples. Unlike
you get the last round this. Ontario, Canada got rid
of all their coal fired power plants. Over the last
ten years. Their electric grades have gone up three to
five times, three hundred to five hundred percent for the
consumers in Ontario, Canada. That's thing one think too. Here
in my home state of Michigan, the plan was to bulldoze.
Listen to this. This is insane bulldoze state forest plan
(21:33):
to put in solar panels hundreds, if not thousands of akers.
I'm sorry, this is good for the environment. They've lost
their minds, Congress. When there's just no other way to
put it, I'll give you the last word.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
Look at there's a little Island off of the coast
of Spain. It's in the Canary Island chain, it's in
the trade wind zone. And you look back a decade
decades before they talked about becoming energy into pends. Now,
if you're in the trade win zone, you get a
tremendous amount of wind consistence. But yet in the last
couple of years you look at over fifty percent of
(22:04):
their utilization. Even though they started this goal decades ago
to be going truly green, they're having to rely on
fossil fuels over a majority of their year because it
is not continual, it's not affordable. The countries that have
gone this at payday price, and they are sacrificing that
on their economic security, but their national security when they
(22:25):
become dependent on hostile regime regimes for their energy needs.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
Which, by the way, I would say consent is absolutely
not green. JOHNS Rakeen, Oklahoma, Congression, greatly appreciate you being here.
You come back anytime, great conversation. I appreciate you being
here today. Yeah, all right, coming up half of the break.
As we march into spring, there's a lot on the agenda,
including do is cutting more government ways ensure the survival
(22:50):
of the Trump tax cuts. More details coming up.
Speaker 7 (23:00):
Normal.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
I make no mistake, the economy is still number one
for most Americans when it comes to top issues of concern,
and as we head to the spring, the agenda remains clear.
Allow Elon Musk's DOGE to continue to locate fraud and
wasteful spending, and to do all we can to ensure
these changes are permanent for the future. To protect the
American taxpayer and all of their money. Another important issue
(23:24):
tax cuts. We need to ensure that the Trump tax
cuts from twenty seventeen aren't just temporary, but permanent. Codify it.
Here's me to discuss this as the executive vice president
of the National Taxpayers Union, Brandon Arnold and Brandon, when
it comes to cutting taxes, I would say, you're probably
as big a fan as any. Thank you for being here.
Speaker 9 (23:43):
I am. Thanks so much for having me.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
All right, So what do you think? I was just
talking to a congressman who says they're working on this big,
beautiful bill. They hope to get these things rolled in there.
They've got a lot going on. It's going to be
an enormous bit of legislation, but it is the only
way we can proceed, isn't it.
Speaker 5 (24:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (24:04):
Absolutely. I mean I'm a big fan of a lot
of the work that the Doge is doing right now
and cutting spending. But at the end of the day,
if we don't want that unwound by future administrations or
by courts, the Congress has to play an active role
locking in these spending cuts as well as, as you said,
from the outset there, making sure that we have good
permanent tax policy that's going to stimulate economic growth. We
(24:27):
can't simply grow our way out of these budget deficits
that we've created. It needs to be a combination of
budget cutting that's going to take place in this Congress hopefully,
as well as good tax policy that will help us grow.
That combination is how we get rid of all this
redding that we've a master for years and years and years.
Speaker 3 (24:48):
Yeah, we need to. Look, we're going to bring in
about four and a half billion dollars I just meet
rough numbers here. We're going to spend two tillion dollars
more than that. Again, despite what may happen in this
a reconciliation bill, we're still behind the eight ball. We
need to pare that down. Elon musk At one point
and thought he could claw back two trillion dollars a year.
(25:09):
If we can get to one trillion dollars, it'd be
a pretty good start, and I think that that would
be applauded by most people. Where would you like to
see the numbers end up?
Speaker 9 (25:19):
I mean, listen, I'm more focused on the direction that
we need to go right now. We've been digging this
trench deeper and deeper and deeper. If we can just
start to make progress toward alleviating that yawning two trillion
dollar annual deficit that we're facing, I'll be happy. The
more we can cut, the better. But at this point,
you know that is that proverbial aircraft carrier. Takes a
(25:41):
long time to turn that around, and I just want
to see some progress made to that effect. And that
needs to happen at the Doge level. It needs to
happen at the congressional level. We need to scour each
and every budget item within the federal domain, because listen,
we're spending trillion dollars this year just on interest payments
on the national debt. That is benefiting absolutely nobody spending
(26:05):
more on servicing the national debt than we are on defence,
which is just bonkers. We need to start turning us around.
We need to have an adult conversation. It'd be nice
if Democrats would actually get involved in this conversation too,
because this is a bipartisant problem, not just for Republicans
to fix.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
Well, look, when Jasmine Crockett is the voice of reason
for the Democrat Party and the person out front, we're
going to have some challenges getting adults to the table
because as I look across the landscape, I don't see
many adults anymore in the Democrat Party. I've got Hakeem Jefferys, AOC,
Jasmin Crockett, like I mentioned, you've got Bernie Sanders, You've
(26:42):
got Maxine Waters screeching like a smashed cat. I mean,
I don't know how you make a deal with people
that are completely unhinged every single day. So we have
to hope that the Republicans remain cohesive and together and
pussue legislation that works for the American people. I really
don't see an alternative, Brandon, do you not?
Speaker 9 (27:01):
In the short term? Unfortunately, what's happened with the Democratic
Party if they've pushed a lot of these show horses
to the front of the line and suppress the voices
of Democrats that are more concerned about our nation's fiscal
health and so forth. And that's why you see this
cast of characters that just wants to get attention on
Twitter and on TV and not actually do any real
(27:23):
work to improve our condition. But yeah, in the short term,
there's no question about it. This Reconciliation bill, this big,
beautiful bill, is going to be a Republican only initiative,
and hopefully it's going to contain those deep spending cuts,
those strong tax policies that we need, as well as
a revitalization of the American energy industry. We need to
produce more energy if we're going to have a strong economy.
Speaker 6 (27:47):
It's that simple.
Speaker 9 (27:48):
That's really the key to driving down inflation, creating jobs,
and all the good stuff that we want to see.
Speaker 3 (27:55):
Brandon, Donald, always appreciate you being here for the national
tax payers. You didn't. Thank you so much, My pleasure.
Speaker 9 (28:01):
Thank you.
Speaker 3 (28:01):
All right, we are keeping an eye on the White House.
Donald Trump there for Women's History Month. He's got a gathering.
It couln't happen at any moment. I just make you
aware of that. But what about funding for trans mice.
You heard me right, transgender mice funding for that and
the little you know, little stickers on their head too.
(28:23):
Apparently we'll talk about it, say had in America's Voice Live.
As I mentioned the President Trump out at the White
House to discuss Women's History Month.
Speaker 5 (28:36):
Here he is at the podium, the place at the
White House. It's just an amazing place to live and
to work in. And you know, I've seen a lot
of good places, but believe me, there's nothing like this.
It's just very special. And it's great to have you
here to celebrate Women's History Month. That's a big deal.
And today we honor the legacy of incredible women like
(28:58):
Betsy Ross, Harriet Tubman, Susan b Anthony, Clara Barton, and
Amelia Earhart, all legends, and their extraordinary courage and patriotism
and devotion propelled our nation to glory and to greatness.
They are great women, many great women. And thank you
(29:20):
for the vote. You were earnest to me, the women
we set every record.
Speaker 4 (29:25):
We loved it. We love that vote.
Speaker 5 (29:29):
But we're delighted to be joined by some of the
pioneering women who are making history in our own time.
Speaker 4 (29:36):
A woman.
Speaker 5 (29:36):
That's just absolutely incredible I have. I can't tell you
enough about her. She ran my campaign. We kept winning, winning, winning,
and then we did well where she won Florida by
record numbers, and I said, you know, the second time,
I said, well, just keep running Florida and the big
one was stolen from us, you know, so I said,
(29:57):
we better get her for number three and we want
and records. We won every swing state, We won by
millions of votes, the popular vote, we won everything. We
won the districts at two thousand, seven hundred and fifty
to five hundred, five hundred and seven or something like that.
Speaker 4 (30:14):
And we just won so big.
Speaker 5 (30:16):
And her name is Susie Wiles.
Speaker 4 (30:19):
And she where are you Susie?
Speaker 5 (30:26):
And she was just named by one of the very
prominent media groups. I won't mention it because I cannot
stand the people, but she was just named as and
it's true, the most powerful woman in.
Speaker 4 (30:38):
The world, Susie. That is crazy. Huh.
Speaker 5 (30:44):
That's a big Her father was a great Pat summer All,
a great announcer, really great football player and announcer for
the NFL for like twenty seven years. He really got
the NFL. He did pretty well with the NFL. He
got him off to a very good start, didn't they.
Speaker 4 (30:57):
But he was great.
Speaker 5 (30:58):
But she's got those same So thank you very much, Susie.
Great job. Also, we're going to go to somebody that's
really the rage right now.
Speaker 4 (31:10):
She's the youngest ever White.
Speaker 5 (31:11):
House Press Secretary, Caroline Levet.
Speaker 4 (31:15):
Caroline, look at you.
Speaker 5 (31:16):
Huh, They said, sir, sir, she's just too young.
Speaker 4 (31:25):
And I said that, I don't know about that.
Speaker 5 (31:27):
She did awfully good because she did it during the
campaign and she was awfully good, and she's been amazing.
She just did another one just a little while ago.
She's looked at Susie and looked at me.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (31:38):
I think I'm ready, sir.
Speaker 5 (31:39):
How old are you? Twenty seven? Right, twenty seven? He said,
You're not too young. And she's knocking them dead. Everyone's
talking about you. Thank you very much, great job. And
we have somebody else who's like a rocket ship, the
counselor to the President.
Speaker 4 (31:56):
She served me.
Speaker 5 (31:57):
Well, I'm going to miss her, but we'll see her
out of her anyway. I hope it's on friendly basis
because I've got to be very concerned because she's going
to be the new US Attorney for the District of
New Jersey, Elena, where's Alena Harber? Elena, Alena Harbor. Thanks Elena.
(32:18):
She's going to be great. I'll tell you she's going
to be great. She's a great lawyer and lives in
New Jersey. And I said, that sounds like a good combination.
Everybody wanted that job. They're all looking for the job.
And said, wait a minute, doesn't Elena live in New Jersey.
I think Alita's going to get that job. So congratulations, Elena.
It's fantastic. I'm also thrilled to say that we have
(32:39):
more women in our cabinet than any Republican president in
the history of our country. And joining us today is
a woman I've known a long time.
Speaker 4 (32:54):
You talk about.
Speaker 5 (32:55):
Strong women, this is a strong woman. Remember they were
saying he doesn't like strong women. That may be true.
But if that's true, I'm in deep trouble because I'm surrounded.
I got the strongest women. And this is a beautiful, strong,
wonderful woman. Attorney General Pam Bonding. But yesterday, you know,
(33:22):
she was talking about these guys that like burning down
cars and plants and everything else. And I was watching
on television she said, I'm going to get you. We're
going to find you, and you're going to suffer. And
I say, man, I don't want her after me.
Speaker 4 (33:39):
You know, it's amazing.
Speaker 5 (33:40):
The attacks have gotten down very very precipitously. So Pam
is fantastic, Thank you very much.
Speaker 4 (33:46):
Pam really a basal.
Speaker 5 (33:51):
Along with a woman who was given a very hard
and difficult problem.
Speaker 4 (33:57):
The cost of eggs. This was the problem. The cost
of eggs. Eggs were through the roof.
Speaker 5 (34:03):
If you got to see the Biten chart, it's like
a rocket ship and Trump is like this way. But
I gave Brooke the secretary of agriculture and I didn't
know it. I didn't know it. She studied that in college.
I didn't know that I was going to give a
tour anywhere. It didn't matter that she studied, but it
(34:24):
sort of helped, right, But she came in and she
lowered the cost of eggs by almost fifty percent.
Speaker 4 (34:30):
In three weeks. Someday you're going to tell us that secret.
I want to find out.
Speaker 5 (34:36):
But the chart looks great, it's biting like this, and
then we're like this. But we also, by the way,
we lowered energy costs really like tremendously. Energy's way down,
cost of gasoline's way down. The cost of groceries a
word that I used a lot of the campaigns, like
an old fashioned word, but it's a beautiful word, very
descriptive word. And the groceries are coming down brook and
(34:59):
a level that very I mean, we're finally getting costs
under control in our country. And people don't like talking
about it because it's so good, it's so positive. I
haven't seen one story on eggs plummeting by fifty percent,
but someday they'll get around to writing it. Secretary of Education,
she's trying to put herself out of a job, Linda,
(35:22):
she's trying.
Speaker 4 (35:22):
To put herself out of a job.
Speaker 5 (35:24):
She's moving education back to the States, and she's doing
it at a rapid rate. And she's an amazing woman.
I've known her also for a long time. She's been
amazing no matter where she's been, she's been successful, including
with her husband building a tremendous empire. And Linda McMahon
is very special. Thank you, Linda, thank you. And it's
(35:48):
getting praise by the way, the concept of moving education
back to the States, back to the mothers of the fathers,
and you'd probably do it for less than half and
you're going to have great grade schools. You know.
Speaker 4 (36:02):
I say that.
Speaker 5 (36:04):
In our country, they have charts and they rate the countries,
various countries, and Norway and Denmark and Sweden and lots
of places are rated at the top and Finland China
is rated very high too. Tell me that takes the
big problem out, because if they can do it, that's big.
Speaker 4 (36:21):
So we can do it. And we're rated toward the bottom.
Speaker 5 (36:24):
We're at number thirty seven, thirty eight, thirty nine or
forty out of forty, so we're just about last, and
yet we're first in one very nice category, cost per pupil.
Speaker 4 (36:35):
So obviously there's something wrong.
Speaker 5 (36:37):
We just have to repeat that Linda, and everybody says, well,
I guess it's time to do it. And it's been
that way for a long time. And originally we had
it run by Home States, so we never had that
kind of a problem. But it's going to be Katie,
it's going to be brought back again and Linda's going
to do it. And I just say, you know, she said,
you basically want me to get out of government, don't you.
(37:00):
He said, that's why I do your job and get out.
But I promise I'll have something.
Speaker 4 (37:03):
Else for you.
Speaker 5 (37:04):
Okay, I promise I'll have something even better for you.
All Right, But you're doing a job, but we appreciate it.
Also a special man. He's got a tremendous majority. It's
so easy, a majority of about one. I think he's
the only man could do the job because everybody loves him,
everybody respects him.
Speaker 4 (37:21):
He's really smart. Really, he's so nice. People say, is
he's smart?
Speaker 5 (37:25):
I said, you have no ideas he's actually you know,
he's really nice because he's smart.
Speaker 4 (37:30):
He knows.
Speaker 5 (37:31):
It's the only way you can live with it. Where
is Mike? Where Mike? It's the only way you can
do it? You got He's the nicest guy. But in
actuality he's not a nice person. He's ruthless. You haven't
seen this guy when he gets angry. I don't want to.
I'll ruin your image overnight. He is a phenomenal guy,
a great speaker. Mike Johnson, thank you very much. I'm
(37:57):
just I don't know is that good or bad for you?
So sure it's okay? He said, what have it? The
heck you want to say is Okay, first female Republican
attorney general of Iowa and an early supporter of Trump.
And where's Brenda Bird? Brenda Brenna? Thank you very much.
She's so popular in Iowa. She came out so early,
(38:19):
and I appreciate it very much. That's great. Alaska Lieutenant
Governor Nancy Dlstrom. Nancy, thank you, Nancy, thank you very much.
You have a great governor too. By the way, Nancy,
he's also tall. He's seriously tall. I mean, guy's like
seven foot two.
Speaker 4 (38:37):
He is a tall guy. But he's a great governor.
Speaker 5 (38:39):
And I have a son who's tall like him, and
Baron is very tall. They're all tall, but Baron seriously tall. Right,
So anyways, say hello to him. He's great governor. South
Carolina Lieutenant Governor Pamela It where is Pamela?
Speaker 4 (38:55):
Thank you very much. Good job you're doing. Great job.
Good and good.
Speaker 5 (39:00):
Luck with everything. I know it's big stuff, right, oh, good,
thank you. Well, you have a great governor. Oklahoma Agricultural
Commissioner Blaine author.
Speaker 4 (39:10):
Blaine, thank you, Blaine. Good.
Speaker 5 (39:13):
Nice to see you, and so many other incredible women.
I'm going to make so many enemies because I'm looking here.
I know every one of them, and I'm supposed to
say their names. I maybe we'll get to it.
Speaker 4 (39:23):
I don't know. It's a long list. For four long
years we had in.
Speaker 5 (39:27):
That administration that tried to abolish the very concept of
womanhood and replace it with radical gender ideology.
Speaker 4 (39:36):
Maybe you heard something about that.
Speaker 5 (39:38):
They destroyed women's spaces and even tried to replace the
word mother with the term birther person. The mother became
a birther person. What's that all about? Then you wonder
why they lost that? Trying to figure out what did
they lose? I saw a congressman today for the Democrats.
He was having a big fight on television early this morning,
trying to make it so that really he thinks men
(40:01):
should play in women's sports. He hasn't given that up yet.
He was fighting like crazy. I said, this guy is
going to lose. He's going to lose badly. The whole
party is still into that. They haven't learned under and
we don't want him to learn. Frankly, we want him
to keep fighting. Let's not tell him. Under the Trump administration,
we're ending the Marxist war on women, and you had
a war on women, and we're protecting women's rights, defending
(40:23):
women's dignity, and standing up for the American moms and daughters.
So many are represented here, great people in this room.
American women have never had bigger champions than all of
us in the White House.
Speaker 4 (40:36):
I mean it's me, but it's the group of men
and women. We have a lot of men that are
like Howard are head of Commerce. I see is here?
What are you doing here? Howard? Oh that's so good.
Speaker 5 (40:48):
He's got his beautiful wife.
Speaker 4 (40:50):
I would saying what toward doing this? Like?
Speaker 5 (40:53):
There aren't too many men in this audience actually, but
he's a big advocate.
Speaker 4 (40:57):
And we're going to be making it right after this.
Speaker 5 (40:59):
We're going to be making a big special announcement Howard
and I and Scott and a few of the people
on cars.
Speaker 4 (41:06):
We have Liberation Day in America.
Speaker 5 (41:09):
That's where we take back all it is money that's
been ripped off from us for so many decades, and
we start a process. We're going to go with the
tariffs and cars and as you've probably been reading, it's
all over the place. You've been reading and seeing and
watching car companies and every other form of company they're
pouring back into our country at levels never seen before.
(41:30):
We're up to I guess close howard to five trillion
dollars of investments already, and there's never been that much
for a year. We did that in a period of
six weeks. Has never been any numbers like that, We've
never seen. They're all coming They're all coming in so
they don't have to pay tariffs. It's very simple because
if you build your product in the USA, there is
no tariff. On day one, I made the official policy
(41:53):
of the United States government that there are only two genders,
male and female.
Speaker 4 (42:04):
Is there anybody, seriously? Is there anybody that disagrees with
that in this room? I was thinking maybe somebody from
the press MD. I don't think so. There aren't too
many people. You know. It's amazing.
Speaker 5 (42:18):
It's got to be like a ninety eight percent issue, right,
So what are they doing, Marjorie?
Speaker 4 (42:23):
What are they doing? They're fighting for a two percent issue.
That's good. Let them keep doing it.
Speaker 5 (42:29):
No matter how many surgeries you have or chemicals you inject,
if you're born with male DNA in every cell off
your body.
Speaker 4 (42:37):
You can never become a woman. You're not going to
be a woman.
Speaker 5 (42:43):
And that's why last month, I proudly signed a historic
executive order to ban men from competing in women's sports.
Speaker 4 (42:51):
And it was very popular.
Speaker 5 (42:52):
Very very popular. We had a track meet and it
was so disparaging to great women athletes.
Speaker 4 (43:02):
I've known so many great women athletes.
Speaker 5 (43:04):
I gave Anaka Sornstam the Medal of Freedom here not
so long ago. And these are unbelievable athletes. But it's
so ridiculous. They head ay track meet and you heard
me talking about a long distance tract meat. The man
won by five hours and fourteen minutes and twelve seconds,
and I.
Speaker 4 (43:21):
Said, this is not good.
Speaker 5 (43:23):
And you want to see worse, take a look at
the weightlifting records, take a look at the boxing, take
a look at this. The whole thing is ridiculous, and frankly,
it's the meaning to women. And you are superior to men,
in my opinion, what.
Speaker 4 (43:35):
Do I know? You are? I seen you.
Speaker 5 (43:40):
Now.
Speaker 4 (43:41):
They are superior. I've known it all my life, and
I'm not happy about it. I'm not happy.
Speaker 5 (43:47):
I also banned puberty blockers. Can you believe I'm even
saying this? And the sexual mutilation of minor youth? Now,
who would think? You know, let's go back ten or
fifteen years. If you ever heard a statement like that,
you'd say, what the hell is he even talking about,
right Brook, what is he talking about puberty blockers? But
(44:09):
that's where we are, that's where we've come, and we're
ending it. We're sending it back to where it came from, oblivion.
Speaker 4 (44:15):
Right.
Speaker 5 (44:20):
So in the recent election, we did fantastically well with women.
Speaker 4 (44:23):
I kept hearing women don't like them.
Speaker 5 (44:26):
I said, I think they do, you know, don't like
fake polls, don't like me, the suit don't like me.
But we were setting records in so many of these cases.
Speaker 4 (44:36):
And I was for women. I was for the women, the.
Speaker 5 (44:39):
Suburban housewife, where I stopped low income housing projects being
built at a house next to you, where people were
being decimated, the houses were being literally ripped up and destroyed.
Then I stopped it, and we've stopped it again. We
had to stop it again. I stopped it.
Speaker 4 (44:54):
First term.
Speaker 5 (44:55):
We had a great first term, a really successful first term.
We had the largest incre in stock market value eighty
eight percent increase in the history of our country. We
gave you the biggest tax cuts, we gave you the
biggest regulation cuts. We rebuilt our military, We gave too
much of it away to Afghanistan. This character what I mean.
He gave billions and billions of dollars of it way
(45:17):
to Afghanistan. And maybe you'll have to ask for that back.
Although it's getting a little old now, they're getting a
little old. We're building new stuff. But I will say
that it was such an honor working with so many
great women. I've worked with women all my life. I've
always been ahead on that subject. I had women on
my construction business putting up skyscrapers in New York thirty
(45:38):
years ago, thirty five years ago, long before it was
in vogue, and they were phenomenal. Every one of them
was phenomenal. My administration listens to America's moms, and that's
why I recently created the Presidential Commission to Make America
Healthy Again. And that's really caught on. That's really caught on.
(46:00):
And Bobby Kennedy, by the way, is doing a great job.
Speaker 4 (46:03):
He was.
Speaker 5 (46:05):
I think it's going to be I think it's going
to go down as another great choice. And we just
don't want to treat the chronic disease crisis. We want
to prevent our children from getting sick in the first place,
And there are so many things that we are doing wrong.
Speaker 4 (46:20):
Something happened.
Speaker 5 (46:21):
If you go back twenty years autism, think of it,
one in twenty thousand children. Think of that one autism.
You see it all over. One in twenty thousand children.
Now it's one in thirty six children. Now what the
hell is that all about. There's something out there and
(46:42):
we got to find it. But can you imagine one
in twenty thousand and now it's one in thirty six,
not thirty six thousand, one in thirty six children. And
I see it. I see it all the time, and
so there's something. There's something out there, and we're going
to find I did. We're doing something really wrong, and
(47:03):
it might be very simple to even correct. But we're
looking very hard, and Bobby's looking very hard, and we're
going to figure it out. And to further support our
nations mothers, I've signed an executive order to expand access
to fertility treatments like IVF.
Speaker 4 (47:21):
That's Katie, Katie. Where's Katie?
Speaker 5 (47:26):
Katie called your great senator from Alabama. She called, and
she was like in a little bit of ankstraight She said, sir,
we just had a ruling from an Alabama judge who
said you couldn't have the clinics IVF and I was
in my plane and she said.
Speaker 4 (47:42):
It's terrible. It's terrible.
Speaker 5 (47:43):
Friends of mine are virtually attacking me because they did not.
Really people don't talk about it necessarily.
Speaker 4 (47:50):
Why should they. But Katie called me up.
Speaker 5 (47:52):
She did such a great job, and she said, sir,
you have to get on this right away.
Speaker 4 (47:56):
It's terrible.
Speaker 5 (47:57):
They're going to close up all the clinics. They ordered
all the clinics love and they said, so Katie, give
me a quick definition. Please educate me in a minute
or less. And she did. And I came out totally
in favor of what all of these women wanted, and
I mean it became our issue. We actually took it away,
Mike from the Democrats. They were late to the party,
(48:18):
and it was really I give you a lot of credits,
So thank you very much, thank you, Katie Roat. And
I also signed an executive order to begin abolishing the
Department of Education, as we said, but also to go back,
to go back and do things with our school children
that just hasn't been done in many, many years. But
(48:41):
the basic is reading, writing, and arithmetic, and we want
to make sure that they teach English. Okay, But I
think we're not going to have a problem, and you're
going to see things happen. I think on the education front,
like nobody, like nobody can believe.
Speaker 4 (48:54):
It's very exciting, very exciting, and so many of.
Speaker 5 (48:59):
The states like I I, Idaho and Indiana. By the way, unrelated,
but Indiana, they just signed Honda. One of the biggest
auto plants in the world is going Honda, big big company.
Would have never come here except for let's say the election.
I like to say the election result, but let's give
tariffs a little Well, without the election result, you wouldn't
(49:21):
have the tariffs, right, So I guess so, I guess
it's all about the election moderie.
Speaker 4 (49:26):
But one of the biggest anywhere in the world.
Speaker 5 (49:28):
They're building in Indiana, big big plant, and we have
many of them going up. Many plants in other countries
have stopped, they've stopped construction, one of them right in
the middle of construction. They're coming. They just signed a contract.
They're going to build it here instead. So you're going
to see that at record. Just remember I told you
so in twelve months from now. But on day one,
(49:49):
we're ending the inflation nightmare that Joe Biden created and caused,
but just by his spending two things, his spending, but
I think more important, he destroyed our energy policy and
energy started going up. Gasoline, all of any form of
energy went through the roof. And then what he did
to get it down a little bit, He went back
to the Trump policy everything let him d A.
Speaker 4 (50:11):
Let them.
Speaker 5 (50:12):
They were very, very concerned, and it was too late
because that jack rabbit had gotten out of the nest
and it was too late.
Speaker 4 (50:20):
They really screwed us up in so many ways.
Speaker 5 (50:23):
How about allowing millions and millions of people to come
into our country open borders, people from all over the world,
not South America, South America, but all over the world.
They came in from Africa, from Asia, from all over
the world.
Speaker 4 (50:38):
From prisons. The prisons were emptied into our country. I
call them prisons in jails.
Speaker 5 (50:42):
Prison being a slightly tough return, but the prisons in
jails were emptied into our country. The mental institutions and
insane Asylam same thing. Insane Asylam is mental institution on steroids, right,
I say.
Speaker 4 (50:55):
I used to say.
Speaker 5 (50:56):
Doctor Hannibal lecture, the Great Doctor Hannibal Lectures is in
a hotel room near you, and the fake news back
there a lot of fake news here. By the way,
fake news would say, why does he keep mentioning Hannibal Lector.
I said, you know why, because I just we just
wanted an election. We got a lot of votes because
of Hannibal Elector. We don't want to have Hannibal Lecter
(51:18):
in our country. So we watched what was happening to
destroy our country. And a woman, by the way, the
head of Homeland is doing Christy is doing a great job.
Christy Now, she's doing her great job. She's getting them out.
And Tom Holman. But Tom Holman and Christy Noma, they're
(51:39):
doing an unbelievable job.
Speaker 4 (51:41):
She's tough. She might be tougher than Tom.
Speaker 5 (51:44):
Is that pretty tough, right, I'd say Tom is central casting,
but he says, I think she might be tougher than me.
So that's we needed that because she's dealing with a
rough group of people, millions and millions of people.
Speaker 4 (51:55):
Twenty one million people came in, but of that.
Speaker 5 (51:58):
At least three million or series is serious criminals, many
of them are Murderer is eleven thousand and eighty eight
and of that number about half of murdered.
Speaker 4 (52:07):
More than one person. This is not going to end well.
Speaker 5 (52:10):
So we're getting them out in record numbers, and we're
having a lot of problems with the courts because the
courts want to pretend they're president and they're not president.
They didn't get eighty million votes, and they didn't they're not.
They can't do that to this country. That's not their job.
But we're getting them out in record numbers and it's
going to save a lot of lives. It's so, we
(52:30):
got some really bad people in this country, but you
see the ones we're taking out.
Speaker 4 (52:34):
Trendy Arugua that