Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
I Am six forty. You're listening to the John Cobel
podcast on the iHeartRadio app. Yes, it is a great day.
We had been spared caf I am six forty more
stimulating talk radio, the John Cobelt Show. Yes, way Away
(00:25):
with the Buvezellas. It's a historic day. It's a celebratory day.
We are being spared. Kamala Harris's governor. She's not running.
I repeat, Kamala Harris is not running for governor. Only
in California would she be considered a serious contender. And
(00:45):
she actually was at the top of the polls. There
are so many stoops living in California, just stoops.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
She wants the big job.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
Well, good because she'll get crushed doing that.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Why don't you want to see her in Gavin square off?
Speaker 1 (01:03):
Well, can you imagine a Gavin Kamala debate?
Speaker 2 (01:09):
It would be riveting.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Riveting, that's one word for it. She's uh, she's really
like one of the dumbest people I've ever seen in
public life. I have been, in a way, like bizarrely
mesmerized by her existence. I just I can't believe she exists.
Sometimes she seems permanently stoned. Much of the time talks
(01:32):
in these loopy New age woo woo circles, and I
can't you know, I'm not saying anything that you haven't
all noticed. I do not understand why in Democratic polls
though she'd get a majority of the votes to run
for governor. I do not understand that at all. But
then again, she got forty eight percent running nationally. I
(01:55):
I have never I can't remember seeing probably not since
you remember Dan Quail. He was an empty headed dope,
the vice president for George Bush, the first Bush. He
was a blockhead. But Kamala Harris not only a blockhead,
(02:15):
but she really seemed like she was under the influence
much of the time. Well, we've got another candidate for governor,
the Riverside County sheriff, Chad Bianco. He's running as a
Republican and he's here now, Chad, how are you?
Speaker 3 (02:31):
I'm doing great? How are you doing?
Speaker 1 (02:32):
I'm doing really well. I'm doing a little better. I
did not want to slog through. I don't know how
many years of Kamala Harris running in the state. I
mean that that that's depressing to me. I will admit
that takes away a lot of great material for for us,
But uh, I don't need material that badly. Good Lord,
what tell me what you think?
Speaker 3 (02:55):
You know? I think I think it was a actually
a great political decision for her to make, because I
think that her deciding not to run for governor of
California is probably the first right decision that she has
made in a career full of wrong decisions, especially for
this next race. Californians are absolutely tired of living in
(03:17):
an unsafe state that they cannot afford anymore, and I
think that she really understands, especially with political aspirations, she
understands that the status quo here in California is going
to be impossible to defend.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
I don't know how anybody saying would even try to
defend it, but I imagine that most of the Democrats
left running against you are going to be defending it,
are going to be trying to at least tell us
it's not so bad and I can make it better.
Speaker 3 (03:51):
You know, they have to. They've we've already been on
the same stage with them, and they attack me for
my beliefs and everything else. And it's actually bizarre. It
was like being in a version of a different version
of reality that they truly live in but they are
going to have to. They're going to have to attack
(04:13):
each other and put blame for everything that we have
in California on each other. They can't point to me.
I will not allow them to point at Trump. We're
just going to sit back and we're going to watch
them all try and defend the decisions that they have
all made in the last twenty years that have put
us in this position. And quite frankly, I think it's
(04:35):
going to be a different version of material for you.
It would have been more entertaining with Kamala in, but
I think there's going to be more material that is
very relevant in California that they truly they can't defend
what they've done for the last twenty years. And I
really do believe that. Quite frankly, this just propelled me
(04:58):
to a victory next November.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
I'm looking at the names of seven candidates, and most
of them seemed to be washed up, no names. The
only recognizable name in the group that most people would
identify is Antonio Viragosa. But the rest of them, I
don't think most people have ever heard of the lieutenant
(05:20):
governor of.
Speaker 3 (05:24):
Yeah, so the reality of every single one of them
is they are the same names and the same politicians
that put us here in this position. They've been doing it.
You said it. They are washed up politicians that could
have fixed California, but they made it worse, and now
they want to be the governor. And I mean even
(05:46):
I mean even Via or Via Ragosa is trying to
run as the moderate of all of them, saying that
he's for public safety and everything else. We can't forget
that he was ran out of Los Angeles. It wasn't
like he just gave up on this big success. He
was ran out of Los Angeles because of the failures.
And that's what they have all had. And they're all
going to have to defend themselves and accuse the other
(06:07):
ones of being responsible when the reality is every single
one of them are responsible.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
I'm looking at this list. Congress former Congresswoman Katie Porter.
I don't think she could even get to what she
could even get like thirty percent in a Democratic primary
for senator, Right am I remembering that?
Speaker 3 (06:29):
Right? Yeah? She was. She didn't succeed in her in
the run for senator. She was I can't remember if
she was number three or number four.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
She was behind, Yeah, she was behind Steve Garvey. That's right. Yeah,
that's how Garvey ended up in the runoff against Adam Schiff.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
Yeah, and I'll be really honest with you here, what
California needs is an actual leader. They need they need
someone with leadership ability, with character and all of these things,
and those are something that you look for other people
to tell you who that is and what we have
now with all of these every single one of them,
they're all running for a personal reason. They're running to
(07:08):
be the first of this, the first Hispanic, the first female,
the first. Everybody wants to be the first. Look at me,
Look at me, look at me. Nobody is saying, with
the exception of me, that I will just provide you
the leadership ability to work for all of Californians. I'm
doing it for Californians, not for me, not for a
political party. And this is going to be an election
(07:30):
cycle that we haven't seen in a maybe ever, maybe
we've never seen something like this, but it's definitely something
we want, something we need, and I truly I'm looking
forward to this.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
All right, Chad Bianco, we'll be talking with you again soon.
But major change in the dynamics of this race with
Kamal Harris dropping out, you will not run for governor
of California. We'll talk again, Chad, thanks.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
Absolutely, big high five for that news for today.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
Yeah, I'm just enjoyed for a few hours. Jeez. I'm
going to read you the list of names here. I
bet you most people don't know most Maybe you'll know
one two names. The Lieutenant governor Eliney cunilachis right that
she wants to be the first woman. The former cabinet
(08:22):
secretary for Biden, Xavier Bessera, who Biden called Javier Bakaria.
You got that clip, Javier Bakaria. There you go. Biden
didn't even know his name. That's how that's how useless
he was. Then a former California Senator Tony Atkins. She's
(08:44):
to be President of the Senate. Katie Porter, former Congressman.
A lot of formers here, the Democratic Party vice chair
Betty Yee, and I never heard of her. Oh mean, yes,
she wants to be the first Asian woman. State superintendent
Tony Thurmond. Oh, he's in charge of the public school systems.
(09:04):
They're horrific. Three quarters of eighth graders can't read, can't write,
and can't do math, and he's the state superintendent and
he wants to be governor. And then Viragosa, who is
an abomination as mayor.
Speaker 3 (09:21):
I believe in me.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
That is a bad, bad group there. Can you feel that? Whoo?
I mean that really has an odor about it on you.
And then we have Chad Bionco running on the Republican
side and a Fox News commentator named Steve Hilton. Are
Roll Moore coming up?
Speaker 4 (09:43):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI Am six.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
Forty moist lines eight seven seven Moist eighty six, eight
seven seven Moist eighty six, or you can dial eight
seven seven sixty six four seven eight eighty six. Plenty
of room, plenty of room here, he says, Wednesday, Wednesday, Yes,
all right, so it's getting late. Way to your room.
Maybe a farewell to Kamala Harris. Oh that'd be nice. Yeah,
(10:09):
I think I think that would be wonderful. And also,
by the way, I'm gonna I'm on my wife's video
podcast on YouTube. It's it's called Debora Cobelt Live, and
sometimes I'm a guest. So this week I'm a guest
Deborah Cobet Live on YouTube and you're here to hear
us talk about the news of the past week. It's
already been posted now. As we were telling you in
(10:30):
the first segment, this news just broke, oh, maybe an
hour hour and a half ago. Kamala Harris is not
running for governor. Yes, no, Kamala Harris to kick around
for the next year and a half. Listen to this
pompous news release. Uh. In recent months, I have given
(10:53):
serious thought to asking asking the people of California for
the privilege to serve as their governor. Nobody talks like that,
like she's laying back in meetings in between bog hits
or brownies or gummies or whatever she's ingesting. Yes, now,
you're my closest advisors. Should I ask the people of
(11:16):
California for the privilege to service their governor? What do
you think? Let's go around the table. I love this state.
It's people and it's promised. What a load of cliche nonsense.
It's people, it's it's it's promise. It is my home.
(11:41):
But after deep reflection, oh yeah, there's a lot of
depth there, I've decided I will not run for governor
in this election. And she was leading the polls, although
that her support number was shrinking because I think reality
was starting to set in with some people. You have
(12:04):
this idea of, oh, well, she's got name recognition. You know,
there's a lot of people who name recognition. All right,
Charles Manson had named recognition. Nobody wanted to have him
as governor or president. No people, no, No Democratic Progressives
like somebody like they like Kadala Harris. They I don't
(12:24):
know why. Maybe they're stoned too, Maybe everybody in the
state is stoned. That's the only explanation for the people.
They picked. Gavin Newsom, another high IQ person. Huh do
you think if you put Kendala Harrison Gavin Newsom together
you'd get you'd get to one sixty combined on the
IQ meter. Whoever's running for governor. If you're going to
(12:49):
vote for somebody for governor, consider this. Not that any
of this is covered in the media. We've got the
highest unemployment rate in the nation, the highest. We've got
the highest taxes. We have a bloated, busted budget to
(13:09):
go along with the highest taxes. We got the most
homeless people in the state. We have the most poor
people on Medicaid. We had the most people living in poverty.
We blew twenty four billion dollars in tax money statewide
on homelessness, got nothing for it. We got that high
(13:30):
speed rail train that has cost us about I think
seventeen million dollars billion dollars, excuse me, seventeen billion. These
are disasters that go back through the Newsom administrations, six
years of all the way to all the way to
(13:53):
Jerry Brown, even into Schwarzenegger. We've had bad governing going
on for almost twenty years here. And Kamala Harris was
going to do what exactly she cannot get from A
to B in a simple thought. I don't think she
could get through reading a grocery list in public. And
(14:14):
I just wanted to like start grabbing people by the
back of their heads and start knocking their heads into
the walls, like what are you people doing? We have
the we have the highest rate of people leaving California.
Go look at the articles about U haul. We have
a number one state for moveouts. We are the number
(14:38):
fifty state for move ins. There aren't many people renting
a U haul to move to California. There's a tremendous
number of people renting U haul to leave California. We
have the worst business climate in the nation, fiftieth that's
ranked by business people worst business climate, worst business taxes,
(15:00):
worst gas taxes, worst income taxes, worst sales taxes. And
what do we got for it? We got the worst
homeless situation. We have an incredible amount of crime, crime
that's no longer reported or counted anymore. There's nothing but
(15:21):
cook statistics. They they they turned a lot of crime
into non crime and then told this crime was down.
I mean they let they let, they let boys, grown
men compete against girls in sports and take away their medals.
I mean, there's just there's just no end to this stuff.
(15:46):
The rest of the country is enjoying boom times where
sanctuary state, sanctuary city. So we have thousands and thousands
of criminal, illegal aliens that Newsome and Bass protect. I
can't think of a category where we're not completely screwed,
(16:11):
completely screwed, and nobody's you know, two thirds of the
state will never admit it. But aren't you happy Trump
got rid of that electric car maan date. Since we
didn't have electric chargers and we don't have an electricity
grid to sustain all those electric cars, that we'd be
(16:33):
forced to buy. That's a great thing that Trump ditched
that electric vehicle mandate. You know what he's going to
do next. He's going to cut off homeless funding unless
you put the mental patients into a mental health facility,
(16:54):
the drug addicts into a drug addiction facility, and everybody,
we're regardless of your problem, is ordered off the streets.
There's going to be no more federal money for cities
and counties that includes LA and I don't think there's
anything the cities or counties can do about it. And
no more money for those fake, stupid nonprofits. This place
(17:17):
needs a wrecking ball badly. Kamala Harris her campaign was
a joke. You know, according to things I've read and heard,
the donors didn't want her to run. They didn't want
to finance another disaster. They already gave her two billions,
(17:38):
They gave her over a billion dollars, and she blew
it her only chance to become governor. Is California progressive
voters really are stupid. They're stupid people. There's a whole
story today I'll get to later on the number of
people who moved out of California because they couldn't take politics.
(18:01):
That couldn't take the results of the politics. Just an
unlivable situation here? Oh what else? Yes, we have the
highest housing costs, the highest rental costs. What's the green
up arrow in California? Pick a category? What's going well here?
(18:22):
You could use your eyes. You could just describe your
daily life. I mean, I described my last ten days,
two weeks that my wife and I have experienced murder
at our local grocery store. The murderer picked up at
a restaurant a few doors down from the grocery store.
(18:44):
Day after that, woman taking a large bowel movement in
front of the grocery store. Wife getting her nails done.
Crazy homeless people barge in, wife getting her hair done.
Crazy homeless people barge in second grocery store that I
go to. Guy gets stabbed in his own car by
a crazy person. That's just the last ten days or
(19:06):
so in my little square mile of town. There's crazy people.
There's dozens of dogs dying, are deathly ill and venice.
So it's got to be poisoning of the dogs, intentional
(19:27):
or unintentional. I don't understand. And so Kama Harris is
considered well, I've given serious thought. You have no thought,
serious or otherwise. You're a test pattern, a blank slate.
There's nothing going on there. You're a brain stem, a vegetable,
go a go ay. You're some kind of fluke. You're
(19:50):
some kind of hy historical fluke. Because of gender and
race and the general hysteria of the last five years.
There's no way, in a normal time, in a normal
state like Kabla Harris would even exist as a public figure.
There's nothing going on there, nothing, but that is a
(20:11):
lot of good material going down the dray Well.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
I mean, I still think she's going to run for president.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
Yeah, but there's gonna be so many people running for president.
But last time she had to run against a bunch.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
Of people, she was the first one to drop out.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
First want to drop out. And I think in twenty
twenty eight there's going to be a better crop than
they had in twenty twenty So.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
Why do you think the real reason is that she
decided not to run. I mean, she still was the
front runner, right even though you said support was slipping.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
She still was.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
Well she was she was. I don't know, I've did that.
People say, oh, it's name recognition. It's like, really, that's
all it takes you get a vote. Oh, I know
who he is. I know who she is. I don't know.
I really don't. I'm totally baffled by her appeal, especially
after that campaign or she ran you know where she said, Oh,
(21:05):
I do the same thing. I wouldn't change a thing. Yeah. Really,
nine percent inflation huh? Ten million people over the border,
you wouldn't change anything.
Speaker 3 (21:14):
Huh.
Speaker 4 (21:16):
You're listening to John cobelts on demand from KFI Am
six forty.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
We're on every day from one until four and if
you miss something, that's what the podcast is for. Same
as the radio show posted just after four o'clock on
the iHeart Radio app. It's called John cobelt Show on Demand.
That's what she type in. Excuse me? Alex Stone coming
on after two o'clock talk about the aftermath of the tsunami. Boy,
(21:43):
was that a bust?
Speaker 2 (21:46):
Better to be safe than sorry.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Do you know how high the waves were in Santa
Monica today?
Speaker 3 (21:52):
Two feet?
Speaker 1 (21:53):
Not even? It was like it was like one foot
three inches.
Speaker 4 (21:58):
They canceled the US open a surface competition in Huntington
Beach today.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Because the waves weren't big enough to serve. Is that right?
I swear to God, because I heard has a whole
thing out there, and the promotions team was supposed to
go out there and they canceled it. I thought you
were going to tell me somebody overreacted last night. No,
they canceled it. No, they overreacted today. Yes, this morning
not enough. That was the Now you have to confess. Yes,
(22:26):
when you heard there was a tsunami warning for Los Angeles,
what did you do? What did I do? Because that's
one of your great fears, that's up.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
There with earthquakes, it is. But I do not live
close to the coast at all. So I wasn't that fearful.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
You're high up at a mountaintop, Well you are. I didn't.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
I didn't panic, but I did worry for people that
live the beach.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Down below, the peasants down below. Oh, I hope those
people down there aren't in danger. I am fine on
my mountaintop.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
I am terrified of tsunami's I told you I have.
I have dreams of getting drowning.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
But why you're I mean you're not near?
Speaker 3 (23:07):
No?
Speaker 2 (23:08):
Because I oh, I know, because I told you I
watched that movie about that tsunami that that took place
where was that Thailand cat Yeah, and it ever since then.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
I seriously that just that was awful and a fascinating
fascinating is why I.
Speaker 2 (23:28):
Told you that? Well you heard me, I mean you.
John and I were talking off the air and I
was bothering him about not getting a certain test and
I could not I could not remember the name of
the test or a type of cancer that I was trying.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
To tell him, which which I don't have.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
I know, I know, but I'm just telling you because
of the lack of sleep and all my stress, it's
killing off the few brain cells that I have.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
That's what stress does. Yeah, I know. Stress causes dementia.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
And you you saw that.
Speaker 1 (23:59):
Oh my s was a while we were just talking
about medical text. She goes, well, you should get that,
and then she was off in biden Land and I thought,
oh wow, this is funny. How long is it going
to take?
Speaker 3 (24:13):
Why?
Speaker 2 (24:14):
Then I realized what it was, But then I couldn't
remember the name of the procedure. I had to google it.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Okay, missus Biden. Alex Michaelson posted this because the big
news is Kamala Harris is not running for governor and
Alex the anchor at Fox eleven, says a source familiar
(24:40):
with Harris's thinking. Now, that could be Kamala herself, because
I like the phrase. Familiar with her thinking. She was
tempted to run for governor, but ultimately didn't want to
do the job because if you want to do some good,
it's a lot of work. We went through the whole
(25:01):
list of things that have gone really really wrong here
in California. You have to want to put in sixteen
hours a day, seven days a week.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
But being president isn't a lot of work.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
Well, she's I think she got a taste of being
a national celebrity when you're California governor. It's just the
light doesn't shine that brightly and there's a lot of
heavy problems here and people are really fed up. More
of her thinking. She's been an elective office for decades
(25:35):
and wants to take time to experience life as a
private citizen and see how she can be more helpful.
Stay home. I wonder if I'll see her in my
grocery store again. Oh yeah, remember that she's writing a
book setting up a nonprofit. Oh well, that's how she's
(25:58):
got her money, right, Yeah, I'm hat almost nonprofit that
could be uh, you know, several hundred. In fact, she'll
make more running almost nonprofit than she did as vice president,
and she will travel the country to campaign for Democrats. Yeah,
I'm sure there'll be a lot of invitations. She genuinely
(26:19):
hasn't decided whether to run for president in twenty twenty eight,
but her heart wasn't into running for governor in twenty
twenty six. See, vice president was a perfect job for
her because she didn't have to do anything because because
for the stuff I've read about her is that she
doesn't have a whole lot of confidence and she's not
(26:41):
really knowledgeable on a lot of things, like you could
program her to some extent, and even then, you know,
she couldn't. She couldn't read speeches, she can't talk off
the top of her head. I can't believe she ran
for president for several months and there wasn't one new,
decisinctive idea out of Kaimila Harris's brain, Like, not one
(27:05):
issue where she said, we got to fix this, and
here's how I want to fix it, and here's why
it'll work. Not one. And when you add up all
the stuff that needs to be fixed here in California,
the massive homelessness and the billions of dollars that have disappeared,
the massive amounts of crime going on, the incredible excessive taxes,
(27:32):
the horrific business climate, all the people leaving the state,
the high speed real thing. Do you think she would
have any energy, any innovative ideas, any intellectual curiosity, any
any ability to get the progressives to stand down and
stop their insanity. She's not that person. She's like, hey, wow,
(27:57):
can I have another hit? That's her level of energy.
Her level of energy is like a stoned hippie. I've
never and you know, any excitement she had on the
campaign trail was scripted excitement, fake excitement. She's not a
(28:19):
spontaneous personality. And I've never heard her say anything interesting.
It was all gender and race. That's what propelled her
and joy Remember you talk about manufactured joy Man still
got forty eight percent of the vote coming up after
(28:43):
two o'clock. Oh wow, at least here, I mean maybe
in Hawaii there was more action. Very disappointed in this tsunami.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
You were disappointed?
Speaker 1 (28:52):
Oh yeah, I wanted to look down like, actually, you know,
I'm probably a bigger risk. I'm much closer to sea.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
Level Yeah, you were not thrilled with the wildfires and diluting,
you're gonna be happy with the tsunami going over your house.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
No, I think tsunamis are cool. It look, it's just
I like the Earth's the natural disasters the Earth can produce.
Speaker 2 (29:23):
Yeah, I don't get it.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
Hurricanes, stuff that happens, weather stuff, hurricanes, tornado, tsunami is.
Speaker 2 (29:33):
The kind of thing I can live without.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
All of those.
Speaker 4 (29:36):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM.
Speaker 1 (29:40):
Six coming up after two o'clock. The bust that was
the tsunami, all this unneeded hysteria. Now, the natural disaster
that really happened, of course, was the big fire in
Palisades in Altadena. Let's look at the damages just in
(30:02):
the city of Los Angeles, because Karen Bass was in Africa,
because she didn't have an all hands on deck meeting
the night before with the fire chief and Genie Conyonez,
the DWP leader. The fire ravage the Palisades and the
total damage according to the real estate brokerage company Redfinn,
(30:26):
fifty one point seven billion dollars fifty one point seven billion.
How about that.
Speaker 2 (30:35):
That's a lot of money.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
Oh my god, and she's running to get reelected. Her incompetence,
her mouth seas its. It's a great word. Her idiocy
cost fifty one point seven billion dollars worth of damage,
and she wants another chance at it. This is half
(31:00):
leaving the reservoir empty. This is after not sending firefighters
up to the Palisades as a preventative measure. This is
after not having anybody overseeing the old fire that had
petered out a week before. This is after not getting
the fire trucks fixed, the fire hydrants were not repaired,
(31:26):
firefighters being sent home. They should have had a command
center the night before, with all department heads constantly making
decisions and sending the troops in. Instead, she was drinking
in Ghana. Might have been dancing too, Might have been
(31:48):
dancing with the handsome president of Ghana. I don't know. Wow,
twenty three thousand acres fifty one billion dollars. That doesn't
count Malibu and Altadena, by the way. Among the properties
analyzed by redfin, a hundred of the properties had a
(32:11):
pre fire value of more than twenty million dollars each.
Almost one hundred properties worth twenty million each. Third most
destructive in state history, and much of the damage could
have been mitigated if she'd only stayed home, shown up
(32:32):
for work. She had warnings for several days, and now
she's trying to bluster her way by screaming about ice
and Trump. You know what if you fall for that,
(32:54):
If you fall for somebody screaming about ice and Trump
and you re elect her, Hey, when the next fire comes,
don't come complaining. Here we have a test case in
case you wondered, gee, what would it be like to
have a socialist, progressive, a follower of Fidel Castro? What
would be like to have someone like that as mayor
of Los Angeles? Go west down Sunset Boulevard, you'll see
(33:21):
it was a great idea. Of course, that's going to
happen because in communism, property ownership is not a thing.
So letting everybody's property burn down it kind of seems
like the logical next step. We come back after two o'clock,
We're going to have Alex Stone from a Cafi new
(33:43):
from ABC News four D five. We're also going to
have Carl Demayo on next hour because Governor Newsom with
nothing to do, apparently because all the problems are solved,
is frantically trying to put something on the ballot that
would that would allow for all the congressional districts to
(34:04):
be redrawn in Washing for Washington, d C. For Congress.
You know, they do that once every ten years because
of the census. But he wants to do it now
quickly because the Democrats only have forty three out of
the fifty two congressional seats and that's not enough for Newsome.
(34:25):
He wants to redraw the districts, so maybe they get
fifty out of fifty two. Carl Demile coming on after
two thirty Deborah Mark Now live in the KFI twenty
four hour Newsroom. Hey, you've been listening to the John
Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear the show live
on KFI Am six forty from one to four pm
every Monday through Friday, and of course, anytime on demand
(34:45):
on the iHeartRadio app.