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May 30, 2025 34 mins

Our spotlight interview of the week with Speaker Newt Gingrich on his new book, Trump’s Triumph! 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show has heard live
from five to eight am Central, six to nine am Eastern,
three to six am Pacific on great radio stations like
News Radio eleven ninety k EX in Portland, News Talk
five point fifty k f YI and Phoenix, Arizona, and
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love to have you join us live in the morning,
even take us along on the drive to work. But

(00:21):
better late than never. Enjoyed the podcast Friday two three,
Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because we're in this together.
This is your Morning Show with Michael del John. It

(00:41):
was this was just Monday, right, We just finished the weekend.
We already you know about Monday, you were off Monday.
We were talking about a three day weekend. Invested this Friday? Yeah, right,
about just Friday. And that'll do it for me as
we head to June, and it seems like I just
put the Christmas decorations away. Time flies when you're having

(01:02):
fun and we have fun every morning. That what's that?
The last day of May? I mean that to me
is just baf Yeah, no, it is pretty soon. Well,
I'll be dead, but we're here today. Friday made the
thirtieth of Our Lord twenty twenty five, eight minutes after
the hour. Israel is accepting a new proposal for a
ceasefire with Hamas. That's good news. White House says DOGE

(01:25):
mission to cut waste, fraud, and abuse from the government
spending will continue even after Elon Musk's departure, which there
will be a news conference apparently with the President and
Elon Musk. It's time for his one hundred and thirty
days to be up, but the mission to continue. President
Biden's former aids even Jill Biden and staffers may cooperate

(01:46):
with the House Republicans looking into Biden's health and mental
state while in office. And a new report says someone
has been impersonating the President's chief of staff. If you
get a call and you hear nothing but silence, that's
someone impersonating Red. That's not really Red. Now if you

(02:11):
get somebody that calls up real chatty, yeah, that's not
read either. The Eastern Conference, Big John, you know, I've
always said that the magic of radio is the invisible intimacy,
the fact that we all know each other even though
we haven't met, and I mean we really know each other.

(02:36):
I'm watching the Knicks last night, and all I'm thinking
about is Big John and like go boys go. So
it's not over yet. They're staying alive, staying alive with
a big win last night, one eleven ninety four that
forces a game six in Indiana tomorrow night. Now you
have radio hosts thinking about their listeners watching games. It

(02:57):
used to be the other way around. These are just
some of the things we're gonna kick around today. That's
what's happening. You know, if I was the waiter at
the table, these would be, you know, the menu items.
We do have some specials today. I just thought of
something I could probably make a lot of money and
people would just start stip tipping twenty percent to their
talk show host. I got a strange email yesterday, by

(03:19):
the way, somebody and there's no tax on them, and well, yeah,
not yet, but soon there'd be no tax on tips.
I don't know the name because they didn't sign it.
I can just tell you her Albert fan. But that's
a strange one out of the blue, right, Herb Albert,
of all people, He said, when I hear a new

(03:44):
radio host I form a visual image in my head.
That used to be a big thing in radio because
there was no internet. You didn't know what somebody looked like.
You just know they knew their voice, and so you
would you would picture them, and then when you would
see them, they never look like what you pictured. Well.

(04:04):
In fact, the old expression is you have a face
for radio. I used to love to tell listeners you
don't look like you sound either, and so this person
is whenever I hear a new radio host, I form
a visual image in my head. I looked up your
picture and it's nothing like I imagined. So and then

(04:25):
that's just the end of the email, and I'm thinking
to myself, what does that mean? You thought it was ugly?
No elaboration on what you picture versus what you saw,
So I said, I said, well, uglier or better, more cheerful,
and then commented on my wife's good looks. Is that

(04:46):
like a good personality means you, oh, he has a
great personality, but he's ugly and the out kick discoverage
I once listen, I resent those kinds of statements. Men
just like have them off as a compliment. I married
my wife or character. Okay, that's important. Well, yeah, but

(05:07):
but you know what she married well too, she laughs.
She's cherished, She's had a wonderful life. You know, I
don't like that. I don't accept that I cherish my wife.
She is the sum of what I am. But we
don't rate out kicking coverage. We're both in God's will.

(05:28):
That makes that makes us equal, equally blessed. No, but
what I what I was getting ready to say, is
we do have a few features today in our polls
are plenty. I think the one that Redd and I
have stumbled the most on because you have this one
big story today. The Democrats can't figure out what wrong. Well,

(05:51):
part of the reason they can't figure out what's wrong
is they can't get out of their bubble. The other
part is they create words, all right, So when you
when you talk to them, you get a polling result
that the Democrats voters themselves prefer populism over abundance, which

(06:13):
would presume that abundance necessarily isn't popularism, or that popularism
can equal abundance, or that populism equals poverty. I mean,
none of this makes any sense. So you know, they
create this world of crazy straw houses and then you

(06:35):
try to figure out why the foundation isn't solid. I
guess loosely, if you went and looked at a definition
of populist versus abundance, I mean, Red's gonna probably hate this,
but I would say populism would be trendy group think.
Abundance would be personal reality. I need a job, I

(06:59):
need enough money to pay the bills, which is to say,
secure a home for my family with a roof, proper
nourishment and food, the basics. But they've created this illusion
that it's what we all know is right versus selfish abundance.

(07:19):
I mean, look, you talk about a worthless poll based
on a worthless framework, based on worthless arguments. The other
is that fifty one percent believe the COVID vaccine caused

(07:42):
heard inflammation. We always talk about is the polling result
the reality or is the poll a revelation of what
the American people think about a reality or a truth
that gets blurred quickly? Of course, course, myocarditis. It's real,

(08:04):
and it happened from the vaccine. Didn't happen to all,
but happened to some. Why are we well?

Speaker 2 (08:10):
Now?

Speaker 1 (08:10):
Fifty one percent including twenty one twenty nine percent said
very likely. How about it just was I mean, I
wasn't that one hundred percent. Didn't they have to come
out in it? Well they did. You know you would,
you would if it should be one hundred percent because
it's a reality. We just weren't allowed to acknowledge that reality.

(08:31):
And so now five years later, fifty one percent are
willing to acknowledge a reality in a truth. What's scarier
the polling results are, or the fact that it really
caused myo charroditis, but you know it does. These are
those quick little glimpses of all the things that were
taboo and off limits that you couldn't say. I mean,

(08:56):
we used to say COVID revealed way more than it did,
and it did a lot, But it revealed a lot
about people's blind, ignorant trust, how cheap they would sell
liberty and freedom, how lazy they were to just trust
what everyone said. But a big revelation in terms of

(09:23):
COVID was that you could create a boogeyman, you could
create a fear, and you could control everybody at once
through that fear. And oh how it revealed the matrix
in full bloom. I mean, that's really the way to
say it like a flower in full bloom the matrix.

(09:47):
Look how quickly we divided into teams, masked team, unmasked team,
VAX team, UNVAC team. We're all gonna die. No liberty, freedom,
democracy is gonna die. Five years later, just to show

(10:15):
you you haven't healed, You're not all better, they could
might even pull it off again. Fifty one percent acknowledging
a link between heart inflammation and the vacs. That is
just a fact and a reality. Now five years ago
when you said it, you might get your job thrown,
you know, taken away from you, especially as a talk

(10:36):
show host. But even today, five years later, stating that
fact is still only fifty one percent. Oh how polls
of plenty revealed things that we can talk about. Those
are some specials today. The other specials Jake Tapper. All right,
so here's the question. Can can Jake Tapper, who is
as guilty or more than anyone else in this Biden

(10:58):
cover up, get away with writing a book about the
Biden cover up and somehow not be a part of
the problem but be the hero. The answer is no,
that's number one. Everybody sees through it. I could play you,
Stephen A Smith on a tie raid today if you'd

(11:19):
like to hear somebody colorfully do it. But because we
live at a matrix, and because of where Jake Tapper broadcasts,
is he is he a hero on a white horse

(11:40):
among the left? Clearly not so MSNBC. Long time ago,
MSNBC took the position of the Obama Network to this day. Well,
first of all, I hope you know that Fox is

(12:01):
not conservative, It's a establishment Republican. Here's a question for you.
Would Fox be better off if Tucker Carlson and Meghan
Kelly returned. They wouldn't want them for how truly conservative

(12:23):
they've become versus establishment republican that they were, and they
certainly wouldn't want to go back. I don't think you
could get either one of them with a gut. The
odds of them going back to Fox is the same
as me going back to the company I used to.
It would never happen. But Fox in and of itself

(12:45):
is establishment republican. MSNBC is establishment democrat. It's still the
Obama Network. CNN is just crazy land left. So when
you see Jake Tapper, his ratings plummet to the lowest
in a decade. In the month of May as he's

(13:05):
selling this book. What does that tell you about the
establishment Democrat Party and their view or even Democrat voters
even versus crazy liberals view of him revealing all this
not good lots to talk about. There the proper way
to say goodbye and thank Elon Musk for heading up

(13:27):
Doze and keeping Doze alive. Without Elon Musk, that's a
special to talk about today. And the Federal Appeals Court
pauses the ruling on the tariff blocking of other judges.
So yeah, you have lawfairs still continuing against the president,
Judges still getting out of the banks of the branches

(13:51):
of government lanes. But this is kind of caught in
the matrix too, when a judge blocks something. Oh, Katie
Kirk's there. Anybody knows how crazy left she's gotten gotten.
I always thought she was, well, she always was, but
now she's just blatant about it. So when you watch
your little videos every day on Facebook, you're like, oh,
this is who was hosting today, Oh this is who

(14:13):
was doing interviews in CBS Evening News. They're all crazy left,
but anyway they'll cover. The left will cover when the
judge blocks it. The right will cover when an appeals
court blocks the block, Well, they all play their little
MAT's games. Does anybody remember the Constitution? Can that be

(14:34):
the final?

Speaker 2 (14:34):
Say?

Speaker 1 (14:35):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chano. While staffers
are going to be summoned to testify before Congress, the
White House wants Jill Biden to testify what she knew
about her own husband's decline while in office.

Speaker 3 (14:51):
Wayne House Crest Secretary Caroline Levit claimed on Thursday that
the former First Lady is still lying to the American people.
Levit also said Jill Biden still thinks the American public
is so stupid that they're going to believe her.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
Lines.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
For comments come as House Republicans ramp up investigations into
Biden's health and mental state while in office.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
By Mark Nethew, what becomes of DOGE now that Elon
Musk has gone nothing? It continues its mission to cut waste,
fraud and abuse.

Speaker 4 (15:17):
Press Secretary Caroline Levitt said many DOZE employees are now
political appointees and government employees and intend to stay.

Speaker 5 (15:24):
The entire cabinet understands the need to cut government waste,
fraud and abuse.

Speaker 4 (15:28):
In each cabinet secretary at their respective agencies is committed
to that must be an offboarding as a special government
employee on Wednesday. He's helped lead the Department of Government
Efficiency since it was established in January. As a special
Government employee, Musk was allowed to work for the administration
for only one hundred and thirty days in a calendar year.
I'm Tammy Trheo Well.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
A new album by Miley Cyrus, is now streaming. Something
Beautiful is Cyrus's ninth album that includes her recent hit
End of the World. Cyrus has described the album as
a pop op that's fueled by fantasy. She also is
releasing a film version of Something Beautiful that's going to
premiere next week at the Rebecca Festival in New York.

(16:09):
It'll hit theaters later on June the twelfth.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
This is Shannon Gregory and my morning show is your
Morning Show with Michael de Jono.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Hi. It's Michael. Your Morning Show can be heard live
on great radio stations across the country like wilm and
w DOV and Wilmington and Dover, Delaware or wgst AM
seven twenty the Voice in Middle Georgia. We're going to
need some blankets. News Radio six fifty K e n I, Anchorage, Alaska.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
Now enjoy the podcast. We're just giving Jeffrey a hard

(16:46):
time off the air. He's wanting to get away and
ride some roller coasters, and he brings up Holiday Worlds
and Splash and Safari in Santa Claus, Indiana. Yeah, you
know you live in Tennessee. Dollywood was rated the number
one amusement park in America. Beat the mouse. Well, I
just did see something on the printer about Holiday World

(17:07):
was given away some free tickets on another station down
the hall. Oh well, want to freebie is one thing,
but you get what you paid for. No, Dollywood is
a go to for our family. And I got to
tell you. We did Cedar Point last year in Sandusky, Ohio.
I would say, if you're a roller coaster fan, I
used to always say this, Dolly's got the greatest roller coasters, Okay,
from from Wooden to you know, Thrill. And then I

(17:30):
went to Cedar Point, where every roller coaster is the
most extreme experience of your life. Oh, even the kiddy
coaster will kill you, but you gotta do them all.
And you know what, no matter how they have one
that you get's at the very top and then you

(17:50):
start down and it stops and just lets you stare
straight down for like three seconds and then oh boom
drops you greatest ride of my life. Yeah. So, whether
it's point Dollywood or I guess you could go to
Splash and Safari and put some floaties on your arms
and have a good time in Santa Claus, Indiana looking
for a great weekend for the boys. But I mean,

(18:10):
wasn't it this week red that Dollywood was rated number one?

Speaker 2 (18:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (18:13):
I mean on the week they're rated number one, you
slap them in the face for a freebie.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Nothing.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
I'm speaking Holiday World, I said, Hollywood, Holiday World, Splash
and Safari. All right, you you just have to call
him the speaker, right and you know you're talking about
Newt Gingrich his new book, Trump's Triumph America's Greatest Comeback.
Is it Trump's greatest comeback or America's greatest comeback? Was

(18:41):
it a red wave or an orange wave? How does
it all impact both parties? Moving forward? Say hello to
our spotlight Interview of the week. This is the speaker,
Newt Gingrich, Good morning, how are you. I'm doing terrific.
It's always an honor to have you. All right, let's
start with the title, uh, Trump's triumph, that would suggest

(19:01):
this was an orange wave, not a red wave. And
there's a challenge still for the Republicans to receive a handoff.
But just how extraordinary was this? And has anyone ever
pulled off anything like this? Could anybody but him have
done it?

Speaker 2 (19:19):
Well, that's a couple different questions. Rover Cleveland is the
only other president to lose the White House, turn around,
come back four years later, and win it back in
eighteen ninety two. So in that sense, just the act
of winning it back is historically remarkable and very rare.
When you look at the totality of what Trump experienced

(19:41):
and Clisson and I first talked to him about running
in February of twenty fifteen, and you look at the
FBI lying about him, the New York Times and Washington
Posts getting pulses for printing in the lies, the CIA
trying to destroy him. You look at the whole process
of two impeachment efforts, assassination attempts, four efforts to put

(20:03):
him in jail, uh, and he was still standing. And
it's it's truly at a personal level, one of the
most remarkable stories of courage at endurance in American political history. Uh.
And then you look at the American people. There's been
a movement growing from Goldwater to Reagan to the Contract
of the America to the Tea Party. Uh and now
the Trump the Mega movement has very deep roots. It's

(20:26):
very real. Uh and Uh, I think that that there's
a relationship. You know, Trump needed Mega and Maga needed Trump.
And the result was that when it came to a crunch,
he not only not but he then turned and carried
every single swing state in the one by a million
vote majority, which were Republicans very hard to do.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
Uh, and beat Harris.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
So there's there's something profound and real about the emergence
of Trump.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
My listeners are going to think that, oh, he must
have read this book already, because these are things that
I've been saying and I haven't and I'm going to.
And that would be flattering if they thought that, because
I think you're one of the most brilliant minds. But
you nailed on something. What is it we're experiencing. I've
said this is kind of Reagan Revolution meets Tea Party
meets trump Ism, and it's all become one big kind

(21:20):
of Americanism. And the reason I always ask the question
is because where does that leave a Democrat party that
doesn't have a messenger or a message or nowhere to go,
or really, quite frankly, silently, the Republican Party. And you
kind of hit all of them in that laundry list.
And then the only thing that you brought up that
I think really needs to be dusted out is how

(21:41):
what person with his means would have chose to go
through this? I mean, what an amount of courage and
determination to have gone through political, legal, and physical assassination
to get another term. It really is like nothing we've
ever even come close to seeing before.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
Well, when you think about the fact, I think he
owns at least eighteen golf courses, so he could literally
spend the rest of his life in nice, comfortable places golfing,
which he likes to do. But I think, and I
say this, from the very first we'd known Trump for
about a quarter century, and the very first conversation we had,

(22:21):
which was in Iowa in February at breakfast in February
of twenty fifteen, I had a sense that he felt
driven to do this, that he felt that the country
was in trouble and that having an outsider who's a
businessman who doesn't play by the rules would in fact
be very helpful to the country. And as a result,

(22:46):
in my mind, he became one of the remarkable historic
figures that America occasionally produces. And I think that he's
endured so much. Part the way I wrote Trump's triump
me to put in context, this guy had the FBI
trying to deshoy him, the CIA trying to destroy him. Uh,

(23:06):
he had two year Moler investigation, which proved nothing. Then
he has four efforts to put him in jail, He
has two assassination attempts, there are two efforts to impeach him,
and he just keeps coming. I mean, it is truly
one of the amazing stories in American history. And now

(23:29):
that he's president, he's clearly one of the five greatest
changed presidents in American history.

Speaker 1 (23:34):
Dude, and that he can win this one. Oh, I
was just gonna say, new Gingrich does bigger? Is this
forty three or forty four for books? For you? I
think we're at forty four.

Speaker 2 (23:43):
I think forty four. Yeah, I think we're forty four.
But I don't count him that way.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
I know, I don't know. The book is called Trump's Triumph,
America's Greatest Comeback. You know, you talk about how long
you've known him since that assassination attempt. I am seeing
massive change in this man's heart and demeanor. How much
has that changed him? And now he's off in a
stratosphere where the words and the heart are with the

(24:08):
ideas and with the direction this I live both. This
is starting to feel a lot more at this point,
even more special than Reagan for me.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Yeah, I know, I think it is.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
I loved Reagan.

Speaker 2 (24:23):
I worked with him starting in seventy four Coast and
I did a movie called Rondevous Destiny about the Reagan presidency.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
And Reagan was an.

Speaker 2 (24:31):
Extraordinary person who did an amazing number of things. But
Trump's in a different league. Trump is one of those
characters who just towers above history. He changes the probability
of what's going to happen, and it's almost inexplicable. And
I think, frankly, it also changed him. The Trump that

(24:55):
we knew is no longer the Trump who's now there.
The effort to assassinate him, I think had a profound
impact on him, and I think he genuinely believes that
God spared his life because if you remember it, Butler,
if he had turned one second left, he'd have been dead. Well,
that sort of sobers you. And then when he learned

(25:17):
that there was a second assassination attempt, I talked to
speaker Mike Johnson, who happened to be a man of
Largo that day, and he said when they briefed Trump
on the second killer who they stopped, that he and
Johnson went into a private room and prayed for about
two hours. And I think that it was sincere. It
was a very deep intersection in Trump's own life that

(25:41):
he now has an obligation both to the country and
to God because his life has been spared, and therefore
he should spend his life trying to get the country
back on the right track and trying to get the
right values and the right policies. And I think he
is in that sense, a deeper, more spiritually driven, and

(26:03):
more serious person than the guy who first announced for president.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
This is kind of a hidden thesis throughout the book,
but I want to just pick your brain about it
through COVID, through what we're dealing with. Now we're clearly
we faked the presidency the movie Dave, and everybody knew
it when it was Most people knew it when it
was happening. Now everybody's admitting it. But I think it's
a scandal way bigger than Watergate. Loss of trust started

(26:29):
with COVID, then the fake Biden administration. How what role
did that play along with this extraordinary man, this unique
only second time non consecutive term that's allowed him to
have two really first one hundred days. I mean, where's
the loss of trust and who owns it? Once Trump's gone?

Speaker 2 (26:50):
Well, I mean, I think the loss of trust goes
back a long way.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
I think the American people felt lied to for years
and years and years, and then it got worse. And
I think Trump's invention of the term fake news was brilliant.
And that was in the first campaign because you figured
out that you couldn't answer every lie that the New
York Times of the Washington Post or CNN or NBC waned,

(27:15):
so you had to lump them all into one thing
and say, oh, yeah, that's fake news. Well, that caught on,
and because it suddenly summarized for the country what people
had always thought, they'd always thought that was fake news,
and now here they had the guy running for president
who told him, yeah, that's right. And so in many
ways that happened. Then we learned that fifty three senior

(27:36):
intelligence officers.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
Had lied, literally lied about.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
Hunter Biden's laptop. We learned that the senior FBI had
lied to federal judges in their effort to destroy Trump.
You could just sit down the list. And then of
course when he does get reelected, he brings in Elon
Musk and the effort to the doge, effort to see
what's happening, and they begin on earth such extraordinary scale

(28:02):
of dishonesty that is breathtaking. We just had the Secretary
of Energy say that in one five week period they
show what He've used the word shoveled. They shovel ninety
two billion dollars for their friends at the end of
the Biden administration, just in one department. Well, people look
at that and go, well, this is all just you know,
that's my money, that's my children and grandchildren's money just

(28:25):
being thrown away to pay off a political machine. And
I think in that sense, Trump represents a real, deep,
popular American rebellion against the system which is just clearly
out of sync.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
You just have to say the speaker, new Dingrid's joining
us author of Trump's Triumph. The subtitle is America's greatest
comeback for both Donald Trump and for America. Where do
both parties stand? What does America post Trump look like,
mister speaker, Well, they have very different challenges.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
The Democratics party challenges that it is split. They may
end up in a civil war between a rational survival wing,
say Chuck Schumer, and an irrational, almost religiously left wing
group with AOC and others, and they may end up
in a huge fight over which wing is going to dominate.

(29:17):
The Republicans have a very different, very interesting problem. They're
having to learn how to govern, which means learning how
to say yes. And if you're historically a minority party,
you cheerfully, get up every morning and vote no, and
you feel good about yourself because whatever they left to
propose is stupid. But now it's your job defined solutions,
it's your job to right legislation, it's your job to

(29:39):
compromise to get something done. That's a whole different set
of skills, and they're gradually getting there. And I give
Speaker Mike Johnson an enormous credit for helping them move
in the right direction. But the scale of change that
Trump and the Make America Great Again movement implies is
a very big, very hard challenge for the Congress because

(30:02):
now you get down to real money, real policies, real programs,
and all of a sudden you have to vote on
them and putting the particularly in the House, you have
a very thin majority. In the Senate, you have slightly
bigger majority, but remember on most legislation, the Senate requires
sixty votes and you're seven short. So in both bodies

(30:24):
they have a real challenge of making translated MAGA movement
into real legislation.

Speaker 1 (30:31):
What do you want people to come away from reading
this book with? There are so many because you know
it's such a triumph, and there are so many attacks,
so many there's so many acts of God, let alone
brilliant responses, let alone off the cuff things that I mean,
you could say, no tax on tips may have delivered Nevada,
but the extraordinary of not even campaigning in a primary,

(30:54):
being tied up in court and you'll win the primary.
Then you go on with all these physical and character
assassinations and you secure the presidency. I mean, with all
of that, what would be the one single takeaway you
hope we'd come away with from this book with a
lot of evidence to prove.

Speaker 2 (31:12):
Optimism. To be an American is to be an optimist.
The future will be better. It's going to be exciting
and daring and challenging, and it's going to be more prosperous, safer, freer,
and we're going to have a great run. And you
just look at everything. That's why the book when we
talk about Trump's triumph and then we talk about America's

(31:33):
greatest comeback, it's America which is coming back, not just
Donald Trump. And I think you're going to see by
the summer of next year Trump boom. You're going to
see extraordinary breakthroughs in space, extraordinary breakthroughs in healthcare. We're
going to move from a sick care business to a
healthcare business, which will be extraordinary. And the MAHA movement
make Americans Healthy Again is going to take place, and

(31:57):
you're going to see a dramatic improvement in children's health,
which is actually on the lower cost while improving the
lives of millions of children.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
Still leading, still connecting the dots, still writing books, and
I'm grateful for all three. The speaker nude Gingrish the
new book, Trump's Triumph, America's Greatest comeback. Get it everywhere
great books are sold. Thank you, mister speaker, Thank you.
This is your morning show with Michael del Chuno.

Speaker 5 (32:24):
Four weeks from today, our family will be heading out
of Tennessee for annual kick to Cedar Point. Except for
a couple of our boys. Can't come this year because
of a couple job situations. So come on, all of you.
My husband needs a writing buddy.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
Rachel. Rachel actually emailed me one time at the next
time you go to Cedar Point, let us know we'll
meet you there. Wow, it's an extreme adventure. I can
grant you that, all right. Top five stories of dam
I gonna make them really quick. Israel is accepting a
new proposal for a ceasefire with Hamas. Remember the unfinished
business of this presidency, whether it's a big beautiful bill
or just securing those tax cuts that it's a biggie.

(33:01):
The other is peace in the Middle East and what
to do with the Palestinian territory to keep this from
happening again. The other is ending the war with Russia
and Ukraine and then stopping Iran from getting nukes. This
is one of those, so one of the four moving
forward with Israel. Israel accepting a new proposal for a ceasefire.

(33:21):
White House is DOGE mission to cut waste, fraud and abuse.
Even though Elon's going in a press conference today, its
mission will continue, and a new report says someone's been
impersonating the President's chief of staff, and the Eastern Conference
finals will continue. Nick staying alive, pulling up Beiji's Last
Night one eleven ninety four at home. Now they head

(33:42):
to Indianapolis to take on the Pacers for Game six.
That will be tomorrow night. All right, when we come
back right now, there are nearly a half a million
more houses for sale than there are buyers. Why aren't
people buying? Roy O'Neil has that story coming up. Kevin
Sirelli is our futurist. He'll be joining us as well.

(34:03):
I have to cough. Oh there is a cough button.
There's a sneeze button. Science is now pushing the boundaries
of human longevity. Oh what that does to our entire
financial system. Kevin Sirilli will be joining us, and then
of course later on in the third hour, It's Friday,
that means Friday with forty seven. We're all in this together.
This is Your Morning Show with Michael ndheld, Joano
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