Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael. I'm so glad you found the podcast,
and don't forget you can listen to your Morning Show
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(00:21):
Enjoy well two three.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
It's starting your morning off right, a new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
This is your Morning Show with Michael.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Gell John.
Speaker 4 (00:40):
Tonight, against all odds, we have grasped it. The future
is in our hands, my friends. We have toppled a
political dynasty. I wish Andrew Cuomo only the best in
(01:15):
private life, but let tonight be the final time I
utter his name.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
I mean, needless to say, Zorn mam Donnie was not
gracious in victory by any stretch of the imagination. A
very very noticeable, noticeably different tone in victorious Mam Donni
from candidate mam Donni. It became very much about him.
(01:50):
And victory and fight. This was more of a proclamation
of revolution than it was an election in a city.
More on coming up as Your Morning Show continues nine
minutes after the hour, Good morning and welcome to Wednesday,
November fifth. It was a sweep for the Democrats, but
remember predictably so in very blue states, in very blue cities.
(02:12):
But what ends up being a serious victory for a
night could become a serious problem for the party moving forward. Also,
tragic news out of Louisville. We had a US United
UPS cargo jet filled with fuel headed for Hawaii from Louisville.
The footage shows that the wing was on fire, the
(02:34):
engine was on fire as it was taking off. It
crashed moments later. Our Your Morning Show national correspondent Rory
O'Neil is here. The three on board all killed and
I think the death toll is up to now seven Rory, right, yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:49):
With eleven more also injured. There was a crew of
three on board this MD eleven, as you said, filled
with fuel for the long flight from Louisville to Hawaii.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
It crashed upon takeoff.
Speaker 5 (03:01):
The video shows of flames coming from the left side
of the plane and parts of the engine were and
the cowling at least the covering of it, were seen
on the runway alongside the runway, so before the impact
of the crash. The NTSP obviously will be focusing on
that left engine, its maintenance records, or the idea that
(03:21):
maybe there was debris on the runway that got sucked
into that left engine during the takeoffs. So don't go
into this presuming anything. But it's a long bit of
work for the NTSP. They're getting an awful lot of
video coming in though, to show exactly how this all unfolded.
By the way, part of the reason there was such
a big black boom of smoke. Yes, it was full
(03:41):
of jet fuel, but it also crashed into a fuel
and oil recycling plant. So that's why they were telling
people to shelter in place, turn off their air conditioning,
things like that, because this was kicking up a lot
of ugly chemicals and they wanted to do their homework.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Yeah, and the NTSP will do its job. Our speculation was,
I mean, it appeared to be on fire three quarters
the way down the runway. Now one of two things
came to mind. Did it not have a warning light
maybe they knew it was and the plan was, well,
we're too far down the runway at two high a speed,
we'll just take off and then circle right back in
emergency land. But none of which happened. I guess the
(04:20):
black box will give us clues to that.
Speaker 5 (04:21):
But yeah, right, and again it's a three engine aircraft,
one engine under each wing, plus there is a tail
engine there as well. On an MD eleven, I think
the plane was thirty six years old in this case.
I think those maintenance logs are going to be something
they look at very carefully.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
Obviously with three on board. There's some death on the
ground and injuries on the ground, and the severity of
the injuries that death till could actually rise. Elon Musk
reworking his plan to take a rocket to the Moon
after NASA said it's reconsidering the project in general. Get
us up to speed on that.
Speaker 5 (04:55):
Sure, So we heard from the I guess now former
acting ahead of NASA, Sean Duffy, as a at Isaac
ban is back in the picture again to lead the agency.
That's a separate story, but they said they're going to
put the contract up forbid again. So SpaceX is reworking
it's starship plans for the lunar surface landing. Remember, NASA
will launch Artemis three with their SLS rocket, the Orion
(05:17):
capsle on top it gets to the Moon, but when
it gets to the Moon orbit, it then shifts to
a starship by SpaceX, which will actually go from the
Moon's orbit down to the surface and back up again.
So that's what Secretary Duffy said SpaceX was falling behind on.
They wanted to reopen the contract SpaceX now saying we're
going to simplify things, streamline it. Maybe we can come
(05:39):
in on that four point four billion dollar budget and
on time. So they're going to probably resummit the bid
now again to a NASA administrator who was a close
ally of Elon Musk.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
Rory's gonna be back in the third hour. We'll talk
more about the election results from last night. Rory, thank you,
it's twelve minutes after the hour. Yeah, big victory the
Democrats in a single predictable evening. But what problems does
it create for the midterm elections and the presidential elections
two years later. Time will tell. But if they're going
(06:13):
to make this a referendum on socialism, that will play
differently nationally than it did in New York City for
Mom Donnie Spamberger. That was a predictable victory fifty seven
percent to forty two percent. And by the wide margin
(06:34):
we expected. The Mikey Sheryl victory over Chittarelli that was
wider than expected, fifty six percent to forty three percent.
Most polls had this within six points, and then some
late polls had it within one point. It clearly was
not that close. And proposition fifty this is an interesting one.
(06:54):
So again, just because people are waking up and tuning in,
redistricting is necessary and constitutional populations shift and the representation,
especially in the People's House, has to be reflected. It
also impacts the electoral college map. If you have more
people in a state, you're going to have more representatives,
and more representatives are going to be a higher electoral number.
(07:16):
The Democrats have a real problem down the road as
soon as twenty twenty eight, but even more so in
twenty thirty two, where the electoral college map is going
to shift anywhere from eight to twelve points away from them,
and that's because their policies in state, which they have
every right to do, has caused people to leave blue
states and go to red states. Now, as people move,
(07:44):
you get new census, and you do redistricting. That's constitutional.
Jerry Mandering is the abuse of that in order to
impact an outcome, where you purposely draw lines for one
side to win. The Democrats are telling you the Republicans
do that and it's wrong when they are the biggest
(08:05):
perpetrators of this. That's why there's very little there's much
taxation and very little to no representation in some East
Coast states. And I'm with Red. I don't know how
this hasn't gone to the Supreme Court. You've got forty
percent of the state of California votes Republican, and by
(08:26):
the time they're done redrawing these lines, you'll only have
seven percent Republican districts. That's ourn near taxation without representation.
But just to show you that this what they're doing,
they are jerry mandering and then telling you they have
to in order to fight Donald Trump and create checks
(08:47):
and balances. Well, checks and balances are created by accurate,
fair votes district by district and state by state. That's
how you create checks and balance. As the American people
spoke and elected Donald Trump, It's not California's job to
cheat the representation of its own people to fight Donald
(09:09):
Trump nationally. This is very bad civics. This is not
good democracy, and in the end you have one party rule,
which is not democracy. But here's what it will achieve.
Right now, even though forty percent of the people living
in California are Republicans and vote Republican, there's an eighty
three percent Democratic representation, and that's not enough for the Democrats.
(09:34):
They want to purposely jerry mander redraw the line so
they can get it to ninety two percent. Eighty three
percent is probably already evidence of jerry mandering in place,
but now to purposely vote to jerry mander to fight
a president nationally, it'll take it from eighty three to
(09:56):
ninety two percent. The projection is we'll end up with
forty eight members of Congress compared to four for the Republicans.
Proposition fifty past Mikey, Cheryl one, Spamberger one, Mom Donnie one,
(10:17):
even Jay Jones who ran for Attorney General, wanting to
put a bullet in the head of the Speaker of
the House, wanting his wife to hold her dead small children.
This guy proves there's nothing that makes somebody unelectable not
in the very divided partisan states of America, that's for sure.
(10:38):
But what is a predictable night of victories for the
Democrats last night? Does it create a year of headaches?
More on that with our senior contributor David Sonati coming
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You're gonna love it. This is your morning show with
Michael del Chrono. I can't believe you think that deer
was getting ready to charge me, jaysons if you just
stepped off that porch and made one wrong move le,
(12:24):
I mean off the porch. I was off the porch.
I was standing on the ground five beat in front
of him. You say he was ready to charge? Yeah? Absolutely.
Did you see that swollen neck? The thing was the
runt is real. Don't be dying around in the woods
like that. I thought he knew what I was saying.
I was saying, come out the gate, go down two doors,
take a left, He'll be right back in the forest
saying you had a pretty mouth on you. You can't have
(12:45):
your morning show without your voice. How are you all
processing the Dems? Big night? Twenty five minutes after the hour,
Let's start with Joey.
Speaker 6 (12:52):
Well, Michael, New York elected a socialist, Islamist further mayor,
and now you're probably gonna go back to the way
New York City was in the nineteen seventies before ed
Cott showed up with crime rampant and.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
Phil You know the interesting thing I'm thinking about. I
don't know how to say this politically correct. I can
tell you he made it about being young and Muslim
and socialist. I always was more concerned he was Islamist.
(13:30):
But there are a lot of Islamists and jihadists that
are watching this race and seeing a city they attacked
going on twenty five years ago, just elected an Islamist mayor.
As we approached the twenty fifth anniversary of nine to eleven,
this could be very embolding in many ways. Vince from
(13:52):
the what are we saying the Gold Coast? He's from
Treasure Coast, Treasure Coast, Okay, Vinny, Hey, good morning, Michael.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
I'm not surprised at all that the blue states are
voting blue, blue cities are voting blue.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
What I do find amusing.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
Though, is that the elitist leftist liberals are sitting at
a checkerboard while everyone else is playing chess, and they're
not even smart enough to realize it.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
Well, let's hope we're playing chess. I do think the
President needs to certainly make the next year about the economy,
and nott lip service and energy is a big part
of that. President needs to get economy and ai not
TikTok and tariffs to the front and center. He's got
(14:40):
some things he needs to really achieve and then campaign
on those achievements, and that set up with this socialism
versus capitalism referendum that could be brewing in a midterm
election and it would be very good for the Republican
Then you're playing chess. You may have gotten suckered into
(15:02):
a checkers game. By the way, that's Vincent. His father
is also Vincent and just had a heart surgery. For
those of you that are believers, pray for Vincent's father,
Love him dearly, and I know he's going to be fine.
James is in Youngstown morning. Michael and Cruiz. Great to
have the whole gang bat together. Did you have to
notice the Governor Abbott is threatening one hundred percent tariff
(15:23):
on New Yorkers fleeing Minami's interesting city. Now I think
that's hilarious. You know, we did a little thing off
the are. We're trying to figure out what would be
the best analogy of what happened last night. Imagine if
last night the big race was the Oklahoma City mayor's race,
and the two big governors races were Texas and Tennessee,
(15:46):
and the big proposition vote was in Alabama, would anybody
been surprised this morning waking up that the Republicans swept.
Speaker 3 (15:57):
This is Deba Morris from our little town Ranklin, Tennessee.
My morning show is your Morning Show with.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
Michael Bill Jorneo. Hi, I'm Michael del Jorno and your
morning show can be heard live as it's happening five
to eight am Central and six to nine Eastern on
great stations like six' twenty WJDX and Jackson, Mississippi, or Akrons,
News Talk six forty WHLO and Akron, Ohio and News
(16:27):
Radio five seventy WDAK and Columbus, Georgia We'd love to
be a part of your morning routine. But we're glad
you're here. Now. Enjoy the podcast if you're just waking up.
It was the Democrats night, predictably to sweep. These were
very blue states, very blue cities, and it went very
blue except for New York City that went very red.
Take a bite out of the big red apple. Socialist
(16:50):
zoron Mam Donnie is the new mayor. Abigail Spanberger one
Virginia's governor's race, Mikey Cheryl won the New Jersey governor's race,
and California Governor Gavin Newsom claims victory over Proposition fifties passage.
I only have time for one caller before John Decker.
We'll get the other ones in later, but let's do
that last one first. And I believe it was John
(17:12):
or Joey in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 7 (17:16):
More than Michael Jeffrey and Red. Yeah, pretty much blue
wave here in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 4 (17:21):
Again.
Speaker 7 (17:22):
You touched on what Trump needs to doing in next year.
I agree a little bit, but I think we need
to worry about energy independence first, because without energy we
can't support AI and get the economy under control.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
Actually, you agree a lot with me because it's all
about energy. It's energy, by the way, that is keeping
food costs high. It's energy that hasn't been addressed and
replaced what we've drained from the reserve. Let alone get
back to being energy independent or exporting AI is a
much different story. Yes, we don't have the grid for
We're going to visit with david SONATI. This is the
(17:58):
Gilded Age of AI and it's here and everybody's embracing
it and loving it. But do we have the grid
to power it? Do we have the ability to economically
survive it. AI needs to get on the President's radar
far more than TikTok. It is a clear in present
(18:19):
danger to our economy that no one seems to have
their arms around. Many who do are benefiting and profiting
from it. But we're opening up a can of worms,
and these worms bite. If you're just waking up. The
death toll is at seven. We have eleven injured, some
(18:42):
quite critically, after a UPS cargo jet crashed in Louisville
on takeoff. Footage is coming in. We don't know what
caused the left engine to catch on fire, but it
was fully a blaze at takeoff. The plane crashed moments later,
and then of all things, crashed into an oil refinery.
(19:04):
Just an absolute mess in Louisville and a tremendous loss
of life. NTSP is investigating, and Boeing is facing pressures
from both sides of the aisle to end the strike
in Saint Louis. Meanwhile, they can't end their own strike
in Washington. As we enter day thirty six of the
government shutdown, probably the biggest election story is this, was
(19:28):
this a serious victory for the Democrats, I mean all
blue states, all Blue cities, or is this a serious
problem for the Democrats moving forward? And if socialism versus
capitalism becomes the main theme of the midterm election, things
will not play nationwide the way they played in New
(19:50):
York City. That's really the question of the hour and
how this plays moving forward. The other reality is for
the socialist Democrat movement within the Democrat Party, it was
a great night of victory. Remember their first goal is
to take over the Democrat Party. They took some giant
(20:12):
steps towards that. But like a parasite who kills the host,
you ultimately kill yourself. How does that play out next year?
In the years after, We'll cover that and our sounds
the day as well. It's also, believe it or not,
a huge day to keep your eye on Washington. The
Supreme Court is going to hear arguments over whether President
Trump's tariffs are constitutional. Our White House correspondent is also
(20:36):
a Supreme Court bar attorney, which qualifies him greatly to
cover this story from both viewpoints. John Decker, good morning,
And what's at stake with the Supreme Court today? Other
than everything? Everything is at stake, Michael.
Speaker 8 (20:49):
It's the entire economic agenda for President Trump. And the
reason being is because the President, the Trump administration has taken.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
In pens and pens and tens.
Speaker 8 (21:00):
Of billions of dollars in tariff revenue over the court
of the past nine months.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
All of that could be going.
Speaker 8 (21:07):
Away if the Supreme Court rules with two lower courts,
including the DEC's Circuit Court of Appeals, and saying that
the president's reciprocal tariff is imposition of them was illegal,
was unconstitutional.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
It violated the law, all right. So stop being a
White House correspondent, just be a Supreme Court bar attorney.
Get to the end. Because the trend is that lower
courts have been activist. Supreme Court has once again set
it straight. So is this going to be another one
of those, or what's the particulars of this case? And
what do you see in what way do you think
(21:42):
the Supreme Court is leaning the particulars of this case?
Speaker 8 (21:46):
The Trump administration, in imposing tariffs on every one of
America's trading partners, is relying on a nineteen seventy seven
law that has never been imposed before by any president,
not even President Trump in his first term, in imposing
these tarriffs. And the reason for that law is they say,
at national emergency of some sort would allow a president
(22:09):
to do that. What is the national emergency according to
the president fentanyl coming into the US, even though fentanyl
is coming into the US at significantly lower volumes, and
in addition to that, trade deficits. But the US has
run trade deficits for the past fifty years even longer.
And so the question that will be asked by Supreme
Court justices today to the Solicitor General of the United
(22:32):
States is why is it a national emergency?
Speaker 1 (22:35):
Now?
Speaker 8 (22:36):
Why wasn't it a national emergency in President Trump's first
first term in the White House.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
I guess at some point you could bring up thirty
six trillion dollars of debt. But the emergency is spending there,
all right. So John, the president is more or less
framed this as we've been getting ripped off for a
long time. I mean, this is something he campaigned on,
you know, as much as in twenty sixteen he campaigned
on the border. He campaigned on these bad deals in
other countries taking advantage of us. I mean, there's a
(23:04):
lot of precedents here that this is the president's choosing.
Not an emergency. This is gonna be a tough thing
to sell. It's going to be a very tough thing.
Speaker 8 (23:14):
And of course the question will certainly be asked, why
isn't a tariff a tax on imported goods? That's the definition.
You look it up in the dictionary. That's exactly what
it will tell you. Well, you know, the power of
the purse is devoted to Congress in our constitution. The
Congress devotes the power to Congress to tax, to apply duties.
They don't give that power to the executive branch. They
(23:36):
don't give that power to presidents. So that too will
be asked of the solicitor General for the Trump administration today.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
And as we always say, we'll listen closely to the
questions that justices asked. It often shows you which way
they're leaning or what areas are of greatest concern. But
I think this is the beginning of a tough battle
for the president, that's for sure, all right, What would
happen if if this got a power.
Speaker 8 (24:01):
Well that if the Supreme Court upholds what the lower
courts have done, then you have to go to Plan B.
And I've asked the President about Plan B before. I said,
mister President, why don't you just go to Congress. You
have the Republicans in control of both the House and
the Senate. Say, Congress, I would like you to apply
these tariffs to.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
All of these countries.
Speaker 8 (24:21):
And you know what, I've spoken to members of Congress
and the leadership. They say, we have the votes to
do that. So to me, that is a logical place
to go for Plan B. So the President can continue
taking in that tariff revenue into the US treasury.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Yeah, but if you can do it with avoiding that,
that way, all those members don't have to face reelection
with tariffs in their you know, on their resume, I
think it's worth a shot to try to avoid it
all right, Lots of fate in the air with the
Supreme Court today concerning the president and whether or not
tariffs are constitutional. John Decker great reporting as always. You
(24:55):
can hear more from John his White House Briefing Room
with John Decker, a podcast daily its by nine Eastern
eighth Central every morning. All Right, if you're just waking up,
the sounds of the day and the top story election results,
they're one and the same, all right, everybody, look aloud.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
Look, you just got to try harder not to show
some grat the opportunity for a brief civics lesson.
Speaker 7 (25:17):
You're perhaps you'd like to be alone with you picly
deteriorating mental conditions.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
Don't know us, always revealing, often entertaining. Here's your sounds
of the day, starting with Mom Donnie who the smiling,
meek Islamist socialist candidate took a different tone after victory.
Speaker 4 (25:40):
For as long as we can remember, the working people
of New York have been told by the wealthy and
the well connected that power does not belong in their hands.
Fingers bruised from lifting boxes on the warehouse moor, Palms
callous from delivery by candlebars, Knuckles scarred with kitchen burns.
(26:05):
These are not hands that have been allowed to hold power.
And yet over the last twelve months you have dared
to reach for something greater.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
And you just elected a thirty four year old with
no executive experience whatsoever, a socialist, a Muslim and Islamist
as your next mayor. What could possibly go wrong?
Speaker 4 (26:30):
As we turn the page on a politics that abandons
the many and answers only to the few.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
New York tonight you have delivered.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
A mandate for change, a mandate for a new kind
of politics, a mandate for a city we can afford,
and a mandate for a government that delivers exactly that.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Odds, we have grasped it.
Speaker 4 (27:13):
The future is in our hands.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
So for Mom, Donnie, he makes us a referendum on socialism,
and not just for New York nationally. That's a tougher
play next year. As for the fall of Clomo, he
certainly celebrated that as well. He began the speech quoting
(27:42):
Eugene Debs right out of his mouth. Socialism.
Speaker 4 (27:46):
Tonight we have spoken in a clear voice.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
Hope is alive.
Speaker 4 (27:55):
Hope is a decision that tens of thousands of New
Yorkers made day after day, volunteer shift after volunteer shift,
despite attack, ad after attack, AD let this one, and
we will build a city hall that stands steadfast alongside
Jewish New Yorkers and does not waiver in the fight
(28:18):
against the scourge of antisemitism, where the more than one
million Muslims know that they belong not just in the
five boroughs of this city, but in the halls of power.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
That was pretty specifically an Islamist victory with a wink
to the Jewish people. And then he concludes with this
summary of himself.
Speaker 4 (28:47):
After all the conventional wisdom would tell you that I
am far from the perfect candidate. I am young, despite
my best efforts to grow older. I am Muslim, I
am a democratic socialist, and most damning of all, I
(29:12):
refuse to apologize for any of this.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Now, the question moving forward is is he beyond socialist?
Is he Islamist? And I guess New York is about
to find out, just in time for next year's twenty
fifth anniversary of nine to eleven. Well, the change in
tone of Mom don me that was even caught by
Van Jones at CNN.
Speaker 2 (29:33):
That's an opportunity to open himself up tonight and I
think that that will probably cost him going forward.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
Scott, Oh, are.
Speaker 3 (29:42):
You saying he didn't He wasn't the unifying voice of
a generation that you predicted mere moments ago. I acts,
where was the man that you predicted.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
Would not slice and dice dealer? Look, guys.
Speaker 3 (29:54):
He started his speech by quoting Eugene Dibbs, who ran
for president of the United State.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Say it's five times.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
As the Socialist Party of America candidate, He repeatedly attacked,
I know my socialists. I keep a close So here's
the thing.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
He went after. Everybody that he thinks is a problem.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
People who own things, people who have businesses. He said
an interesting quote, no problem too large for government to
solve or.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Too small important.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
And so when when you think of the world that way,
that every problem, no matter how small or how large,
is something for government to do.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Let me just decipher this for you.
Speaker 3 (30:44):
Tax increases as far as the eye can see, which
means that people who need to provide jobs to the
young people that you say need jobs are going to
flee as quickly as they possibly can.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
Yeah, I not even CNN. It's buying mom, Donnie, and
it's already I think AOC is going to make it
impossible for this not to be a much bigger story
than New York. Again, just to keep perspective, these were
all blue states, these were all blue cities. These were
all very predictable outcomes. And it's not so much a
(31:20):
serious victory in a night as a serious problem for
the year ahead. Why AOC is already talking like the
front runner for the Democrat nomination for President of the
United States.
Speaker 9 (31:31):
Listen, well, what I think is so impressive about what
Zauran mamzani accomplished tonight, as well as the entire movement
of New Yorkers that cannot to vote for him, is
that he had to not just defeat a Republican, He
had to defeat a Republican and the old guard of
the Democratic Party at the same time. He was fighting
a war on two fronts and not just one. And
(31:52):
he's still won resoundingly. And I think the message that
that sends is that the Democratic Party cannot last much
longer by denying the future.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
Bye. Remember, socialist Democrats' first goal is to take over
the Democrat Party, then dismantle the Republic by getting rid
of the electoral college. They see last night as the
first of the two big victories. They want to ride
this into the midterms into her presidency in twenty twenty eight.
I just don't think it's going to play that well
(32:24):
for the rest of the country. Neither does Mark Penn
real quickly, I promise when we take a second.
Speaker 10 (32:29):
Essentially, what's happened here is that DSA has golombed onto
the Democratic Party and said, hey, we're Democrats, and unfortunately
the DNC leadership has said, sure, come on in, doesn't
really matter if you believe things that are completely antithetical
to core democratic principles. We're welcoming you if you win elections.
I think that's a crazy position for a party. It's
(32:50):
ultimately fundamentally destructive. I always remind people that in nineteen
seventy two and nineteen eighty four, the Democratic Party managed
to reduce itself to a single state.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
Boom boom, shaka laca, very revealing sounds of the day.
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This is Your Morning Show with michael vinhild Joo