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November 10, 2025 33 mins

Government to reopen, Dems get nothing and like it!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show can be heard live each weekday morning
on great stations like thirteen sixty The Patriot in San Diego,
News Talk, one oh six point three and AM eighteen
eighty WM EQ oh Claire, Wisconsin and one oh four
nine The Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri. Would love to
be a part of your morning routine. But so glad
you're here now.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
Enjoy the podcast on two three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.

Speaker 5 (00:30):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Bill Charman.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Seven minutes after the hour, Good morning, and welcome to Monday, November.
The tenth Ye of our Lord today with them of
hope for the Senators voted to pass a funding measure
making a major step towards reopening the government, get back
to get towards forty twenty dollars of debt.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
Shall we.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
Riise and gine and good morning, Welcome to this Monday.
This is your morning show. I am Michael del Jona.
Jeffreys got this out. I don't know what red has.
It's wearing green. I don't know what that means when
a red's in green. Maybe he's getting in the Christmas spirit.
Maybe it's for Veterans Day. The Christmas Tree arrived at
Rockefeller Center. It can't be far off. Santa's going to

(01:15):
make his way. This tentative agreement reached by the Senate
late last night to reopen the government would restore food
assistance basically, other than a notion that the president would
would not be firing federal employees. I'm trying to figure out,

(01:38):
maybe Red can help us how this is any different
than the clean Bill that was passed in March.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
So basically it would not.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
Be Yeah, I mean, every American should be waking up going, Okay,
what the heck did we just do for forty days?

Speaker 1 (01:52):
And why?

Speaker 3 (01:55):
So it does not include any Obamacare subsidies, which was,
by their their own lips, the main reason for this shutdown.
So why take us through this forty day lap around
the anxiety pool? Eight Democrats. I'm sure there'll be a
lot of conversation about these eight. Some of the usual

(02:19):
names that were on there were Fetterman, Cortes, Maystow, but
she and Hassan King, Cortes, Maysto, Dick Durbin, Fetterman, Cain,
and rosen All joined Republicans in a sixty to forty vote.
There was a verbal, I think assurance in there that

(02:42):
the president might rehire some government employees. So did we
go through a forty day government shutdown? Not for the
principal stated, not for the good of the American people,
but for the good of government employees. That possibly it
And the only blink comes as we're on the brink

(03:07):
of having a travel nightmare. Good luck spitting this. Jeffries
and Bernie Sanders very outspoken against it, as was Gavin
Newsom screaming from the West coast. Notice me, notice me.
President issued some pardons. Also, the idea of a two
thousand dollars tariff dividend and a fifty year mortgage. I'll

(03:32):
never forget. I was up for a job in San Francisco.
It was a long time ago. I think I was
living in Tulsa at the time, and I think that
was what finally did it. That was what finally made
my decision. When I was told, oh, don't worry about
home prices year, we have one hundred year mortgages, and
I said.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
Well, you may, but I never will.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
Who play, I mean, assuming you buy a house at
the youngest what twenty five thirty?

Speaker 6 (04:02):
Yeah, most radio jobs last what twenty four months?

Speaker 3 (04:05):
You want to give us a little Dave Ramsey on
the math of a hundred year mortgage check.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
That debt is what you need to turn my headphones
up on that, right you? Now? Do you know that
for a fact he asks for his headphones to be turned.

Speaker 6 (04:20):
I feel like he's saying it when he's talking in
his headphones.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
It's like your mortgage, how you going to be debt free?
I gonna pay that off.

Speaker 6 (04:29):
I can't pay that debt off, but I can turn
my headphones up. Could you imagine how little equity you
would have in your home?

Speaker 1 (04:39):
All that?

Speaker 3 (04:40):
But that's their theory that the home values are increasing
so much that you know it doesn't matter. You know,
you just get in the house and your equity builds
from there. But I do know as America ready for
a fifty year more, I cannot I mean I I
can't wait to run that by David Bonson on Thursday
and then just watch his head explode. The two thousand
dollars tariff dividend. This has been kicked around before. I

(05:01):
don't know the two thousand and again it depends. It
doesn't depend on how much money you make, depends how
much money you spend.

Speaker 1 (05:10):
As to who pays more.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
But I just love how Republicans always are against means testing.
I mean, it's right up there with limited government until
they do it. I don't know if you saw, but
buried in this is means testing. So the truth of

(05:37):
the matter is not everybody gets a two thousand dollars dividend. No,
if you make a certain threshold of money, you don't.
So once again government's in the position of picking winners
and losers. And I'm just wondering why Republicans are always
against this except when they do it and everybody just
bec as president.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
Everybody will hate me for saying that today. Just a question.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
I'm just something for you to ponder, along with fifty
year mortgages. But everything is great again. The fifty year mortgages. Michael,
he wanted to be compared to FDR.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Are you serious. I didn't know that was a goal.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
Oh that's the new deal, my friends. Lenny Watkins passed
away at the age of eighty eight. Just great player,
great coach, great citizen. In the end media, Lenny Wilkins,
I said Lenny Wilkins. You said Watkins? Did I say

(06:39):
Lenny Watkins? I think he's fine. Lenny Wilkins dead at
the age of eighty eight. Russia and Ukraine exchanged massive attacks,
both targeting each other's power grids. There is no peace,
even a brewing between Russia and Ukraine, and the President
issued his round of pardons. He had one of the

(07:00):
for Rudy Giuliani. Did they pardon him for his hair melting?
Remember that news conference when he just started dripping? That
was one of the greatest things I ever wasn't the
kracking that made his hair melt that day?

Speaker 1 (07:10):
What was it?

Speaker 7 (07:11):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Remember her with it?

Speaker 3 (07:12):
We're going to release the crack and gosh she said
she released a squeaker.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
That was about it.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Yeah, they both get pardoned, and let's see what else
is really big? M I mean, that's about the gist
of everything that we're going to cover. We do have
John Decker who will be following that two two thousand
dollars chair. Can we take the early bets? Do you
remember that? Wasn't it a John Decker question that brought

(07:43):
up the idea? I remember when and then Trump said
how smart he was? Where'd he go to school, and
he said Wharton, Oh yeah, you must be smart. Wasn't
that I think it was Decker's idea. No, I can't
say there was Decker's idea to means test who gets it?
Who doesn't? But you know he'll be taking a bow
on this one. And then Rory on, Okay, if we

(08:07):
get a deal, and I mean, you know, obviously it'll
take a couple of days by the time the House
approves it and the President signs it. But do we
avert some of this travel nightmare that we were poised for?
And third hour, I beg it begs this question. Who
has had a better year than lee Ane Morgan? Seriously,
top has been yummy?

Speaker 1 (08:28):
She gives her hands are so swell and I can't
band it.

Speaker 3 (08:31):
But no, I mean, first, she has that hit movie
where she steals the show and cordially invited from Will
Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon.

Speaker 8 (08:37):
Now I've been on the Klans for three days.

Speaker 1 (08:39):
I'm awake. I can't even make.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
A fanst She's so yummy, But first that movie where
she steals the show. There's other clips you could have
played that are even more funny. But I understand why
you didn't. That movie was just terrifically refreshing andonderful.

Speaker 6 (09:00):
What I'm gonna turn my parents onto that movie this
week and hear my mom's review.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
If you haven't seen Cordially Inviteed, do it tonight. Makes
a popcorn Sit with your loved one and have a
few laughs.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
Get some clean necks, because you're gonna cry.

Speaker 3 (09:14):
You laugh so hard, and even over the dumb stuff,
you know, like how does an alligator end up in
a bed? Well, it does, all right, and it's funny.
So after that, they give her her own show on Netflix,
huge hit, Leanne and very well done. In fact, I
may run this by her without I hope it doesn't
sound like I'm kissing, you know, blown smoke. But I mean, seriously,

(09:37):
there's that show in the chemistry of that cast. I'm thinking,
is this Roseanne two point zero Roseanne twenty twenty five.
I mean, that's how good it is, and it's really

(09:58):
so at that point. Now she does her stand up
Unspeakable Things, and it's number one on Netflix. I mean,
you got the number one stand up special, you got
one of the top shows of the year, and you
stole the show in one of the funniest movies of
the year.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
That's a good year. That's a better year than we've had.

Speaker 3 (10:17):
What we done well, I mean I had a couple
of exceptional holes at Gaylord Springs.

Speaker 9 (10:22):
Once again.

Speaker 3 (10:23):
There's a new trend brewing where I just can't keep
my concentration on the front nine and then.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
I close strong on the back nine. All it does
is keep me coming back.

Speaker 6 (10:33):
And we've added four or five radio stations to our
little family. We started the year at what did we
start the year at thirty something?

Speaker 1 (10:43):
And now we're at one hundred and eight. Yeah, I
guess we've had a good year too, but nothing likely
and Lee and Morgan, Ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 3 (10:48):
In the third hour, Our Correspondence, Roy O'Neil, Aunt, John Decker,
Chris Walker, all things Republican. We'll see how he feels
about means testing. We got a big, big show. This
is your Morning Show with Michael del Chrono.

Speaker 1 (11:03):
A Mikey Joey you Monday morning. I'm going to get the
government open up again. Baby, have a couple of cool.

Speaker 3 (11:15):
I always picture him like a fight or escape in
the Bronx or something, always.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
Having a couple of cool. Tall him a pay phone.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
By the way, I'm absolutely appalled that read thought he
could stop me. What was Mackenzie Phillips' first movie, of course,
American Graffite.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
And you didn't think about it. You just pulled it
right out just like that.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Well he forgets we're one and the same. We split
it eight weeks or identical twins to different mothers, same father.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
You know where I'm going with that. On Joey Kits
and Joey nor My Kings, Well, Joey kind of stole
my thunder.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
The Senate has voted to pass a funding measure, a
major step towards reopening the government.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Mark Mayfield joins us with the good news and details.

Speaker 10 (11:56):
Eight members of the Senate Democratic Caucus joined Republicans advancing
the measure.

Speaker 11 (12:01):
On this vote, the yas are sixty and the nayser forty.
Three fifths of the Senate duly chosen and sworn having
voted in the affirmative. The motion upon reconsideration is agreed to.

Speaker 10 (12:13):
It includes a stopgap measure to fund the government through
January thirtieth. Sunday's vote broke a forty day deadlock in
the chamber after an agreement was reached that included a
future vote on extending healthcare subsidies and assurances that federal
workers furloughed during the shutdown would be reinstated. Still, hurdles
remain before the government can fully reopen, and any Senator
could slow the process forward several days.

Speaker 3 (12:33):
I'm Marketfield, Well, the President had a good idea. How
about a tariff dividend to help you with the lower
priced items due to the tariffs? No, to help offset
some of the costs of the tariffs. Scott car reports.

Speaker 12 (12:48):
As the US Supreme Court weighs the legality of President
Trump's sweeping tariffs. In his social media post, the president
says the payments would be for everyone, accept high income people.
The High Court heard arguments last week after agreeing to
fast track the case, and his post, Trump also took
aim at those who are against the tariffs, calling them fools.

(13:08):
The tariffs will stay in place until the court makes
a decision.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
Well, millions of US are gearing up for colder temperatures
and some for potential snow this week.

Speaker 8 (13:19):
It's due to an area of low pressure moving down
from Canada and into the eastern part of the country.
That started on Sunday. Cities in the Midwest we'll see
temperatures in the twenty degree range today. What places like Atlanta, Dallas,
and Nashville could see highs in the thirties by tomorrow.
Record lows are possible across the southeast. I'm Tammy Trujillo.

Speaker 3 (13:43):
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has new class in duckies.
The ceremony took place on Saturday evening in Los Angeles.
Joining the ranks this year Bad Company, White Stripes, White stripes. Look,
we're all tilting our head like dogs hearing his out
in the distance. I never heard of the White Stripes. Sorry,

(14:04):
Sound Garden, I have Chubby Checker. I've twisted Joe Cock.
I cannot believe Joe Cocker wasn't on until this weekend.
Cindy Lauper, I don't know that I've called that rock
and roll, but we've all gotten past that and the
outcasts round out the inductees.

Speaker 9 (14:19):
Well.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
Turkeys are going to be more expensive this year due
to an outbreak of bird flu. But there is an alternative,
and nobody gets alternatives, especially when it comes to food
like bre tennis.

Speaker 9 (14:31):
Instead of using a knife and fork, how about a spoon.
For Thanksgiving, Baskin Robbins is again offering its Turkey ice
cream cake, as they've done since the seventies. This year's
cake can be made to order and we'll set you
back about forty five bucks. It features sugar coat legs,
so no drumstick, but enough ice cream to feed about
fifteen people. They say it's perfect for the ninety seven

(14:51):
percent of Americans who like ice cream and the other
three percent. Kenny Pie, I'm pre tennis.

Speaker 3 (14:57):
NBA star and coach Lenny Wilkins is being remembered for
his contributions not just to basketball, but to Seattle.

Speaker 5 (15:04):
Lenny Wilkins dance Sunday at age eighty eight. He spent
more than five decades in the NBA as a player
and a coach. He was also known for volunteer work
in Seattle to benefit children. In June, Wilkins was honored
with the first statue outside of Climate Pledgerina. There's also
a street named in his honor. He led the Seattle
SuperSonics to their first and only NBA championship in nineteen

(15:25):
seventy nine.

Speaker 7 (15:26):
I'm Brad Fod, I'm actor jeff E Howard and my
Morning Show is your Morning Show with Michael Del Jorno
aka Pizza Boy.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Hey Gang, it's Michael. Your Morning Show can be heard
live each weekday morning on great radio stations like k
EIB in Los Angeles, WFDF nine ten AM Detroit, Michigan,
the Superstation, and the Rocket Talk sixteen hundred AM Kiva
and Albuquerque, New Mexico. We'd love to have you listen
live every morning. But glad you're here now for the
podcast Enjoy?

Speaker 1 (16:05):
Can I do a free plug?

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Sure, sure? I hope it's not the wrong name. Is
it Tim Horton? Tim Horton's a breakfast place. No, it's
a coffee place.

Speaker 6 (16:17):
It's a Canadian coffee place that my sister in laws Canadian.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
She's excited. We got one in Nasha. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:23):
But it's a breakfast place, isn't it the tim Hortons? Yeah,
the Tim Horton's cured coffee.

Speaker 4 (16:29):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
It was a buy one, get one free at Public's,
so we tried it. I think it's my favorite ever.
You like it better than mcafe, better than Duncan. I
think it's the premiere.

Speaker 7 (16:41):
Now.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
I don't know how many particles of plastic I'm dying
of right now. But it's the best part of my morning.
Tim Horton said, my cup. Hey, good Morton, Rise and shine.
Early bird gets the warm, sleepy squirrel misses the nut.
It is thirty six minutes after the hour. Throw a
leg over the bed, shuffle into the kitchen, whatever coffee
you have, grind it, make it.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
We got a d understand.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
The Senate has voted to pass a funding measure, making
a major step towards reopening the government. Major step. The
House will approve it, the President will sign it. It
is coming. So everybody's already fighting amongst themselves in the
Democrat Party, while the rest of America is just staring
on and scratching its head, wondering.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Why did we do this? For forty days?

Speaker 3 (17:22):
The agreement doesn't really have anything in it they've been
holding out for. In the end, they didn't have to
use a nuclear option. They were able to get it
passed by having eight Democrats come on board. You can
only imagine how popular those eight will be, even though
all of them with the holidays just a week or

(17:45):
two away. Thanking them for doing it because travel was
going to be halted. The vote goes through sixty to
forty to take the first step towards ending the shutdown.
Came hours after Democrats agreed to support a package that
would fun and multiple agencies and programs for the full
fiscal year and all others until January thirtieth of twenty

(18:08):
twenty six, not the thirty first, just January thirtieth, twenty
twenty six. In exchange, Democrats have a commitment from President
Trump and his administration to rehire government workers fired at
the start of the funding lapse.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
So in the end, if you've got.

Speaker 3 (18:24):
A notebook out victories for the Democrats government jobs, that's it.
And the government jobs of those that were fired at
the start of the funding lapse. So had you not
shut down the government, they never would have been fired.
So all you have is your government employees from the

(18:46):
stunt you bolt. In the end, eight members of the
Senate Democratic Caucus voted Sunday night to advance the House
passed stopgap. The vote will pave the way for consideration
later this week of a legislative package that would fund
the Department of Agriculture and the FDA, the Department of

(19:08):
Federal Affairs, military construction projects, and the operations of Congress
for all of the current fiscal year. All other agencies
would be funded until January thirtieth of next year. According
to a text of a continuing resolution released on Sunday,

(19:28):
two things to tackle One. You ended up passing a
clean bill, So this was a forty day lap around
an anxiety pool for what Democrats' own lips told you.
It was to fund the subsidies to Obamacare, subsidies that

(19:50):
were doubled by Biden for COVID. So what Americans really
should be sitting down and look at at is did
Obamacare fund everyone? Remember when that was the argument that
insurance was a fundamental right. Insurance is what you pay

(20:13):
for the things you can't afford. It's a financial strategy,
and you should set your deductibles and coverage accordingly.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
No, no, no, it was a human right.

Speaker 3 (20:32):
Okay, clearly Strategically, the Democrats wanted a federal government healthcare system,
but they couldn't get it, so they created Obamacare to fail.
Remember Nancy Pelosi famously saying we have to pass it
to know what's in it. Well, without knowing what's in it,
they were promising it would ensure everyone.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
It didn't.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
In fact, roughly the same amount of people, many of
which were young and shows not to remained uninsured. So
we didn't go from thirty million uninsured to nobody insured uninsured.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
It remained roughly the same.

Speaker 3 (21:11):
Premiums were supposed to go down and be more affordable,
they were actually up, and it was supposed to increase
care and quality of care, and it didn't do that either.
How did they finally get more people insured by getting
taxpayers tax dollars to subsidize it. At that point, you're

(21:35):
calling people up and saying, would you like this coverage? Well,
what's the cost? Nothing? Someone else is paying for it.
And all that was going to lapse was the added subsidies.
You still have the subsidies scam being played out, but
the added subsidies for COVID. So that's a game that's

(21:55):
being played. We can't get government healthcare, so will create
it through a failed health care plan that is subsidized
by other taxpayers.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
All of this, of course, began.

Speaker 3 (22:09):
With the dilemma of how do we bring down the
cost of healthcare in America? Well, the problem was you
were letting millions into the country, plus our poor weren't paying,
and so the cost was shifted to those who were paying.
That's why those who were responsible had insurance and used
their insurance and got care and paid for it, were

(22:32):
paying more and more because they were paying for their
care and the people that weren't paying because no one
was going without receiving treatment. Now, that in and of
itself is a much bigger story, a much more scandalous

(22:53):
partisan story. And the average American is just so darn
busy going to work and paying for things they can't
follow all of this. But that's the bigger painful story.
What was the last forty day painful story about? Because
none of that changed. The one thing they claimed they

(23:13):
were going to destroy the entire economy over was subsidies
for Obamacare, and they don't get it and they pass
it anyway. So seriously, what was this forty days about?
Should be on everybody's lips today. Who were the eight

(23:35):
that finally saw the light? Well you have Senator Catherine
Cortes Maesto of Nevada mastow. She repeatedly stated she did
not want to inflict sweeping pain on some Americans in
order to extract a solution to the impending healthcare crisis
of expiring tax credits, inspiring because there was an expiration

(23:58):
date set when it was agreed on. She described lines
like I haven't been seen since the pandemic for food
banks in Nevada to reporters on Sunday. Then there's Dick
Durbin of Illinois. Now he doesn't face any re election consequence.

(24:19):
He's a Democratic whip, the only member of the party
leadership who voted with Republicans to advance the deal to
end the shutdown. This bill is not perfect, but it
takes important steps to reducing their shutdowns hurt. And of
course he's retiring after three decades in office. John Fetterman,
who has always been reasonable from Pennsylvania. He's the only

(24:42):
Democrat who has voted each and every time to end
the shutdown.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Boy, will he be targeted in his Senate race.

Speaker 3 (24:53):
Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, who was one of the
Democrats who negotiated the vote on the Affordable Care Act
credits deal. A former New Hampshire governor, she's up for
election in twenty twenty eight. I've heard from those in
the granted state who can't afford a doubling of their
health insurance costs. I've also heard from families about the
deep pain that the government shutdown has caused. Tifkine, who

(25:19):
was Hillary Clinton's running mate for president, represents about one
hundred and fifty thousand federal workers affected by the shutdown
and backed the deal that includes key provisions for his
state reinstatement of federal workers impacted by the mass reduction
and force.

Speaker 1 (25:34):
Of the firings during the shutdown.

Speaker 3 (25:35):
Then you have Angus King of Maine, an Independent who
caucuses with Democrats. He was a key negotiator on the deal,
struck to guarantee a vote on the Affordable Care Act
tax credits once the government has reopened. Jackie Rosen of Nevada,
who joined her fellow Nevada member Cortes Mastow to vote

(25:57):
to advance the deal. And then she In of New Hampshire.
Shaheen was an original sponsor for the legislation that created
the enhanced Obamacare tax credits that have been central to
the shutdown dispute. Like Durban, she's retiring from the Senate
next year, so nothing you can do to me. Audios
Ami goes and that's what paves the way for the

(26:18):
government to be opened again, but continues to beg the question,
what was this last forty days about I'm not trying
to play good guy bad guy shirt skins all this,
but if this was about the subsidies for Obamacare, in
other words, admitting Obamacare has failed, it's just being paid

(26:41):
for by other taxpayers, what this is revealed is far
more damaging than the forty day nightmare they put us through.
But other than negotiating the rehiring of some federal employees
who were fired because of this shutdown stunt, what did
it achieve? And the answer is absol nothing, unless, of course,

(27:03):
they were using the shutdown to get the election results
they were likely going to get anyway.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Last week, it's gonna be hard. Sanders was not a
happy camper. No, well, there were a lot that weren't.
But here's Bernie.

Speaker 4 (27:20):
Tonight, eight Democrats voted with the Republicans to allow them
to go forward on this continuing resolution. Into my mind,
this was a very very bad vote. What it does,
first of all, is it raises healthcare premiums for over
twenty million Americans by doubling and in some cases tripling

(27:44):
or quadrupling.

Speaker 5 (27:45):
People can't afford that, well, they never could afford it.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
It's what you're not telling them.

Speaker 3 (27:51):
And it's only going to double triple or quadruple because
it's coming from zero. The Affordable Care Act was not affordable.
It did not insure everyone. It did not lower premiums,
it increased them. You only subsidize them, you paid them.
Otherwise they would have chose to still not be insured.

(28:16):
And a good portion of them are illegal immigrants that
shouldn't be receiving taxpayer dollars to cover their insurance for
a country they broke into. Will Americans take this moment
to figure some of these things out. I don't know,

(28:39):
but it begs the question. Does the government reopened but
the ignorance continue and the pandering and partisan dysfunction continued. Unfortunately,
my guess is yes.

Speaker 4 (28:51):
It's Your Morning Show with Michael del Journo.

Speaker 1 (28:56):
The big news.

Speaker 3 (28:56):
A tentative agreement has been reached in the Senate to
reopen the government, and it would restore SNAP funding.

Speaker 8 (29:02):
Funds for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, have
been in limbo and at the center of a legal battle.
If the new deal is approved, SNAP would be funded
through next September at higher levels, funding labs for the
program at the beginning of November for the first time
in at sixty year history. As the shutdown dragged on,
I'm Tammy Trhio.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
President Trump says a tariff dividend of at least two
thousand dollars a person will be paid to American Scott
car reports.

Speaker 12 (29:28):
As the US Supreme Court weighs the legality of President
Trump's sweeping tariffs. In his social media post, the president
says the payments would be for everyone, accept high income people.
The High Court heard arguments last week after agreeing to
fast track the case, and his post, Trump also took
aim at those who are against the tariffs, calling them fools.

(29:48):
The tariffs will stay in place until the court makes
a decision. I'm Scott Carr in Washington.

Speaker 3 (29:54):
Some of you may be scratching your head, saying I
thought Republicans were against government picking and choosing winners and losers,
redistribute of wealth and means testing.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
You'd be right to scratch your head. President Trump is
issuing a new round of partons us Parton.

Speaker 10 (30:07):
Attorney Ed Martin announced on Sunday that pardons for seventy
seven people had been granted. That includes Rudy Giuliani, former
Trump attorney Sidney Powell, longtime advisor Borie Epstein and former
White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. Those pardon were
allegedly involved in efforts to overturn the twenty twenty presidential
election results, including a plan to field an alternate slate

(30:28):
of electors on Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
The famous Rockefeller Christmas Tree has arrived in New York City.

Speaker 1 (30:34):
Tammy Trio's back with the.

Speaker 8 (30:35):
Latest, seventy five foot Norway spruce weighing eleven tons, made
the one hundred and fifty mile journey to Midtown Manhattan
from just outside of Albany. For the next few weeks,
it will be surrounded by scaffoldings so Cruz can wrap
it in fifty thousand lights and top it with a
nine hundred pounds Warofsky crystal. A lighting ceremony will be
held on December third and air on NBC and Peacock.

(30:56):
I'm Tammy Trio.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
NBA star and coaching great Lenny wilk is being remembered
for his contributions to the city of Seattle.

Speaker 5 (31:03):
Lenny Wilkins dine Sunday at age eighty eight. He spent
more than five decades in the NBA as a player
and a coach. He was also known for volunteer work
in Seattle to benefit children. In June, Wilkins was honored
with the first statue outside of Climate Pledgerina. There's also
a street named in his honor. He led the Seattle
SuperSonics to their first and only NBA championship in nineteen

(31:24):
seventy nine.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
I'm brad four in sports.

Speaker 3 (31:27):
Jamar Gapp one hundred and seventy two yards, three touchdowns,
Lions forty four to twenty two. Doubled up the Commanders
in our Nation's Capitol.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
Jets fourteen points. We had a kickoff return that a
butt return for a touchdown.

Speaker 3 (31:40):
Browns lose twenty seven to twenty to the Jets. The
Baker Mayfield two hundred and seventy three yards, three touchdowns,
Still not enough. Bocks lose to the Patriots twenty eight
to twenty three. Devon a chain one hundred and seventy
four yards, two touchdowns. Fins dominate the Bills thirty to thirteen.
Cottonals fall to three and six, losing to the seat
Hawks forty four to twenty two, so they could claim

(32:02):
their portion of the NFC West.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
The other portion went to the Rams.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
Matthew Stafford two hundred eight yards, four touchdowns forty two
twenty six over the forty nine Ers. Last night Sunday
Night Football, Steelers dropped to five and four. Chargers win
at twenty five to ten. Monday Night Football tonight is
the Eagles and the Packers from lambeau Field. In hockey,
the Red Wings lost five to one to the Blackhawks,
Kings three to two over the Penguins and the Ducks
four to one over the Jets and the Hardwood Pistons

(32:27):
by three on the road one eleven, one aw eight
over the seventy six ers, thunder now ten and one
beat the grizz one fourteen, one hundred in Memphis, Kings
lost one forty four to one seventeen. Might want to
play a little defense to the Timberwolves. Bucks lost one
twenty two one to fifteen to the Rockets. And not
a lot of change at the very top of the

(32:47):
NCAA Top five Ohio State number one, Indiana number two undefeated.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
Both I think Texas A and m is undefeated as well.

Speaker 3 (32:55):
Right at number three Alabama and Georgia with one loss,
four and five. The top ten rounds out Ole Miss Oregon,
Texas Tech not her name, and Texas Birthdays Today from
Gray's Anatomy. Do you ever notice in Gray's Anatomy they
just play music throughout the whole show. It never stops. No,
it's just from great music too. But it's irritating, is it.
That's why I used to, you know, never really watch.

(33:18):
My wife would have it on. I did notice that
all Chast she's fifty, she's fifty six today. Singer Miranda
Lambert is forty two. From White Lotus, Walton Goggins is
fifty four, and one day at a Times Mackenzie Phillips
is sixty six.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael nhild Joo
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