Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
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Enjoyed the podcast one two.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Three, Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding. Because we're in the state bold,
this is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Jordan.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
President elect Donald Trump expected to name Florida Senator Marco
Rubio as his Secretary of State. Republicans officially retained control
of the House at two hundred and eighteen seats to
two hundred and nine. President Biden welcomes the Israeli President
of the White House today and the Rams lost at
home last night at so Far twenty three fifteen on
(00:52):
Monday Night football Rams fault to four and five. Good
morning and welcome to Tuesday, November, the twelfth year of
our Lord twenty twenty four. This is your morning show
on the Aaron streaming live on your iHeart app. One
of the things we were bragging about with our big
boss in town is our listeners all over the country
and how well they use the talkback button. You know,
I brought up something. I'm really proud of you, my audience.
(01:13):
I don't sometimes we can't get to all of them.
But we have never, really, rarely ever had to edit
a talkback because somebody wasn't on topic or you know,
was asking a dumb question or making a foolish comment.
I mean, you guys have gotten this every step of
the way, and that's why your voice is so vital.
Can't have your morning show without your voice. So use
(01:34):
the talkback button on your iHeartRadio app. It's a microphone.
You can make your insta comment or question. We also
have the email Michael did at iHeartMedia dot com and
toll free. You can call one eight hundred six eight
eight ninety five twenty two. Well, by the way, just
directing your attention to the scoreboard. Donald Trump wins with
three hundred and twelve Electoral College votes to two twenty six.
(01:55):
The Senate is now going to be officially fifty three
Republicans forty seven Democrats in the club of one hundred.
That's a plus four. And then don't forget Jade vance
ends up being an additional vote if something should get
that close. And the House has now officially been retained
by the Republicans as well, plus one at two nineteen,
with a few seats to still be determined, we kind
(02:17):
of felt like that was going to come in maybe
at two twenty two somewhere around there. We'll see, but
the Republicans have control of the House, the Senate, and
the White House, and the president very busy putting together
an administration. We wanted to talk in general because we
said going into this election it was going to be
a very close race state by state, but not a
close result. And in the end, I'm lucky, as I predicted,
(02:43):
all seven swing states went to Donald Trump, so an
overwhelming mandate victory even won the popular vote. So there's
this sense of a mandate rejection of overwokeness, a mandate
rejection of ignoring what's important to the voters, and a
mandate that Donald Trump's did it once, he can do
it again. Fix it, fix the economy, fix the border,
(03:07):
fix the wars and rumors of wars. But it does
beg the question how does a mandate level electoral college
victory play out over the next four years and it's
still very divided nation. Important questions go to important people.
Senior contributor David Sanadi is joining us. That's really what
we're all kind of. I'm not like these woke people
(03:27):
you're seeing on the internet freaking out. There was one yesterday,
but a woman in a park and she's I guess
they're going to do like blue wristbands now so they
can identify, you know. I mean, they're literally playing, you know,
us versus them wargames kind of thing, and she's just
paranoid or people looking at me because I'm white, thinking
I voted for Donald Trump, and it's just pure derangement
that aside as we watch the next four years, this
(03:50):
is a mandate political call in one direction for a
nation that's still very divided. That'll be very interesting to
watch play out.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
To really have to deal with is the fact that
forty eight months is a very brief amount of time. Yeah,
and Donald Trump has got a lot of work to
do and he's busy about it. So just a question
as to whether or not he can get as much
done as possible with this significant majority that he has
in both the House and the Senate. Now, it's a
(04:20):
significant majority in the House, even though the numbers are thin,
because it's not going to be shaken.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
So it's a solid even though it's small, it's solid.
Speaker 4 (04:29):
But his majority in the Senate is an unusual one
because he has enough people now in the Senate to
overcome the two progressives on the Republican side. So Trump
has got a clear lane to govern. The forty eight
months has not a lot of time to move the
administrative state. So it's going to be your point for
them to understand.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
In the Senate because of Collins and Murkowski, that's really
a plus one. That's really fifty one to forty nine
on really tough issues, and then it's a plus two
with jad advance as a tiebreaker. So that's why it
was so important that the Senate be led by more
than the House. The House will be pretty strong just
with the majority.
Speaker 4 (05:07):
Yeah, so it's going to be a very exciting time,
but it's going to be a very fast time. Again,
we have not seen a situation where a president in
essence wins a second term disassociated to the first, so
it's like a new first term.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
He gets a second months. Yeah, because most most re
elected presidents really don't get that second one hundred days.
Speaker 3 (05:27):
No, they really do not know, and he does.
Speaker 4 (05:28):
And most second term presidents the second term. I look
at Reagan, second term was worse than the first. It's
pretty predictable. So this is a very different thing. The
thing that surprises me the most about the country right
now is how fast it's settling down.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
The other thing is how much Donald Trump has learned
from his first presidency. That's another thing that we've never
had before. Somebody that has a presidency loses that has
time to put it in perspective and come back before
their second term with that perspective rather than just flow
(06:01):
into it. And you can see that in the Who's
In and Who's Out? You know, Nikki Haley out Pompeo.
That was very quick and a very good passing hurdle
for Donald Trump out. Now let's see, you know, we'll
see what the Senate Republicans do in their choice of
a leader. That's something Donald Trump can't control. But he
(06:25):
is laser focused and putting together an administration that really
and he was always a person that did what he
said he would do. He plans to do it really
really fast.
Speaker 4 (06:36):
I know, commentators aren't supposed to interview the host, but
I'm sorry, I can't resist your guy, Rubio, Secretary of State.
Speaker 3 (06:41):
What's your read on that?
Speaker 1 (06:43):
Well, you know, there's several reads on that. One I
think he is the right mind for it. The other
is what it does for him politically. You would assume
the JD Vans now that this all depends on how
things go over this four years. If Donald Trump fixed
is everything? This is an interesting and I'm going to
answer a question with a question, but an interesting way
of looking at it is he fixes the border and
(07:05):
it's resolved. He fixes the economy, energy, things start moving
in the right direction, jobs market, everything starts going in
the right direction. Does America feel like then Wes Moore
comes along, Wow, we have the luxury now focusing on
social issues or cultural issues? Or is that just a
natural flow into a JD. Van's presidency or do they
(07:26):
open up the primary? Either way, I would say this,
it makes Marco Rubio quite frankly number two in this administration,
even right tied for two with Vance in this administration,
and probably puts him on the ticket with Jadvance.
Speaker 3 (07:42):
I would think.
Speaker 4 (07:44):
Rubio is a remarkably talented I mean he may leap
frog JD with this.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
Defending on how the work.
Speaker 4 (07:50):
Plays away in his career in American public life is
fascinating as well. So this is a big move. This
is a this is a future oriented move. The Trump
people are getting down to business in a hurry.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Yeah, because we said this going in a you got
to do with the mandate of the American people what
the elected you do and fix these things. The other
thing is you have to do is you have to
set up this party to have a future, and if
it doesn't, let me start over. This was not a
red wave. This was not a big Republican election. This
was a Donald Trump election. That makes it an orange wave,
and the Orange goes away in four years. So they've
(08:24):
got to find a way to keep trumpsm or the
future of the Party of trump Ism moving forward. I
think this does it.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Also.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
I hold my breath whenever I see a cabinet like
this come together. This good. I go, what does God
know that I don't know? Because maybe we are headed
to war and that would put a secretary of State
then a Secretary of Defense in a very high position.
And if war becomes the next four years, either way
no matter how no matter how you slice this pie,
it comes up Marco Rubio. This is huge for.
Speaker 4 (08:53):
Just one of the pieces of this puzzle that going
forward that's interesting is is Trump is, without a doubt,
the character that was required for American voters.
Speaker 3 (09:03):
To come to their senses. Yes.
Speaker 4 (09:05):
So now we're in a position where he's surrounded by
people in many cases who are philosophically and historically more
experienced than him and deeper than him in regards to
how to govern. And that is a fantastic team situation
where Trump provides the energy, but these guys provide the delivery.
It's much more of the kind of business model that
Donald Trump's familiar with. So I think Americans are going
(09:26):
to sit back and enjoy Christmas and say, let's see
what happens in the first ninety days, and if the
momentum continues, I think the Democrats have a problem.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
And the first play of who his cheapest staff was
not just to make history, but a woman who has
proven herself to navigate this. This was an election like
no other, from court to assassination, but moreover, to protect
him and keep him on the rails and protect the
clowns from getting in and around him in the Oval office.
(09:56):
That was Look, Marco Ruvey is a huge one, be
some huge picks. I believe we're going to get Christy
Nome right for homeland security. So I mean, he's really
surrounding himself with people. I mean, this is not a
good time.
Speaker 5 (10:11):
You know.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
I could say it's not maybe not the best time
to be Governor DeSantis. It would look it would seem
moving forward that he's out Rubio's in. Not a good
time to be Nicki Haley. Not a good time to
be an establishment Republican. I really don't think so. In
the next four years now he has to succeed with
these people, But if he does, they become increasingly, if
(10:32):
not completely irrelevant.
Speaker 4 (10:34):
So what about to say it's not as he point
himself to be the cenator from Florida.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
That might be his wisest move long term, because if
the Republicans maintained this, it's Ruby or Vance. And now
the question is do they have a full primary and
decide And if so, you know, I still want Vance
Telsea Gabbard and I still think that could play. But
I think that's for them to make it choice. But
(11:01):
the natural order would be probably to move forward with
Vance's president, Marco Ruby's vice president after being secretary of state.
Would you think that'd be the advantage over Tulsa Gabbert.
Speaker 4 (11:11):
Well, and what's fascinating about this is if this was
a traditional presidential election where the person coming in has
eight years, people would.
Speaker 6 (11:19):
Say, wait, guys, give yourself a break. Go oh no,
this is on Christmas eggnog. Unfortunately, this is on the
table right now. That's quick to say in one hundred
days that you're at the play.
Speaker 4 (11:31):
And that brings us to our most fascinating question of all, which.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
Is which is usually where is the big where is
the big money at which.
Speaker 3 (11:38):
That's that's the second question.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
The first question every morning I wake up with is
where's John Podesta today?
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Oh, he's planning. I want to share an email with
you when we come back.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Detruno.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
I'm Michael del journal David Sinnati is our senior correspondent
who is joining us and contributor. I got this one now.
I don't know if I'm going to be able to
find this. Okay, here it is, and I'm just going
to cut to the chase of a long email, David,
(12:12):
you'll get it. I hope the listeners get it. Okay,
So all this plays out Biden cognitively impaired. They finally
choose to reveal it in an unprecedented debate before a convention.
Even happens. That's very odd. That was done on purpose.
We smelled the rat immediately when they cut back to
CNN and they're calling for well, there are consultants and
(12:33):
there are donors everywhere scrambling to find it presidential. It
was all staged to get rid of Joe and then
they hand it to Kamala Harris and at backfires. So
her question ultimately is I'll share my answer after you answer.
So why did George Soros let this happen? You know,
you brought up John Podesta White Podesta saus let this happen.
Make no mistake about it. I'm thrilled Trump one. But
(12:55):
what's the catch? Bobby does feel like there's a catch,
doesn't it?
Speaker 7 (13:00):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (13:00):
There sure does. These people haven't gone away, no, but
by far. And they're playing the long game, which in
this case is now the next term.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Right that on a whiteboard, Jeffrey Snati said, they're playing
the long game.
Speaker 3 (13:13):
Got it? Got it.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
Go ahead.
Speaker 4 (13:15):
Yeah, they certainly are, and they're going to accept the
fact that things are messed up. The other thing, Michael,
is they also know they've gone too far, they've lost
control of the count.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
So let it go in the casket with Kamala Harris
and everyone will forget about that and they'll come back recaliber.
So here was my response. Well, you got Trump, but
he's gone in four years. How did this happen? Elon
bought Twitter, audience, moved from mainstream media to digital and podcasting.
Republicans awakened to mail in an early in person voting
(13:51):
going to the left, too fast, too far, Joe refusing
to leave soon enough. But they have a plan, I
assure you, to trade the four years for the next
sixteen or worse. A plan yet up their sleeve to
come prior to inauguration day. You know it's one of
those two, right, somebody's got to say it.
Speaker 4 (14:09):
Out loud, well, And what happened in this election is
to prove the fact that there are more people who
are interested in a healthy country than there are in
being woke.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
That's what happens when you get too far out over
your skis.
Speaker 4 (14:23):
There's going to be a political adjustment, and Sos and
Podesta saw it coming.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
I mean they lost at every level.
Speaker 4 (14:28):
Source lost this prosecutor in Los Angeles, they lost their
key ballot issue in Ohio on jerrymandering and restructuring the
way that districts are assigned. They had all kinds of
plagues going on in this election, the biggest one being
that abortion was going to dominate the world, and it
did not, not.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
Over food, not over gas, not over housing. So for
those listings saying, well, if Trump gets in office, he's
surrounding himself with all these great people, he makes America
great again, America would be umb enough to go back
to the Democrats, would they?
Speaker 4 (14:58):
But that's exactly what they're worried about now, so not.
What they've got to figure out is how do they
protect it. Maybe that they can pull it off in
four yours if Trump fails, but if Trump succeeds, they've
got another set of problems. So right now, you know
they're probably getting pretty deep in their egg nug.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
Yeah, no, I think yeah, or they've got something up
their sleeve when it comes time to certify all this,
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (15:19):
Well, that's an interesting dynamic and it would certainly for
a very challenging set of conversations around the holiday tables
this year.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
But I don't you feel it's coming. They're quiet for
one of two reasons, and that's one of them. They've
got a plan yet. Yeah, well there's just so far
erection clause could be their play and so on and.
Speaker 4 (15:37):
So yeah, and they've exhausted themselves. So again, if Trump's
if Trump succeeds and he's lining up the right people,
and he's lining up a future vision and his chief
of staff is a no nonsense, doesn't need to be
in the news kind of person, yeah, it's good. If
they have a successful four years, it changes the way
said everything we said. You know, it's going to take
a Donald Trump two point zero to win this election.
(15:57):
He found his two point one zero two point zero
thanks to a bullet, thanks to a lot of things.
But this is a Donald Trump three point zero presidency,
and if it succeeds, they've got real problems ahead. The
only thing I want my audience to know is we
are there. This isn't crazy talk. The guy hasn't even
been inaugurate. He's put his camera together.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
Trust me, he's got one hundred days to get everything
in motion, and it's going to come at you like
a blitz creak.
Speaker 7 (16:24):
I'm Jim Schultz in Tampa and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael gill Jorno.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your Morning show can be heard
live five to eight am Central, six to nine Eastern
and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio, or Columbus, Georgia.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine
and we're grateful you're here. Now enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 7 (16:51):
Well, it's a you know, we'll have a special election
in New York. That's kind of how these these work.
You obviously have to, you know, bring together a quick
election process to figure out who's going to run for it.
I have not seen a lot of who would be
kind of the front runners in a race like that
just yet. But you know, at least up honest a
great pick for the un She was you know, house
(17:13):
conference chair in the in the in the House and
has been trusted advisor and was somebody who's kind of
vetted and looked at potentially as a potentially e an
VP candidate for Trump during the campaign. So a trusted advisor,
someone who's kind of been a stalwart for you know,
conservative principles, even from the state like New York, and
you know, try to put putting together a great team here.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
This is exciting time. Yeah, is this apples to apples
I'm thinking of. I mean Nikki Haley, of course, was
a governor of South Carolina and then US Ambassador to
the United Nations, and that put her right in the
forefront as a front runner for the presidency. We talked
about with David Sanati Marco Rubio, Secretary of State. I mean,
obviously jd Vance would be in the best position as
(17:54):
vice president in four years. That would seemingly put Marco
Rubio way head of the Tulsa Gabbards and the governor
DeSantis in the sweep stakes. Also for what might be
an open primary. What would this do to a least
staffhanic because this is going to elevate her. I don't
I don't think to Nikki Haley's status, but this is
(18:16):
going to be a big elevation for her.
Speaker 7 (18:19):
Yeah. Absolutely. I mean again, let's she was, she was
on the list for VP during the during the campaign,
so I mean she's been she's been a fast riser
for a long time. You know, she's a she's a
very strong conservative woman, and she's got a great track
record to go with it. Unlike the previous occupent of
that position, Liz Cheney, that.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
Went the opposite direction.
Speaker 7 (18:38):
So you know, this is this is a net net
positive for both the House and for you know, the
Trump administration. But but you're right in terms of it's
a very narrow majority in the House. There's a lot
of work that needs to be done to ensure that,
you know, the de seats are being you know, going
to be replaced by Republican again, because so much depends
on the House passing bills that you know, really worked.
(18:58):
Trump came out and said he's again he wants to
a Boston part in education.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
Well, that has to.
Speaker 7 (19:02):
Come from Congress, so you know, you need a Republican
House subsided to do that.
Speaker 1 (19:07):
We were talking a lot prior to the election about
when Donald Trump makes this selection for a running mate,
is it a state that can bring something to the table.
Is it an element you know, that can unite the party.
We saw that the Reublican Party very divided during Reagan
and Bush, and so uniting them became a powerful move
(19:30):
or is this about the future of trump Ism? And
that brings me to Marco Rubio, which I believe and
I'll go to my grave under believing was Donald Trump's choice.
His son talked to me too, Jadvans. I think he's
fine with that choice now. But it's not a shock
you'd give Marco Rubio Secretary of State. All of these
things as we're seeing them being put together. It shows
that Donald Trump's serious about doing what he's promised. He
(19:52):
is playing for now an achievement, But there's also are
we overreading to see that they're setting the table for
the future of their party? Is well?
Speaker 7 (20:01):
Oh absolutely, I mean, look only at the Nikki Haley
and Mike Pompeo effect. I mean, you know, he's certainly
there is certainly chatter amongst the chattering class, which is
their their their ilk to you know, suggest that the
Haley and Pompeo decision was somewhat based on trying to
clear the lank for JD in twenty eight So, you know,
I think politics is always going to be thought about
(20:22):
in Washington, and that's certainly part of it. But I
think Rubio has built a very solid born policy. You know,
resume as he's been in Congress. I mean, he was
the chair of the Intelligence Committee and has been a
strong advocate for Israel, and you know, just he's a
solid voice.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
On these issues.
Speaker 7 (20:40):
And so I think he's earned that irrespective of domestic politics,
he's earned it in terms of his record and Senate
as well.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Republican consultant and analyst Chris Walker, also your morning show
contributor joining us Christy Nome Homeland Security, Marco Rubio, Secretary
of State. We've talked about all this, this this concept
of Donald Trump not being you know, in a second term,
but rather a one term president who goes away comes
(21:08):
back kind of becomes a Donald Trump two point zero.
This seems like a Donald Trump four point zero president.
This is a guy that comes back having learned a
lot from his first term. And I think it's evident
in every one of these selections. But what's your analysis.
Speaker 3 (21:22):
I think that's right.
Speaker 7 (21:23):
I mean, you know, there will not be the kind
of long term you know, long in the two dec
establishmentarian types. I mean that this is something where I
think he got burned by them in the first term.
I think he continued to be burned by them even
up to the very end of his of his term.
So you know, this is a shame same for me. One.
Shame on you for me one, same on me. I mean,
(21:43):
he's he's taking that lesson and applying it. You know,
I would also say that I would say that these
people are coming in with a mandate. It's not enough
to have good selections, it's what they do when they're
in office. And you know, for him to come out
and say that he wants to Boston Department Education, it's
something that conservative been talking about for thirty years. Trump
actually seems to be poised to do it and is vocalizing,
which is great, But it also means that these cabinet
secretaries are going to come in with the mandate to
(22:06):
cut into, you know, improve on what's happening, to really
kind of take a bite out of the deep state,
which is something that Steve Bannon talked about in twenty
sixteen but really wasn't impacted because you had so many
people there saying that they were the resistance from within.
This is somebody who's saying, if you're being picked, this
is what you're going to do. And I think that
level of mandate and details can be really important as
(22:26):
we as we hold not only Trump to accountable to
the mandates, and he says, but also to the people
who's appointing in those positions.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
And don't miss the subtlety, notice the you know, never mind.
Oh yeah, we're going to lift regulations, we're going to
increase manufacturing. We're going to talk tariffs just so we
have trade advantages. That border is going to be secured.
These two deportations, they're all going to happen. That stuff
you elected me to do. And he comes out fighting
with things like returning education to the States. That wasn't
(22:56):
lost on me. The others are a no brainer. I'm doing.
Here's where the fight is, and here's where my first
victory is going to be. So he's going to get
everything he pledged to do, plus one he never talked
about right in the first one hundred days. I think
it's brilliant.
Speaker 7 (23:11):
It's incredibly exciting. It's allowing people to feel, you know,
let's not forget why Trump's winning, right, and Trump or
Trump won a second term in really historic fashion, the
way it.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
Has been done in one hundred plus years.
Speaker 7 (23:22):
You know, the people of America are tired of seeing
the status quo of Washington continue to kind of exist
beyond the administration to administration. And here Trump comes in
and is saying these things that people have been screaming
from the rooftops forever to be heard, and here he
is listening to them in a way that that you know,
he's listened to them certainly in the first term, but
I think that's stifled by Washington.
Speaker 3 (23:43):
This is not going to happen the second time.
Speaker 7 (23:45):
And I think this mandate of a you know, frankly,
a President Trump who doesn't have to worry about re
election again really coming in and making some huge changes
to Washington which are absolutely necessary. I mean, you and
are conservatives first, and you know, seeing this is an
exciting out the fresh air from a you know, Republican
party who's generally been a status quo party for a
long time. I mean, they bristle at the thought of
(24:06):
cutting budgets and here.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Going that is that's the failure that has to be
admitted first and foremost Democrats are a failure because they
live what they believe and they do what they say
they're going to do. Republicans have failed in the past,
not because of their platform, but not doing what they believe,
not having the courage to lead it and do it,
or having the kind of leader with the exception of
(24:28):
reaganer or maybe one other, but this is a guy
that the orange opened the door. And then he's not
only going to do it all in a way no
one else could have gotten done, but he's going to
turn that orange. Hopefully they're going to try to turn
that orange to red by the end of this one term.
And I mean, these are the first few moves of
(24:48):
a chess game, but they seem to be the right moves.
Many moves to come and many people left off the board,
and then to go beyond Pompeo and Nikki Haley, the
future of establishment, repup moderate or not doing what you believe,
Republican party, Republican in name only is really in jeopardy
right now. And we could apply the names to that,
(25:09):
but we don't need to right now.
Speaker 7 (25:10):
But yeah, I mean, you know, look, and I would
also say Trump is Trump is trying to be magnanimous
in a lot of ways too. I mean, there are
going to be some picks that you know, the Twitter,
you know kind of chattering class will not like, or
you know, the Senate may pick you know, someone like
John Corny to lead it. And that's okay too, because
you know, everyone's kind of growing in the same direction.
(25:32):
It doesn't necessarily after Rick Scott. You know, there are
going to be other voices in there because there it's
a big country with a lot of opinions, and so
the question is this is somebody going to sex of
the agenda And that's not the case. And that's what's
really important here because Trump Trump knows who've left to him,
knows what they're looking for, and knows what they want,
and promises made promises. CAP will be something that you know,
(25:53):
I think will help someone like jd Vance if he
wants to run in twenty a, which I assume he does,
in terms of continuing the success and the wins that
we're hopeful that Trump will provide for us.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
I hear what you're saying. I hope you're right. Time
will tell Hi to God with Scott Right.
Speaker 2 (26:10):
It's your morning show with Michael del Charno.
Speaker 1 (26:14):
These are your top five stories of the night. Wow,
The Kremlin is denying that President elect Trump and Russian
President Vladimir Putin spoke by phone last week. Mark Mayfield
has the very latest on that story.
Speaker 8 (26:31):
This comes after multiple news reports emerged about the phone
call in which Trump apparently recommended that Putin not escalate
the war in Ukraine. He also allegedly reminded Putin of
the significant military presence of the US in Europe. Russian
state owned media Task reports. The Kremlin spokesperson said reports
of the call are pure fiction. Putin did publicly congratulate
Trump on his election when the same day that the
(26:52):
reports came out at a security conference in Russia.
Speaker 3 (26:56):
I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
Well, flying Spirit Airlines alone is scary enough alone when
you come under gunfire attempting to land in Haiti. Brian
Shook has that story.
Speaker 9 (27:05):
That's according to reporting from the Miami Herald. The aircraft
was flying in from Fort Lauderdale and was diverted to
an airport in the Dominican Republic, where it safely landed.
At least one person, a flight attendant, was grazed by
the bullet. I'm Brian Schuck.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
President, like Donald Trump, is nominating New York Congresswoman Elise
Stephanic to serve as US Ambassador to the United Nations.
Lisa Taylor has more.
Speaker 10 (27:29):
Before the election, Stephanic was opened to the idea of
joining Trump's administration.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
Well, I of course would be honored to serve in
any capacity in a Trump administration.
Speaker 7 (27:37):
I'm proud to be the first member of Congress to
endorse his re election.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
I'm proud to be a strong supporter of President Trump.
Speaker 10 (27:42):
Trump confirmed the news to The New York Post. The
President elect said he's honored to nominate Stefanic for the role,
while calling her strong and tough. Stephanic is expected to
push Trump's America First policy, which presses allies to contribute
more when it comes to shared defense efforts.
Speaker 3 (27:57):
I'm Lisa Taylor.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
A new study shows the well being of a America's
in different parts of the country. You know what part
you're living in, Let's see how you fare. Michael Casner
reports I got it that night.
Speaker 11 (28:14):
A report in The Lancet shows researchers study the Human
Development Index, which includes life expectancy, education, and income. It
found that those scoring the best live in parts of Colorado, Maryland,
New York, California, Virginia, and Washington, d c. Those who
scored low on the index live in the southern part
of the country, Appalachia and the Rust Belt state.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
I'm Michael Cassner, Well, well, Michael's gottas all thinking music.
Let's stay on that note. Legendary rock duo Simon and
Garfunkel maybe building a bridge over their troubled waters with
their friendship. Andrew Whitman reports.
Speaker 5 (28:56):
Paul Simon and Art Garfunkle have been islands from one
another for almost a decade, but that may be changing.
Garfunkle tells The Sunday Times he and Simon got together
recently and cried, reflecting how their partnership and lifelong friendship
went south. The two traded jabs in the press in
(29:17):
twenty fifteen. Garfunkel apologized his jabs came first. So does
this mean the Queen's schoolmates will reunite and once again
be Garfunkel says, all he's thinking about is meeting again
and making things right. The music matters less. Andrew Whitman,
NBC News Radio, New York.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
In Sparts, the Rams lost twenty three to fifteen at
SOFI last night on Monday Night Football, Rams fall to
four and five on the season. Next up, Thursday Night Football.
The Commanders in the Eagles great matchup in basketball and
the Hardwood Calves lost one nineteen one thirteen to the
bull or one one nineteen one thirteen over the Bulls.
Calves are now twelve and zero in their start the season,
Thunder one thirty four, one twenty eight over the Clippers.
(29:59):
Kings fell once sixteen to ninety six to the Spurs
and the Whiz lost one oh seven ninety two to
the Rockets. On the ice, we didn't fare too well.
Bred's lost three two but got a point in overtime
with the Abs. Kings lost three to one to the Flames,
and the Stars our only winner on the ice in
regulation seven to one over Pittsburgh. Birthdays today actor Ryan
Gosling forty three years old, Russell Westbrook of the Clippers,
(30:22):
thirty five Young Sheldon's Wallace Sean was eighty and you
can't help but think of his song, Oh man, take
a look at your life. Neil Young seventy eight years old,
and if it's your birthday, happy birthday. Were so glad
you were born. We were talking earlier about this kind
of concept of how do things play out. You know,
(30:43):
we have a mandate election, but it's still a very
divided nation and some people caught in these narrative bubbles,
believing everything they hear they're living in some kind of
self created paranoia. So for our Sounds of the Day,
I had to select this one. James Woods, the actor,
posted this one and he said, and they wonder why
(31:03):
Americans gay President elect Trump a landslide victory. The notion
that the other side is responding to the election in
this way quite troubly.
Speaker 12 (31:12):
Listen, I am experiencing this unfamiliar feeling, and I wondered
if anyone else has been feeling this way.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
So I'm at the dog.
Speaker 12 (31:21):
Park and I feel so mistrustful, like I don't know
who's on my side and who's on the other side.
I mean, I know we're gonna start wearing the blue bracelets,
and I think that will help, But like, does anyone
else feel that? I just have this fundamental mistrust Like
(31:44):
I'm just looking at everyone, going, are you part of
why this happens?
Speaker 1 (31:49):
Are you a safe person?
Speaker 12 (31:51):
Like I can only imagine how the marginalized communities are
feeling right now. And I also don't want people to
be looking at me thinking, oh, white woman, she definitely
voted for him. Like it's a very unsettling feeling. Is
anyone else experiencing that?
Speaker 1 (32:09):
I hope not. You would be the definition of Trump
derangement syndrome. You would be the product of what has
been created in this matrix by the media and by
social media. Log off your computer, stop watching one news source.
(32:30):
She reminds me of when my wife makes you watch
all these forty eight hours and the next thing you know,
I anticipate somebody busting into my bedroom trying to shoot me.
It's delusional.
Speaker 2 (32:41):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Penhild Joano