Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Zach on the other side of the glass. Kelly's here too.
We're in a first day and basis, I'm Ryan and
you're you, and you could text me at five seven seven,
three nine. We're talking about one week since the rousing
Donald Trump victory on November fifth and the red wave
that came with it, and he is responsible for much
of it. You look at the map. New York Times
(00:22):
has this. It's fascinating and it shows you all the
state breakdowns, and it shows you either in a left
arrow in blue or a right arrow in red. And
it's bigger the more the dramatic shift that there was,
no matter what state it was in. And there's a
handful of little blue arrows and unfortunately a couple of
(00:43):
those are here in Colorado, but the vast majority of
the map shows a dramatic shift red and right. With
the arrows on that map, we're investigating the reasons why
why did Trump win, Why did he win so big?
Went wrong with the Dumbink Party? And will they ever
get it back on track? Now? These things happen in cycles.
(01:05):
And you know, thirty years ago Bill Clinton finally solved
the matrix after the Democrats were wallowed in the likes
of a failed Jimmy Carter presidency, a terrible candidate, and
his former vice president Walter Mondale, a Massachusetts governor who
was in a liberal elite and above it all until
he wasn't. Michael Ducaccus, and Bill Clinton represented a very
(01:28):
stark shift back to a Southern strategy, but then also
a more relatable figure even I think in some ways
than Jimmy Carter, and that Bill Clinton was an intellect,
but he was a down home Southern boy raised by
a single mom in a trailer in a town called Hope.
I come from a town called Hope, Arkansas. And you know,
(01:52):
for all of his faults, and there are many, Bill
Clinton was a self made man. He went to Oxford,
he went to Georgetown, he became a very very successful
governor in Arkansas, and he parlayed that and did the presidency,
and he won it and come from behind fashion out
of nowhere. If you remember that ninety two campaign, the
front runners were Paul Songis again, it's like Ducacas two
(02:15):
point zero, basically former governor of Massachusetts Dick Geppart, remember
that guy from Missouri, and Clinton was just kind of
hanging on, hanging on, and hanging in there, and then
he just turned things around once the primary started and
game Will met him. He won on our senio with
the saxophone. I mean this guy, he hit every right. Note,
(02:38):
the Democrats are in a world of hurt right now.
They're in the wilderness. We're going to get into the
reasons why in just a moment, But some texts. First,
the FBI said Hillary was a criminal, but people voted
for her anyway. They did. Patty says that cat screaming
in the background. Kitt and fried steak on the menu.
They're eating the pets, they're eating the dogs, They're eating
(02:59):
the cats. Even James Garville, you look at him, he
looks like a lizard. And as we know, lizards elie
k cats at they're small enough. Yeah, there was a
cat wailing in the background for the raging cage and
I found that to be quite humorous, and I hope
you did too. Have you missed it? Dial back to
our one in the podcast form, Ryan, do you think
(03:21):
liberals realize their values are all based on codependency. That's
their entire gimmick, that's their entire strategy, is building a
dependency on government. Rush Lim Boss spous this for years,
saying that they establish and it's been a winning formula
in some ways, a dependency on government, So you vote
for more of the same. The Democrats are going to
(03:42):
give us freebies. You know, it's very easy to give
a man of fish rather than teaching him how to fish.
And this is it harder to sell as a Republican
saying well, we're going to teach you how to fish.
We're going to give you the tools to succeed, but
it's going to have to come from you, and it's
your effort. It's your guts and guyle and gusto. It's
going to get it done. We're gonna make it possible
for you, but we need you to kind of, you know,
(04:03):
participate a little, rather than the Democrats like, oh, here's here,
here's some free stuff giveaway. Santa Claus. Oh, I'll vote
for that. That's a lot easier then I don't have
to do any work. But I think people are figuring
it out. And that's much to the Democrats' dismay. Alexis says,
since Democrats wanted to expand the Supreme Court, Trump should
do that JK. However, it would be hilarious for Trump
(04:25):
to come out this week and announce he's expanding the
Supreme Court. The Dems would tell us twenty four to
seven why that's a bad idea. Then Trump can say
he listened to the I just listened to the Dems.
They had a good idea. I wanted to co opt it,
and expanding the Supreme Court is a very bad idea.
No one should ever bring it up again. That's four
dimensional chests right there, Alex and I like it because, yeah,
(04:45):
if it benefits the Democrats, they're all for it, but
they never calculate that it's going to boomerang back on them.
I go to this most recent election in the national
popular vote going to Trump. The idiots, the morons, and
the dummies who in this state decided we're going to
join the National Popular Vote Pact and whatever way that goes,
we'll give our ten electoral votes to the winner. Well, hello,
(05:08):
leftist that thought that would benefit you. If that were
in place right now, Donald Trump would get New York's, California's, Colorado's,
and whatever other states have signed up for this madness,
those electoral votes would go to him. I think it's
a good idea. Now it's just so dumb shortsighted to
say the least. And Alexis is love loving Trump's appointments
(05:32):
and the speed he is handling these, well, you have
to imagine he had a game plan going in. He
learned from the mistakes, and they were many that he
made the last time around. I talked about that with
Representative Lauren Bobert. I hope that's the biggest thing that
he learned, because I saw in the chiron here for
CNN Trump taps loyalists to fill the early spots in
his cabinet, Like should he tap disloyalists, you know, like
(05:55):
he did last time? Look how that all turned out?
You kidding me. Here's another point. Joe Biden has really
screwed things up, right, I think most of us would
agree on. Then, he's really screwed things up for our
country with Afghanistan withdrawal and the inflation out of control
and the pumping of spending into the economy and all
these things the reasons why Donald Trump won this time around, Right,
(06:16):
name me one, appointe one, just name me one in
Joe Biden's cabinet that has ever pushed back on him ever,
certainly not publicly. I can't think of one, and I
would venture to say not even privately. Whereas now the
media and the Democrats, we need a team of rivals
in Donald Trump's cabinet. We need somebody's going to hold
(06:36):
him in check and push back when he's getting a
little crazy and not coloring within the lines. Where were
those people for Joe Biden? Why didn't Joe Biden require them?
Why didn't you want those for Joe Biden? And if
you didn't, why do you want them for Trump? See,
I'm not having any of that. Five seven seven three nine.
The text line is Kelly still over there. She disappears
(06:57):
from others. She is Okay, we're going to get back
into the whole line of where do the Democrats go
from here? And we're going to start. I want you
to enjoy this to the degree that you're able. Here
was the open to Saturday Night Live this past Saturday
Night about Donald Trump in the twenty twenty four election.
Now it starts off, and I'm about to turn it off, right,
So bear with me on it, and I want you
(07:19):
to respond with whether or not you think this was
well done, entertaining funny in any way, or if it
was just the typical shlock that we get now from SNL.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
On Tuesday, Americans went to the polls and elected Donald
Trump to be the next president of the United States.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
To many people, including many people watching this show right now,
the results were shocking and even horrifying.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
Donald Trump, who tried to forcibly overturn the results of
the last election, was returned to office by an overwhelming majority.
Speaker 5 (07:55):
This is the same Donald Trump who openly called for
vengeance against his political enemies.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Now, thanks to the Supreme Court, there are no guardrails, nothing.
Speaker 3 (08:04):
To protect the people who are brave enough to speak
out against him.
Speaker 5 (08:08):
And that is why we at SNL would like to
say to Donald Trump, we have been with you all along.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
We have never wavered in our support of you, even
when others doubted you.
Speaker 6 (08:24):
Every single person on this stage believed in you.
Speaker 7 (08:28):
Every single person on this stage voted for you.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
Because we see ourselves in you.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
We look at you and think that's me.
Speaker 8 (08:38):
That's the man I want my future children to look
up to.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
And mister Trump, your honor.
Speaker 9 (08:45):
We know that you say things that are controversial sometimes,
but really you're just speaking the truth. And I hate
how the lame stream media Michael Jay tries to spin
it to make you look coolish.
Speaker 5 (08:59):
So keeping some sort of list of your enemies, then we.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Should not be on that list. And it's c h
E change.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
And if we find out someone here voted for Kamala,
we will wrap them out so fast like our three
disgusting new cast.
Speaker 5 (09:20):
Members, so real quick left right line, Athley Badilla and
Emil Joachim. You can find their home addresses online.
Speaker 7 (09:29):
Hail Trump, but the rest of us Hell Trump voted
for you at least once.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
I voted for you. Fifty times in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Of black women voted for Kamala, but I was one
of the proud eight percent. For me is brother Donald
X Trump all the way, And.
Speaker 10 (09:52):
We're so excited to debut.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
Our new impression, hot Jack Trump.
Speaker 11 (09:59):
That's right, that's right, it's free hot jack Trump.
Speaker 10 (10:03):
They finally got the body right.
Speaker 5 (10:06):
But from now on we're going to do very.
Speaker 11 (10:09):
Flattering portrayal of Trump because she's shrinkly my hero, and
he's going to make an incredible precedent and eventually, King,
we love your buddy.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
A body, seat and muscles.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
In summary, all of us at SNL are so excited
for Trump two point zero, which is also what I
blew on a breathalyzer Wednesday morning.
Speaker 3 (10:35):
We can't wait to see what you do with the
country this time. I keep waking up in the middle
of the night screaming with joy.
Speaker 12 (10:41):
Of course, my only regret is that we didn't get to.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
Do another January sixth because.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
I was ready, me too.
Speaker 5 (10:53):
And worst case scenario meaning scenario if our planet falls apart,
we can all go to ours with the other man
that we love and trust, Elon.
Speaker 1 (11:03):
Musks doing a parage.
Speaker 11 (11:19):
Cut it up, Doc Mega, But esseriously, I run the
country now.
Speaker 10 (11:28):
It's gonna be like one of my rockets.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
You know.
Speaker 11 (11:31):
That's super cool and super fun, but it's sich good
blow up and everybody dies. Ha ha ha.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
I'm Doc Mega.
Speaker 11 (11:40):
See you in the White House, US USA.
Speaker 7 (11:50):
And to all young men who helped elect Trump and Elon,
we know you felt unseen these past four years.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
So we say to you, young men, there's no need
to feel down.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Young men.
Speaker 5 (12:04):
Pick yourself off the ground.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Young men, time to put on your crown.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
Do you love me? Now? What does this say that
they have to bring back Dana Carvey, who will be
seventy in June. Think about that my god, Dana Carvey
will be seventy in June. They brought him back to
(12:30):
properly portray Joe Biden. We've done a fantastic job of that.
And Elon Musk right there. Bohen Yang, I might add,
is from right here in Colorado. He grew up in
Aurora and went to Smokey Hill High School. So that's
of note. But Kelly, your reaction to the SNL cold
open from Saturday.
Speaker 10 (12:48):
I didn't think it was funny.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
What do you think they were trying to accomplish with it.
Speaker 10 (12:52):
I think that they know that they're full of crap.
Speaker 6 (12:57):
And they're just trying to like, you know, because remember
like when Hillary lost the election before, they had like
somebody playing the piano. Oh yeah, on that one it
was the Leonard equally cringe.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
Worthy yea hallelujah.
Speaker 10 (13:11):
This one was the song Okay, I don't remember, I
don't care.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
It was cringey.
Speaker 6 (13:18):
Yeah, this one was equally cringey, kind of like, Okay,
we know your game, people, because next week you're just
going to be making fun of him again.
Speaker 1 (13:27):
And they didn't homage to Barack Obama as I recall too.
It was around the same time as the Hillary tribute
and the white pants suit by Kate McKinnon that you're
talking about, the piano playing Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah, and they
did it was like a It was a creepy, almost
cultish worship of Barack Obama. And this is where Christian
Tona and I we've had this conversation many times on
air and off about where comedy went wrong, where it
(13:49):
lost its way, and it was when they handled Barack
Obama with kid gloves, if at all. There's a lot
to work with there, and they if we could make
fun of him, we could, and they just didn't. Fred
Armist and I remember trade Barack Obama a lot of
those sketches in the late two thousands or whatnot, but
they never really took any big, you know, punches at
him comedically. And I think that's where it kind of
(14:09):
started where they haven't done the same with AOC. I mean,
think about how ripe for comedy AOC is. They could
skewre her, it'd be hilarious, but they can't do it
because they have a cause celeb and it is portraying
Democrats as being the solution to all the problems and
the Republicans and Trump in particular as the cause of
(14:30):
them and the bit where they said we all voted
for you. Is there one SNL cast member one that
you believe voted for Trump?
Speaker 10 (14:38):
None at all.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
I think there would have been had they had Shane
Gillis as a cast member, and they remember they fired
him because of something he said. Yes, an anti Asian
remark in a podcast.
Speaker 6 (14:49):
Might have been a reality, but at this point, no,
none of those people voted for Trump.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Well, Shane Gillis was responsible for one of the funniest
sketches of the past year, and that was the Trump sh.
Speaker 10 (15:00):
But dovetail off your point.
Speaker 6 (15:02):
That's you know, back when Obama they wouldn't make fun
of him, they wouldn't do anything to his administration, they
wouldn't make fun of anyone, and it got really unfunny.
Speaker 10 (15:12):
And then you had cancel.
Speaker 6 (15:13):
Culture that came out of that. Yeah, and all the
comedians getting handled.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
It really was coinciding with that, and that's where it
all went Downhill went wrong, went woke. Hashtag me too.
I'm not saying that. You know, men who did creepy
bad things like Charlie Rose or Matt Lauer or Bill
O'Reilly didn't have it coming. They did, but this extended
them to Brett Kavanaugh. We watched that whole debacle unfold
with Kamala Harris front and center and that interrogation. Texters
(15:42):
say this one says SNL hasn't been watchable for at
least twenty years. By the way, keep up the great work.
Fire emoji, thank you for the fire emoji. When I
was listening to the SNL cold opening, all I could
see was liberals crying and their non alcoholic beers. Yeah.
Well it was Bowen Yang who was the one that
said his bal was two point zero on Wednesday. So
(16:08):
let's start here, and I don't know how much we're
gonna be able to get through this. But AOC was confused.
Apparently there were a lot of people in her congressional
district that split their ticket between Trump and her, and
Abby Phillip was trying to figure this out.
Speaker 4 (16:21):
Who are Democrats and what do they believe? One of
the most prominent progressives in the party is trying to
get to those answers to these questions by asking the
very voters who voted for Donald Trump but then.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Still voted for her.
Speaker 4 (16:35):
Alexandria Ocasio Cortez wants to know how there is a
ven diagram. I think many of us want to know
where voters see similarities between her and the president elect,
who is basically her polar opposite.
Speaker 8 (16:47):
There's a not insignificant amount of down Valley Democrats like
myself for which there were Trump AOC precincts or Trump
slash Democratic House or Senate member precincts, and that I
think is a very rich environment for us to dig into.
If you voted for Donald Trump and me, or if
(17:11):
you voted for Donald Trump and voted Democratic down ballot,
I would really love to hear from you. I actually
want to learn from you.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
Scott Jennings had this thesis.
Speaker 13 (17:25):
I'll tell you what I think it is. People are
sick and tired of fake and authentic politicians who can
only operate off of a script, who are being handed
things by consultants who's every movement and facial expression is rehearsed.
And the thing that Trump and AOC have in common
is that they both appear to be authentically speaking what's
(17:45):
on their mind and what's in their heart at any
given time. It's as plain as day. The rejection of
the political class in favor of the authentic class. And
sometimes they're contradictory, and sometimes they say things that make
you lift an eyebrow.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
But that's the threat in thirty seconds? Is Scott Jennings right?
Speaker 10 (18:02):
He is?
Speaker 1 (18:04):
So you believe that AOC is authetic even though you
just agree with there and you think she's you know,
bat blank, but authentically. So, yes, that's her.
Speaker 10 (18:11):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
And that's why you think there are AOC Trump voters. Yep.
Speaker 10 (18:15):
That's exactly right. Scott has it perfectly.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
I don't know that it makes a whole lot of
sense to me, but there were a lot of tickets splitting,
especially in those Senate races in Wisconsin and Michigan. The
Democrats won, but Trump won the states. That's the only
thing that explains it. We're back with more after this
on Ryan Schuling Live.
Speaker 14 (18:36):
The investigation involving the Colorado Secretary of State's Office, the
DA's office says it has received two affidavits alleging election
laws were violated.
Speaker 10 (18:46):
As we've reported, hundreds of.
Speaker 14 (18:48):
Voting systems passwords were leaked on the Secretary of State's website.
That leak included passwords to El Paso County election equipment.
According to Jennet Griswold's office, a former staff member created
the spreadshet with the passwords in a hidden tab. That
staff member later left the department. The Secretary of State's
office maintains the leak did not pose an immediate security
(19:08):
threat to the state's elections. We have reached out to
both the DA and the Secretary of State's Office for
an updated response.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
Back on Ryan Schuling Live, it begs the question, why
not just be upfront and transparent about this with any crisis,
And this is a crisis of confidence in our elections
and their integrity in this state of Colorado, which I
don't trust as far as I can throw. And Jenna
Griswold in particular, when this happened, when this staffer apparently
(19:40):
uploaded this document an Excel spreadsheet or whatever it was,
to the Secretary of State's website and inadvertently, we'll give
benefit of the doubt status even included one half of
the passwords that were needed to access the accounts throughout
the entire state of Colorado. Why not when that happened,
(20:02):
have Jenna Griswel come out and go, look, this was
an egregious malfunction of our personnel was a human error.
The person involved has resigned her post. We have parted amicably,
but we do not tolerate any such leaks, fissures, mistakes
in our ballot gathering counting processes. And on my watch,
(20:24):
you can rest assured that these matters will be addressed
and nipped in the butt in short order, and that
I will be fully transparent and public about that process.
Why did she not do that? Why did it take
the Colorado Republican Party pointing this out, discovering it, calling
it out publicly? And then Jenna Griswold had to respond
(20:46):
to that, and Kyle Clark even gave her the business
in a fifteen minute interview, asked her if she would resign,
and she Kyle, you are so extra of course I'm
not going to resign. Would you even ask that, Kelly?
Why would she not have publicized that immediately when it
(21:06):
happened as a public official?
Speaker 10 (21:08):
You think she was trying to cover it up?
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Of course?
Speaker 10 (21:10):
Yep, there you go.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
I don't trust our elections. Don't call me an election denier.
The evidence is right there. The other part of it
is anecdotal. As I mentioned earlier, go to that New
York Times map, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New York, California, California.
Most of the counties went right for Donald Trump and
(21:33):
down ballot. But Colorado is this island of an anomaly
in which our election actually went left a little bit
in a lot of our counties. I'm not saying it's
not the case. I'm just saying, when you open that
door to suspicion, you invite these kinds of conspiracy theories.
You invite them, you welcome them.
Speaker 6 (21:51):
What did I say to you before the election. We're
stupid and we want to kill babies. That's all Colorado
wants to do.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Well it The latter is certainly true based on what
we just voted through an Amendment seventy nine. I was
encouraged that we voted down ranked choice voting. I think
we got that one right. I was encouraged that they
didn't enact the ban on big can't hunting. I think
we got that one right. But school choice we vote down.
Come on ridiculous enshrining that in the constitution. The abortion
(22:22):
is another matter. But I don't trust Jenna Griswold. I
don't trust our elections. All vote by mail. I don't
trust them, whether they're valid or not. I don't know.
I lose chain of custody on my ballot when I
put it in the bin. I don't know what happens
to it after that. And I've told you before the
old fashioned way we should go. We should turn back
(22:44):
time shar style, back to the future. We should go
back paper ballots election day. Vote on election day. You
want an absentee ballot, you apply for that ahead of time.
You get that mailed to you by your request, not
willy nilly, and show your ID. Show your ID day
that you vote, and take your own ballot like I
(23:05):
used to do in Michigan, and I put in the
machine and I saw that it was counted, and I
had it in my hand the entire time. There's no
reason we can't do that here in Colorado. There's no
reason we're still counting votes in Colorado or a lot
of these other states. Your home state of California, Kelly,
we're still counting votes Florida has been done for a week.
(23:27):
There have to be federal voting standards in place, and
I hope that's one of the first orders of business
for the next Congress. Under Republican control. And by my
latest calculations, I believe it's going to be two twenty
three to two twelve in the House. I'm keeping my
eye on that the Senate. Dave McCormick, he has won,
so no matter what. But Bob Casey says, I think
(23:48):
even Chuck Schumer's relented and invited McCormick in for orientation
in the Senate. So it's going to be fifty three
forty seven. There you have the opportunity Republicans in these
two years, and right up should be some kind of
federal election guideline, standards, laws, procedures, and practices that must
be adhered to. If one hundred years ago we could
(24:08):
count all the ballots, if fifty years ago we could
count all the ballots, if twenty years ago we could
count all the ballots, What the hell is going on
in all these states, Kelly, I'm looking at California. Seventy
six percent of the votes have been counted in one week.
What's happening?
Speaker 10 (24:28):
I don't know. If I knew, I would tell.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
You it's unacceptable.
Speaker 6 (24:31):
It really is, and it's been like that for a
very long time. This is not their first rodeo at
not being able to count ballots.
Speaker 10 (24:38):
No by election night.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
I don't know if it's too much legalized weed here
and then on the West coast because I look at
those states. Washington is still only ninety two percent, They
got eight percent to go. What are you doing? What
are you doing this whole week? Oregon eighty seven percent?
Now Alaska is at eighty but you know, who knows
what's going on up there with the winter conditions and whatnot.
But California is only seventy six just flat unacceptable. But
(25:04):
why did the Democrats lose? I wanted to play the
sound for Kelly and get a reaction. It's Promila Jayapaul,
one of the most far left members of the House
Democrat Washington. And this is how we know we have
won the battle in the culture war on the trans
issue of biological males in women's sports and spaces. It's
(25:26):
been one of my top issues. Kelly knows this for
a long time now on this show with guests and
just my personal convictions on the issue. Kelly's a former
Division one athlete as a diver for Purdue. I didn't
make it that far, but I was an athlete in
high school. I played baseball. I ran cross country, and
I know damn well there was no girl or woman
(25:48):
good enough to play in the boys' sports as a
biological female. I ran a Soak Valley Invitational on which
I was paid stride for stride with the girl who
would end up winning the invitational. And I finished in
the middle of the pack among the boys, and I
barely defeated her. And we have this ranting and raving
(26:08):
from lunatics, and we might get to this sound on
the other side about there's no difference. If this person
says they're a girl, they're a girl, well biologically they're not.
They're just not. And if this is such a coin
flip issue here you say you're a girl, you play
with the girls. You say, here a boy, you play
with the boys. Where are all the transgender males born
biologically female transitioning to male. Where are any of them
(26:33):
in any male sport at any level professional NHL, NBA, NFL,
Major League Baseball, NCAA, Maybe any sport biological female transitions
to male competes on that level wins a scholarship at
that level. High school, name me one, show me the example.
(26:53):
And Jia Paul basically gives up the ghost on this
topic altogether. Listen to her carefully here.
Speaker 12 (26:58):
I just find that to be an offensive comment. Actually,
we're talking about half of one percent of people in
the country, and I think that we have to really
be clear. There was one party that tried to initiate
a culture war, a so called culture war against a
tiny group of people. That was the Republican Party that
(27:19):
poured billions of dollars into this. I go back to
the fact that we can have an economic agenda that
allows people to feel good and safe about their lives
and that is inclusive, so that everybody gets to live
their life out. I don't think that just trying to
instill fear in joining a party that is instilling for people,
(27:43):
for a tiny, tiny group of population, group of people
that we're talking about, is the right way to go
about this.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
Hold on there, Promila, wasn't it the Democrats the left
that we're championing the cause for Leah Thomas? You remember
this on ABC News. It's just one half a one
percent you were demanding. You were insisting the transgender females
who were born biologically male be allowed to compete in
(28:11):
female athletics, including in the NCAA at you Penn shattering records,
defeating Riley Gaines in the pool. We didn't bring that up.
You did. And now did you hear her Kelly running
far and as fast as she can away from the issue.
They weaponized it, they declared this culture war. It's only
(28:33):
a half of one percent of the people. They are
singing a much different too than they were about two
years ago.
Speaker 6 (28:39):
Well, they just looked at their women's numbers and saw
how far they've actually fallen. And I can tell you
that a lot of women cross the line and voted
for Trump because they don't want their daughters in locker
rooms changing with biological men.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
It's breathtaking to me, though, to hear Jiapaul complete completely
retreat on this issue. She continues, here, where do the
Democrats need to go in order to win again?
Speaker 10 (29:06):
Tom, Let's look back to our business.
Speaker 12 (29:08):
Let's get that economic agenda, which we actually know what
it is. We've had a proposition agenda at the CPC
for some time and it includes all of these things,
including taking on these big corporate monopolies, taking on price gouging,
investing in housing. These are critical things that will lift
people up. In addition, of course, to minimum wage, paid sickly,
(29:30):
the things that passed on the ballot in Trump states.
We can get those done, but we need people to
trust us, and we need to actually fight for them
and be willing to unrig the system because it is
rigged right now for the billionaires and the wealthiest individuals
and corporations. We've got to take that on and be
willing to do it loudly and proudly.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Who is this person? It sounds like Bernie Sanders got
to her, maybe directly, Kelly Promila, Jaya Paul. She was
front and center on these social leftist issues. I swear
to you you can find it yourself, and now she's
abandoned that, going to Bernie Sanders socialist populist route. We
got to hit those kitchen table issues. They weren't doing
(30:11):
this until they were handed their acts on Tuesday night.
This is a sign, folks, that we not only won,
we won bigley and it's glorious and we'll savor the
flavor a little bit more as we come back after
this time out. Ryan Schuling live back after this.
Speaker 10 (30:34):
Please respect the chairs, authority.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
The chair, respect the chairs by the chairs. You work
for me. I'm a tax payer. I'm a taxpayer. You
work for me.
Speaker 10 (30:47):
The witness will suspend.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
Tom Holman is a gem and he's now the new
borders are and he embraces the title, doesn't run from
it like Kamala Harris did. And that was our good
friend Representative Promila Gianpaul Democrat Washington abandoning the trans issue,
throwing it overboard, and trying to run back to the
(31:11):
knit and grit of the socialist populist issues of the
Bernie Sanders wing of the party. And Bernie, to his credit,
has called out his own party saying, you've forgotten about
these people. These are the people who responded to me,
Bernie Sanders in the twenty sixteen and twenty twenty elections.
He's right about that. And the weird Venn diagram we
talked about AOC and Trump. There are a lot, including
(31:32):
Joe Rogan, who went from being Bernie Bros Too. I
think voting for Trump this time around because they have
that populist kind of bent and focus. Let's go to
some tax and a lot of them coming in five, seven, seven,
thirty nine. Ryan, Like you said, when your life is
so dependent on the government, who's in power really matters
in your day to day life. But if you have
limited government and limited regulation, your day to day life
(31:54):
doesn't really change with the presidential election. That's why it's
harder to sell. You know what's in it for me.
You're voting in your own self interest, which is fine,
but you got to be able to really sell that
idea of libertarianism and freedom and independence and individual rights.
And that's what the Republican Party is just winning in
(32:15):
spades right now. They've made the argument, and we saw
it happen and unfold on Tuesday Night. Last Tuesday Night,
Ryan Nobody pushed back on FJB. Joe Biden because he
wasn't making any decisions or there were some bad ones
being made, but there wasn't a voice, a clarion call
from within the administration, no matter who it was. Jenny
(32:35):
from the Block, Jennifer Granholm, my former home state mayor
or governor rather of Michigan and Secretary of Energy. She's
a disaster. Pete Boodha disaster, Secretary of Transportation, Rachel Levine disaster,
go up and down the list, Lloyd Austin, Secretary of Defense, disaster,
Tony Blinken, Secretary of State, disaster. John Ratcliffe, by the way,
(32:57):
has just been named the new CIA director, and I
think that's a solid choice. He's been a very strong
advocate for Donald Trump and his agenda. He was the
former director of National Intelligence, and I think Trump's knocking
out of the park for the most part here, Kelly,
on these cabinet picks, what do you about? You? What
do you think?
Speaker 6 (33:14):
I love them all you do. I think he's doing
a great job. And only a week before anywhere since
of the election, you know, well, yeah, yeah, she kills
her dogs and I don't I know, yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:31):
Yeah, Bob and arvadis is Dick Wadhams said. The eight
hundred thousand voters from the Pacific Coast migrated to Colorado.
They were mostly Dems and winning Colorado, they continue to
vote them. Yeah, they leave the Democrat hell hole. That's California.
Maybe the same thing will work here, though, is it?
We're winning? Folks. Stay on the straight and narrow and
I'll be back with you tomorrow. Stay tuned. The Dan
(33:53):
Kaplis Show is next. You've been listening to Ryan Shuling
live