Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael Del Johno, and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
Central and six to nine Eastern non great stations like
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a part of your morning routine, but we're glad you're
(00:21):
here now. Enjoy the podcast well two.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
Three starting your morning off right. Thank you, A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in the stage. This is your morning show with Michael
del Jordan.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Let me be the first one to say good morning
and welcome to Wednesday, September the fourth. You're of Our
Lord twenty twenty four on the Aaron streaming live on
your iHeartRadio app. I am Michael Del Johno, Jeffrey Lyon
in the controls, and you at home playing the role
of what really.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
Matters at your morning show. Did I just sing.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
Three Dog Night one yes in Leon Russell, Yes, very versatile,
I am.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
And then you did the medley where you switched to
tight groupe before I switches that that's the kicking in
on the lyrics.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
RFK Junior will remain on the presidential ballot in Michigan.
About half of the swing states we'll leave him on.
Half have removed him. We'll see who that favors. Ozempic
is no longer linked to depression or suicide. Vice President
Kamala Harris is expected to announce her economic proposal as
she pits the rich against the poor, she will pit
(01:30):
big business against small business.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
Remember, if you're a small business, we love you. You're
the backbone of America. You're a ramrod. If you become
a big business, you're the enemy itself and the devil.
You should pay for everything.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
Do you forget the feeling we're playing a political game
while really John Podesta and the administrative state just marches
on really running us into the crown. David Zonadias here.
He is the president of the American Policy Roundtable, host
of the Public Square, also hosts eighteen fifty main Street
at eighteen fifty main street dot com. And I'm looking
at a story from the Hill and Colmer wants to
(02:06):
interview Podesta Somewhere along the line, John Podesta just crowned
himself the global warming czar representing the United States, and
the House Oversight Committee chair would like to know who
dropped down and made him boss.
Speaker 3 (02:21):
Well, that was about five terms ago, right, David.
Speaker 4 (02:25):
Good morning, Michael, good morning. Yeah, this is something that
you are one of the very few people in the
country that's willing to talk about. And I appreciate that.
I have an infatuation with the career of John Podessa
because in tracking what really happens behind the scenes in
presidential administrations, usually it takes about twenty years to find
(02:47):
out who was really pulling the strings and doing the work.
From a Podesta's case, we go the whole way back
to the Clinton administration, Bill Clinton administration, where he became
his first stint as a chief of staff, and we
find him with Bill Clinton at the end of that term,
hanging around in the White House, riding his bicycle actually
(03:09):
through the White House and bumping up the ice cream
machin figured out how to get free ice cream sat
which and this is that's why I spress John Kuna.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
So there, John Robic, by the way, I'm not interrupting,
but kind of walk towards a window or something to
help us with the breakup. And I'm just going to
vamp for a second for the listener's sake. David's been
in the public policy business over forty five years. I
think the crown jewel is the Public Square, which is
a broadcast heard on twenty stations, And I think the
(03:41):
jewel of the jewel is he does this Christmas in
America presentation.
Speaker 3 (03:46):
Every holiday season.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
We go back in time to find the manger in
great moments in history. We did one recently with the
Depression and how the Great Depression births the Great Generation
that liberated the world. These are powerful stories. But in
one of those stories that David's talking about, I believe
I can't remember what year it was, but we showed
a piece of you showed a piece of video in
(04:09):
the presentation and you see, you know, Bill Clinton playing,
going around on his bicycle and then just kind of
passes the Oval Office and there's John Pedessa the TSK
being president while Bill Clinton is playing. Same could probably
be said for Barack Obama's two terms. Same could be
said for whatever that's been in the White House for
the last four years. And my guess is the same
(04:29):
can be said for whatever will happen in a Kamala
Harris administration. These presidents come and go, these puppets come
and go. The one thing that stays is John Podesta.
He seems to be really running the administrative state. And
of all the feeds David, he has pulled off that
is the most amazing to me. He somehow supersedes the
(04:49):
Obama apparatus and the Clinton apparatus that hate each other.
He orchestrates the Biden Harris ticket, which is the combining
of the Obama and Clinton apparatus, and then now the
switch from the Obama apparatus Biden to the Harris Clinton
apparatus and a coup in a takeover. And he's getting
(05:12):
away with it, and nobody ever points the finger at him.
Speaker 3 (05:16):
Who is he? Is he the Antichrist?
Speaker 4 (05:20):
No, He's just a very very hard working, passionate, driven person.
And so he is the founder of the Center for
American Progress with George Soros. And if you actually look
at his bio that is on the Center for American
Progress's website, something that he founded in two thousand and
(05:42):
three with George Soros, you'll find that very same bio
has been cut and pasted to describe him in White
House statements as well directly from the White House. So
you have a person whose primary role in life the
advocacy for the progressive agenda, funded by George Soros and
a network of billionaires, who is actually now presumed and
(06:03):
assumed in a position in the cabinet of the President
of the United States without Senate confirmation. At the same time,
he's a special counsel to the President for the Inflation
Reduction Act. So he has two jobs, and right now
he's in China negotiating America's policy on climate change.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
So the question is how does John Podesta end up
in China doing John Kerry's job without any Senate confirmation.
First of all, how does he find the time when
he's really the president but he's there being a czar.
He's also writing all the checks, not that we can
find where all the money has gone with COVID money,
and I assume in the future with the Inflation Reduction Act,
(06:42):
but he's if he's not writing checks for that, he's
off being a czar in addition to really running the administration.
And the only thing we're going to get is him
called in to answer some questions about you know who
dropped dead and made you the top climate diplomat. Somebody
o't ask him? And what we'll meet him president going
on his sixth term.
Speaker 4 (07:04):
Michael, this is what is annoying everyone. We've talked about
the cover up of the Biden campaign in twenty twenty. Well,
Podesta was there. We talk about the deal that put
Biden in that position. Podesta was there. We talk about
the administration of an infirm president being covered up because
Podesta is there. Now he's in China doing Carry's job.
(07:27):
And you ask yourself, why is it that none of
the powerful people in Washington, DC are willing to expose
the fact that this is the most powerful man in
the White House.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
David Sinati's the American Policy Roundtable CEO. He is also
host of The Public Square. He joins this weekly. You
know there's a viral thing going on. If you haven't
seen it, I don't want to set everybody's off. But
if you ask Alex a question about why you should
vote for Kamala Harris, he gives you an answer why
should I vote for Donald Trump?
Speaker 3 (07:59):
Nothing?
Speaker 1 (08:00):
If you say, you know, why should I not vote
for Kamala Harris, you get nothing.
Speaker 3 (08:04):
And if you say, why should I not vote for
Donal Trump?
Speaker 1 (08:05):
You get something that goes viral, but you can't get
the Podesta connection to go viral, not even.
Speaker 4 (08:10):
If Fox, I don't get any illustration. Yeah, and you
know it's in plain sight. Michael wants to kick off
the network of billionaires.
Speaker 3 (08:20):
Well, that's got to be the answer. You're probably right.
I wanted to. I did something earlier this morning, and
I struggle doing it without you. To be quite frank
and honest.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Obviously, I want to see Governor Cuomo face some accountability
for what he did with the most vulnerable. You have
a mom late in age. I have two moms, a
mother in law and a mom late age. These are
the most weak, the most vulnerable, the most to be
cared for and loved, and they were the most abused
in COVID, especially in New York. So I want to
(08:50):
see him face this questioning and accountability.
Speaker 3 (08:53):
But are you kidding me?
Speaker 1 (08:55):
What COVID did, the way they played the and controlled
and abused the American people, from mass to vaccine to
shelter in place, to closing and taking over businesses, to
governors who had failed miserably, and the only one we
want to talk to is Cuomo. I don't think history
is off to a good start getting this COVID abuse right.
Speaker 4 (09:17):
You Well, you sent me an excellent quote a testimony
from that Congressional hearing with the three docs including Jay
betachera of the Great Barrington Declaration and were their basic
statement was the greatest perpetrator of misinformation during COVID was
the government? And you know what, no one disagrees with
that now.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
Yeah, but the government couldn't have pulled it off without
legislatures sound asleep and being worthless and doing nothing, or
a media at the cabal table in their back pocket
controlling voices or control over technocracy which was eliminating and
censoring any opposition voice.
Speaker 3 (09:58):
I mean, there were some key players along the way.
Speaker 4 (10:00):
Let's not forget the governors and wind breakers. The most
dangerous part in America is when governors show up behind
a microphone on Tuesday afternoon and a wind breaker.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
I don't know what that makes me chuckle, but yeah,
they go right to wardrobe and when you see them,
the wind breaker run. But yeah, but the quote is
the greatest perpetrator of misinformation during the pandemic was the
United States government? And I think they had the cabal
of the media. I know because I was working for
him and being threatened daily in their back pocket. But
(10:30):
it's true, and we were, in real time just being
sensible talking about a virus as a virus, viral one
oh one, versus as a political weapon, and we threaded
the needle in real time. Has America figured out yet
exactly what China and their own government did to them
with this virus?
Speaker 4 (10:50):
That question is so powerful that it actually is rhetorical.
It's such a big question.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
It's such a powerful.
Speaker 4 (10:59):
Question, it actually brings tears to my eyes.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
And no, probably doesn't want to know.
Speaker 1 (11:03):
America probably isn't even doesn't even have the character encouraged
to want to know what it did.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
And then you make the logical extension, if we can
be so driven by fear to literally give up everything
the way that we did, what would happen the next time?
And that lesson has not been missed by George Soros,
by John Podesta, by Kamala Harrison, by the progressive left.
They know what they can push people.
Speaker 1 (11:31):
They cracked their pants when they saw America do what
they've been trying to get America to do with global
warming with this virus that I don't think they ever
dreamt America would. And then they then they're they're quickly
trying to get it right back to global warming, or
they'll just produce another virus. But they until America shows
them you will not control us. They're misinformation and fear
they're going to do that play again, right that, Well,
(11:54):
it's yeah, yeah, yeah, you might want to be on
high alert because I'll even cancel what I have scheduled.
We've got to continue. Can you do one more segment
at least? All right more with David Szonati from the
American Policy round Table when your morning show continues.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Deltrono.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
We are just two months away from election day, but
not that long, just two weeks away for early states.
Early voting will begin in Virginia, Minnesota, South Dakota, Vermont, Illinois,
and in the swing state of Pennsylvania on September sixteenth.
Then shortly after that in October, residents in nine more
states can start to vote, including the swing states of
(12:35):
Arizona and Ohio. You often hear David Sinati talk about
this short field and how much it changes things. Well, David,
welcome to the short field, because first and ten starts
in about two weeks.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
And Michael the.
Speaker 4 (12:51):
Washington Post had a fascinating comment yesterday this with a
trunky race to the White House. Can you believe that?
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Well, no, I can't because your phone was cutting out,
So I have no idea what you said.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
I'll play the role of the listener repeated.
Speaker 4 (13:11):
Yes, The Washington Post called this campaign at a unconventional
campaign with a truncated sprint to the White House. Now,
I mean, you can't glorify chaos any better than that.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Yeah, no, that is the celebration of chaos. All right, Well,
how Americans sort this out? For RFK Junior, one thing
is for sure, he seemed to really think he could win.
By the way, may I say, I think in a
primary against an incumbent Joe Biden he might have. But
they didn't allow that, and then they forced him out
(13:47):
of the party and then they did nothing. But I mean,
if you think they were using lawfair to harass Trump,
they were doing the same thing to o RFK while
the media mocked and ignored. So when he's at nine
percent and coming out of the conventions, he realizes I
can't win, and I always said, if I can't win,
I won't be a spoiler. He leaves the race, endorses Trump,
(14:09):
suspends this campaign, and removes himself from swing states. Then
the judges get involved to keep him on in swing states,
and when it's all dusted out and said and done,
he'll be and remain on the ballot in Michigan and Wisconsin,
very key swing states, and North Carolina. And he will
be successfully removed from the ballot in Arizona, Florida, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
(14:32):
and Texas. So speaking of celebrating chaos, what do you
make of that chaos?
Speaker 4 (14:38):
Well, the tension of this election is whether or not
people are going to realize this is COVID Part two.
I just saw to me yesterday when Joe Biden wouldn't
get out of the race and the pressure finally came
crashing in upon him. They said in Nevada, he got COVID.
(15:00):
They rushed him back to the White House, and then
he went into a mystical cave and came out and
decided that he wasn't going to run for the presidency.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
To which he picked up the phone and called Kamala
who was making a bacon and pancakes.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Auntie kanneheima bacon and I said, ah, you should, Joe,
and he said, I am sure, and she said, okay,
all right. Pick it up from there.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
Once again they pulled the COVID card. And so now
as we go into this chaos of this election, they're
going to try to do everything they can to disenfranchise
the process to protect their power. Michael, you know, I
asked the question yesterday on the public square have we
lost this election? And people go, well, wait a minute,
(15:47):
I haven't happened yet, I said, but in.
Speaker 5 (15:48):
A way, we the people are losing the entire process processing.
And if you lose the process of an election, you
lose the trust.
Speaker 4 (15:59):
Of the concept to the transfer of power. This is
far worse than storming the capitol. You're storming the rule
of law. And this a question of is there going
to be enough pushback? And I think what people underestimate
about Kennedy is he has had enough of the process
being violated and his rights being violated. And I don't
(16:20):
care whether his name's.
Speaker 3 (16:21):
On the ballot or not.
Speaker 4 (16:22):
If he carries forth with the passion that he has
right now, people are going to see through this, and
they're not going to They are going to follow Kennedy
in the direction that he's going because they're fed up
with being deceived. And who is it that's pulling these buttons,
pushing these buttons and pulling these levers. It's the Podesta
Sorrow Sorrow in their network.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
And may I add he's not the only one. Elon
Musk is pretty disgusting, exactly. And also they're starting a
campaign together, so is Tulsey Gabbert. That's a movement that
probably we should follow more than the Trump movement. It's
also COVID too, in a sense that they hire COVID one,
they hit Joe in a basement in COVID two. They're
hiding Kamala right in plain sight, or at least until
(17:06):
they can't any longer.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
The debate come down.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
All right, well, we we do need to do tomorrow
because what I didn't get a chance to get to
or Friday, whatever you can do. Is it plausible that
a civil war is possible? It's unthinkable, but is it possible?
Speaker 3 (17:22):
Hey, gang, it's me Michael.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
You can listen to your morning show live, make us
a part of your morning routine or your drive to
work companion on great stations like Talk Radio ninety eight
point three and fifteen ten WLAC in Nashville, Tupelos News
and Talk one to one point one and ten sixty WKMQ,
and how about Talk six to fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California.
Love to have you listen live, but are grateful you're
(17:45):
here now for the podcast Enjoy. I'm Michael del Jorono.
That's Jeffrey Lion at the controls. In a moment, Aaron
Rayal will be joining us. This is your morning show
on the Aaron streaming live on your iHeartRadio app if
you're just waking up. One of the big stories, the
law fair continues against Donald Trump. He's got to plead
once again and in the same case bring brought back
(18:06):
up again. Heat wave continues on the West Coast to
relatively mild so far hurricane season. So much for global warming.
And RFK will remain on the presidential ballot in Michigan.
It's about a fifty to fifty split as far as
the states where RFK will remain, and it's up to RFK,
and I think he will along with Elon Musk, along
(18:28):
with Tulsea Gabbert long with Donald Trump, make it crystal
clear in the states where he remains, instructing those with
passion for him and what to do. In fact, I
think you got to get to really understand this stuff.
You got to go beyond just Donald Trump is a solution.
I don't know if America can get peep past that
and any more specific than that, but if they do,
(18:50):
there will be some great messaging for them.
Speaker 3 (18:52):
But it's about a fifty to fifty split on the states.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Wisconsin and Michigan are the big ones where RFK will remain. Arizona,
Pennsylvania some of the big ones where he'll be removed.
And we'll see how that all plays out. And also,
if you're just waking up, a new survey is out
on the best and worst places to retire. How's that
different from the best and worst places to live?
Speaker 4 (19:13):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (19:13):
Well, I suspect it has something to do with income.
Aaron Rayl is here with the story. Good morning, Aaron.
Speaker 6 (19:19):
Hi, Yes, it has a lot to do with income,
and it has a lot to do with the state
tax and inheritance tax. And if you want none of that,
you should go to Florida, particularly Orlando. That is the
top city for retirees according to My Favorite Place.
Speaker 7 (19:32):
While at Hub, they do these incredible lists.
Speaker 6 (19:34):
That are very infuriating and very fun to read.
Speaker 7 (19:37):
So they had forty five key metrics.
Speaker 6 (19:39):
They looked at living, they looked at tax laws, they
looked at availability.
Speaker 7 (19:43):
Activities, healthcare. It's pretty comprehensive.
Speaker 6 (19:45):
Orlando and first late It's followed by Miami, followed by
this one not like the others, Minneapolis, Minnesota. We can
come back to that, Tampa for Lauderdale, Scottsdale, Cincinnati, Ohio,
Saint Petersburg, Casper, Wyoming, and Atlanta, Georgia, Oka.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
All of those. The only one I would even consider
is Cincinnati.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
So I don't know whether to selfishly jump to Cincinnati
or Oh my, that's a lot of Florida cities.
Speaker 6 (20:08):
Ah No, Let's let me just explain Minneapolis, because that also.
Speaker 7 (20:11):
Explained Cincinnati a little bit. So Minneapolis.
Speaker 6 (20:14):
The reason it came in number three is because it
actually has an incredibly strong workforce opportunity for sixty five plus.
There's a large percentage of jobs that are easier easy
to perform for the elderly, and twenty two percent of
the working population is over the age of sixty five.
One of the things I do love about the boomers
is that they're not going to go gently.
Speaker 7 (20:33):
Into that good night. They are working. And like I
was with my dad, whom I adore, over this past weekend.
He's seventy five years old.
Speaker 6 (20:40):
He was jumping in the water with my kids running
around like this is not what my grandfather was like,
you know, like for my kids, like they have this
picture of their grandfathers, this fun guy. It's like always active,
always on the move, and that's so cool. And so
many boomers are like that, and so many boomers are like,
I need to stop working. I don't want to work
as hard, but I don't want to stop working and
have you know, work kind of.
Speaker 7 (21:01):
Like gives rhythm to one's life. And if you're not
doing it.
Speaker 6 (21:04):
Too much and you enjoy what you do, it checks
a lot of boxes in terms of combating loneliness and
creating community and other things.
Speaker 7 (21:10):
So that's not a bad situation.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Well, and again I don't conflate work with purpose, though
purposeful work is a really powerful thing. But I can
tell you need to plan for retirement as much as
you planned for the workforce and life, because I have
seen it all too often. I saw with my father
in law who was fortunate enough to retire at a
very young age in his early fifties, and I watched
(21:33):
how that aged him. You have to have that next
thing to go to. Our bodies are just made to
be used or lose. It's just that simple. So staying
active will make you not look older and not think older,
and not live older and feel older and die younger.
And the same is true with work, you know. I
guess everybody's dream is different. I mean I would like
(21:53):
to spend my ladder years really focusing on I used
to always joke with the Nashville Rescue Mission that I
supper or died for sixteen years that you know, when
when radio is over, that's where I want to spend
my final years working with the homeless every single day.
Speaker 3 (22:10):
I think people need to find that. But okay, so
that's so hot.
Speaker 1 (22:12):
And it was the same in Cincinnati as it was
in Minneapolis.
Speaker 7 (22:15):
Yes, very similar reasoning.
Speaker 6 (22:17):
And I actually what you just said is so great
because that volunteer opportunity, like the working, whether it be
in the form of like compensation or not, but just like.
Speaker 7 (22:26):
Working for the Yes, like you nailed it.
Speaker 6 (22:29):
And actually that's one of the reasons that Florida finds
itself so high. There's a lot of overall activities, like
things that you can do with your time, whether that
be some sort of volunteer work, or museums or galleries
or fishing facilities, music venues. This is why you see
keep seeing Florida pop up. And by the way, this
is so not surprising, and we don't have to go
through everyone. But the other side of the list, California.
(22:52):
Cities in California are terrible when it comes to all
of the metrics you used to assess whether or not
it's pro retiring or not.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
I don't know what to make of Minneapolis, probably fifty
to fifty. I don't know what to make a Cincinnati,
probably fifty to fifty. But something tells me there's a
lot of red that is very good for the retirees
and a lot of blue that is not.
Speaker 3 (23:15):
But I'll let people form that conclusion.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
And on the other topic, I would just say, you know,
some would say that I was instrumental in raising millions
and millions of dollars over sixteen years. For me, I
spent my working years on the radio providing the funds
for others. For me, that ability to one on one
literally be there with the homeless and love on them
physically and help restore their life physically is the second
(23:41):
half payoff for me. So if it's something you really
believe in and are called to and purpose for, you
will get the kind of fulfillment because you don't do
it to remain young and stay alive. You do it
to complete your purpose. And I think those are the
people that do that no matter what it pays, are
the ones that stay young longer. But I guess where
(24:02):
you do it for me? I'm going to rule out Florida.
It's just too darn hot and too much traffic. Plus
Disney's there and I can't stand Disney. So in Minneapolis,
I you know.
Speaker 6 (24:11):
I particularly Orlando, right So I guess.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
I'm leaning Cincinnati right now. Looks like I'm gonna be
a red ticket holder.
Speaker 8 (24:20):
You know.
Speaker 7 (24:20):
I've never been to Scottsdale, but I have a feeling
I don't know why, like the desert. It looks so
cool to me.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
It's a dry heat, is it? Yeah, that's what they
that's their claim.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
I was up for a job there once and I
told the guy said to you, you know, I love you,
I love your company, I love your station, but I
really hate on a sunny, hot day, I'm miserable the
guy there's like dead air. For five seconds, he goes, well,
it's sunny and hot here every single day.
Speaker 3 (24:47):
So I passed. I passed on the job. But maybe
it'll feel better at eighty air. Great reporting to anyone
talking to you, all right, it's not five stories of
the day, and there are.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
I don't know where you want to rank them. I
would probably put this one first.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
Were right.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
We tried assassination that were right, back to lawfair that
didn't work.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
Will it work this time? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
But it's got former President Trump pleading not guilty again
to a saying charge that has come back again.
Speaker 3 (25:19):
Brian Shook reports.
Speaker 9 (25:20):
Special counsel Jack Smith filed a revised indictment last week
after the Supreme Court ruled that former presidents have some
immunity for their actions while in office. On Tuesday, Trump
directed his legal team to plead not guilty on his behalf.
The new indictment keeps the same charges Trump faced before,
but instead highlights his actions as a candidate and private citizen.
(25:44):
I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 1 (25:45):
Six days until the big debate between Vice President Kamala
Harrison former President Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (25:51):
Mark Mayfield has the preview.
Speaker 10 (25:52):
Both campaigns are continuing to work in key swing states
until then. Harris used Labor Day to hold a campaign
event in Pennsylvania, her first joint rally with President Biden
since he dropped out of the race for the White House.
That followed an event held in Michigan earlier in the day.
Republican vice presidential candidate JD. Vancy scheduled to visit Arizona Wednesday,
while Trump is set to hold a rally in Wisconsin
(26:12):
on Saturday. The debate takes place in Philadelphia, hosted by
ABC at nine pm Eastern Tuesday, September tenth.
Speaker 3 (26:19):
I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (26:20):
Election Day might be two months away, but election voting
begins in several states in mere days.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
Tammy Trihila reports early.
Speaker 11 (26:29):
Voting starts this month in Virginia, Minnesota, South Dakota, Vermont, Illinois,
and in the swing state of Pennsylvania on September sixteenth.
In October, residents and nine more states can start to vote,
including swing states Arizona and Ohio. If you want to
hear more from the candidates before you vote. Kamala Harris
and Donald Trump will debate on ABC next Tuesday night.
(26:49):
I'm Tammy Triheo Well.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
Labor Day brought cooler temperatures where I live in the
middle of the country, but for the West Coast, record
breaking heat continues.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
Michael Castor has the details.
Speaker 12 (26:59):
Phoenix, Las Faivegas, and Los Angeles will be among the
cities that see temperatures ten to twenty degrees above normal
this week.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
Temperatures are expected to peak Thursday.
Speaker 12 (27:08):
National Weather Service in Los Angeles has some parts of
southern California could see temperatures as high as one hundred
thirteen degrees. Meanwhile, the National Weather Services temperatures in Phoenix
may reach a high of one hundred fourteen and Las
Vegas could reach one hundred six degrees.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
I'm Michael casna Well.
Speaker 1 (27:25):
The United States finally filed charges against Tamas terrorists who
but they're scared. Israel killed two Hamas leaders in a
recent air strike in Gaza.
Speaker 3 (27:35):
Lisa Taylor has more.
Speaker 8 (27:36):
The IDEA said on Tuesday the commander was among eight
Hamas members killed in Gaza City. Raf Senchez and Tel
Aviv's as Nettagnan, who's facing pressure to ultimately try to
end the war and retrieve the hostages.
Speaker 13 (27:46):
Prime Minister Natya, who depends on the support of several
far right ministers in his cabina. These are people who
think there should be no concessions to Hamas, But his
Defense minister, who is a more centrist, more moderate figure,
a former army general, is saying that it is worth
making concessions if it means bringing those hostages home alive.
Speaker 8 (28:07):
This strike took place outside a hospital, and Israeli forces
said they took a number of steps to avoid harming civilians.
Ami said Taylor well to.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
Say the least is his tip of the Iceberg stuff,
and it's hardly speedy justice. But former New York Governor
Andrew Cuomo is set to publicly answer questions regarding his
handling of the coronavirus pandemic. Natalie Migliori reports for.
Speaker 14 (28:26):
The first time, Cuomo was set to publicly field questions
from a Republican led House subcommittee next Tuesday afternoon about
his response to the COVID nineteen pandemic. Cuomah's administration was
accused of underreporting deaths in nursing homes after a twenty
twenty mandate required those facilities to take patients who tested
positive for COVID. It comes after he sat for a
seven hour closed door deposition in Washington, DC. Back in June,
(28:48):
cuomo spokesperson release a statement saying, in part, the American
people deserve the truth and partisan political games must stop
because this is a matter of life and death. I'm
Natalie mcliori, NBC News Radio, New York.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
The starch suggests oh oh ozamvik is not linked to
depression and suicide. Mark Mayfield is back with that.
Speaker 10 (29:07):
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania study data from over
three thousand people who use the popular diabetes and weight
loss drug that's found in nozempic and also a GOVI,
and who did not have a major mental health condition.
The study found less than one percent reported suicidal thoughts
or behavior during their treatment. The study was funded by
a Novo Nordisk, the company that makes o Zempic. I'm Markneyfield.
Speaker 4 (29:32):
I'm Daniel Colsney and Tampa and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael deil Jorna.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
Thanks for waking up with your morning show. It's ourn
or to serve you, I'm Michael del Jorna. We always
give the final story to Rory.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
All Right, Kamala is at the top of the Democratic ticket,
but what about underneath that?
Speaker 3 (29:48):
Can the Senate still flip Republican? Oh? This old chestnut, Rory?
What say you now?
Speaker 15 (29:57):
A couple months ago, when Joe Biden was still on
the ticket, it looked like a lock that the Senate
was at least going to flip for the Republicans. Well,
things are getting a.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
Bit more questionable.
Speaker 15 (30:08):
It's getting closer in Montana where John Tester is hanging
on by his fingernails against a Republican challenger, Tim Sheehey.
Speaker 3 (30:15):
But she he's been stepping in it a lot lately.
Speaker 15 (30:18):
And perhaps it seems that Sherion Brown in Ohio has
a pretty good chance of holding on now as well.
Those were probably seen as the two most likely to
flip outside of West Virginia.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
Of course, Yeah, because you know, America loves checks and balances.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
So if it gets a sense.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
Donald Trump is going to win, I think that's an
advantage for these Democrats lowering the ticket. If it looks
like Kamala is going to win, that could be an
advantage for the Republicans down the ticket. We've already seen
with the polling that they're willing to split. They'll vote
for one president and then vote the opposite party for
the Senate. But what do you make if if we
(30:55):
headn't really close, Well, we're within days now for early voting.
Nobody knows what does that do to underneath the ticket?
That's what I think is going to be most fascinating. Well,
then you break it down state by state, right, and
whether or not. I mean, look, Montana's going to go
for Donald Trump, right, it's probably by fifteen to twenty.
Speaker 3 (31:13):
Question is his test are going to survive? Right?
Speaker 15 (31:16):
And what voters turn out for that is the question
doesn't motivate more more blue voters. It's interesting though that
in both Montana and Ohio, the Democrats who are running there,
the incumbent Democrats Tester and Brown, they want nothing to
do with Kamala Harris. They don't want air Force one
to come to visit, they don't want to be at
a rally. They did not go to the Democratic National Convention.
(31:38):
So they're trying to run as sort of their own
definition of a Democrat rather than get looped into Kamala
Harris and Tim Wallas.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
Well, what a smart analysis, by the way, on them,
and for you for mentioning, let's do the reverse of that.
You know, what they need in Montana is Donald Trump
to come and help get this Senate. See problem is
Donald Trump's busy in all the swing states trying to
get the presidency.
Speaker 15 (32:00):
Right, and Montana's going to get you what votes? Yeah
they are so were I guess from the electoral college. Yeah,
so it eats up a lot.
Speaker 3 (32:06):
Of his time. But that one seat could be the
difference between a tie or control of the Senate, which
means everything when you're trying to govern.
Speaker 15 (32:17):
Especially when you're trying to make more appointments to the
Supreme Court or get your cabinet approved. The Senate's got
a lot more sway on some of those big issues
for presidents who want to get their agenda push through.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
What do you make of all this RFK and ballot
is show? I know every state has its own laws,
and in Michigan, the judge said, look, based on our
laws and the timing, he didn't get the withdrawal in
in time. I mean, we've seen some states for dead
people end up on the ballot depending on when they die.
In the end, for whatever reason, it breaks down to
where about half of the swing states he's still on
the ballot, half of the swing states he's off the ballot.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
This has swung two different ways, right, Rory.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
There were some people said him on the ballot and
these swing states will help Trump. Then you get the
sense from rfk's polling that being on the ballot hurts
Trump being off the ballot, and that's why he suspended
the campaign and only removed his swing states. I guess
we'll all find out election day, but I suspect he
will spend a lot of time in these swing states
telling his voters to vote for Trump and not him well.
Speaker 15 (33:14):
And I also think though, that having OURFK Junior on
the ballot helps Donald Trump because Trump maxes out at
forty seven percent, So the more they can split that
vote up and bring it down so that you don't
need a fifty percent majority to win a state, the
more I think that helps Donald Trump.
Speaker 8 (33:29):
Well.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
Then the other way of just thinking out loud, is
is there anybody for it?
Speaker 3 (33:33):
Again? It depends it's in the eye of the beholder.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
For me, when I think of RFK, I think as
somebody who's willing to expose the truth about certain issues
that matter to people. And if you really believed in him,
would you even I mean, what are the odds you'd
vote for Kamala Harris, So you'd neither stay at home
or vote for Donald Trump. So either way it could
be much to do about nothing. But we'll see how
(33:55):
that plays out.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
And then the debates a week away.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
I suspect the law'll be campaigning this week, but at
least for Kambla Harris, I expect her to hunker down,
hunker down this weekend and Monday to prep for the debate.
Speaker 15 (34:07):
That's that's your new drinking game, folks.
Speaker 3 (34:12):
Don't drink too much. You'll get hunkered there. It is
all right, roy O, Neil Greg reporting. We'll talk again tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael nhild showing not
Speaker 8 (34:28):
H