Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on your Morning show with Michael dil Choanoh.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
We're having a little DC with DZ on this Thursday,
March the thirteenth year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five.
The two NASA astronauts, by the way, waking up this morning,
they're trapped in space. They had to scribe the mission
because of a hydraulic issue with the clamps holding the
Falcon nine rocket in place, so it's not on the
rocket but on the ground. They hope to have that
if it's resolved, another launch tomorrow night. And then we
(00:26):
have Chuckie Schumer bragging out he thinks he's got the
votes it's going to take to block this Republican spending bill. Well,
it's an American spending bill, and if you continue to
block it, we're going to have a government shutdown, which
by the way, is fine with me. That just cuts
all non essential spending. But we're talking abou David Snatti.
There was an interesting poll we did earlier in the
(00:47):
five o'clock hour shameless plug for the podcast if you
missed it, and it's just like every pole every day.
It shows that Donald Trump is different this time and
the American people are especially different. So if the Democrats
decide to play not an opposing party game, which they
should be playing, but a pure obstruction game. If they
(01:08):
can't read the tea leaves of where the American people are,
and they certainly couldn't during the election cycle, and they
haven't very well since they're going to lose power for
a long time. And this poll today was over Donald
Trump's executive order on the English language being the first
primary language. Seventy three percent of the American people support
English as the official language, including fifty four percent who
(01:29):
strongly support. Only ten percent strongly disagree. So on the
passion front, this is a five to one advantage for
English as the official language. It is a seventy three
to ten percent differential. And we keep seeing this in
every issue, whether it's the border, whether it's the economy,
(01:50):
whether it's trends athletes competing against women, and the Democrats
haven't made a narrative shift yet and how that plays well.
Here's our great example. A signal poll shows that Senator
John Asoff in Georgia, Democrat is in a deadlock forty
(02:10):
four to forty four percent against any generic Republican challenger.
The numbers shift fifty two to thirty eight percent advantage
to the GOP. When you remind them that asof voted
to allow men to play in sports against women, I mean,
they're just going to die on this trans hill, it
(02:32):
would appear, or all these different hills where they just
can't seem to get a simple read. This isn't Donald Trump.
He's not perceived as a boogeyman or the devil or
an insurrectionist. In fact, he's doing the things the American
people want done and that they support being done. How
could all this impact this midterm election?
Speaker 3 (02:52):
It's a great question what's the midterm election going to
be about? Because it's already here and at this stage
in game, it appears that the investment is going into
two issues, the transgender issue and Doge. The other side,
the Democrat side, is basically saying that the same call
for social justice on the question of transsexuality, and they're
(03:14):
basically condemning out of hand Doge. If the election becomes
a referendum on what's on the Doge website, I don't
know how the Democrats expect to win, because one thing
the American people would like to know is what's going
on inside their government and everything that DOGE is showing
us says that the claims about waste, fraud, and corruption
(03:36):
are at in abuse are absolutely true. If those stories
continue to mount, they will be the language of the
conversation in twenty twenty six, and the Democrats are going
to have a really hard.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Time because two thirds of the American people support what
DOGE is doing and are outraged at what it's finding.
Speaker 3 (03:54):
This is across all demographics, and the transgender question crosses
all demographics. However, lest everyone get way ahead over their skis,
that's thinking that twenty twenty six is a slam dunk.
A congressional election is everything different than a presidential election.
A presidential election takes all the sentiment, all the rhetoric,
(04:14):
and all the money and puts it into one singular
filter and gives Americans a binary choice, right.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
You pick A or B.
Speaker 3 (04:23):
That's totally different than having four hundred and thirty five
House races spread out across the country that is very
divided on the whole. In other words, when you take
all the Democrat members of the House from California and
Illinois and New York and you compare them to everywhere else,
(04:44):
it balances out within five seats, very different election, right
how and the Democrats are great at jerrymandering as well,
Let's not kill ourselves. They have mastered the art of
jerrymandering in the places where it matters, most high population centers,
so that means they get seats just showing up.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
By the way, for those don't know that term, that's
how the districting is done. That gives a proclivity for
an outcome. All right, So.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
Red, did you catch up quickly? He just ripped that off,
just boom right there.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
No, I know, but what I wanted to say was,
I'm thinking of Red's favorite story yesterday. So Nancy Pelosi,
weird or ugly head, stopped AOC from getting the head
of opposition party in ways and means to get revenge,
her chief of staff is going back to San Francisco
to try to dethrone Nancy Pelosi. That shows you that
(05:36):
they're fighting a two front war. Democrats are mostly at
war with themselves, then Republicans and or both. You got
the new Hampshire Senator Jeanie Shaheen. She is not going
to run for reelection. Everybody, I mean, how long does
it take both of us to go? Well? If Sununu
decides to run, that's a pretty good shot for the
Republicans to steal that seat. But all that aside, what's
(06:01):
the chances of Democrats losing in primaries if the current
seat holders don't awaken to these narratives that are failing them.
A part of me says, it may be a different
Democrat party. The other part of me says, well, it's
the same old thing we always say. Ask everyone they
think of Congress, less than ten percent approve of Congress.
(06:23):
But then they'll go, oh, but my congressmen and vote
for him. So and you talked about the jerrymandering and
how these districts are set up, especially in Illinois, New
York and in California. They're likely not to learn much
or really shift. But what is the odds of there
being a shift in the party? In other words, if
these seat holders won't let go of these narratives that
(06:44):
are so at odds with the American people, they may
lose their primaries and thus reshape Congress.
Speaker 3 (06:49):
Well, this takes us right back to where we've been
in the reality of the hollowing out of the Democratic
Party by George Soros and the billion our cartel. It
just depends on what level they choose to play. Now,
if they want to go ahead and look, the policy
district is safe no matter who's in it. So if
they put an AOC type candidate in there and they run,
(07:11):
they're going to win. Okay, that's not even a question.
That's a seat. That's a seat. To get control back,
they've got to come into the vulnerable districts and the
Republicans have to mess up by not getting quality candidates.
And the problem with Republicans is they're great at campaigning,
but they have a hard time doing two things at
one time. They get so focused on governing. Once they're
in power and they are doing a serious commitment to
(07:34):
governing right now, will they remember that those House seats
change everything. Do they have that ability to that capacity,
and do they have that kind of money to be
able to do it, and will they spend that money? Michael,
you can't beat something with nothing. And the Democrats have
only got one game right now, and that's the field
candidates they believe can upset the apple cart in twenty
(07:54):
twenty six. If the Republicans don't pay attention and don't
put the right people in the right places.
Speaker 2 (07:59):
They could be closing moments. So David's an notty CEO
of the American Policy Roundtable, hosts of the Public Score
on two hundred stations, and senior contributor to your morning show.
Think about just these first fifty days, and it's been crazy.
The Democrats have been in full opposition against the Ukraine.
Support that's blown up in their face, full opposition against Doze,
(08:22):
that's blown up in their face. English as the official language,
that's blown up in their face. Hey, they put a
lot on the line with egg prices and that's blown
up in their face. Eggs are down two dollars a
dozen as of today, and that's just the first fifty days.
So how much more time can do they have to
get things right before the midterm because the midterm really
(08:45):
really starts right after summer.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
If not already, yeah, if not already, And no, you're
exactly right again the questions how much time do they have, Well,
they have plenty of time to run a campaign, plenty
of time to apply the billionaire Cartail's money. Question is
do they have the candidates? And the biggest question is
if the other side's not playing or not fighting in
(09:10):
key swing seats, then that's the big question. I mean, look,
if everybody puts out a total one effort, the momentum
is clearly on the side of the Republicans. If the
issues as you mentioned early stake are the question about
transgendourism and particularly the issue of Doge, Republicans have got momentum,
and momentum is hard to get back once you've lost
(09:30):
it unless somebody stops fighting.
Speaker 2 (09:32):
We have often said that who really runs Listen, Democrat
constituents don't have any say in this party. They did
in twenty sixteen they wanted Bernie, they got Hillary, they didn't.
In twenty twenty they wanted Bernie again, they got Joe Biden.
They didn't in twenty twenty four. They just gave their
Biden votes directly to Kamlin, never even asked them. All right,
so they don't even have a say in this But
(09:54):
bottom line is they're going to have to pivot and
pivot soon. And the people that are really running the
party aren't the ones talking right now. They're letting other
people doing it, so they probably have a plan. They're
showing you their first hand. Ronnie Manuel is going to
have some kind of play in this narrative policy candidate shift.
(10:16):
I don't know that they've played their hand for the
midterm election yet as to what they're going to do,
and I wonder how much longer they have before they
have to pretty quickly at the.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
Points you're bringing up, Michael, because Emmanuel has gotten the
money from the Obama cartel before, he could likely get
it again. Now. He may be just doing all of
this to provide leadership until the moment and then he
steps back out of the way. But somebody's got to react,
reactivate the billionaire cartel, and with em Manuel on the job,
that's what he's done. He's got nothing else to do.
So watch out.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
Yeah, if they're going to get their act together before
the midterms, they're going to show their hand here right
before the summer break, don't you think. Yep, And they've
yet to do it. I don't see, have you.
Speaker 3 (10:55):
No, As long as the doge guys don't stumble, the
other guy's got trouble.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
We had to go into overtime today to cover everything.
Thank you so much for your time at ease, my friend,
go and rest. Still no sun in Orlando, not yet.
I'm still in the dark in Tennessee.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
You're in the birds, but no sun.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
Can only imagine how dark it is on the West Coast.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Thank you, Dave, miss a little, miss a lot, miss
a lot, and we'll miss you. It's your morning show
with Michael del Churno.