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November 3, 2025 • 28 mins

Sean Hannity leads with the government shutdown and looming SNAP food aid crisis, putting the spotlight on how political strategy is impacting real Americans. Economist Steve Moore joins Sean to break down New York's tax hikes, the exodus of businesses and billionaires like Ken Griffin fleeing states like New York and Illinois, and the dire consequences of free everything socialist agendas championed by candidates like Mamdani. Sean frames it as a battle for economic sanity and freedom against government overreach, highlighting real-world damage when high earners relocate and budgets crater. Steve Moore brings urgency and insight, underscoring why this matters for the future of American cities, jobs, and economic growth.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, do just round up information overload our Here's

(00:02):
a toll free telephone number if you want to be
a part of the program. It's eight hundred and ninety
four to one, Sean if you want to join us
number one. The Trump USDA found enough emergency funding to
cover fifty percent of the food stamp program for a month,
which is a start. And you know, I'm expecting after
this election tomorrow that hopefully we will have the government

(00:27):
open up. And you know, the the shakedown and you know,
the hostage taking by the Schumer shutdown Schumer Guy's entire career.
I played the montage over and over and over again,
but that looms large now. Real people are going to
be impacted. By the end of this week, we may
be asking you to donate to your local food bank

(00:47):
because people are going to be in dire you know,
and very bad, you know, very bad positions financially, and
hopefully we can get this thing reset after the election.
I think Democrats have purposely held out to not let
this impact the election, thinking would help them, although poll
show just the opposite. U And you know, we'll just

(01:08):
have to wait and see what what what happens here now?
I don't think that Republicans in the House and Senator
Gonna and the Senate in particular gonna end the filibuster.
They do not want to be the party that does it.
But there's a new shutdown urgency. States have announced aid
to cover snap benefits during this this shutdown I was
supposed to happen on Saturday. They've been able to extend

(01:30):
it out, at least temporarily. John Fetterman is saying Democrats
really need to own the shutdown. I mean, we're shutting
it down, and Fetterman ripping Schumer for using Americans as
leverage because all these Democrats, Chris Coons, you know, congressmen
and women, all the the only we know people are hurting,
but we're doing it for leverage. It's pretty remarkable, sad, pathetic,

(01:51):
and the antithesis of everything they say that they believed it.
So we're going to watch that very very closely. You know,
there's something. There's going to be something if Donnie wins
Marxist Mumdanni in New York City tomorrow, although obviously something
dramatic happened Atlas Poling is very credible. Clearly the bottom
is dropping out for Mom Donnie, the question is is

(02:13):
it too late? And I said, you know, weeks ago
when Linda said, well, why doesn't Coomo approached Curtis and
they form a coalition that would have been if ten
million dollars isn't going to get Curtis out of the race.
And he's so angry at Andrew Cmo for, you know,
instituting no cash ball in New York. And that was
never the answer. I mentioned earlier in the program that

(02:33):
Goldman Sacks led by David Solomon, they're going to spend
five million dollars in Dallas, Texas for an eight hundred
thousand square foot campus there. A half a billion dollars
is being spent by Apple. They're spending a ton there.
They now more JP Morgan Chase employees in Texas, thousands
more than in New York City. And Wall Street South

(02:55):
in Florida. Citadel's Ken Griffith, we moved to Florida out
of Illinois. They're all going to leave. They're not gonna
put up with what Mamdani's offering. You know, this is Mumdani,
you know, promising everything is going to be free, free, free, free, free.

Speaker 2 (03:08):
Listen.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
We are going to.

Speaker 4 (03:10):
Freeze the rent for more than two million rents stabilized tenants,
and use every resource at our disposal to build housing
for everyone who needs it. We are going to eliminate
them there on every single bus line and make what

(03:34):
are currently the lowest buses in the nation move around
this city with ease. And we are going to create
universal childcare.

Speaker 5 (03:45):
And no cost to parents.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
So New Yorkers can.

Speaker 4 (03:52):
Raise their family in the city they love. Together, New York,
We're doing the freezom.

Speaker 5 (04:02):
Together, New York. We're going to make buses.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
Together, New York. We're going to deliver universal.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
Uh. Anyway, Now, let's play mom Donnie hoping to convince
wealthy New Yorkers to pay higher taxes.

Speaker 6 (04:19):
Listen, but right now, the top one percent earnings in
the city pay forty percent of the city's income taxes,
according to the Empire Center for Public Policy. How do
you bring these wealthy residents to the table as mayor
stop them from saying they're leaving going to Florida because
we need that tax revenue to pay for some of

(04:40):
the things you're talking about.

Speaker 7 (04:41):
What I have put forward is a vision to make
the most expensive city in the United States of America
affordable at a time when we have the wealthiest city,
it is also one with one and four are living
in poverty. And to your point, we have a number
of New Yorkers who are doing quite well. The top
one percent of New York City earns a million dollars
or more a year. And my vision is not one

(05:02):
where they leave. It is one where they stay. It
is one of yours, in part by showing them that
asking them to pay more in taxes would increase even
their quality of life.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
All right, joining us now is Steve Moore. We love
our friend Steve Moore, probably one of the smartest economists
out there, author of the best seller Trump trump Anomics,
Inside the American First Plan to revive our economy. Sir,
how are you welcome back?

Speaker 5 (05:26):
Good to be with you, Sean.

Speaker 8 (05:27):
A couple of just quick insights. I mean, one is
you know there are forty five million people in America
today that are on food stamps. I mean, come on,
what's wrong with our country that you've got people who
are on food stamps. We've got to get people out
off of the dole, off of food stamps, off of medicaid,
off of free housing, all of this stuff and into
the labor for us and getting a paycheck. All the

(05:48):
Republicans are saying is, hey, if you're going to get
these government programs, you're going to have to You're gonna
have to have a job. You're gonna have to be
you know, work requirements. This is something like about eighty
percent of Americans are in favor of wordless a party,
and it just it saddens me that forty five million
people are getting free food from the taxpayers. When you
played that clip from Mandamie, I was thinking, my gosh,

(06:11):
this sounds like Lennon, It sounds like Fidel Castro. I mean,
that's exactly what they told people, you know, fifty one
hundred years ago, everything's going to be free, and look
what happened. So somebody's got to show me, Sean, can
you talk to anywhere, literally anywhere in the world, at
any time where socialism worked.

Speaker 7 (06:28):
No.

Speaker 1 (06:28):
I wrote a whole chapter and Live, Free or Die
Socialism and its history of failure, any form, any name,
any manifestation of it always ends the same way. Unfulfilled
promises more poverty than when you started, and you end
up sacrificing a larger percentage of your freedom in the
name of false security, and I give example after example.

Speaker 8 (06:51):
Yeah, well, so I want to address that issue of
what's happened in New York and not just New York.

Speaker 5 (06:56):
By the way, there's a.

Speaker 8 (06:57):
Big election in New Jersey as well. Of course, the
two of the three states with the highest taxes in
the country our guess what, New York and New Jersey,
the third one being California. New York over the people
should go go to our website called Vote with your Feet.
Got that, and you can click on New York and
then any other state Sean. You could click on Arkansas,

(07:19):
you could click on West Virginia. You could click on
Texas or Utah, right, and it'll show you which way
are the moving vans going and guess where they're going
out of New York, not in New York. So New
York has lost.

Speaker 5 (07:30):
Are you ready for this?

Speaker 8 (07:32):
Two million people on net over the last ten years,
two million people they have lost. Now, we did a
little study looking at what was the impact in terms
of income in that state of New York.

Speaker 5 (07:46):
New York has lost.

Speaker 8 (07:48):
You're not gonna believe this.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
Five hundred billion.

Speaker 8 (07:52):
Dollars of purchasing power in the state because people have
moved out, away from high taxes, away from crime, away
from the massive budget deficits of these states. And you
said it quite correctly, my friend, Where are they going?
Number one Florida, Number two Texas, number three Tennessee. They're
leaving because they cannot afford to live there and they're

(08:15):
not going to pay these confiscatory taxes. So if you
put additional taxes like Mandani is talking about in New
York City, I'm going to make a prediction to you,
Sean on your show. I think Wall Street is gone.

Speaker 5 (08:26):
It's gone.

Speaker 8 (08:27):
It's you were quite correct. A lot of it is
left already. I think you're going to see the next
financial capital of the country will either be Dallas, Texas
or Miami, Florida.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Well, I think Wall Street South is very real. I
mentioned Texas. I mentioned Wall Street south of here in Florida.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
It is very real.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
I know because these financial firms are there now. My
guess is the mass exitus that has already begun is
only going to get accelerated. And with that these companies,
they may have a small presence on Wall Street. Private
equity firms, as financial firms, et cetera, investment firms, They

(09:04):
may have a small presence that they'll keep in New York,
but their major operations are not going to be in
New York, and it is not going to be taxed
by New York. The one thing I've learned about rich
people in the course of my life is they're not stupid.
There are a lot of things. There are some that
are evil, there are some that are you know, may
have a dark side, but most of them are not stupid.
They didn't make that money, you know, if they made it,

(09:25):
and assuming they're putting aside trust fund brats, I don't
really know those people, but I'm just telling you. If
people that I know make money, they're going to make
a business decision. And whatever the cost of moving is,
it's nothing compared to what it would cost them if
they stayed there and got taxed to death.

Speaker 8 (09:41):
Well I'll give you an example. I think, as you know, Sean,
I originally from Chicagoary.

Speaker 5 (09:46):
I love Chicago.

Speaker 8 (09:46):
I think it's one of the greatest points, was one
of the greatest cities in the world. They elected Brandon Johnson,
who's a socialist in Chicago, and people have been moving
out a mass, and so their deficit has gotten worse
and worse, and the head of Citadel well, I'm blank
out of his name.

Speaker 5 (10:02):
What's the name of the billionaire from I'm Ken Griffin,
Ken Griffin.

Speaker 8 (10:09):
Yeah, when he moved he now lives in Palm Beach.

Speaker 5 (10:13):
And when he moved, one.

Speaker 8 (10:15):
Person, one billionaire. So listen, New Yorkers, listen up, people
in New Jersey, New York. One billionaire left out. It
put a fifty million dollar hole in the Illinois state budget.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
That's how much they got out of it.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
I mean, he's a multi multi billionaire, and he's moved
all his operations, you know, between Palm Beach and Miami, Florida.
And I know people that work for all of those
New York companies here in the Free State of Florida
right now, they work here, and I think they have
all been paying very close attention to it. What shocks

(10:47):
me is, you know, when this last minute hyper alarmism
that has come out about this race, what part of
Andrew Cuomo losing the primary didn't wake those people up
that Mamdannie was real.

Speaker 8 (11:02):
Well, I mean, look, the problem, quite frankly, is you
know Cuomo is an extremely flawed candidate too.

Speaker 5 (11:07):
I mean, I would have our time, if I lived
in New York voted for Culomo.

Speaker 8 (11:11):
I mean he's the one who locked down the New
York City economy and led to as exodus. So it's
not I'm for the Republican in that race if and
I think you're right.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
He's the one that started no balance New York, right, right,
So it's a long time ago. If they wanted to
get to Curtis Lee. We look Curtis Lee with Sez.
I don't know who offered him the money, but he
says he was offered ten million dollars. You know, I
could have told you, because I've known the guy thirty
five plus years, that he'd never take money.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
I could have told you that.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
But his passion is law and order and stopping crime
in New York and keeping it New Yorker safe. He
lives in the subways. I mean, this is this is
his whole life's work. And why Cuomo didn't reach out
to Cleewah and say, you know, I'll make you a
deputy mayor in charge of crime and law and order,

(12:01):
and I will back down on this no bailed madness
and reimagine the police madness. Because they're both talking almost
about the same number of police officers that they'd hire.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
Curtis would hold them accountable to that, but that was
on Cuomo.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
As far as I'm concerned to do the reach out,
I mean this, first, look, do you think Atlas has
had has a very good track record with polling? This
is the only pole that had Mumdanni up in single digits,
six point six points. It's the only poll that had
Cuomo beating Mumdanni head to head. And it only came
out this weekend. So you know the argument to me,

(12:37):
you know, show me the numbers. Okay, I finally got
numbers the weekend before the election that I believe Atlas,
for some reason, I don't even know who these people are,
have a good track record. So clearly you know this
last minute panic has worked. Is it too little, too late?
I would argue probably yes.

Speaker 5 (12:56):
Well, you know the saddest part of the whole story,
because you've.

Speaker 8 (12:59):
Lived in New York. I've lived I lived there when
I was at the Wall Street Journal for ten years.
I went back and forth between DC and New York,
and at that time and then you know, mid late nineties,
was Rudy came in as mayor and you could see
day after day after day the change in New York.
It became a Liverpool city again. It was thriving again.

(13:19):
You had businesses reopening.

Speaker 7 (13:21):
They got rid of the.

Speaker 8 (13:21):
Clime, and they got rid of the graffiti, they got
rid of the pan handlers. I mean, it was amazing
what one person could do. And essentially what Mandani is
going to do is exactly the opposite of everything Rudy
did to fix the city.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Oh, Rudy Giuliani cleaned it up. And you know, I
just had it, you know, as somebody you know told me, well,
you know, the mayor doesn't have any power.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
I'm like, that's a croc true.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
Exhibit A is Rudy Giuliani as mayor. He cleaned that
place up, and it was a mess. I remember growing
up and we'd go from Long Island to New York City.
We're young teenagers, and I mean you couldn't I mean,
I mean remember the Peep Show and you know the
strip places and forty second Street. You couldn't walk three
feet without being approached by a drug dealer.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
It was insane.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
And if crime was out of control, the murder rate
was nearly three thousand and eight, they brought it below
three hundred.

Speaker 5 (14:14):
Well chows.

Speaker 8 (14:15):
Leadership matters, doesn't it, And you get him.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
The other thing he did was cut taxes, and guess what, business.

Speaker 8 (14:20):
Has started moving back into the city rather.

Speaker 5 (14:22):
Than out of the city.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
Yeah, you're right, Steve Moore. We appreciate you, man. Thank
you eight hundred and nine point one. Seawan, if you
want to be a part of the program. Hannity was
keeping an eye on Chuck and Nancy and their minions.

(14:44):
Jean Hannity, you know, I know there's been a lot
of press CBS former New York Times, well, I don't
know what she did. Writer editor Barry Weis has moved

(15:05):
over there, and somehow they think that, oh, you know,
CBS guy dance paramount is going to be more balanced.
And apparently she had asked the question of the sixty
minute staff, why does the country perceive you as liberal? Well, okay,
that was before this interview with President Trump with Nora

(15:26):
O'Donnell i walked away saying sixteen minutes, CBS haven't changed
an inch. Here's some of the hostile questions. I'm going
to play a montage. It was nothing but hostile, gripping hostility. Listen,
when I look at.

Speaker 9 (15:41):
DC Now, you can walk down the middle of the street.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
You can have your daughter who's ten years old meet
you at the park.

Speaker 7 (15:49):
She's going to be okay, Well, certain, you tell me
how big a difference is DC now compared to.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
What it was a year ago.

Speaker 10 (16:00):
I want to ask you about American City in Washington,
d C. I think I've been working too hard. I
haven't been out and about it.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
I'm not a fair answer.

Speaker 5 (16:08):
You see a more.

Speaker 10 (16:10):
Recently, Americans have been watching videos of ice tackling a
young mother, tear gas being used in a Chicago residential neighborhood,
and the smashing of car windows. Have some of these
raids gone too far?

Speaker 4 (16:23):
No?

Speaker 11 (16:24):
I think they haven't gone far enough.

Speaker 10 (16:25):
James Comey, John Bolton, Letitia James were all recently indicted.
There's a pattern to these names. They're all public figures
who have publicly denounced you.

Speaker 3 (16:36):
Is it political retribute?

Speaker 2 (16:37):
No one you know who got indicted. The man you're
looking at, I got indicted and I was innocent.

Speaker 10 (16:44):
Did you instruct the Department of Justice to go I'm
not in any.

Speaker 7 (16:47):
Way shape or for him.

Speaker 6 (16:48):
No.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Okay, there you go. There's your answer. Unless there's a
complete redo I get it. Anyway, don't waste your time.
Let's get to our phones. Let's say high to Albert.
He's in New Jersey, Albert, we'll watching New Jersey closely.
New Jersey is real. It's in play now. It's a
long shot. It's a dark blue state. But there are

(17:12):
four polls that have at a one point race. And
I believe that, you know, the only way Jack Chitdarelli
can win is if all of you in New Jersey
listening to my voice, Paul, every one of your friends
and family members, and you know you've got to get
people to go out there. Mikey Cheryl is a disaster.

(17:35):
And if you think that your current governor Phil Murphy's great,
you're going to get worse than that with Mikey Cheryl. Anyway,
you got a shot in New Jersey tomorrow. I wish
I wish you all the best. It's definitely in play.
Don't let anyone convince you not to vote. And if
you're in line tomorrow, and you know, if you're in
line before the polls close, you get to vote. What

(17:57):
time are the post close in New Jersey? I think
eight o'clock tomorrow, New York nine o'clock just as I
come on the air tomorrow night. Anyway, what's up, Albert,
How are you well?

Speaker 9 (18:08):
A couple of things. I'm from Jersey. Its most of
my life here. I'm a trained chef that I've been
around the world. The thing about Jersey is it's not
as deep a boot state as you.

Speaker 7 (18:22):
Think it is.

Speaker 9 (18:24):
Northern part of the state is, the southern part of
the state is as as right as you could possibly pay.
Our unfortunate part about it is that you have that
sanctuary city stuff worked against us and the last election
because we have all these people and we don't have
verification of voters IDs, which is to me, is insane

(18:47):
that we don't have that. I don't know why we
shouldn't have it throughout the United States.

Speaker 1 (18:52):
What then was the Passaic County one of the counties.
The local town council voted not to put cameras on
a mail in ballots. I'm like, that is insane. If
we don't have voter integrity, I mean both sides, Republicans
and Democrats, have complained about it. So make elections fare
and that means voter IDs, signature verification, chain of custody

(19:15):
controls where yeah, those early ballots are monitored twenty four
to seven online. Any person in any state should be
able to look at them anytime they want, so nobody
can go in there and mess with them. Then you
want updated voter rolls. And on top of it, you
need partisan observers watching the vote, voting all day, in
the vote, counting all night.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
Listen, New Jersey, you got a shot.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
This may be your last shot because Mamdani wins and
Mikey Cheryl wins. I don't know if New Jersey can recover.
I mean the damage that has been done. The budget
nearly doubled. You're forty ninth out of fifty in terms
of taxes in the country. You want to live that way,
you go right ahead. I want no part of it myself,

(19:58):
but you have a chance to stop. You have a chance,
and my tell everybody, all of you in New Jersey.
We have a big listening audience in New Jersey. Tell
everybody you know to vote. Everybody, get out.

Speaker 2 (20:13):
This is in play. This is real.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
It's tough, but it's in play anyway. Appreciate the call out,
but good luck tomorrow, man. I'm hoping for the best
for our friends in New Jersey. Let's say hide to
Carol and Maryland. Carol, you're on the Sean Hannity Show.

Speaker 11 (20:29):
Hi, oh, Hi, Florida, Man, I wish I was there.
I'm in the old state of Maryland. Anyway. I've caught
about my son. He's one of these TSA agents. It's
going to work every day and not being paid, and
it's getting rough. It wasn't too hard at the beginning,
but we thought it would be over real fast. But

(20:51):
it just keeps going on and on and on. Is
there Do you think there's any end inside? Or is
he just going to have to keep going to work
every day without pay? And that happened as much as
I can hand.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
I think after tomorrow, I think that it's I think
the government will begin the process of opening credit to
the Trump administration, you know, Snap Benefits was supposed to
expire on Saturday. The President, you know, figured out a
way to keep you know, the payments going in the

(21:21):
short term. I don't I don't want to have to
come on the air and beg all of you to
go to your local food bank, although it's a nice
thing to do on a regular basis anyway, But if
that happens, if you can afford it. Your food banks
are going to be overrun, overrun.

Speaker 11 (21:38):
Yeah, I I've been saving money for a car. I
drive an old two thousand five Chevy now, but aside
for a new car. But I'm giving that getting through
this mess.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
Anyway, Carol, I appreciate it, but you know, I feel
sorry for people like your So we need them. We
need our air traffic controllers back, and we need you
know critical. You know, we need our military to get paid.
They're getting paid now because of the generosity of one donor,
you know, temporarily till they get paid back.

Speaker 2 (22:12):
But I'm just telling you we really need it.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
So appreciate the call back to our phones upstate New York.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
I am they thank you for taking my call, and
thank you for everything you do. And I would like
to say a few things about the election in New
York City, where I lived most of my adult life,
and there is no better place that I love more.
And that is how New Yorkers feel about New York.
I know why you left. The last time I was
there a couple of years ago. I have seen what happened.

(22:44):
But here is what I want to say. So the
first point is I agree with Mayor Giuliani, and also
about the polls not really being indicative. And I agree
with Linda about Curtis Leewa being able to pull out
the selection at the last minute, but for that to happen.

(23:05):
Last week, I read that eight percent of Democrats registered
Democrats were coming out, but only five percent of registered Republicans.
Everyone who is in the sound of my voice and
your voice and anyone else's voice who understands that curtiously
when the city desperately needs them, if they're in New York,

(23:29):
don't sit home. It was the same problem. The Trump
campaign had the same problem with a lot of people
supporting Trump even going to the rallies, but they weren't
coming out to vote, and they had to make a
huge push to get those people actually out to the polls.
Don't sit home and tell everyone you know to get

(23:51):
out there to the polls. And if you're not in
the city and you have relatives in the city or
friends in the city, get on the phone, get onto email,
get onto tech, and tell them to get out to
the polls. It's not election day until tomorrow. And if
there's anyone who ever deserves to be mayor of New

(24:14):
York more than Curtis Lewa. I don't know who it is.
And if there's anyone that the city needed more than he,
I don't know who it is. We have to have
Curtis Blewa, and I believe it is possible. Now the
other candidates, Mom Domic, I'll say Clomo first. Clomo is

(24:34):
a broken man. I've always felt a certain regarded him
as a certain feeling of poignancy because I don't think
he ever had a chance to become a full person
in his father's shadow. He now is without a job.
Job security matters to him. He's not an un materialistic person,

(24:55):
and this is the only place he had to try
to go. He told us in New York State a
few years ago, if you're not a liberal, you're not
a New Yorker. Well, if you vote for Mondani or Clomo,
you're not a New Yorker and not a New York
City person. He gave us Tathy Hochel, who is he

(25:15):
caused the problem? All the problems need to be cleared
up now in the city. He gave Kathy Hochel, who
has been a disaster as a governor. And in top
of everything else, we are a wrongful death law in
New York State. That was the first longful death law
ever passed in the country. But it's over one hundred
years old. It's antiquated, and it's not fair, and the

(25:39):
legislators have been trying to pass a new one that
is that is a better one for a long time now.
Cassi Hochel won't sign it. If she signed it, and
the statute of limitation works were, you know, were in
place in a way that would involve Clomo, can you
imagine what would happen to him over those fifteen thousand

(26:01):
people who died in nursing homes. So Cuomo, no, he
should drop out. It's Cuomo who should be dropping out
and throwing his help to Fleiwa And Aswoarman Dommy, he's
not even a New Yorker and appears first people who
are voting for him are not even New Yorkers. On

(26:21):
top of which, from what I see on I think
he's going to have a very very rough time that
he's not expecting in the next couple of years. He's
been able to coast so far on a smile and
a beard, but when you really looked at him, you
can see what he is and he's bad news. And again,

(26:43):
everyone who knows anyone in New York, no matter where
you are in the country, in the world, call anyone
you know in New York and make sure they get
to the polls tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
Well, I can't say it any better. I will tell
you that, particularly in New New Jersey, but I'm going
to add New York City and I'll add Virginia. We
are huge underdogs going into tomorrow, but particularly in New Jersey,
Tomorrow is going to be a turnout day election. If

(27:15):
you don't OVERWHI, I probably will have a very good
idea if we have a shot. By the time this
show starts tomorrow at three pm, I will know what
the turnout numbers are and if we're getting near the
record turnout that we will need for Jack Chidarelli in
red areas in New Jersey, you have to turn out.

(27:35):
You have to get your friends to turn out, your
family to turn out, your coworkers to turn out. It's
a turnout election. That's what's going to make the difference.
But I appreciate it. Same in New York City is
you know, we can shock the world, but New Jersey's
you know, the one we have the best shot. At
my humble opinion, I'm not Pollyannas with his audience, I

(27:55):
tell you the truth. Eight hundred nine four one show
is a number you want to be a part of
the program. All right, Election Eve edition of Hannity Tonight,
nine Easton on the Fox News Channel. Please set you DVR.
Matt Towery and Robert Kaheley. We'll look at the poll numbers.
Stephen Miller tonight, Piers Morgan tonight, Curtis Lee with Jack Chitarelli,
Jason Miaris, Lawrence Jones. Vote out and vote, especially in

(28:18):
New Jersey and especially for Mars in Virginia. Anyway, that's
all the time we have left. Thanks for being with us,
Thank you for making this show possible. Our Election Eve Show,
nine Easton Tonight's see you them back here tomorrow.

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Sean Hannity

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