Hour 1 of Rush To Reason opens as John Rush and Andy Peth examine the political challenges for conservatives in deep-blue Colorado. What does it take to win statewide—and who is likely to do it? The discussion focuses on strategy, messaging, and coalition-building, highlighting why Mark Baisley may pose the strongest Republican Senate challenge.
The tone intensifies as John and Andy analyze Greg Lopez’s decision to leave the Republican Party and run as an unaffiliated candidate. Does breaking from the party expand the tent—or fracture it beyond repair? With blunt honesty, they examine loyalty, branding, media incentives, and the unintended consequences of splintered campaigns.
Listeners are challenged to think beyond ideology and ask harder questions: Is the problem the conservative platform—or failure to sell it to the middle? In a state where margins count, this hour reveals party dynamics, discipline, and the high price of missteps. The discussion is fast and direct, setting the tone for the show.
HOUR 2
Hour 2 of Rush To Reason shifts from domestic politics to the global stage as John and Andy are joined by Scott Angell, a leading advocate for USA Energy Workers (https://usaenergyworkers.com/). What does the “energy pivot” of 2025 really mean for prices, inflation, and jobs in 2026? And how do new offshore leases and domestic production reshape America’s economic outlook?
The conversation quickly expands to Venezuela, exploring how a leadership change could alter global power dynamics. Does Venezuela’s shift weaken China, Russia, and Iran in the Western Hemisphere—and strengthen U.S. leverage with Canada ahead of critical trade negotiations? Callers add real-world insight into heavy crude, refineries, and why American expertise still dominates global energy.
This hour explores media narratives, foreign policy doubts, and the rise of click-driven commentary. Are fear-driven takes blinding audiences to strategic wins? What happens when energy, security, and prosperity align? This brisk hour blends energy policy, geopolitics, and media scrutiny—prompting questions about who’s winning in the evolving global order.
HOUR 3
Hour 3 of Rush To Reason zeroes in on political strategy, electability, and momentum as John and Andy break down why Republicans often miss key opportunities. With corruption scandals rocking Minnesota, they ask the blunt question: why don’t voters punish the entire party machine—and will Republicans actually capitalize on this opening in 2026?
The conversation expands into a candid assessment of candidate marketability versus ideological purity. Why do business-minded leaders avoid politics—and how does that leave parties stuck with career politicians who don’t know how to sell to the middle? From Minnesota to Colorado, John and Andy argue that winning requires understanding the political market.
The hour closes with a sharp warning to grassroots activists and candidate supporters. Can a movement candidate win in a blue state without alienating persuadable voters? Are social media habits helping—or quietly sinking—otherwise viable campaigns? This hour challenges listeners to rethink what it really takes to win.