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November 1, 2025 31 mins
Brian Fitzherbert, president of Liberty and Prosperity, joins Anne Baker on WOND radio for 'Fitzherbert Friday'. Anne and Brian talk about the imminent New Jersey gubernatorial election. Get out the vote initiatives, school choice, inappropriate sexual material in schools. Sean Hannity/FOX News Townhall with Jack Ciattarelli in Point Pleasant, NJ."
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Episode Transcript

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(00:00):
Ann Baker is on Newstart +1
point three w o n d. Wanna talk
with Ann? Call (609) 927-1100.
Good morning, everyone. This is Anne Baker on
Talking with Anne, and I am here with
Brian Fitzherbert on Fitzherbert Friday. Good morning, Brian.
You have a story to tell us, I

(00:20):
think, this morning.
Well, good morning, Anne. Thanks for having me,
and happy belated birthday. I hope it was
a good one with you and your family.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah. Thank you, Brian. Appreciate it.
So where were you last night?
I attended the, town hall hosted by Sean
Hannity for gubernatorial candidate, Jack Cattarelli.

(00:41):
Woo hoo. Alright.
The people that were in the audience with
you,
were they like the ones
like ourselves, a 100% behind Jack Ciattarelli and
what he stands for?
Yeah. I mean, that was such an electric
crowd to be a part of. I mean,
every single thing that either Sean and or
Jack said, there was a visceral emotion, whether

(01:03):
it was a positive thing in the things
that Jack wants to do or a negative
thing that was called out that Mikey Sherrill
was trying to do and the Democrats are
trying to do. They were definitely ramped up
and ready to go. They were ecstatic, and
they were your typical everyday New Jerseyans just
trying to come out and show their support
and change something for the first time in
a quarter of century. Were most of those

(01:24):
were most of those people, actually,
going to go out and work? Were they
going to be calling people? Were they gonna
be knocking on doors or making phone calls
to get everyone
to vote? Because that's probably going to be,
the deciding,
action.
Getting everybody You know, it's
it's funny. I did just kinda start talking

(01:46):
to strangers. There was actually quite a few
strangers in the crowd that I was not
familiar with, didn't know, and just started asking
them what do they think, how are they
feeling, what have they done, have they voted
already, are they planning to vote, are they
telling their friends, their family,
their colleagues, their neighbors, etcetera, to go vote.
And it seems like overwhelming,
that the individuals that I spoke to take

(02:08):
this very, very personally.
That is their obligation to do as much
as they can to help and assist and
get a Republican elected in New Jersey. Woah.
I love to hear that. I absolutely
love to hear that. It's,
you know, we we heard,
what,
the numbers
sounded like,
a couple months ago, and she was, like,

(02:30):
up by nine or or 10 or and
I keep thinking to myself, I hate
I hate those kinds of things to come
out. I I I really do because I
think they they project more what the company
that is doing,
the the numbering
than it does the people. I mean, if
you're gonna be taking calling one person and

(02:51):
that one person
may in fact represent a 100 people or
even a thousand people,
what does it mean to anybody?
I hate to see those numbers.
Yeah. So, unfortunately,
polling in the aggregate has obviously been very
embarrassing the last decade given how many pollsters
missed Donald Trump,

(03:12):
coming on the scene in in multiple factions.
As well as the fact that most of
these polls, they're snapshot in time. Yes. They're
sampling,
and there's a debate on whether or not
they're registered voters, likely voters, what the margin
of error is. It's usually between two and
three points.
Where and how long the poll is in
terms of, you know, is it three days,
two days, one day? How the questions are

(03:33):
worded,
the verbiage that's used to ask people questions.
Do people that actually,
receive the phone calls, most of them are
landline,
are they honest? Are they messing with the
pollster? I mean, all kinds of things.
And the only way that I've seen that
is at least
accurate to a point is if you average

(03:55):
the polls like RealClearPolitics
does. They take the last four or five
polls and they average them to kinda give
some form
of an upper and lower,
level of confidence. You know, if we get
into the itty bitty
of statistics,
those levels. So it's somewhere in between.
And so again,

(04:16):
six weeks ago, this looked like a runaway
for quote unquote Democrats
by that snapshot in time. Obviously, things have
changed. The summer has ended. People are back
in, the stride of their fall and their
academic schedules with their kids,
etcetera, and they're paying attention. And the election,
obviously, is November 4. So more and more
people are paying attention, and this is getting

(04:36):
tighter based on those snapshots in time. So
like I said last week, I was waiting
for the Trafalgar one because that's, in my
view, the most appropriate poll. They do a
very good job with the way they word
their questions, etcetera, and they call this a
one point race. And you've had two or
three other pollsters
that have also said that this is a
one or two point race. And then, of
course, you have Quinnipiac come out in the

(04:57):
last twenty four hours with an eight point
delta,
meaning Mikey Sheryl's up on their polling. And,
again, is that psychological warfare to try to
suppress the vote? And that's where I kinda
have a issue with the day by day
numbers that are coming out for early voting
because it could be one of two things.
It could motivate people or it could depress
people depending on how they individually read it.

(05:17):
We don't have time to explain these numbers
all the time and our people even paying
attention to it. So it could be suppressive.
It could be motivating. It could be anything.
When it's all said and done, and that's
why, again, in a perfect world, we want
election day to be one day. Open the
polls at six, close them at eight, and
anything
received
after 08:00,

(05:37):
it doesn't count because you had your window.
Those are the rules of the game just
like if you play sports. You have to
play by the rules of the game and
make sure that those votes are counted. We
have a winner.
Unfortunately, things have since changed and, you know,
it it may not be
known on election day. I sure hope it
will, but there's so many things that factor
into the psychological the psychological

(05:58):
impact of how people respond because in New
Jersey, right, everyone assumes New Jersey is a
blue state. And if you look at it
from a district by district standpoint, it's really
geographically
very red, but
there's a lot of density and,
and
lots of population in certain places that that
basically decide for the rest. So again, there's

(06:19):
so much to dissect here with the polls,
but again, if you look at it in
the aggregate and you average them, this is
a margin of error race for sure, meaning
two or three points up or down.
And the my only reservation if I try
to look at this objectively is Jack hasn't
cracked 47 or 48. He's been stuck there.
But if you count in the margin of

(06:40):
error, two or three points, it gets him
to 50 to 51.
So that's what I'm hoping for, and people
just gotta go and vote. Get your friends,
get your family, get your neighbors, get the
random person you see at the grocery store
or anywhere else. Get your colleagues, tell them
to go vote. Put the brakes on this
insanity the Democrats have wrought for nearly a
quarter century here. I know.

(07:01):
It's like I don't understand how how even
Democrats can look at what's happened to their
state in the last eight years
and wanna continue
those same kinds of policies that have literally
destroyed
I mean, sanctuary state. Are you kidding me?
Yeah. And, you know, Jack mentioned that last
night. That's his number one executive order that

(07:22):
he will revoke,
that any and all cities and the state
of New Jersey will no longer be a
sanctuary city. And local local cops, law enforcement,
sheriffs, etcetera can work with,
Tom Homan to continue to do these raids
to get people who do not belong in
The United States, who have overstayed visas that
do not belong here to get out. American

(07:44):
citizens first, we have to focus on us,
our own, and the state of New Jersey,
New Jerseyans
who are legally and lawfully to be here.
That's right. We're the one who are paying
taxes. Now there may be illegal immigrants out
there who actually have jobs and were able
to get a license and do pay taxes
and may even have a Social Security number,
which they shouldn't have. But I don't know

(08:04):
how we overcome that. I mean, we know,
that there is corruption in the voting system.
We see Joe Juralo brought it out to
our attention with the ballots that are picked
up by some people and brought in,
to be counted.
You're not allowed to do that. I mean,
I think three is the maximum, but there
are people that go out there and take

(08:26):
the ballots from people, have them sign off
on it, and then fill them out for
them, drop them off. And that may be
on both sides. I hate to think that
it's a Republican because I certainly know that
Democrats have been involved in this for a
very long time, but it could be both
sides. I think it has to be stopped.
And as you said, we want polling to

(08:47):
take place
on the day
when you can vote,
which is what? The second Tuesday in November?
It it it's It's usually the first Tuesday
in November, and it should be six to
eight in New Jersey. And, you know, take
a step further what you're saying.
Why are they even allowed to have ballots
to do that? It goes back to voter

(09:07):
registration rules. And truthfully, these need to be
cleaned up. There needs to be lawsuits,
and there needs to be decision
We lost you.
Made on that. And this needs and it
needs to happen in New Jersey.
Well,
we we need to simply get out there

(09:28):
and vote. If we haven't voted yet,
go vote. Call your friends. Go to your
neighbors. Hopefully, you're friendly with your neighbors. Ask
if they need a ride.
We had Claire Swift on yesterday, and Claire
was giving us a telephone number that, in
fact, people could call. If they couldn't find
a ride,
You can call the SWIFT Guardian office. You

(09:49):
can call congressman Lobiondo's,
congressman
Van Drew's office.
You can call
any politician's office if you need a ride.
Brian,
you know, we we talk about,
this
election
that is so critical for New Jersey.
And we also look at what's happening

(10:11):
to the education system in New Jersey.
I can't tell you how,
thrilled I am that if, Jack Ciattarelli gets
in, that we're gonna have school choice.
That finally,
finally,
we're we're going to insist
that what happens in the school districts,

(10:34):
is amended so that the mandates that came
down from,
mister Murphy and the Board of Education, he
put in place all peopled
by far left dems,
that that is not going to continue to
corrupt our children.
A 100%. He talked about that last night.
He's been talking about that for years. It's

(10:54):
not just changing,
the school funding formula so that,
it's it's not appropriate based on the district
where you live and where it gets funding
sent, but also the ability for dollars to
more or less follow the student in the
form of
what happens in other states. You know, if
you pay property taxes under school taxes,

(11:14):
to cover the cost of your child and
you don't want to send them to public
school, you can send them elsewhere, parochial school,
pride school, etcetera,
and get a get a basically, a rebate
or a refund,
based on that. Or,
like you're talking about, change this toxic
indoctrination that has flooded New Jersey schools that

(11:35):
has dropped us from the top three,
in terms of actual education, you know, math,
reading, writing, etc,
things that actually matter instead of this indoctrination.
You know, kids go to school to get
educated, not indoctrinated with political nonsense or even
more so
abnormalities that people are trying to normalize that

(11:57):
are mental disorders.
So all those things are on the table
to change that and again this will allow
school boards to actually,
affect change, whereas right now you can get
people on on quote unquote nonpartisan school boards,
but
at the end of the day, funding
controls everything and if you go against,

(12:17):
for instance, right now go against Governor Murphy,
he's just going to pull funding from that
school district, which a lot of these school
board members are not willing to do, so
they just take it and this is where
the leverage of power are, and that's why
if you get a republican in the Governor's
Mansion, you can change that and you can
actually have effective change
at the school board level. Yeah. I love
the idea that parents would get a voucher

(12:39):
for several thousand dollars that would allow them
to to take their children to a school
that they know is much, much better,
for their child. There there's not you know,
if there are parents out there whose children
are going to the inner city schools even
here in Atlantic City,
what a gift that is. What a gift

(13:00):
to be able to send your child to,
a charter school, to be able to send
your child
to,
one of the Catholic schools
that is in the area,
or a religious school, Atlantic Christian School.
What a gift it it would be. And
your child would be in the thick of
it learning and actually

(13:23):
not having
a school district that has taken discipline out
of the classrooms.
When you hear where they're allowed to be
undisciplined in classrooms
and where there aren't enough security people to
keep kids safe in the bathrooms,
where there are fights in the hallways,
where the lunchrooms are filled with food flying.

(13:45):
That's a bad school district. Don't let anyone
tell you different. It's a bad school district,
and we need to change that. And if
parents
took their children away from that school district
to put them into one that is a
better school district in every way, shape, and
form, then the Bayard School District would, if
they wanted to continue to get federal dollars,

(14:06):
they'd have to change
that school
into one where discipline is enacted, where children
are made to be responsible for their actions,
and where good teachers finally are able to
teach.
A 100%. You throw bullying in that as
well. And, again, if you let the market

(14:26):
decide, right, the invisible hand of the market
to determine whether or not kids go to
certain schools because, oh, I don't want my
child going to that school. Those principals, they
don't do any discipline
to kids that need disciplinary and accountability. I
can send them elsewhere. Or let's say private
school. Let's throw some random numbers out there.
Let's say private school or parochial school is
$7,000 a year, and let's say you pay

(14:47):
$15,000
a year in property taxes. Well, guess what?
You're getting an $8,000
rebate
if you only,
have those dollars equivocate to your child to
pay for that $7,000
tuition. You're getting that $8,000 rebate,
reverse. Right? If it costs more, let's say
it's $10,000 to go to a private school
and you're only paying $6,000 property taxes.

(15:10):
You know, you're gonna have to come up
with that delta to make up the difference.
But, again, it's school choice that's allowing the
market to decide and let these bad schools
die, the crappy teachers go away and find
a different piece of employment, and the good
teachers reward, and the big schools grow, and
you get back to basics of actual education,
not indoctrination. Hoorah. Hoorah.

(15:31):
You know, you are married to a wonderful
teacher.
Sure am. That's right. And there are absolutely
fabulous teachers out there
teaching in our public school systems
who shake their heads at what they they're
told they have to teach.
What does what does your Katherine say about

(15:54):
Jack Ciattarelli
and about what the education system
could be
if it were placed in the hands of
parents to be able to send their child
to the school that best suits them?
Well, we've had lots of conversations
because she's worked in multiple states,
and, obviously, there's things you can learn from
other states as well as talking to other

(16:17):
people across the country that we know that
also happen to be teachers.
And, again,
Jack's kinda scratched the surface on a lot
of this, but, again, we have over 550
school districts. I I can't remember exactly, but
it's definitely more than five fifty, less than
600.
The administrative
bureaucracy that's associated with that
is cost driver number one. Man, I see.

(16:39):
And and if you look at other county
other states, you have county school districts.
And, again, you can have, debates on this
with home rule, etcetera.
But in New Jersey, if you had just
a school district by county, that means 21
counties, 21 superintendents,
right, instead of 550
superintendents. So right there, you have a headcount

(16:59):
reduction and a labor reduction and, ultimately, a
cost reduction of the bureaucracy.
And take it a step even further,
when you have the option, when you let
market forces
drive
competition
and decisions
that aren't hampered by the government, meaning
colleges,
universities that's been unfortunately,

(17:20):
ambushed and completely manipulated. But if you allow
true market forces to happen
where it doesn't matter your ZIP code or
what town you live in, that you want
to send your child to a particular school
for whatever reason. Your reason may be different
than mine. Who cares? As long as you're
empowered
to do that with what you wanna do
with your children and where you want to

(17:40):
put them and not be constrained by ZIP
codes,
by,
school bus, all this all these kinds of
things. And what does that do? It's not
just the school
formula that Jack consistently talks about. So that
it's not that in one school district that
has poor grades and barely passing students gets
more money. Clearly, money hasn't solved the problem.

(18:02):
It's not money, it's not funding, it's actual
education,
and that's where teachers come into play where,
again, another thing we've talked about in the
past, New Jersey is not a right to
work state. So all these teachers are paying
union dues in the public schools,
and they may not agree with what those
union dues are spent on.
In private school, you don't have that problem

(18:23):
because you are not unionized in private school.
So again, there's all these things that I
talked with my wife about and she has
experience in in Virginia and Pennsylvania and New
Jersey.
And it's very different in each state. And
then, obviously, talking to colleagues that she's met
along the way that are in places like
Arizona, that are in places like Georgia and
Ohio,

(18:44):
that
really, really emphasize
school choice
regardless.
And it maximizes
the utility of the education of the child,
the empowerment of the parents, and ultimately,
it impacts
overall cost of living because you're not paying
up the yin yang to get into a
ZIP code that has a school district that's

(19:04):
confined based on the taxes
and or the school funding formula.
Yeah.
You know, it's it's,
funny that you you talk about the, different
neighborhoods.
And people nowadays,
if they're young couples with kids,
they're going to be looking at the school

(19:26):
district probably before they look at anything else.
They want yeah. They want their children to
be well educated. They want them to have
a great foundation.
And, unfortunately, in public schools today, at least
in, New Jersey,
where the mandates come down from the governor's
office and a board of education filled with

(19:48):
Democrats who go along with whatever mister Murphy
says,
they're there to really steal our children. They're
there to take them as young as they
can get them, where they can then begin
to indoctrinate them into whatever system it is,
diabolical or not. Whatever system it is, that's
what they want

(20:09):
for education for our children. I don't get
it. I I I I'm I hear it.
I know this is completely deliberate and intentional
because children
do not have yet developed
critical thinking abilities.
They are still being molded. They're still malleable.
They're still learning. They're still soaking up things
like a sponge. So when they see something

(20:30):
for the first time, it just is to
them. Right? They don't look at it like,
that doesn't look right.
Some do, some that have accelerated, some some
are smart enough to do that, others are
not. Again, people learn and grow at different
rates, but that's what the Democrats and these
left wing people believe that really truly believe
in indoctrinating
instead of educating because when children see something

(20:52):
for the first time, it just is. So
they get used to it. It's normal to
them. Their entire,
plane of normality has been,
completely
manipulated
by seeing something for the first time.
And, again, it's reinforced
by people or adults around that say, oh,
this it's okay for this. It's okay for

(21:13):
that. That may be completely contradictory
to your values. Again, children are going into
the care of individuals
potentially for seven to nine hours a day.
And if they do not do the fundamentals
of education
and instead are trying to,
invoke and indoctrinate
and do anything else under the sun that

(21:35):
is unbelievably
against your values, then, of course,
this is why they're doing it. How many
times have we heard that colleges in particular,
liberals that have driven the professor, 90%
liberal
socialist communist, etcetera, ideology, we wanna make you
as unlike your parents as possible by the
time you graduate.

(21:57):
That's clearly an attack on traditional and conservative
values, and it has been for decades.
But it's a lot easier
to do it to a child, a minor,
that has yet to develop
strong critical thinking abilities, and this is why
they're going after elementary schools because it just
is to children. They haven't developed yet how

(22:19):
to say, no. This doesn't look right.
Wow. You know, any Democrat,
parent out there who just listened to you
speak on this topic,
Brian,
would be crazy,
crazy to vote
for a Democrat socialist,
which is what,

(22:39):
Mikey is.
Absolutely,
you've laid it out. You've
you've said
you have
this is it. This is why our kids
are coming home and they're indoctrinated.
This is why the schools say parents don't
have to know what the kids actually wanna
do in school having to do with their
mental or physical health,

(23:01):
and they have two different files. One for
for the child, one for the parents.
And the parents are oblivious
to what's in the child's file
that speaks to
something that's mandated,
something that's indoctrinated
these children into perhaps transgenderism
or DEI or LGBTQ

(23:23):
or having books available to them in their
libraries
that literally
would knock your socks off if you picked
up one of these books and looked at
these cartoonish
figures
showing your children how to commit sex acts.
It's absolutely amazing.
So thank you, Brian.
We need to I mean, look, this this
this whole thing is so outrageous, and we

(23:44):
need to be able to break this down
into bite sized pieces so that we can
share with our friends and family exactly what's
going on and that's that's try to that's
you know more or less how I try
to explain this and it's not just and
unfortunately it's not just Democrats, there are Republicans
that don't have a spine that vote for
things that are atrocious.
And they do they they do their benefit

(24:05):
analysis in terms of staying in office
instead of staying
ahead of the game and staying principled. I
don't want my child, especially a minor, to
be exposed to any of this or have
access to this on their own, much less
an adult, allegedly a teacher in charge, who's
trying to invoke and indoctrinate
a a particular worldview

(24:26):
instead of just teaching what two plus two
is, how to read, how to write, how
to critically think, how to communicate, etcetera.
There's no place for it in any
scenario
where a minor is involved, much less
when you're
above the age of 18. Again, education
should be education,

(24:46):
not indoctrination.
And the voices are getting louder, the parents
are getting more organized, and again, it's not
confined, it's mostly confined to the Democratic party,
but there are some in the Republican party,
that don't know if it's fine to do
anything. And, again, there will be judgment at
one point
or another
over the course of this battle.
Yeah. It's, it's a scary battle, but it's

(25:08):
one which we have to win.
And Ginny's on the line. Good morning, Ginny.
Welcome. How are you?
I am great.
Brian, I saw the whole,
town hall last night,
and,
I wasn't surprised, but then again, I was.
I saw Byron Donald in the audience.

(25:29):
I don't know if I saw him. Be
campaigning with Jack Ciattarelli.
Yeah. I don't know if I saw him
there. If he was, I I might have
missed him.
But there were
a handful of Democrats
in the,
in the audience,
that had shown their support for Jack Chedarelli,
and everything in between. So it was, it

(25:51):
was it was definitely fun. It was I
looked as me hanging out with my, you
know, 250
to 300 friends
while you look forward to trying to get
New Jersey to turn red. So it was
it was a good time. Yeah. We've got
Jenny on the line. Jenny.
Yeah.
Yes. Yes. It's all good, isn't it? I
mean, it's all good. If we can if

(26:12):
we can put Jack Ciattarelli in place,
we're going to disrupt the socialist movement that
mister Murphy
and,
miss Mikey,
want to spread in our in our country.
You know, whatever happens in New York
seems to happen in New Jersey and vice
versa, and this is what scares me.
However, what I wanted to say is Jack

(26:35):
Ciattarelli,
he was prepared.
He was sharp. He was fast. He didn't
look up into the sky. He didn't stutter
or stammer.
He had all the answers.
He didn't
drone on, but he was concise. He's he's
just
he's ready. He's he's the right man for

(26:56):
the right time.
Your lips, god's ears,
Jenny. Yep. And I think What do you
think, Brian?
I think you're right. Look. We've got a
real opportunity here. We can't take it for
granted. As Sean said last night, vote as
if your vote is the deciding
one to get Jack Cattarelli elected and put
the Republicans in charge of Trenton.

(27:17):
We gotta get this done. Look. We need
13 seats in the general assembly. That's I
get it. That's that's a really hard lift,
but you never know. You never know. And
vote Republican
down the column. Get your friends, get your
family, get your neighbors, get your coworkers,
everybody.
And we've got a real chance here to
put the brakes on the last the nightmare

(27:39):
of the last eight years and I arguably
say the last quarter of a century,
because the Democrats have controlled the state legislature
since,
the turn of the century since 2001
and I was in middle school the last
time the republicans had either the state senate
or the general assembly. We've got a real
chance here,
hopefully we don't,
come up short. All the things are happening
that need to. Jack's getting all the lucky

(28:00):
bounces he needs. He's done a very, disciplined
campaign.
He's gotten multiple Democrats to cross over to
endorse him to hopefully bring some of their
supporters and their voters over, and hopefully those
independents realize that we just can't get taxed
any further, which Mikey Sherrill
could not commit to not doing if she

(28:21):
were elected governor. Cost of living in New
Jersey is the problem.
It's a problem across the board, but specifically
for people my age, my generation,
a lot of my friends, they can't get
out of an apartment. They can't get out
of their parents' home. They wanna be able
to start their life. They can't do it.
They can't get affordable housing.
And among other things, they cannot even pay

(28:41):
the taxes, much less get the jobs to
afford to do any of those things. Yeah.
I know. I know. It's so bad. And,
I was I was thrilled to see Harris
Faulkner come out, weren't you?
That was a nice surprise. She, she did
a great job. She's obviously,
a high level New Jersey resident,
and, obviously, this impacts her as well. And

(29:03):
she asked some very thoughtful questions,
of Jack Ciattarelli, and it was great. And,
she's always a rock star. So, I'm glad
I was glad to see her last night.
Yeah. Thank you, Ginny. I was too. I
was Yeah.
Ginny, are you going to be picking up
any of your neighbors and driving them to
the polling place? Ginny just hung up, but
that's okay. I'm sure she will. I'm sure

(29:24):
she's spoken to every neighbor,
around her,
to make sure they understand the importance of
voting for Jack Ciattarelli.
And,
you know, Brian, that's all we can do.
We can continue
to push people who think their vote doesn't
count
to the polls.
And if we know anyone who simply says,

(29:46):
I can't get there. I don't drive anymore.
All they have to do is call one
of our politician's office, whether it's congressman Van
Drew,
whether it is, Assemblywoman
Claire Swift and Assemblyman Don Guardian, call their
office, and
you will be provided Kelsey Grammer here. You
will be I grew up in New Jersey.

(30:06):
Who? Yeah.
Yeah. I Is that Kelsey Grammer?
Yeah. Something just went off. Yeah. So I
agree. So, ultimately,
the greatest and easiest analogy to this whole
scenario is anyone who is a sports fan,
when your team is kind of, like, in
the gutter and they're not a playoff down,
much less championship down, you kind of don't
really pay attention,

(30:27):
this is the Stanley Cup, this is the
NBA finals, this is the World Series, this
is the Super Bowl. Your team, I e
Jack Cheddarelli and the Republicans, have a real
shot to win this thing. Pay attention. Come
out and support. Get as many people as
you possibly can because this is the time.
This is the time to pay attention. This
is the time to get involved and make
sure you vote. You have the ability to

(30:48):
vote until Monday early,
and then you can vote on election day.
You gotta get this done. Now is the
time, and we can't let this fall through
our fingers.
Perfect. Perfect way to end. If you care
for your family, if you care for your
community,
if you care for the future of our
country, you will vote for Jack Ciattarelli.

(31:09):
Brian, thank you. As always, you you give
it your all, and,
I so appreciate your being on. You're, you're
a brilliant young man,
who has his finger on the pulse of
what,
our state is doing and what other other
places throughout our country are doing. You you
know what we need, and, you speak it

(31:30):
with courage. So thank you for being here
as always, my friend.
Thanks for having me. I appreciate it. Get
out and vote, and happy Halloween. Happy Halloween.
You too, sir.
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