Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Seven, twenty two, our time here in Houston's morning news. Yep.
Out of touch is a great way to describe the
Democrat Party right now, even coming from at least the
moderates within the party, the few that are left, most
of them have a connection to Bill Clinton in some way,
shape or form, including Doug Shane, who said the Democrat
Party is rudderless. They're not speaking the right language. He
(00:22):
said that Donald Trump is moving the country in the
direction that the country wants in terms of the budgets,
certainly in terms of the border, and that the Democrats
don't have any big ideas. Aaron Evans joins this president
at winning Republican strategies. That's pretty amazing.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Thing.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
I think, maybe even more shocking than all that eron
is that CNN, they're a little polster there, has been
driving their anchors crazy. The other day came up with
a show to polls showing that Republicans are tied with
Democrats for under the question of who cares the most
about me? And that was a category that was owned
by Democrats for a lot of people, you know, who
(00:59):
cares about the comp every day man, Democrats always won.
That Republicans are winning that now absolutely no. And look,
there's been a huge shift.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
And I think that I mean really if you look back,
especially in in Texas, and you know, I grew up
in Virginia and it was the same thing there where,
you know, kind of the southern Democrats that I mean,
their their brand was uh, protecting blue collar workers. And
and and I mean, what have we seen, you know,
really happen with the Democrat Party? And uh, I mean
(01:29):
it's just so out of touch with uh with everyday
uh blue collar values, out of touch with common sense
literally animous to you know, anyone working and trying to
make money.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
And and and.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
I think that across the board, you know, whether it's safety,
whether it's people's wallets, whether whether it's morality, you know,
and and just freedom and uh uh and common sense.
You know, the Democrats have really went off the rails.
It's it's no longer the party of uh, you know,
the Clinton for certain.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
So here's the one question that does seem to come up.
Is President Trump moving too fast? I mean, he's a
man of action, He's done a lot, done a lot
of things already, but that seems to we make at
least a few people nervous that he's acting at the
speed that he's acting. Others are just ecstatic he's going
so fast.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
Look, you know, I think four years is a really
short amount of time. And I think that the number
one thing that everyone's got to remember is we're not guaranteed.
But two because as crazy as as the Democrat Party
has shifted, you know, but there's still no guarantees on
how midterms turn out. And so you know, I think, look,
(02:40):
President Trump was given a mandate. He's taken that mandate
extremely serious. He's hit the ground running, and I think
he's doing exactly what the majority of America's Americans voted
for him to do, which is to go in and
actually make real lasting change and impact and and and
(03:00):
there's so much broken and there's so much that's been ignored,
you know, over the last few decades. Uh, everything from
our national debt to uh obviously what we're seeing with
those uncovering UH and the and the waste fraud and
abuse just done to some common sense, getting back to
the basics of what governance really is about. And so
(03:21):
he's got a ton of work to do in a
very short amount of time. UH. And and he's one term,
you know he's a one term president, so uh, I
think he's doing exactly what he needs to do. And
uh and honestly, if anything, I wish, I wish he
could move even faster, and I know that he can't
because he already doesn't sleep and he you know if
I think he sleeps about four hours a night from
what he said, But he's he's doing exactly what he
(03:43):
needs to do for you know, the the massive work
he's got to accomplish in such a short amount of time.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
I think he's working fast enough. I could do something
about Congress stuff. The Republicans in Congress need to act
with a sense of urgency that I just haven't seen yet.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
I Look, I couldn't agree more. I mean, I think
at the end the day, the biggest concern that I
personally have right now is not what not what President
Trump's doing, but you know, ensuring that Congress actually locks
these meaningful changes in because at the end of the day,
if Congress doesn't do their job, and we get to
the end of the president's term and we you know,
(04:21):
will inevitably at some point have a Democrat again, and
if it's just executive orders, you know, what's done by pen,
can be reversed by PEN. We need Congress to act
and do their job.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
That's right, sir, Thank you, appreciate it. Aaron Evans, President
of Winning Republican Strategies. It's seven twenty seven.