Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time time lucking load. So Michael Very
Show is on the air right looking into Mica. We
gotta feed every beard. I don't plan to shave, and
(00:25):
it's you've the thing. But I just gotta see I'm
doing all right. Will I'm make me sport meets, I'm
beating ready tode and that the drug. It's neither drink
the drug and snool. I'm just doing all right. Instagram
(00:47):
herb against I don't know, I'm still so.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
A friend of mine went to UT forty years ago
and he said he had a classmate who was from
Virginia that taught this to them. And it's kind of diabolical,
but maybe that's why I liked it.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
The way it worked is.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
Like you have three guys in a dorm room or
fraternity house or I guess probably work for a fraternity house.
And when one of the three or four or however
many live there, is coming into the room, another of
them hides in the closet, and I guess they had
(01:31):
a vented, you know, a little cheap vented folding doors
or whatever, so you can hear what's going on in
there even though you're behind. And so this guy taught
them the game. And so when the guy comes into
the room not knowing another member of the group is
hiding in the closet, the challenge is how fast can
(01:52):
you get him to say something bad about the person
he can't see, so you know, he comes walking in
the room, unless say, Lee is hiding in the closet
is and Bobby comes walking in.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
Is man at f and Lee and Bobby says, what
do you do?
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Just leaves his socks around, He don't doesn't pick up
after himself, and that, you know, Bobby is supposed to
go I know.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
He's such a slob.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
But if he says, well, you know, he't got a
lot going on, and you know, then you have to
go deeper. It's how quickly you can get him to
say something bad about his other friend. And we were
talking about the fact that women could not do that,
because if a woman slights another woman, you know, in
nineteen eighty eight, in twenty twenty six, she's still mad
(02:42):
about it, right, whereas we think it was funny rolling
down you do women slighting women? They do not, They don't,
they don't forgive it. She'll forever be there doing that.
She'll tell her kid not to be friends with the
other one's friend. Thirty years later, Jesus, bad person? How
comes you're a bad person?
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Mom?
Speaker 2 (03:05):
Today begins early voting. You are within your rights to say,
what in the world is going on?
Speaker 1 (03:14):
Didn't we just vote?
Speaker 2 (03:16):
You?
Speaker 1 (03:16):
Did? You did? It's not your fault.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
The systems convoluted, it's complex, it's set up for failure.
Back in March, we had what's known as Super Tuesday
during the quadrenial during the presidential elections.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
In March, we had our primary.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
And our primary is where the Democrats pick their candidates
who will be on the ballot in November, and the
Republicans pick our candidates who will be on the ballot
in November, and then those two will face off in
the general election in November. This is the moment where
we picked or March was the moment where we pick
(03:56):
our Republican candidate for governor. For all the race that
are up, every state rep is up every two years.
State senators are up on a rolling cycle every six years,
just like the US senators are. And then you've got
and then you've got a number of positions that are
on a four year the governor, for instance, you've got
(04:16):
we've got we elect our judiciary.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
So you've got your your.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
Supreme Court, your courts of appeal below that, your your
district courts. That's your state district courts here in Houston,
we've got quite a few of those. You've got your
criminal courts that here obviously criminal case, your civil courts
who who hear the civil cases. You've got your family
courts who deal with obviously the tough business of families, divorce, custody,
(04:46):
and those sorts of things. You've got all of these positions,
and it's a lot. It's a lot to keep up with.
You've got your US Congressman and those, but that's up
every two years. You're US senators. These are the people
who go off to Washington, d C. So you're electing
people to go to Washington. You're electing people to go
(05:07):
to city hall in your community or in the county
government in your community, the state government in Austin, and
the national government in Washington, Washington, d C. In the
state of Texas, if someone does not give fifty one
percent in the primary, there is a runoff. So we
had ten weeks till the runoff. Except during that ten
weeks we had school boards, and so now you had
(05:31):
all these new people campaigning, and if you're not glued
to it, and there's no reason you would be, it
can all get it can get confusing. Well, now we're
having the runoff, the round to the finals for the
March primary. Anyone can vote in the Democrat or Republican primary.
(05:52):
You need not have voted in the first round. The
only time you can't vote is if you voted in
the other election in the primary. So if you voted
in the Democrat primary, you can't vote in the Democrat runoff.
I mean, if you vote a Democrat primary, you can't
vote in a Republican runoff. If you voted in the
primary in March, you can vote starting today this week.
(06:14):
If you did not vote but didn't vote anywhere else,
you can vote this week. This is the Ken Paxton
beats John Cornyn race. This is the Mays Middleton beats
Chip Roy race. This is the Alex Mehler beats Briscoe Kine,
this is Beau Fringe, this is.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
John Bond.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
So that begins today seven a to seven pm through Friday,
and then next Tuesday is what's known as election Day.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
And as always I would urge.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
You not to wait until election day, because things can happen.
You get sick, it rains, you have to travel, something happens,
and you don't get to vote.
Speaker 1 (06:59):
And you do want to vote. I don't mind if you.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
Sit it out, because I don't care how many people vote.
We're still going to have our candidate. I don't want
you to sit out in November. I don't mind if
someone doesn't think they want to vote in the primary,
because if you're not sure you want to vote, I
don't want you voting. I want people who care, people
who pay attention. One of the dangers in primaries is
that you will have Republicans. Let's take a John Cornyn,
and you know John Corny. Thing is, I'm a nice guy.
(07:25):
I've been around a long time. I'm a nice guy,
and so many people will vote on that baby, I'd
rather they not vote, be honest with you, just as
soon they don't vote.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
That'd be just fine for me.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
And you're a final reminder at least of this telling
you cannot look at your phone while you're in the
voting booth. So I have posted my candidates on my
Facebook page, on my email. I'll do that again today.
But you cannot carry your phone. You can carry a phone,
and you cannot open and consult your phone or any
(07:58):
internet connection while you're in the voting booth. You can,
you may. You are able to take any printed materials
with you. So whether that's my web page, my Facebook page,
my email, or any other printed materials you want to
take with you, you can take that with you to
consult in the voting.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Is Michael Berry show enjoy it. George Strait turned seventy
four today.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Here are the candidates I am voting for where I
can vote, I don't live in that district. I'm not
voting is who I would vote for in a district
if I don't live in it and can't vote in it.
That is Don Hooper for Harris County Republican Party Chair.
I care about one thing, and that is filling every
(08:50):
single seat with real Republicans so that if we do
our job and get people out to vote, we can
vote out every single Democrat they don't win by de
So I'm voting for Don Hooper for Publican Party Chair.
I'm voting for Ken Paxton for Attorney General. Sorry for
he is the attorney General. I'm voting for him for
US Senate. I'm voting for Alex Meeler for the new
(09:12):
Congressional District nine that is created out of the redistricting.
I'm voting for John Bonk in Congressional District thirty eight.
I'm voting for Mas Middleton for Attorney General. I'm voting
for Bou French for Railroad Commissioner. I'm voting for Thomas
Smith for the Court of Appeals, and finally i am
(09:33):
voting for Zach Gibson for Court of Appeals. Those are
posted on my Facebook page. If you don't get our
Daily Blast, just go to Michael Berryshow dot com and
say sign up for Michael's Free Blast and you will
get that. It will be every day this week. It
will be listed in our Daily Blast. I don't know
(09:56):
where else you can find that. I'll put it as
on the signal at your line of my emails, so
then when I respond this week, it'll be on there
as well. And you can bring printed materials, just not
your You can't consult your phone while you are in
the voting booth. Well, what do you call a shoe
(10:17):
made out of a banana? A slipper? What do you
call a woman who sets fire? To all her bills
burn a debt. What's the most adorable type of triangle acute?
(10:51):
With the best of intentions, they had planned a hockey
game for lepers, a leper hockey game, but then it
had to be canceled. There was a face off in
the corner. How rare it is for a cow to
be struck by lightning?
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Medium rare. Here been to Mount Rushmore? Were you impressed?
Speaker 2 (11:24):
You know how beautiful Mount Rushmore was before it was sculpted.
Its beauty was unprecedented.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
How about this? This is so complicated and convoluted.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
City Council District C had a special runoff election on
Saturday to fill the seat that is being vacated by
that little communist Abbie Kayman. So they had a standalone
election with all the expenses that go with that. When
we'll get early voting starting today, it's none of it.
(12:18):
None of it makes any sense, none of it. If
you were trying to balance your budget, you would do
none of what these idiots actually do and the way
they do. As a general rule, you can consult the
Houston Chronicle for who not to vote for. It's always
(12:40):
funny that the Houston Chronicle will endorse in the Republican primary,
so they can pick the candidate that should that candidate win,
would be best for them. But come November they're going
to vote, they're going to endorse the Democrat. So what
they do is pick the most Democrat like Republican in
(13:00):
the primary, and they've done so again. They'd like you
to pick John Cornyan because he has quote performed admirably
during his twenty three years in the US Senate.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
He is objectively one.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Of the most consequential members of Congress. It should be
no surprise that the likes of former Senators Kay Bailey
Hutchison and Phil.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
Graham have lined up behind Cornyan. You clowns.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
Don't you realize we don't like either one of those
swamp creatures. That's what's so funny is when the Democrats
start telling Republicans who we ought to vote for? My goodness,
alive this John Cornyn. Y'all should all vote for John Cornyan?
Speaker 3 (13:43):
Hey, y'all, y'all, y'all, hey, you know he's got the
bushes behind him. And also Kay Bailey Hutchison, yeah, and Phil.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Graham and Mike Pence yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
In uh, Dick Cheney no less than Dick Cheney's behind him.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Yeah, he's got he's got.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
Jeb Bush, former presidential candidate Jeb Bush is behind him.
He's consequential and important. You should vote for him again.
He's he's consequential, Yeah, he's he's he's admirable. You will
notice a theme, and a lot of our people don't
(14:28):
pick up on this Trump Paxton. Their crass, they don't
follow the norms. They're not admirable. They're not decent and
honorable like the good Republicans. You can ask some good
Republicans called the Washington Generals. Their job is to speak
(14:55):
of forever wars, decency, have nice polished shoes and pretty
bow tie, and talk about things like honor and dignity
and the conversation.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
We must be civilized in the conversation.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
And these are the people who are quite happy being
honorable losers as the Democrats destroy our contry. These were
the people who refused to close the border.
Speaker 1 (15:20):
They were admirable, admirable about.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Relevitions to librarians. Everyone listens to Michael Arry show. This
time of year is known as the silly season. Within
the political process, candidates and officeholders, especially the office holder
(15:45):
has been for around for a while. Know this as
the silly season. And the reason is there is really
no limitation on what one person can say about another person.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
To you to get you to vote for them.
Speaker 2 (16:07):
When you've been around campaigns for a while, you understand
that most things can be reduced. Most candidates can be
reduced to three very simple measures. It's like you're trading
them as a stock or as a commodity, and those
three simple measures are name, I D. Do you even
(16:32):
know who that person is? Whether you realize it or not,
you will typically derisively dismiss someone whose name you don't know,
and you will consider it an insult to them to
point that out.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
Who's this guy running for this I don't even know
who he is.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
He could be the greatest guy ever, or he could
be the worst guy ever. But you don't know who
he is, and whether you realize it or not, that
becomes a judgment in and of itself. I don't even
know who you are? Well, how many people know who
(17:17):
you are? That makes you a bad person, to make
you unfit for your job, make you a loser, to
make you inexperienced. Nope, it's hard to be known. It's
funny you go see a concert as a guest of
(17:42):
a friend and the band gets up the googlely Google
des you never heard of them. They start playing. Before
they strike the first chord, you already figure they can't
be any good because I never heard of him.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
They may be.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
In two weeks the biggest band in America. They may
be already so big in the Northeast or the southeast
or the West coast, and they're gonna be really big here.
They may be really big in Dallas, but you never
heard of them, and they're about to launch. And that
happens in today's world more than ever because today you
can go viral really fast with the song.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
But because you've never.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
Heard of them, you immediately since they're not any good,
I'm gonna get some drinks. I don't go to the restroom.
I oh need to listen to them or not any good.
Most people have that belief. It is a bias. It's
an irrational bias, but it's a real bias.
Speaker 1 (18:45):
Do I ever do that with a band?
Speaker 2 (18:50):
Uh? Okay, just say the way this works, I talk, you,
nap or do whatever you want, and then when the
time comes, you play the music that tells us we're
going into the this this really is in a co
host debate firing line, Yes, I do that, you do
it with master Box twenty?
Speaker 1 (19:07):
Is that true?
Speaker 2 (19:09):
Well they opened for the Stones, okay, and you thought
who is this? That's a stupid name of a stupid band.
Did you immediately hear the song and think I like them?
Or did you get you didn't give them a chance.
It's fascinating, isn't it? Because it's true, and a lot
of people have no It's the sign of what I
(19:32):
call human cattle, people who never think and just kind
of go through the motions. But they have strong opinions
and strong opinions. They just don't realize how they came
to that opinion. Most of those opinions were handed to
them by somebody. They have no idea because once they
received that opinion, it became their opinion. They internalize and
(19:55):
you can't change them from that opinion. Very strongly hold
that opinion. Who doesn't hold that opinion is gay or foreign,
or stupid or a communist. Everybody else is horrible, terrible
because they don't hold the opinion that I hold on
this issue. And so at a time like this, if
(20:16):
you're a professional, you got your candidate. He's got three
measures name I D So if you have low name ID,
you have to start with here's who I am and
this is why I'm great.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
But the audience is not receptive to that. We don't
want to hear a new band. We like what we
like already.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
That's one of the things about conservatives is we like
stuff it's been around for a while. We can trust
it more. We don't trust new stuff. New stuff can't
be any good. We're not on the lookout for new bands.
There are certain people in your orbit who is man,
you got to hear this new band. They're really good
and nope. And I'm one of those people who says, nope, right,
(20:58):
new is not good.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
I got what I like. I like whe I don't
want to try any new food.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
I don't care if this is what is hot out
of the West Coast.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
You're dipping dots? Are you this or either? I like that.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
I like what I like, I like what I like,
I don't like what I don't like. I don't like
what I don't know. I like what I like, I
like what I know. So if you are a startup candidate,
you first got to get your name out I don't
know the numbers, so I'll just use big numbers. Ninety
nine percent of candidates who aren't known at the beginning
of campaign are going to lose because nobody's gonna know
(21:28):
their name. You're not vote for somebody you don't know
their name. So the biggest challenge is getting your name out.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
How do you do that well?
Speaker 2 (21:36):
First time candidates think you go to debates, You go
to the debate, and you debate well, and you win
the debate. I thought that I ran from Ayre. There
was one debate where there were thirty nine CEOs of
companies tech companies, thirty nine and each one of them
got to vote a silent vote at the end on
a piece of paper, and they tied them up. I
(21:57):
got thirty six out of the thirty nine. It didn't
give me a huge boost. I didn't get elected mayor.
Typically debates are where people who support individual candidates come
out and tell the other guy he's horrible, and each
one of them tells their candidate. They as the kids, say,
gass them up. You want that debate?
Speaker 1 (22:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
Sometimes you get some bulletin board material, You get somebody
to say something that you can use in the camp,
he said this, but mostly and you can build a
name id on a low level. That's why you tell
people to run at the lowest level. First, you can
get a name id by going door to door and
having one on one conversations, very very labor intensive, but
(22:39):
good candidates will do it.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
City council, school board. You can get there that way.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
Once you get that office, then you can use that
office to take some stands, to be public, to get
covered by the media. But by and large, if you
start with no name id, you're sunk. By and large,
there are exceptions to the rule. Then you've got your
positive your negatives. When you start a campaign, you try
(23:03):
to build your positives. That's people who when they hear
your name they think is good guy does good things.
May not even know what good guy does good things.
Your negatives, of course, are that's a bad dude, that
he's not any good, he's you know, dishonest, or whatever.
They The job of a consultant that they are paid
(23:24):
for is to play you, is to get you. What
they would like to do is that their candidate have
higher positives than your candidate. But if your candidate has
higher positives than theirs, at a certain point in the campaign.
As you get later, you realize we can't out positive
that guy. We can't make our guy more positive than
(23:44):
their guy. So what do you do? You make their
guy more negative than yours. And that's what you're experiencing. Now,
that's where they.
Speaker 1 (23:51):
You like so and so, Well, guess what he's never done.
He's horrible.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
And then you'll watch people repeat what they've been told
as if they came to that conclusion on their On
the Michael Berry Show. Do you know what I call
this song the lie?
Speaker 1 (24:09):
We're just kind of casually gloss over the fact that
he's lying. What a great song. I'll be glad to
share it you.
Speaker 2 (24:20):
So let me address some campaign issues out there. Do
with it what you want, vote the way you want.
We've disagreed before, we'll disagree again, and that's okay. That's
this process. Competition is not easy. I mean, many people
(24:43):
don't want us to have spirited primaries. That's how you
end up with bad candidates. That's how you end up
with the John Cornyn who's really never had a challenger
in these twenty four years.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
You end up with a guy who keeps coasting. And
you know what, people who keep coasting.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
Do they vote how somebody else wants them to vote
because they no longer fear you. Yes, your elected officials
should fear you. Bill Cassidy and Louisiana voted to convict
Donald Trump of impeachment as a Republican from Louisiana that
probably ninety percent of the people didn't want him convicted.
Bill Cassidy just lost his primary. He didn't even make
(25:17):
the runoff. You need to have these healthy debates. Look,
sometimes you got to clean house. Sometimes you got to
go through difficult process Sometimes you've got to go have
a body scan or have a lump checked out. You
have to go through these difficult processes. We don't like them.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
Nobody like I get a light. It's always women.
Speaker 2 (25:39):
It's usually older women, and they're mad at me during
the primary season, and I tell them, I understand that
you don't like conflict. You are a nice person. The
world needs more people like you, nice people. I'm not
a nice person. I may get the best person if
the better person is available, I want the better person.
(26:01):
I don't want to go along to get along. I
don't believe in making. I think that's how we end
up with bad policies with the best of intentions. I've
watched it happen, and I'm not going to let that
happen as far as if with every effort I can make.
So let's talk about the Ken Paxton case. All Right,
We've got corn who's been there for twenty four years.
(26:22):
We can't get a Save Act because Cornyn won't.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
Allow it to happen.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
There is almost no one now at this point, you're
not really arguing with people who say Cornyn does a
good job. He's up there and everybody understands he's establishment.
He said we couldn't build a wall. He said we
couldn't stop at legal immigration.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
We did.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
He said that Trump should should step down. There should
not be a Trump in twenty twenty four. It's time
the country moved past him because he can't win in November.
Remember he told us Trump couldn't win in November. Same
argument he's using now for why Ken Paxton shouldn't beat him,
why he can't win.
Speaker 1 (26:58):
Vote for me.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
So you're telling me to pick you over the other
guy because the other guy can't win. That's your strongest argument.
What does that say about the twenty four years you
spent in the Senate. What does that say about? It
tells you everything you need to know. So now I
get a lot of people, nice people, don't get me wrong,
who have become political consultants. They're Tea leave readers, they
(27:25):
are they are deep students of who wins elections in
the argument, and Michael, I'm gonna I like Paxton, I
do he boy, he gets in there and just bull
in a China shop, riding me a lot of Trump,
But I don't believe he can win.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
So I'm gonna vote for Cornying.
Speaker 2 (27:44):
Do that end up with the whole government of Corning
you already have, and you see what you get because
in a year you will go, Michael, how come we
can't get them Dad burned Republicans to ever do anything
for us. And then you know what, You'll say, we
need term limits. You've got them. It's called elections. Corning's
(28:10):
had four terms.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
That's enough.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
It is time for term limits. To kick him out.
It's called an election. Vote him out. But Paxton can't win.
And tall Rico's real bad, He's real bad. I saw
a pole Tallerico win. You saw a poll taken in
March of what would happen in November. I understand you
(28:35):
either have amnesia or this is your first campaign. It
ain't for mine, and I don't I might have a
decline in memory, though I have been full fairness. But
I will tell you this, a poll taken in March
as to what will happen in November is not accurate.
I can show you poll after poll after poll after
poll of candidate who's winning in March and losing in November,
(28:57):
and vice versa. Because as soon as we get past
this primary on May twenty six, May twenty seventh, we're
gonna start talking about who Tallarico is. We're gonna explore
how all of a sudden he did a man ty
to Uh. Yeah, I have a girlfriend, yo. What she
(29:19):
lives in another city. You'll probably never beat her, but
she's my rock. Sometimes we have sex.
Speaker 3 (29:27):
She's a girl and she's got boobies, and uh, we
do dirty things and once a month she has her thing,
you know, because she's a girl and carries a purse
and I have one, and she belongs to me and
we're we're a couple. We do like a couple of
teens and she's my girlfriend, my rock. Oh really, first
(29:50):
we've heard of her.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
How long is this time?
Speaker 2 (29:52):
I mean minutes, This is been going on over six months.
Speaker 1 (29:55):
Really, I don't believe you. But that's okay. The point is.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
Tall Rico will be destroyed starting May twenty seven. He'll
be destroyed with nothing but facts, nothing but the truth,
nothing but the things he's already said, nothing but the
actions he has taken, nothing but the bills he has supported,
the statements he has made in speeches. All of that.
Tall Rico will be destroyed. Trust that.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
So you won't have to.
Speaker 2 (30:28):
Worry whether Ken Paxton or John corn can beat Tall Rico.
But if you let Carl Rove and the establishment who
owned John Corn and tell you who to vote for,
you'll be a lot less excited about destroying tall Rico
because you'll realize Cornin ain't much better and we've been
stuck with that for a long time. Or you can
(30:49):
get a guy, or you can get a guy who's
going to go fight for you, who's going to take
on the cases. Who Trump has said again and again
and again is a fighter, a guy who's taken on
big tech, big pharma. He just got a settlement against
Texas Children's Hospital, who said, remember they said that that
they weren't cutting kids willies off, They weren't transitioning kids,
(31:14):
cutting girls boobs off, creating a little piece of sausage
to hang between her leg, causing her all sorts of
lifelong problems, psychological and physical. Remember they said they weren't
doing that, and then they were, And now they've had
to settle to stop doing that. Stop butchering children. You're
not hooties in South Yemen? What the hell kind of
savages are you? Paxton did that? You know, Cornyn was
(31:40):
attorney general, never did anything. Paxton takes on fights. And
when you take on fights, when you do what needs
to be done, you will be heavily criticized. You've probably
seen that at your church or in your school. Somebody
who stands up for the wrong that's being done, and
that person gets criticized, but they're never criticized. Stand up
(32:00):
for the kids. Oh no, they're a weirdo. Oh that's oh.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
Jones over here. He's always gone to school board and complaining.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
He's a weird. Stay away from him. You don't want
people to think your friends with him.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
He's weird.
Speaker 2 (32:11):
He's weird. He's doing what nobody else has the courage
to do. Paxton can win, and Paxton will win. Vote
for who you think will represent you. Vote for who
you think will support the Trump agenda.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
Vote for who will be there long.
Speaker 2 (32:29):
After Trump is gone in two years. Vote for who
will do what you want done. And stop trying to
play rotisserie league football with who can get the most
fights in November.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
Oh well, Carnin, everybody likes Corning. You don't even like Corning.
Nobody else likes Corning. Carlin can win. How's Corny gonna win?
Speaker 2 (32:47):
He can't win his own primary