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July 28, 2025 • 29 mins

Sean wraps the show highlighting Trump’s economic achievements, including a flurry of trade deals, booming U.S. manufacturing investments, and historic wage growth. Economist Steve Moore joins to break down which states are winning and losing billions due to domestic migration — and why red states like Florida and Texas are thriving while blue states like California, New York, and Illinois bleed wealth. The hour closes with reflections on family, work-life balance, and whether Sean will ever run for president.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Stay right here for our final news roundup and information overload.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
All right, News round Up and Information Overload hour. Here's
our toll free telephone number to eight hundred and nine
point one Sean if you want to be a part
of this program. I have extensively been chronically what I
believe the President has done in terms of the economy.
Who set up what is foundationally definitely, to use his words,

(00:26):
a golden error. Economically, now there is a lagging indicator.
And until we get rid of your own Powell, until
we get interest rates down, sales of pre existing homes
and new home building will suffer. I believe they are
ridiculously high, but that is not stopping the president. We
have eleven trillion dollars going up, if Howard Lutnik thinks

(00:49):
it's up fifteen trillion and committed monies for the next
four years for investments and manufacturing. A lot of this
is good for our national security. But they'll bring back
automobile manufacturing in this country. Those deals have been set
with multiple auto companies. Pharmaceuticals which we had not been
producing for some time, they will now be produced in

(01:10):
the US. Semiconductor chips, you have literally hundreds of billions
of dollars that will be invested in creating those chips here.
Vital rare earths and magnets also similarly will be produced here.
The President has been rolling along with one trade deal
after another, the United Kingdom, Vietnam, the deal announced last

(01:36):
week with Japan and Indonesia and the Philippines. Australia now
will import American beef, something they had not done since
two thousand and three. That too, is a leg to
the economy that we've got a factor in. Then you
factor in the largest tax cuts in history. It's a
myth if you think that cutting taxes somehow limits the

(01:57):
amount of money that the federal government takes in. Know
just the opposite happens. Reagan doubled revenues in eight years.
Congress just spent too much money. Then you factor in
the cutting out waste, fraud, and abuse, which is continuing
even though Elon Musk is no longer part of DOZE,
but he put in place a good foundation for that
to continue in every department. Then you factor in I

(02:20):
think what is incalculable, and that is the President's energy policies,
and that'll be we can't calculate how much money that
that will bring in high paying career jobs. Energy is
the lifeblood of the world's economy. Lower energy costs, et cetera,
et cetera. Then, as part of the President's One Big
Beautiful Bill, you have this thing called bonus depreciation for manufacturers.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
And what does that mean.

Speaker 2 (02:46):
That means that manufacturers can deduct one hundred percent of
their building costs in a single year, which will accelerate
the manufacturing facilities that they will be building out. Again,
it's going to have a ripple effect on this economy.
Now back to the trade deals. Trump announced the trade

(03:07):
deal with the European Union. Now there are people euroucrats
lamenting that Donald Trump rolled Brussels in a disaster trade
deal for them. But you know, we had been ripped
off and taking advantage of it, abused frankly, for so long.
It's it's kind of ridiculous. Now there's so much money
coming into the treasury as a result of all of

(03:28):
this that it's money that nobody expected. And the President
is even considering rebate checks for every American based on
the tariff revenue. I'm not sure if I support the
rebate check idea. Rather than paying down our debt and
reducing the deficit. Remember, June was the first time we've
had a surplus, in large part because of his trade policies.

(03:51):
Even in a former MSDNC hosts praising Trump's political instincts
and his ability to connect to the country culturally. This
is Chris Matthews, and you know, we just have a
lot of good news when it comes to the economy.
The EU will buy seven hundred and fifty billion dollars
in energy, six hundred billion of new investments in the US.

(04:13):
They agree to buy more US military equipment on top
of the money that is being sold to NATO. Tariffs
raised fifteen percent on most EU goods. European pharmaceuticals had
not included in this. But remember AstraZeneca is building a
facility here in America steel an aluminum tariffs they'll stay
at fifty percent in exchange. Trump forgreed not to raise

(04:36):
tariffs on the EU to thirty percent, zero tariffs on
all goods and exports to the European Union. And all
this is setting up, I think, foundationally, nothing but a
great success for the American people. Now, our friend Steve Moore,
who wrote the best selling book Trumponomics, he's going to
join us in a second inside the America first plan

(04:58):
to revive our economy. And he has top ten lists,
and that is which states are people and money moving
to and from. In other words, which states the most
people lost the most people domestically, Which states gained the
most money due to domestic migration. Which states lost the

(05:20):
most money due to domestic migration. In other words, New York,
New Jersey residents, California residents are fleeing to the tune
of one hundred and fifty billion dollars. And if you
look at the bottom ten states which lost the most
money domestically, well, you got New York, California, Illinois, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia, Connecticut.

(05:46):
And if you look at the ten states which lost
the most people domestically, California, New York, Illinois, New Jersey, Massachusetts,
they're in the top five all the time. Then Maryland
and Louisiana for some reason, is in there. That kind
of surprised me. Pennsylvania has been hurt by Democratic policies,
by the way, and Michigan and Connecticut anyway, Steve Morris

(06:10):
here to explain what it means. But anyway, New York
and New Jersey alone residents fleeing to the tune of
one hundred and forty billion dollars. If Mom Donnie's elected
Steven Moore, I think that number is going to go
much higher and the mass exodus will be that much bigger.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Great to be with you, Sean, and you are exactly right,
my friend. By the way, do you know what state?

Speaker 4 (06:31):
Sean?

Speaker 1 (06:32):
In our what with your feet dot com? This is
the official data from the IRS and the Census Bureau.
We didn't make up. The data comes from the official
numbers of the government. You know what state is just
flowing away the rest of the states? What?

Speaker 3 (06:45):
Yes, my state?

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Florida, my friend, I mean Florida has And by the way,
this is a real testament to the great leadership of
Ronda Sannas, I think is the best governor of America.
He in just the last ten years. Are you ready
for this?

Speaker 4 (07:00):
Florida has imported.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
Over two hundred billion billion with the B dollars from
people from other states. And you know where those people
mostly come from, Swan, They've come from New York, They've
come from New Jersey, They've come from my home state.
Of Illinois. I'm from Chicago. I hate to see what
progressives have done to one of America's greatest cities. And
so you see this pattern of the states like Florida.

(07:22):
Now right behind Florida as a big winner is Texas.
Right behind Texas is Tennessee. By the way, Sean, do
you know what Texas, Tennessee, and Florida have in common?

Speaker 2 (07:34):
No state income? Text day passing, Linda, are you hearing this?
Do you see how smart I am? Do you see
how stradius is straight as I'm just dazing my cognitive
test here.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
I knew you'd know these answers.

Speaker 3 (07:50):
You know what the problem is?

Speaker 2 (07:51):
Like I can go on a vacation or do things
for people and they're remind me. I'm like, I did that.
I don't even remember. I have a friend of mine
and I was away with them and they had a
medical emergency in the sense that they were going through
IVF treatment and the doctor says, no, you got to
get here in a day. So I helped, you know,
arrange for them to get there and get back and

(08:13):
they you know, this is like eight years, ten years ago,
and then they reminded me of it. I'm like I
don't have any memory of that. But if you want
Reagan's record from you know, eighty to eighty eight, I
can give it to you a chapter and verse. Does
that mean I'm slipping into Joe Biden territory?

Speaker 3 (08:28):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (08:31):
Well.

Speaker 1 (08:31):
I can name every baseball player from the nineteen seventies,
but I'm not too good.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
I can give you the nineteen sixty nine Mets lineup.
I can tell you who the pitchers were, Ray Sadecki,
Jerry Kuzman, Tom Seaver, Doug McGraw out of the bullpen,
Jerry Grody, backup catcher, Duffy Dyer, Ed Crainpool, Bud Harrelson,
Tommy Agy, Wayne Garrett.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
Cassenger, Glenn Bucker, Ernie Banks, Ron Santo.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Well, you're a lot older than I am. It's not
my fault, Cleon Jones. These are names that most people,
Ron Swilboda, I mean not only most people know these names.
Linda is sitting there scratching her head, saying, what the
hell happened to the show today?

Speaker 1 (09:14):
A lot of pain here because I'm a Cubs fan
and what you guys do do as a nine way
She does not.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
Even know what it means to cross the plane. So
I mean, he's the wrong person ever talked sports with.

Speaker 5 (09:23):
This is true, and I don't deny it.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
But anyway, we are, well, let's talk about what this means,
because this is important, this data that you've accumulated.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
So the website, by the way, com people is it's
live right now, Sean. It just went live today. It's
called boat with your Feet dot com. You can have
a lot of fun with this, folks. You can you
can click on say Florida and Texas. You can click
on those two states. It'll show you the moving vans
going from one state to another, and of course all
the well if you go say Floda, New York, all
of the moving bans are moving out of New York

(09:55):
into Florida, et cetera. So you can pick any pair
of states. And what we're really finding is that the
states that it's basically the red states. I mean, I'm
not especially you know, partisan person here, but the red
states are just dominating, you know, the blue states. So
you look at Texas, you look at Florida, you look
at some of the small states like Utah, Montana are

(10:16):
grabbing huge amounts of new people from California. And by
the way, California on the West coast is that's such
a sad story. How do you ruin California, San? I mean,
it's got beautiful mountains, beautiful beaches, beautiful women, beautiful everything
in the Slice of Heaven and for the first time in.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
American Well, if you're on a different show that would
trigger a lot of people.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
You can say whatever you want on this show.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
Well, I can say it on your show, but this
is a serious point. How do you screw it? For
the first two hundred years of our country, people moved
into California. This is the first time under Gavin Newsome,
people are actually moving out of California.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
I had a debate this weekend with somebody that swears
to me that Gavin is going to be formidable, and
I said, only is clever, He's slick, he deflects very well.
I know him really well. Yeh uh, and Andie'll spin
it like a top. But he has a problem, and
the problem is his past policies and his record, and

(11:17):
I don't think he's going to be able to overcome
that and become president, especially in the era of Trump.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
Well, you know, if you want to know how pathetic
the Democratic Party is today? And it is pathetic. Unfortunately,
they voted against all of the policies in Washington that
have created the boom that you just talked about. I
just said that I'm from Illinois, that you know JB.
Pritzker who wants to run for president. I mean, what
did joke? Illinois is going is the third worst state

(11:43):
in America today and he wants what is he gonna do?
Turn turn the nation into Illinois?

Speaker 2 (11:49):
All right, quick break, welcome back more with Steve Moore,
author of Trumpanomics and Economists, his numbers on the mass
migration that continue in this country but because of horrible
policies by Democrats.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
So get this.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
The Washington Post out of story today a new study
that the Democratic Party is now the party of the rich,
and more than half of upper income families defined as
those earning more than two hundred and fifteen four hundred
dollars a year now vote Democratic now. I have been
saying this for the longest time. The top fifth of
earners went from supporting Barack Obama by a two point

(12:27):
five point margin to supporting Joe Biden in twenty twenty
by close to fifteen percentage points. Now, I have been
saying that the Republican Party, especially under Trump, largest tax
cuts in history, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime,
no tax on social Security, that the Republican Party, the

(12:47):
MAGA movement, is the movement of hard working men and women,
and that the Democratic Party has become the party of
woke coastal elites that are completely out of touch with
mainstream America.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
So in our book that you just mentioned Trumpanomics in
that way, or latest one is called the Trump Economic
Miracle we put out a year ago, and by the way,
it has turned into a miracle. But the reallyest extraordinary
thing is if you look under in the Biden four
years now, we have all the data in do you
know what, there was only one income group that did
better under Joe Biden?

Speaker 4 (13:21):
You know who?

Speaker 3 (13:22):
That was the rich?

Speaker 1 (13:24):
The rich that whereas under Trump in his first term
and so far in the first six months of the
second term, that the income group that's doing the best
is middle income Americans. The Democratic Party has totally abandoned
middle class, working class America. That's why Trump is the
working class president.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
Well, I mean, I think the best is yet to
come because I don't think we're feeling the full impact
yet of Donald Trump's economic policies. I mean, everybody doubted
on his his reciprocal trade push, and and you know,
people doubted these trade deals would come in. I think
he culminated all of this today with the announcement on

(14:06):
the European Union deal. I think the countries that we
needed the most to do trade deals with, we got
to finalize the China China deal. But I think between
that and energy and tax cuts, I think we're really
positioned well for an economic prosperity the likes of which
we've never seen before. Eleven to fifteen trillion in commitments

(14:29):
from countries and companies, a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
Yeah, it's just exactly what's happened in Florida, Enta states
like Texas. We're going to make all the states in
this country prosper And it looked taxes matter, like the
regulation matters, the energy production matters. And somebody's got to
tell me, I don't care if you're you and I
are conservative, Sean, but I don't care if you're conservative, liberal,
matter or whatever you are. What problem do you have

(14:52):
with Trump's policies. They're not liberal, They're not servative. Do
you know what they are? Common sense, good economics, good luck.

Speaker 2 (14:59):
Argue and liberals. I do it for a living. It
annoys me that they're so dumb. Anyway, I appreciate you
being with us. Thank you, my friend, Steven Moore. We'll
see you tonight. We're going to show these graphs. You
got to see them to see how dramatic it is,
and we'll show you tonight. Nine Eastern Hannity on Fox.
More evidence Democrats are in total denial and completely unhinged.

(15:24):
Here's pothole, Pete. Democrats have something to learn from zord
on Marxist Mom, Donni listen.

Speaker 6 (15:32):
I was talking the other day to a Democratic member
of Congress representing part of New York City who said
to me, essentially what you're saying, Mom, Donnie. In many
ways at the future, he knew how to campaign, he's
doing everything right. There's a lot to learn from him.
And this lawmaker said, I haven't endorsed him yet because
I have a lot of Orthodox Jews in my district.
What do you make of that contradiction?

Speaker 7 (15:52):
Yeah, I mean again, it's kind of distinction, distinguishing between
tactics and ideology. And I would say, you know, he's
further left than I am. But also I think that
what he's been able to do is something that our
party ought to learn from.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
I think that's something our party ought to learn from. Well,
that really helped you out in the last election. You
just keep going. I have no criticism of Democrats doubling
down and supporting Mom Donnie. If that's the direction they
want to go, I am perfectly fine with it.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
And here's pothole.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
Pete saying we should be empowering communities and schools to
make decision on men and women's sports.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
They just clueless.

Speaker 6 (16:31):
Listen when President Trump says something like no boys and girls' sports,
which is a phrase that they use, it sounds like
you're not standing on to that.

Speaker 7 (16:38):
I think that chess is different from weightlifting, and weightlifting
is different from volleyball, and middle school is different from
the Olympics. So that's exactly why I think that we
shouldn't be grand standing on this as politicians. We should
be empowering communities and organizations and schools to make the
right decisions.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Empowering them saying absolutely nothing. All right, let's get to
our busy phones. Our friend Joe from lj Joe has
been with this program since my Atlanta days, and that's
from ninety two to ninety six, and Joe's been a
good friend of the program. Joe, how are you glad
you called my friend Sean?

Speaker 8 (17:18):
You're great. Listen, you would be a great president of
the United States. I think the bet oh boy for
the American taxpayers and stockholders would be Sean haun From
Sean Hendy for president and Steve Moore for vice president.
Be the best ticket ever for taxpayers.

Speaker 3 (17:34):
Well, what are you going to do with Linda?

Speaker 9 (17:36):
I mean, Alan, they love you, Sean down here, see
Allen and everybody. I've talked with several people about that ticket,
and people love Hannity for president and more for vice president.

Speaker 3 (17:47):
Well, you're not going to Linda's not going to be happy.
What are we going to make do with her?

Speaker 4 (17:52):
Well, she can come to work for you when you're president.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
What job should she have?

Speaker 8 (17:57):
Maybe your assistant?

Speaker 5 (17:58):
I guess Joe, you can't call this show anymore because
last time I was an assistant, I was in my
twenties and I'm a little too. You know, I've advanced
a bit from assistant. But thank you, thank you for
that offer.

Speaker 2 (18:11):
Thank you for that offer. Joe, Thank you, Joey, Joey,
thank you for the offer. We really appreciate it, all right,
Joe and l Jay Alabama. Roy next on the Sean
Hannity Show. What's up, Roy, How are you hey?

Speaker 10 (18:24):
I'm doing great, Sean. Thanks thanks for having me on
Happy Monday.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
Well, no such thing really as a happy Monday. Let's
be real.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
I mean, when it's Sunday, I'm like, got to grind
out another week, and I start working and working and working,
and Linda's inboxing or text messages just blows up as
sweet baby. James's inbox on his text message blows up.
That means I'm working, preparing for the week.

Speaker 4 (18:49):
I get it.

Speaker 10 (18:50):
And I'm out here under this heat dome in Alabama
just enjoying. I'm assuming one hundred and fifteen heat in
Decks or something out here.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
But man, I lived in hunt Phill It does get hot, man,
it definitely gets hot there. The beauty of Florida if
you're coastal now I've been on the West coast, I've
been on the East coast, is that you get that
that breeze from the water, which definitely helps keep the
temperatures down a little bit. Although I love the summertime here,

(19:18):
I love working out in the summertime. I worked out
this morning. I mean I was drenched by the time
I finished my hour and fifteen minute workout today.

Speaker 10 (19:27):
Yeah, and you know you're a better man for it,
because that's what it's all about. I'm out here. When
the breeze blues, it feels like somebody hitting you with
a hair dryer.

Speaker 3 (19:36):
But oh, that's funny, that's funny.

Speaker 10 (19:38):
See you real quick. You said something last Friday about
your kids growing up and everything and playing video games
and stuff, and it kind of touched me because that's
that's something that I've always done with my kids. And
it's not anything spectacular. It's Mario Party of Eight on
the Wii when my kids were probably eight now.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
Well, I had the Wei with the kids they loved.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
Do you ever play the Tennis game and the driving
games and all that stuff?

Speaker 10 (20:03):
We would we would make time and this was this
was family Thanksgiving, the Christmas where they would come in Dad,
we want to do it Friday night or whatever night,
and we would literally stay up till two three o'clock
in the morning playing these games and as a father,
you realize, you know, it's not about what you get
your kids, or what you give them or buy them
or do for them. It's it's time. You've got to

(20:25):
spend time with your kids when they're sitting there just
laughing and having fun with you know, just you and
them in front of a goofy little video game, laughing,
spending family time. And you know, those are memories that
you can't you know, you just you don't forget. And
oddly enough, this last Christmas, my oldest daughter, twenty four
years old, came came into town and she was adamant

(20:49):
that week pick at night that we're playing marioholl Party
of Eight. And we still have that same one all
these years and it still worked. We didn't last till
two or three in the morning, but we did have
the family time to get together and you know, spend
time together.

Speaker 3 (21:03):
It means everything.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
I'm very fortunate my kids live close to me, and
I don't really play golf, but we all played golf yesterday.
We either go to brunch on Sunday or we'll we'll
hit some golf balls, maybe play nine or ten holes
or whatever, and then we'll go get stake together and
we just you cannot get.

Speaker 3 (21:25):
Back that time.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
If I have one regret in my life is when
there were years when I was on the road too much,
and I mean years that I did sixty five or
seventy cities and it's not it was kind of mandatory
at that point in my career if I really wanted
to build the best career that I possibly can and
provide for my family the best I possibly can. But

(21:50):
you can't get that time back. I don't dwell on
the past. My kids, you know, will say to me today,
they to be honest, they didn't really notice because they
were busy with their lives at the time. But for me,
I noticed it, and then I realized I had to
get off the road. Linda remembers, you remember that time
I just said, I got to get off the road.

Speaker 5 (22:11):
It was I mean, I think the hardest one was
when you did we did nineteen cities in three weeks.

Speaker 3 (22:16):
It was a lot.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
Well that was in twenty ten, and my kids were
old of that. But I didn't still five cities in
two thousand and four, I believe, and my daughter was
born in one so she was still pretty young. My son,
you know, was three years older. So I think it,
you know, and then when you finally get off the road,

(22:37):
you just tired because I was doing radio, TV, speech
book signing, event, whatever I was doing, and I was
doing one a day, and then sometimes even on the weekends,
we do three cities in a day. Remember we did
that crazy schedule. You weren't always on the road with us,
sweet baby, James was on the road every single event.

Speaker 5 (22:56):
The only time I wasn't on the road with you
is when you went to the Middle East.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
And why is that? I think an international incident? The odds,
what would you put the odds out at a potential
without question, without question?

Speaker 3 (23:12):
I am not going to comply.

Speaker 5 (23:14):
It's not a thing.

Speaker 2 (23:15):
Oh boy, okay, we didn't take you on that trip.
They didn't even invite you with the trip roy and Alabama. Look,
if I could recommend one thing, I don't care what
it is you do with your kids. It doesn't matter.
The time is what matters. And you never get that
time back. And I don't think when we're on our
deathbed that we're gonna be, you know, wishing we did

(23:39):
more stops and more cities. You're probably going to be
wishing you spent more time with the people you love.
It's really that simple. I grew up, yeah, but I mean, look, reality,
there is a reality for people. My my parents were
not around a lot when I was a kid. I
don't They weren't around at all, if you really want
to know the truth. My mom was prison guard, work

(24:00):
in sixteen hours a day, and my dad, my dad
worked a full time job and was a waiter part time,
and he was gone a lot. And I just in
many ways, it was the best thing that ever happened
to me because I lived my own life. I learned
to be independent. I had money in my pocket since
my first paper route when I was eight. I fed myself.

(24:21):
We didn't sit around and have family meals every night.
We'd have them at Thanksgiving and Christmas and occasionally not
that often. The fierce independence I developed and the sense
of being financially independent really has served me well in
my life. And the one thing they did instill in
me was a work ethic. And if you want to

(24:43):
be successful at anything, I don't care what it is,
you just you have to put the work in. You know,
most of the work for this show does not happen
on the air. The on air parts, the fun part,
the on air parts, the easy part, the on airport.
If I take a picture and show you how many
papers are in front of me right now, you wouldn't

(25:04):
believe it. Every day, maybe I get to fifteen percent
of that which I prepared for for the show, because
I also want to hear from you, and I want
to take calls. Roy Alabama, Hang in there, man, Cooler
weather will prevail eventually, Sandy Ago, COG Radio.

Speaker 3 (25:23):
What's up, Steve? How are you hey?

Speaker 4 (25:26):
How are you doing? Sean? Call him from the Great
State to the California.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
I'm the United Socialist Utopia of Gavin Newsom.

Speaker 3 (25:33):
What's going on?

Speaker 4 (25:35):
I've been here this nineteen fifty five and I'm going
to hold this thing together the best I can. I
have a little I.

Speaker 3 (25:42):
Gotta take an issue with you. It's a lost cause.

Speaker 4 (25:46):
Don't tell me that I'm gonna make it.

Speaker 3 (25:47):
It's over.

Speaker 4 (25:48):
Oh No, you don't let anybody tell you.

Speaker 3 (25:50):
It's the lost cause, the lost cause.

Speaker 4 (25:53):
Okay, Well, let's get on to the real important top kit.
I have a little tweak on your upcoming presidential run.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Don't have an upcoming presidential run. This is all manufactured
by Linda.

Speaker 4 (26:05):
Oh I'm going to tweak it because a lot of
people are on board with Linda, which I am too.
I love her to death. The bottom line is, you
have great vice presidential candidate. You have we have a
great bench, you have Rubio, you have Vance, you have
DeSantis that can run. So while you're gone and you
do two successful terms, Linda is going to do the

(26:25):
Sean Hanny Show. Katie is going to be her producer.
And then when we when we get when you get
ready to come back, the seat will be warm, You'll
be ready to sit down again. And then Linda will
become the next presidential candidate for the United States.

Speaker 2 (26:40):
I'm thinking if I become president, if I ever did,
now that everyone keeps forcing this issue on me, even
though I don't want it forced on me, I think
I would do a daily radio show from the White
House or wherever I happen to be, even if I
only found an hour. Huh, wait a minute, why don't
you want to do it with all? Did you ever

(27:00):
see the scene in Gladiator and Marcus Aurelius says to Maximus.

Speaker 11 (27:08):
Do you not accept this great honor I am bestowing
on you? When I die, will transfer my powers to you,
so Rome will return to a republic. Maximus, do you
not accept this great.

Speaker 2 (27:22):
Honor with all my heart? No, he says, And then
Marcus Aurelius. And by the way, you can read the
writings of Marcus Earlius, he was a genius, an absolute genius.
You know, for twenty five years, I have known nothing
but war, four years of peace, and that's it. And

(27:42):
he says, with all my heart no. And then Marcus
Earlies goes is that that that is why it must
be you and Marcus Early And Maximus says, well, what
about your son Comedists? What about commonists? Commodist is not
a moral man. And then Commonist goes on to kill
Marcus earl Is and he becomes the Roman Emperor and

(28:03):
gets killed by Marcus early Is in the Great Arena.
If you've not seen Gladiator, you got to watch it,
and then you'll realize I've watched it way too many times.

Speaker 3 (28:12):
That was a hell of a pivot.

Speaker 5 (28:13):
But I think the bottom line is, you know, you're
already in the spotlight. All the things that people have
to go through when they start entering the political arena.
You pretty much have done over the last thirty years.
It would be a much easier thing for you to do.

Speaker 3 (28:26):
I hate to tell you it started in nineteen eighty seven.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
We're like at thirty eight years on radio whatever, and
I can't mine is. I can't wait for them to
pull out the best of Hannity from day one.

Speaker 5 (28:37):
Let me tell you what, the best of the best
of Hannity ain't got nothing on these Antifa jerks running around.

Speaker 3 (28:43):
It's it's ridiculous.

Speaker 5 (28:44):
It's like, it's like knock knock jokes compared to these psychos.
You'll be fine.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
Oh, we'll see eight hundred ninety four one. Shawn is
on number if you want to be a part of
the program. All right, that's gonna wrap things up at
Today Hannity Tonight, nine Eastern on the Fox News Channel.
John Solomon breaking news. This is a doozy, he'll break
it on Hannity Tonight. Lindsey Graham thinks we need a
special prosecutor but one and only. Senator John Kennedy, Dave Asman,

(29:13):
Steve Moore on the incredible trade deals that are getting complete.
I guess that taco thing didn't work out too well
for Democrats. Jimmy Fayla, and much more so, you DVR
nine Eastern Tonight Hannity, Fox News, We'll see you tonight.

Speaker 3 (29:27):
Back here tomorrow. Thank you for making the show possible

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Sean Hannity

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