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October 15, 2025 28 mins

Sean Hannity dives deep with Eric Trump on his new bestseller, "Under Siege: My Family's Fight to Save Our Nation." In a rare extended interview, Eric chronicles the last decade from the unique perspective of a Trump family insider, detailing personal and political battles that have shaped the conservative movement. Sean frames the conversation as a turning point â spotlighting Donald Trump's transformation of the Republican Party into a populist, working-class coalition, and the high personal costs the family faced. Eric reflects on his father's enduring impact, the loyalty from grassroots supporters, and why these shifts matter for America's future. This episode is a must-listen for those interested in the evolution of modern conservatism and the behind-the-scenes struggles few witnessed.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, News roundup and information overload hour toll free.

(00:02):
Our number is eight hundred and nine foot one, Shawn,
if you want to be a part of the program.
In the history of this show, I've never held an
author beyond the nour But this story is so deep,
so profound, and we have so many different aspects of
what has happened to our country over the last ten years.
And Eric Trump is chronicling all of it from a

(00:23):
very personal advantage point because he lived it all. And
his new book is out. It's called Under Siege, My
Family's Fight to Save Our Nation. You can get it
in bookstores around the country. We have a link on
Hannity dot com. You can go to Amazon dot com
right now. Well, you broke another Trump another Trump record.
What a shocker.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
I ever thought this would be my life, Sean. I
never thought I'd be a number one author. This is
a this is an interesting one. But I guess, I
guess miracle has happened.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
You know, you've been so invested in this and I
remember from the earliest days of your father's campaign in
twenty sixteen, have you ever thought thought that maybe one
day you might run?

Speaker 2 (01:02):
You know, I get that question. A lot, and I
think we've developed great voices. And I think we've developed
voices because we know we've had to do a lot
of this, and we've had to defend ourselves, and we
had to go out and fight, and we decided one
day not to back down and not to cower, and
not to quiver or it. And so I think my answer,
Sean would be the same as my father said a
long time ago. If I ever got so bad, you
know that that you know, you had no weather choice.

(01:22):
I really believe that's the answer. I think because of
my father, I think he's changed modern politics forever. I mean,
finally we have fighters in there. We no longer have
the Jeb Bushes. We never no longer have, you know,
I'd admit Romney's right, these people are all They're extinct
and gone. We finally have a Republican conservative party of
people who are willing to be loud, who are willing
to be you know, fight, who have backbone, you know,

(01:44):
who are not just these rhino class that that government
you know, that don't inspire people. We have inspirational people now,
and that's all my father's doing. I think we have
the greatest cast of people in the conservative movement better
than any ever before. You see that with this whole
new generation of kind of Charlie Kirk supporters right where
you have these young kids who are inspired by politics

(02:05):
and there inspired to make a difference in this country
for the first time ever. And that all came from
my father. And so I'm not sure if I ever
get to politics, We'll see if I was ever truly
called to do it, or they ever got so incompetent,
you know, I might very well jump in. But I
do think that the whole Republican Party has changed and
for the better, and hopefully there's a lot more candidates

(02:26):
out there who will do a phenomenal job and taking
this footsteps.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
I think one of the best things that your dad
was able to do is build a new coalition of
the Republican Party. And we're now seeing this in dramatic
numbers where more people are registering as Republicans in terms
of millions of new Republican voters, and Democrats are losing
millions as they have become more and more radicalized. I mean,
I think your dad takes up more space in people's

(02:52):
minds than any one human being on the face of
the earth. I find that part amusing. On the other hand,
it's violent, it's vicious, and it's never I mean, Trump
derangement syndrome is real. But to me, the real secret
sauce of your dad is he stands up for hard
working men and women. I mean, the Republican Party is

(03:12):
now the party of working class Americans. Seventeen trillion dollars
in committed moneys for manufacturing automobiles, semiconductor chips, looking for
rare earth minerals, pharmaceuticals is now going to be made
in America. Energy dominance, the largest tax cut in American history,
no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax

(03:33):
on social security. He secured our border. He's restoring law
and order. These are fundamental. This is impacting the lives
of the people that really do make the country great.
It's the people that make the country great, the people
that work hard, play by the rules, raise their kids,
go to church. That is the heart and soul of
this country. And your dad has united them. He has

(03:55):
been able to break the myth that Republicans are racist
and sexist and misogynists and homophobic and xenophobic and islamophobic
and all this crap and transphobic. And now you see
the largest numbers the Republican Party has ever had with
every demographic book group, African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans,

(04:19):
African American youth, women voters, and moving to Trump, I mean,
and the Republican Party it's it's a transformed party. So yeah,
it's it's traditional Reagan conservatism with a heavy dose of populism.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
Good question, I Sean. I think he'll go down as
almost the greatest educator in a certain way. No one
was focused on politics, no one cared about politics. Politics
was boring as hell, and he opened up everybody's eyes
to to you know, the drug issue, to the immigration issue,
to the fact that we are being ripped off every day.
You know in NATO that no one was paying their
fair of share, and you know the fact that every

(04:53):
single day, you know, free trade was in free trade,
it wasn't free, it was in balanced trade. They were
they were destroying our country, they were ripped off our country,
they were poisoning our country, they were using our country.
You know, we were the police force of the entire
world and we got absolutely nothing out of it. We
were you know, disrespected. I mean, Obama would show up
in China on Air Force One. They wouldn't even bring

(05:13):
a set of stairs out to the guy, right, I mean,
you know, they had come off like the kids stairs
at the bottom of the plane. You know, He's opened
everybody's eyes to to the you know, these issues, and
and he did so with a level of kind of
unvarnished honesty that America really respected. And it's going to
take them a hundred years to try and get back.
Meaning you're you're not taking these principles out of people's
you know, eyes and ears. This has been so ingrained

(05:36):
by Donald Trump in the minds of so many that
we can never go back to where we were before.
The party will never allow it to go back to
where we went before. So I think maybe the greatest
service that my father did was was was truly being
un pc, being incredibly direct, and really opening people's eyes
to what was happening to this country under you know, frankly,

(05:56):
politicians on both sides who were totally inept and capable
and and cared not about this country but their own
personal power.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
There's a certain satisfaction I have because we spent over
three years, for example, on the Russian hoax on this
show and on TV. And the satisfaction is is that
everything that we ended up reporting was more right than
we even knew. And there was we had a very
small ensemble cast. Eric. We had, you know, me and

(06:27):
John Solomon and Greg Jarrett and Sarah Carter and Catherine Herridge,
and there were people that I'm not mentioning, but there
weren't very many of us. And there were maybe six
or seven congressmen that worked with us that helped us
get to the truth, and we got to the bottom line.
And now it's been verified by the Muller Report, the

(06:47):
Durham Report, and now with the declassifications that are coming
out and new information coming out every day, and my
sources telling me there's a lot of bombshells that are
going to come out that will shock the heart and
soul of this country about how everything that they that
you write about in this book, that you live through

(07:08):
and at the time you're gulping water and you're dealing
with attorneys, and you're dealing with depositions, and you're you know,
being subpoened left, right and sideways. You're living this. I
don't think people understand the stress I don't think they
understand the cost involved. I don't think they understand the
magnitude of an impact on people's lives. And anybody associated

(07:29):
with your dad, even on the periphery, you know, had
to live through this. Anybody that worked in the White
House had to live through this. People that had no
money had to hire attorneys, they couldn't afford them.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
Sehn, where's your pulitzer? Where's your they gave it?

Speaker 1 (07:45):
Yeah, okay, the hell will freeze over. Your dad's gonna
get the Nobel Peace Prize. I'll never get a pulitzer,
I promise you.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
Where's your pulster? They gave it. They gave it to
people who are falsely reporting about the Russia hoax when
they when the whole thing became debunked, those people wouldn't
give it back the story with a bogus story. And
by the way, I'm really happy my father and all
of us are suing them for that. You're the one
that deserves the Politier Prize, not not these people who
got the entire story wrong.

Speaker 1 (08:09):
I mean, Maggie Harman doesn't deserve it. You know. I'll
tell you one of the early things that I said
to your dad when we began these conversations late at night,
and You're right, your dad never sleeps. I think I've
talked to him every hour on the hour during a
twenty four hour day. At some point, and at one point,
you know, we were talking and your dad is one
of the most generous people, is one of the funniest people.

(08:32):
I wish people knew the funny side of him. People
can see it in his press conferences. They can see it,
you know, when he does interviews. He just has a
wicked sense of humor, always funny, always fun to be around.
And that side of your dad, you know, I've just
come to love and admire. It's him being him. And

(08:54):
I can just tell you that one of the things
he would always say to me, why don't you come?
And I'm like, sir, that's fine. I just want you
to save the country and save the world. I'm not
asking for much. And I just I feel like we're
on the precipice of him actually accomplishing all that. And
I do believe there'll be peace in Russia. I do
believe the foundation has been set for the strongest, most

(09:15):
robust economy in Golden age. As he talks about, I
do believe the Golden Dome will probably be his greatest legacy.
And these are things that we talk about on a
regular basis, but they're all becoming reality. And it's like
for me, who has been a movement conservative my whole life,
it's a dream come true.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
The sieg was worth it, the thief was worth it.
I mean, I truly believe he's gonna go down as
one of the greatest presidents in the history of this nation.
I'm not saying that because I'm his son, but I
mean that the guy's got the biggest heart in the world.
The guy's are the hardest worker in the world. The
guy never back down when shown the easiest real estate.
The easiest deal I could have made in my career
as a business guy would have been going to these
people and stopping the siege. You know what, He's not

(09:54):
going to run again. You guys, drop all the indictments,
you drop all the nonsense, you drop all the criminal convictions,
and he'll just step back gracefully and he'll disappear into
you know, kind of the sunset years of his life,
and it'd be the easiest deal. And he never ever
did it. He fought relentlessly for this nation, and this
nation loves him for it, and as a son, I
love him for it. I've never been more inspired by

(10:16):
a person in my life. I've never loved a person
more in my life. I've never seen a person that
has greater backbone and tenacity and fight and bigor as
he does. And believe me, he's not doing it for
his own well being. You know, they in fact to
the exactlyame.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
He didn't need this, no, and he didn't need to
come back after twenty twenty either. And I'm going to
end this interview with this, and that's where you start
the book and your dedication, and I want to read it.
He dedicated to two children, and you are the greatest blessings,
my daily inspiration, and the future I fight for. Watching

(10:52):
you grow reminds me of the power of love, the
importance of family, the responsibility we all have to leave
the world better and then we found it. One day
you will read about these times in your history textbooks
when you do. I hope this book stands as a
testament to the truth and a lesson I hope to
pass on in life. Hold fast to your integrity, stay resilient,

(11:16):
always have the courage to stand for what is right.
Never stop dreaming, never stop fighting for what matters, and
always remember how deeply you are loved. Dad. That was
very touching start.

Speaker 2 (11:28):
To write that, and it's hard to write that because
we're not most people. I think you know that at
this point. But it's I mean every word of it.
And I wrote every word of this story. And again,
I think it's why the book is number one. I
think people, you see our heart in this fight. We're
not faking Sean, We're not faking it. If we were
faking it, we would have been dead by now. We
want to save this nation. It's the greatest country in
the world. We were losing everything. We're losing God, we're

(11:49):
losing society, we're losing family values, we're losing our kids,
we're losing our standing on the world stage. I mean
certainly our economy was going and just competency, everything was
being lost. Our values as a nation, we're going down
the tubes. And we won. We won on every single front,
and honestly, that's why it's worth it. We won against

(12:12):
unthinkable odds and we did so as a group of people,
you us, all your listeners. We didn't have the media
we didn't have the establishment, we didn't have law enforcement,
we didn't have the DOJ, we had nothing. The only
thing we had was our fight, our votes and frankly
are our voices. And we won, and the world is

(12:33):
a better place. We have a country where people are
churches are filled on Sundays. We have a country where
the energy costs are coming down, inflations are coming down,
every you know, every economic metric is being met. We
have a country that's respected around the world again. You know,
we have a country where we're appreciating families for the
first time again. I can't tell you. I mean, this

(12:56):
has been the fight of my life. It's been the
fight of my father's life. It's been the fight of
clearly your life. And we wanted it was the ultimate
David and Goliath story. You know, there's never been a
better David and Goliath story where we are just facing
unprecedented odds, odds that if there wasn't somebody above looking down,

(13:16):
we probably would have never made it. I truly believe
this was destined. I truly believe he was who was
guided to do great things for this nation. And I
think right now our nation is being blessed and we're
going to have the greatest three years of prosperity that
this country has ever seen. And I truly do believe
he's going to go down the history books as the
greatest presidence this country has ever seen.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
I agree with you completely, New King Richie even said
it on TV last night. You know, I've known you
for a long time, and I've been kind of dazzled
by the real estate deals that you do, and how
big your family thinks, and the magnitude and the impact
that your family has had in terms of your business
building and your golf courses and all these other amazing accomplishments.

(13:56):
But you know, I say this as a friend that
I don't think there's any greater work you have done
than this book. And I don't say that lightly. I
mean it from my heart, and I really think it's
the best work you've ever done. And I think you've
done the country a service by putting all of this
down on paper and taking the time to write it yourself.
The book is called Under Siege, My Family's Fight to

(14:18):
Save our Nation, Eric Trump. You can get it in
bookstores around the country, Amazon dot Comhannity dot com. Well,
you set a record I've never had an author on
for an hour and a half, but it's been fascinating.
It's an honor to call you a friend and thank
you for writing this book. It's profound, it is deep,

(14:39):
and it is consequential. Like your father and I'm sure
well you father breggs about you and the kids all
the time. I mean, I'm okay, I've heard this a
million times, but he means it. He loves you all
that I know as an outsider, I can tell you
and we really appreciate that you did this. I think
your greatest work, Eric, I really do.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
And thanks for being pally part of the to fight Seawn.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
We love you to dathy know that same same here
all right under siege, my family's fight to save our nation.
Eight hundred nine four one, Shawn, our number if you
want to be a part of the program. All right,
So many of you been so patient. I know we
have a lot of other issues today. Oh we've got
the big debate. When is it? It's tonight, isn't it
with zoron Kami? Mumdanni? Oh, it's tomorrow night? Right after

(15:23):
that debate, By the way, Curtis sleewit's right across the
street from Fox. He's gonna walk over to Fox and
he's gonna come on the air. This is Curtis is
going to be on Fire tomorrow night. You watch. He's
gonna be great. I promise you. He's born to do this.
He's spent all these years in radio. He's a pro.
And they have no idea what's about to hit him.
And and he's gonna go after Cuomo and he's gonna
go after Kammi Mumdani. So it's gonna be interesting to watch.

(15:47):
All right, let's get to our busy phones. Let's start
in North Carolina with Nancy. Nancy High, you're on the
Sean Hannity Show. Thanks for checking in.

Speaker 3 (15:56):
Yeah, thanks for being on the air. Sean. I just
have an idea for all Hamas protesters that have been
out and now it's the time for them to head
on over to Palestine and help rebuild.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
I think we could give them first.

Speaker 3 (16:10):
Class tickets over there and they'd have a chance to
help the Palestinians rebuild that area.

Speaker 1 (16:15):
Yeah. I mean, they seem to care so much about it,
and they're setting up encampments on college campuses and you know,
and the war in Gaza stop the genocide. All this well,
guess what, Donald Trump has stopped it. And now maybe
they can go over and convince the really radical wing
of Hamas to you know, not break the peace and
not assassinate the way they have been, people that are

(16:38):
perceived as having been supporters of a peace deal so
that people can live more productive lives. I think we
send them over, give them free airfare. I like the idea.
I'll contribute. Oh good, great call, Nancy. We appreciate this
is what I love about my audience. Just so smart,
you know, the smartest audience in the world. So blessed

(16:58):
Zach and Missouri haz How are you glad you called?
When I was in the DC swamp, I did get
to see you were a great Senator Eric Schmidt yesterday?
What's going on?

Speaker 4 (17:06):
Oh, not much? A huge fan of the show, been
listening and watching watching you for years. Called in to
talk about this spam burger UH fiasco. I guess you
would call it.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
Well, it's beyond the fiasco UH. And she won't condemn,
she won't condemn this guy that made death threats against
the speaker in UH Virginia. And it's pretty amazing that,
you know, she's she's ducking and dodging and weaving, and
you know, standing by her, man, if you will? And

(17:41):
where's your sense of principle? He's talking about killing? You know?
I have two bullets. You have Hitler, pol Pot and
the speaker of the house. I think I'll use both
of them on the speaker and then go after his
family so that they learn a lesson. Wow.

Speaker 4 (17:55):
Yeah, how would she feel if somebody said that about her?
I think I won't.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
That's a great question. I don't think anyone's asked that.

Speaker 4 (18:03):
Yeah, I think if the tables were turned, I don't.
I don't think that she would like that very much.
I mean, I know I wouldn't if someone said that
about me. And I was listening to the debate questions
and she can't even answer a yes or no question
on if she would rescind current policies of transgender bathrooms,
regarding especially the latest case of the young man that

(18:24):
was in the shower stall and the in the girl's
locker room that saw him in there, and and and
all of that, and and as a dad of two
young girls, I just think it's absolutely ludicrous that these
policies are even in place to begin with. But I
come from a small town in in southwest Missouri of
like two thousand people, so that hasn't made it here,

(18:45):
and I hope it never does. You know, I think
this whole transgender thing is a parenting issue, a lot
of it. The parents are not their parents are absent,
and these kids, they're not living in godly housefold and
they are they are being misled by social media and
everything else. And and then this is the world we

(19:06):
live in because of it.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Zach, how about this? How about the schools and all
these politicians, how about they focus on their jobs. How
about they focus on keeping America safe and secure? Uh,
make America prosperous. How about standing up for hard working
men and women. How about restoring law and order in
towns and cities. And how about they leave our children

(19:30):
the hell alone and stop indoctrinating them? And you know,
stop this this DEI woke insanity. Uh. If you want
to be you know, pro transgender, fine, but it's a
parent's decision. It's not the government's decisions. Stay out of
our family business. How's that right?

Speaker 4 (19:50):
Completely agree? Sean?

Speaker 1 (19:52):
All right, man, appreciate the call. Thank you for being
out there. George in my free state of Florida. George,
Howry you glad you called.

Speaker 5 (20:02):
Hey, Sean, thanks for taking my call. Hey. I got
two things. First about the Middle East when you when
you interviewed that and Yahoo about over ten years ago
he said the problem with American politics is that we
basically do things in four year cycles. And President Trump
has broken that that model because he did things during

(20:25):
his first four years laying the groundwork, and then they
of course to let the four years thereafter. There's still
things that he'd done prior to that still work. Now
he's come back and he's he's basically as a grand strategist,
has saved millions of lives. So he's just not a person.

(20:45):
He Trump is a movement. So he broke that four
year cycle because when one politician comes in does something,
then the next one can come in and change it.
They you know that that could be a problem with
our with our our our policy overseas. And the second
thing is Eric Trump's book. You know, Donald Trump is

(21:07):
is is the he didn't have to come down the escalator,
but he has given America a wonderful life. Shop. He
is the George Bailey Ultimate George Bailey. He has he
he didn't have to do any of that, and and
but he saved his great grandchildren, my great grandchildren. He

(21:29):
has We were very close to having a Pottersville shop
if it wasn't for his his sacrifice and and his
his his uh, just his fight, fight, fight. Uh. He
has talked over the heads of the of the of
the media directly to the people. And that's what we're

(21:50):
just we're now just uh, we're just just so glad
we dodged that bullet. And I'm just so thankful for Eric.
I'm looking forward to reading Eric Trump's book, because that's
another thing. Is he that book would I can pass
that on to other people and we can talk over
the heads of the media and continue to just show

(22:13):
how important those those policies are.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
Listen, I think your comparison is so fascinating. If I
watched It's a Wonderful Life, and I'm tearing up every
year I watch it always around Christmas time. I like
the colorized version. I can't help it, although the black
and white versions still cool too. And George Bailey, you know,
wanted to you know, see the world, and circumstances were unfolding,

(22:41):
and his father died and his brother. You know, he
allowed his brother to go to college before him. His
brother comes home a war hero, and it just keeps
falling in his lap. His destiny, and that is, you know,
this one savings alone that was able to save an
entire town from this one mean old rumpy, you know,

(23:01):
washed uff whatever whatever words he used against you know,
mister Potter, and was able to help people buy homes
and get out of you know, his his slums, if
you will, to use an old phrase, and it's it's
it's a heartwarming story. And then all of a sudden
he finds himself in trouble and he was able to

(23:24):
see through circumstances and an angel that came into his
life because he was at his breaking point, and see
what life would have been like for that town without him.
And you know, I think so many of us don't
even realize. I mean, you know, maybe we don't realize
the impact we sometimes have on people. And I'm talking

(23:45):
about everyday people. You know, maybe you spend a moment
with grandma, Maybe you spend a moment with a kid
next door that's in trouble. Maybe maybe you donate to
somebody that can't afford a Thanksgiving dinner. Maybe you know,
these little things that you do in life, you know,
add up to and define who you are. And I

(24:07):
think that that whole story is a lesson all of
us and the little things that we do in life
and finding our purpose in life, and finding God's purpose
for us in life, I think is paramount to living
a happy life. And I think it's a perfect example.

Speaker 5 (24:25):
Can I make also another good for my generation? Back
to the future also used a wonderful life. Part of it.
Donald Trump is, to George McFly, one punch of bith
to this face change the American politics. So his fighting

(24:48):
has has has made the media and the Democratic Party
just just not as as powerful anymore. And it changed
It's changed people's legacies, life's trajectories. And so you know,
I mean, I like the Christmas time too, but it
is his also, he's the George mcli from my generation.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Listen, you make great movie analogies. I think we're going
to make you the official movie critic of the Sean
Andity Show. I think it's you know, apropos and right
on the money. George, God bless you man, appreciate you
call eight hundred and nine four one Sean, if you
want to be a part of the program, Let's say
hi to Greg. He's in Westchester and New York. Greg,

(25:35):
how are you the number one property tax county in America?
I know because I lived in the number two property
tax county in the country when I did live in
New York. Thank god I left.

Speaker 6 (25:47):
Correct Sean a long time viewer. It's a pleasure to
talk to you and thank you for all your hard
work and all you do to keep this country going straight.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
We're all spokes in a wheel my front right.

Speaker 6 (25:58):
My question is showing is regarding what's going on with
the National Guard in cities like Chicago and Portland versus
cities like Memphis. Who are you, mayor there is asking
for the National Guard's help. Suppose the President were to
change your strategy a little bit and just say, you
know what, We're going to pull the Guard from Chicago,
We're going to pull them from Portland. We're going to
leave that crime rate up to you, mister mayor's, and

(26:19):
see what you can do with it. We're going to
go focus on cities that are asking for our help,
such as necess Basically showing I think the country what
was going to be happening is national Guard and local
enforcement work together? What the crime rate, How they could
really lower the crime rate in that city versus what's
going to continue to go on in Chicago and Portland

(26:40):
without their help at all. And let the country judge
as to whether they view what's better for him national
guard and no national Guard? What's your opinion on that?

Speaker 1 (26:49):
You know, I look at JB. Pritzger, you know, a big, fat,
loud amount that he is, and I'm just like, you know,
we're over four thousand people in your state. You have
five times the murder rate, the homicide rate then people
in New York City. That's saying something. And you know,
I wish he showed the same passion for saving the

(27:13):
lives of people in his state as he does for
hating Donald Trump. You know, how do you justify with
all these crazy protesters and ice feeling for security reasons,
they have to put a fence around their facility. How
do you justify taking that fence down? Do you want
them to get hurt? Do you want them to get killed?

(27:34):
On top of all the incendiary rhetoric that the left uses,
So you know, I can't really it's inexplicable to me.
It's the height of irresponsibility, and it's why Republicans deserve
to stay in power. That's why these midterms and we're
going to start talking. We're a year away and I'm

(27:56):
telling you it's all hands on deck again. We need
all of you, all hands on deck. Nobody can sit
this out. Everybody's got to get involved or else, you know,
all progress will stop if these radicals get in power. Anyway,
I have to run. I'm on a heart break here,
but God bless you great point eight hundred ninety four.

(28:18):
One show is a number you want to be a
part of the program. All right, that's gonna wrap things
up for today. We've got a great show tonight Hannity
nine Eastern on the Fox News Channel. We'll check in
with Steven Miller. He'll be pounding back against the likes
of JB. Pritzker in associates. Why wouldn't Democrats want law
and order in safety and security? Senator Ted Kruz Schumer

(28:40):
shutdown and all the latest out of Washington. James Uttmeyer,
who is the Age of Florida, has a big announcement.
I don't know what it is yet, but we'll find
out tonight and Klay Travis to EDVR, Hannity nine Eastern
on Fox SYED then back here tomorrow. Thank you for
making this show possible.

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