Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
There he is lecturing Americans three thousand miles away as
his own state goes into decay. Congressman Vince Fong said
Newsome more focused on his political ambitions and governoring California.
His rural tour in South Carolina is laughable considering how
badly he's neglected rule California, from crumbling infrastructure to ignored
(00:21):
water storage needs to skyrocketing energy cost His policies have
fueled that affordability crisis hurting families across our state. That
is true. Where's Newsom. He's in Florence, South Carolina. He's
going to do a little rule tour, going to talk
about medkay Kutz and disaster release there as we still
(00:44):
have parts of the Central Valley that don't even have water.
I don't mean for fields, I mean in their kitchen sinks.
Shouldn't he be out there cracking the whip to get
that train track built? What about the fires? There's people
that were burned out, they're the land that was lost.
(01:07):
My mom and dadd are in town and they're coming.
They're out, but they'll be back here in few days.
Bay how they were going to go visit one of
their friends. He was my old school principal. He lives
over in Santa Maria. On Saturday last week, but now
one oh one was shut down because we'd take the
forty one forty six one oh one and it was
shut down because of the fire. Now you really you
(01:27):
don't think there's some people it was the largest wildfire
so far this season in California. You don't think the
governor it's Tuesday, you might be at the largest wildfire
in your state, that after what just happened, you would
think that maybe, you know, he'd want to be out
there and is, hey, I'm clearing off the side of
(01:49):
freeway's attire that knew some puts on and he does
something out in the in the wilderness. Well, he's got
his own line with his California Bear logo. Anyhow, he's
kess South Carolina two day tour. He's gonna go out
some rural areas and he's gonna go into some GOP strongholds.
Old boy, he's going to take him on, right, He's
(02:09):
gonna make eight stops across the state. Democratic Party set
includes coffee shops, small businesses, and of course churches. I'm
somebody in a church asking Governor why if a judge
here ruled that my boy's a boy, my ex wife
could take him to California and you kidnap him. Yeah,
(02:30):
let new some he'd be more embarrassed on that question
than he would when he was spinning the ball around
his finger and doing it between his legs, taking off
to a little tuck and roll around there. It almost
broke the leg of an eight year old Chinese boy
that was out there playing on the basketball courts. He'd
be that embarrassed. We know here in California we got
a housing problem, and you heard there. We're gonna a
(02:54):
state law in nineteen seventy, the California Environmental Quality Act SIQUA.
When it was passed, it was all over the environment, man, piece.
We had to chain ourselves to these trees, tree huggers. Well,
it hasn't really helped the environment. It's actually grown the
the inability to build anything in any kind of proper
(03:16):
amount of time. Way slows downstruction projects in the name
of the environment. When we know that with all the
carbon CO two tax, all that kind of stuff, everything's
to save the environment. Get out of your gas car,
save the environment. Well, Newsom pushed us forward. He signed
two bills simply build one thirty center, built one thirty one,
(03:38):
and eliminate a number of the regulations. Looks like he's
getting ready to campaign. In some other states, it wouldn't
put up with this kind of crap. Well, what I've
done in California is I've gotten rid of the nineteen
seventy law to make all look at him. Boy, he's
all making it easy to build things, Gonna build America
great again. He said he's going to eliminate the regulations. Guys,
(04:04):
the bill said. First they were passed thanks to Newsome.
Now he's gonna turn it around, doing about face. He's
put so many regulations into this state. Now he's gonna
say we got too much demand chasing too little supply.
It's not complicated. California is what not to do? That's
(04:32):
all the signs that need to say that. Picking him
along the way in South Carolina, California, what not to do? Simple?
The sign has to just jump out at you. There
you go. That's it. And then it's sad. The fall
y'all the fall a lot of people. How many generations
(04:55):
have been here, and you think back to areas of
town that you had to ride your bike in that
you're not even gonna get out of your car in
much less maybe your car wouldn't even want to go
there anymore. New Will knows that's a problem. Something's happening
in the housing market that that should not be rogue karma.
(05:20):
Theatlantic dot Com. You can just go see the articles
called the whole country starting to look like California the
Atlantic dot Com. So this comes from a left winging
place here. They're talking about home prices that have gone
up over the past ten years. The median home price
has increased by one hundred and thirty four percent in Phoenix,
one hundred and thirty three percent in Miami, one hundred
(05:41):
and twenty nine percent in Atlanta, ninety nine percent in Dallas.
And over that same stretch ten years, New York, San Francisco,
smell LA have increased by about seventy five, seventy six,
and ninety seven in order there, So you got the
red state places bumping way way up. And it used
to be if you couldn't afford to live in a
(06:02):
New York, San Francisco or smell A, there were cheaper
places to go to. In the early two thousand, cities
like Dallas. The article says Atlanta Phoenix are building new
homes and more than four times a rate of major
coastal cities like New York, La San Francisco on average,
no longer. Rate of building in most Sun Belt cities
(06:22):
has fallen by more than a half over the past
twenty five years, in some cases by more as the
demand has surged. They said, when it comes to new
housing production, some Belt cities are at the point that
the big coastal cities were twenty years ago. It explains
why home prices in the Sun Belt, though still low
compared with those in San Francisco and New York, have
(06:43):
risen so sharply since the mid twenty tens, a trend
that accelerated during the pandemic as the rise of remote
work led to a large migration out of high cost cities.
They said, these places aren't building enough homes and the
prices are wildly Just where my mom and dad moved
(07:05):
back to their hometown in West Tennessee, well it was
like four years ago. They decided to start looking, and
then they decided they were going to build, and then
they went back to just buying one that was already there.
But anyhow, I was on Zillo. Looking over the years
for them at different things. I was focused on West
Tennessee and it's just amazing how I saw those prices
(07:26):
just go up every few months to the point of wow.
And you know, on Zillo you can go see the
little graft that showed how much it sold for in
twenty twelve, and you just to see those red lines
going up. But now they're saying that the prices have
risen someone since the early two thousands, not to the
point where builders can't turn a profit, they say. They said,
(07:49):
also many Sun Belt cities had begun hitting limits to
their outward sprawl. They say. Around Miami they really can't
go out anymore because of the everglades, they say. In
Phoenix tribal lands, they said, like in Atlanta and Dallas,
sy keep growing and the commute distances become crazy, and
(08:14):
the traffic and all of that. So once you run
out of room to sprawl, suddenly your zoning codes start
becoming a real limitation. They said, in twenty years, the
housing crisis in Miami, Phoenix, in Atlanta will be as
severe as it was in La San Francisco and New York.
Today that the prices are just going to keep going
up that much. Maybe it wasn't so much the well
(08:37):
it has to do with the view and all of that,
but the supply and demand. So I guess these cities
have been warned here do you think they'll change do
something about it? So this is why the Atlantic said
the whole country is starting to look like California. Well,
(08:58):
twenty twenty one, Raleigh, North Carolina, they had a bunch
of new people moving into North Carolina, and they reformed
their laws to make building multifamily housing way easier. So
are you listening up there, you Democrat lunatics and Sacramento.
Over the next three years there in Raleigh, North Carolina,
(09:20):
the city built sixty percent more units annually and experience
half the rental cost growth that it had during the
previous five years. So there were more places for people
to runt. And we're seeing right now Newsom getting back
to the middle here. I guess he's in South Carolina.
(09:42):
Isn't that just? How does that make you feel like?
Go ahead and announce it, man, just you've already checked
out that recall should have happened. But think of all
the awesome commercials, the montages that can be put together
for Newsom, you know, against jd Vance. Is that what
(10:05):
it's gonna be? I don't know. We have no idea,
but it could be that if I were a betting
man and I am, can we start putting bets on it? There?
Direct ryand Ageli. Yet I think we kind of agree,
both of us, right jd Vance and Newsom. That's probably
what it's gonna turn out to be. Oh, think of
(10:26):
the the multitude talk about audio hoarding boy, the video
hoarding on Newsom for those TV ads that are out there,
sweet and juicy. There's no way he's going to be
able to hide. I don't know, he's he's kind a trick,
He's sneaky snake.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
That's true because it's true. This is the tremor Chary
show on the Valley's Power Talks.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
One hundred and sixty one people still missing. Man, this
is a huge loss of life. So at least eighteen
people are still missing statewide. We have no idea. We
see the headlines, we see some social media posts. We
don't see the tears in the community centers. We don't.
(11:16):
We don't smell the death. Imagine these these rescue workers
and I know it's what they sign up for and
that's what they get paid to do. But let's still
talk about what they gotta do, like a kid with
a collapsed in head because a brick or mortar was
flowing through the water and bam hit them on the
side when they washed up on the bank, or something
like that. Seeing some you know, the bloated bodies. Always
(11:42):
when I watched World War One documentaries and war documentary
Civil War, when they say, you know, forty thousand loss
on ones, those forty thousand by laying out in the elements,
somebody cleaned them up. They're not there anymore. I know
they didn't just sit out there and k back into
the earth. Somebody had to go out there. And all
(12:06):
these wars, I bet you, especially in Europe and the
World wars and Civil War here in America, as the
townspeople because of disease, you needed to get rid of
those bodies as quickly as you could once the battle
moved on. We never really see documentaries about that. I've
(12:26):
never out of all the ward I've never seen dead
soldier removal. No, not a good job, but somebody's doing
that down there. So it's a tough gig to have
there were these eight year old twins, Hand and Rebecca,
their older sister survived, they died. You saw the one
(12:49):
where the girls were holding hands. They were at their
grandparents' house and they couldn't get out. Saw a lot
of video of people pulling neighbors from rooftops. I'm wondering
now some of these camps, and this is not bad
bedside manner to talk about, but in the future, now,
in some of these flood prone areas that they know,
(13:11):
you know, we'll have a life vest tied to the
end of each bunk or something like that. You know,
there'll be something like that, a lot of grief. One
hundred and nine dead. I guess they had some people
up with drones and it even made a helicopter have
to be brought down and have to be fixed because
they collided with a helicopter. They're saying, no, no drones.
(13:33):
Let the pros be up in the air not having
to worry about And I know people probably had good intentions.
They're like, I got a camera on this, I'll see
if somebody's trapped. Probably thought they were doing the right thing.
I read Texas tribute here the mother recalled the last
time she talked to her daughter before she went missing. Tanya,
(13:56):
she was a mom to twenty one year old Ella,
talked about the last call. She said she was with
her boyfriend at his home with other friends when the floodwaters.
She said, it took the house away. It was just
a slab left just to cemit. That's a salafa, just
wipe the entire house gone. Bodies of two of the
kids who were at the house were found, and the
(14:19):
mother was saying that they can't find Ella and her boyfriend.
Ella was twenty one. She said they were high school sweethearts.
All the stories. The wife of the Kansas City chiefs
owner said they had a family member, nine year old
little girl in their family who lost her life. There
(14:42):
were two young sisters. They said a final message to
their family before they died. Thirteen year old Layer, eleven
year old Brook. Yeah, these are the ones. That's the
grandparents said. They said saying I love you at three thirty.
That was the last text that they said. They sent
(15:04):
a picture of their hands locked together. They found those
two girls with the grandparents haven't been found. I played
you that sick audio of that Houston City official that
was talking about how all the white girls and it's
just a racist, oh ugly dark soul of a person.
(15:26):
Got another one. This is a doctor, female doctor, a pediatrician.
Now let me just start out right now. She doesn't
have a job anymore. She made a comment online. Doctor
Christina prompted, let me get on my social media, let
me type, and here's what she typed. May all visitors, children,
(15:47):
non MAGA voters and pets be safe and dry. Kerr
County MAGA voted to gut FEMA. They denied climate change.
May they get what they voted for? Bless their hearts.
Lightning bolt, Well, she got a little earthly lightning bolt
from Bluefish Pediatrics, who she was employed by. The based
(16:11):
in Houston. They issued a statement, We're aware of the
comments when of our physicians has caused significant hurt and outrage.
They do not reflect the value standards of Bluefish Pediatrics,
who want to be clear, we do not support or
condone any statement like that. Yeah, they said this past
weekend we were made aware of the individual is no
longer employed by Bluefish Pediatrics. Some of me hateful and
(16:33):
discussing people in that horrible at a time when something
horrible happens, that it brings out even more horrible in
other people out there. See, that's that's just a that's
a dark spirit. When you're like sitting there thinking of it.
You know, maybe I'll assume maybe it was a woman,
but maybe some dude. I don't know. But the story
(16:55):
of the little girls with their hands together, you know,
that breaks our hearts. Can you imagine acting more hateful
and disgusting of these than these people are doing? What
kind of spirit you would have to have? I hope
that doctor never gets a practice medicine another day in
her life. All right, well, would you look at here?
Speaker 2 (17:21):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
I realize how poor my speaker is on my iPhone
with my mom and dad's around, I was like, sound
like my record player speaker. I mean, boy, some of
them are so loud that I need to get a
loud phone there. But yeah, and make power Talk your
number one pre set. We're incentivized to push that. Are
(17:46):
you picking up on what I'm throwing down? Help me
out here? Make me your number one pre set? This
is just something else here.
Speaker 3 (17:55):
Wife is getting pretty complicated. Each of us is so
busy with his own affairs, raising a family, making a living,
and keeping house that sometimes we lose sight of what's
going on right around us. Of course, we try to
keep up with things through the newspapers, the radio, television
and so on. But what do you think about when
(18:19):
you read something like this.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
An eight year old boy was completely starred of human
interaction in northern Thailand after being neglected by his forty
six year old drug addict mom and brother. He was
found acting like a dog. He was living among a
pack of wild dogs in a filthy hut in Thailand.
Unable to speak, could only bark to communicate his drug
(18:45):
using family, they said, left him to the dogs. He
had a twenty three year old brother, he's eight. The
mom was like forty six. She would bag around town
for money and all of that. He got some voucher
to pay for a school, but the mom used it
and just took him in. No humans interact with so
(19:08):
he turned to the dogs ended up mimicking their behavior.
Thailand's education minister said the boy will be given a
great chance at a good life. We're going to follow
up make sure he gets everything that he needs. Fascinating story, right, Well,
(19:28):
Fresno's not going to get everything we need. We're gonna
get a hundred million dollars. Daniel Glicktt, seven, King Valley's
son said, Newsoman is giving us a hundred million, and
we're going to revitalize downtown. After all, who who's living
down there? Would they if there were nice places now there?
(19:51):
Granted there are some nice places, there's some There are
some corners that you could take good pictures and convince
people that it looks really good. I say start smack
dab right in the middle and spread out. If it's
an empty building and you can't sell it, tear it
down and put a park there. Now they'd be sleeping
in it, urinating in it. See it doesn't work. Doesn't work? Hey,
(20:15):
let me read new Some proposed giving Fresnel two hundred
and fifty million. We got fifty million. The remaining two
hundred million was delayed. Why game show Newsome gave it
all the way. Funding will go toward infrastructure projects to
support future housing businesses, improvements, parking, sidewalks, making safer walkable streets,
safer streets. Think about that is you'd have to fight
(20:37):
crime to make them safer. This is going to support
one Fredsnoe Mayor Dyer's vision of having ten thousand new
people living downtown down town. Give it up, ain't happening.
You need to stop this, Mayor. You really need Jerry.
Speaker 2 (20:58):
I don't want to get you in trouble.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
A lot on Fresno, California, Dier said, I want to
express my sincere gratitude to the governor for being in
South Carolina. Today's we have the biggest wall for standing
by Fresno and keeping his promise to invest in our community.
It still looks like we're about one hundred million short. Mayor,
he has to give it to I legal alien healthcare,
(21:20):
and he's focused on South Carolina. Expressing gratitude, Well, I
guess somebody gave me a hundred million. I expressed gratitude.
If I had a dream of turning dire Downtown Downtown dire,
it was. It was Downtown lee Brand, it was downtown
swears that. I think it even goes wait further back,
(21:42):
Downtown Autry, Downtown Bradefeld on the city council the first
time building the stadium, and nothing wrong with that. If
you can do it, many cities have done it. My
mom and Dad's wedding anniversary, I took him down to
Crawdaddy's down town by sale, got out, showed them around,
(22:02):
great whitefish, that butter sauce on there. Just spectacular eating.
But we we looked at I fight, so they look
They're like, hey, this is very nice down here. Yeah.
It was vibrant, it was going. You felt like there
were safe sidewalks. Do you ever feel that way in
(22:24):
downtown Fresno? That nice corner that I said you could
take some good pictures and make it look good. Yeah,
go ahead and hopscotch. Just a little talk about you know,
if you feed on down you go find something that
you don't feel comfortable with. Well, one hundred million dollars,
I don't think that's going to change much. I think
(22:46):
I saw something once where it was like sixty million
dollars to change all the sprinklers in the parks or something,
I mean outlayer, you know, like things. We don't think
how expensive it is. But if you got a dream
to revitalize a downtown, nothing wrong with that, that's good.
I hate to see old buildings be torn down. When
(23:07):
they had Madison Square Garden, when they rebuilt that over
the train station there in New York. Oh, that was
such a shame back in the sixties seventy whenever they
decided to change that up built Madison Square Garden right
on top of it. I'm trying these old buildings downtown.
Some of them are beautiful, but inside you know it's
(23:29):
it's got Larry Sevelstein World Trade Center asbestos problems. Those buildings,
you know, were built back when up front a lot
of them were tire up right there, there's a saloon
down the road. They have done a good job with
some of them, but nobody wants to do that. When
(23:50):
my mom was here in town, we loved to go
to antique thrist stores and all that. We had some goes,
and I know there's some good ones down there, but
I just didn't want to be down there with my mom,
much less live down there. I might have told the
story I can never keep track show life in real life.
(24:10):
What I tell people in real life, I will say,
not that I'm not in real life is no, this
isn't real life. I'm doing a radio show. But I
said that when I first came down the first weekend,
when I got I heard movie from Adesso to Fresno.
I had a weekend I was going to come down
and look at places to live. And I had heard
and I looked online because I lived here in the
(24:31):
early nineties that downtown had revitalized. This is twenty fifteen.
And I said, all right, now, I looked at some
places online, and I was impressed some of those apartments
down there, you know, somehow where you got your office
downstairs work and you can live above. And I was like,
all right, all right, we'll see. I made it as
far down Blackstone as where it v's off there, or
(24:53):
why's off there? That McDonald's right there. I made it
that far. And I was on the cell phone and
I all due across the street looked like an actor
for some eighteen eighties movie or play they were trying
to He had a top hat and a cane and
he was talking to imaginary people all over the place
and acting up a storm across the street. And I went, eh, nah,
(25:18):
I gotta go look somewhere else. And I did. That
was it. I didn't make any further down now. After that,
I went down and looked and yeah, they were nice,
but O the surrounding area is not. So you correct that,
and they go, well, crime is always lowered Okay, maybe
it is, but it's grimy. And again, there are good areas.
(25:39):
If we could sweep all the good areas into one
section and then grow out from that as opposed to
one good area over here. Now, if it kept spreading,
that would be good. But it hasn't and this ain't
gonna be enough to put a din in it. The
business owners along Blackstone i kmph dot com here said
they're sounding the alarm over the number of homeless encampments
(26:01):
in the area. This is the Blackstone Merchants Association. The
issue on Blackstone worse and worse. It's the transients, they say,
hundreds and hundreds from the Visiera all the way to Nice.
The story used to be one of the busiest in Fresno.
(26:22):
One of these owners was saying, but we're hardly making
any money, avoiding the area because the safety concerns. They
had a guy that owns the high Voltage tattoo shop.
He said, people outside my shop doing drugs, intimidating people
for money. He said it got so bad somebody came
in once and he had to give them narcan, he said.
(26:46):
The Blackstone Merchant Association oz Rossomni. He said he believes
the homeless shelters may be unintentionally be contributing to the problem.
He said, they use these unused tracks of land. They
don't have a place for them. They say, go over here,
(27:06):
and I guess maybe that's why some of those are
building up around. They got seventy three signatures and submitted
a formal petition to the City of Fresno to put
a stop to it. Yeah, but they have to. This
is the last ditch effort. We lose our businesses or
we put a stop to this. Now they had an idea.
(27:27):
They said, we got empty land in the southwest, huge
one thousand area tracks, just barren land. Put something out there,
fifteen hundred beds, hot and cold, running water, food supply.
Mister russ Omni of the Blackstone Merchant Association said, focus
on long term care, not just temporary fixes. He said,
these homeless today don't want to be housed. They're drug addicts,
(27:49):
are mentally ill. They don't want to be housed. So
I said, why not find safe zones. We can put
them in with a wraparound services and actually homeless advocates. Yeah,
it's like I say, with like do Sheriff Chow make
some tent cities, baloney sandwiches. I get them some better
than baloney. We can do that, right. We had twenty
(28:11):
three billion. Oh, we don't know where that went, he said,
according to the Black Soil Merchant Association. And they're not
looking for confrontation. They want to work for a plan
that works for everybody. Yeah, well, that's actually what it's
going to take. It's gonna take something like that. This
(28:31):
is it's not fair. It's not fair to businesses. It's
not fair to families that are getting kids out of
their cars. It's not fair to everybody at the that
pays rent at the mall. Yeah. Man, it truly truly affects.
And we've all seen it. We've seen the slow spread.
(28:52):
And if you've lived here long enough, you were like,
I remember when it was fine down at Manchester. Yeah,
and it just slowly, slowly spreads to well now you
basically see it. You see it everywhere. Well, I guess
we need to get some elected officials that can get
in there and change it. Talk show hosts can't change it.
(29:15):
Voters can change it. You can change it. I can
change it as a voter with my one vote. Well,
who's running this is the Trebortary show on the Valley's
Power Talk. Who's finding a run next year for city
council seats are going to be on the ballot. Wouldn't
that be great if we could get them all conservative
and get the city back on track. Yeah, maybe not. Well,
(29:39):
if the truth could get out there. I tell you
most people in Fresno, I don't care what district you're in,
I would think most of them agree that, Hey, no,
we don't want your boys to play in girls' sports.
We want you to pay less for guests. We want
your kids if they don't want to go into college,
and they'll go in their hands and got a great
job out here in the oil field. Let's get the
(30:02):
word out there, Let's get the right people to go.
And it doesn't like too many Republicans are sitting here.
According to this article, District one West Reresno, Perea eligible
for a second term. She's going to the State Assembly.
Let's see Rob Fuayntus has filed to run there. He's
a State Center, Community College district trustee and a federal prosecutor.
Rob Fuayntus, we need to find out what he's about here.
(30:24):
Perea staffer Myra Kampa filed to run and Praie is
gonna endorse her. District free Southwest Tresne Downtown Miguel Areas
is turned out. Yeah, let's see who's gonna run their
assemblyman Jauuina Rambla is gonna run. Go go from the
Assembly to city council. Also prison nified trustee Keisha Thomas,
(30:46):
Good luck you, liar on race. The fact that this
woman is still school board trustee after her vicious lie
with coach a Rex and that he called her son
the N word. Why is she still a trustee? Why
is Yeah? It was probably my president of high school.
That's so messed up. You got liars on the board.
(31:06):
We got to make sure the right knows we don't
need a liar on the city council. District Fiz South
East Rosnoe Brandon Vang. He won the special election to
fill the remainder of the term vacated by Louis Chavez.
He went to the Board of Supervisors. He finds a
run for the seat again. Nobody stepped out the challenge.
District seven Central East Rosnoe Nelson, I am not a crook.
(31:28):
Esparsa has turned out he's going to run for the
state Senate. Look look who's having Drakes, Scott Wiener and
Nelson Esparsa. Nov Gerham, former a Sparsa staffer at city Hall,
recent low grad at UC Davis, followed to run. In
his campaigning for the Sparsa seat. They train him underneath them.
(31:50):
When I leave, you step in nov so is Ariana Martinez,
lot community activists who worked for areas at city Hall. Boy,
a lot of leftists. Come on on Presno County GOP.
Where are they? Let's get some people in here. I
know it's a tough gig to sit there and let
some of these crazies yell at you up there on
the dayas it's it's not real appealing, but it would
(32:15):
be a sacrifice that's made a j rossomni h. He's
the black Saill merchant guy I was just talking about.
He's seems like he's a sensible guy there. He might
be good to replace as Sparsa. Two board of supervisor
seats are going to be opened. Bryan Pacheco running for
his fourth He's one. That's twenty fourteen. No body filed there.
(32:36):
District four, which is southeast Southeast Southwest southeast Reso county
parts of southeast City of Fresno. Buddy Mendez running for
his fourth term. He won back in twenty fourteen. Peopleated,
I know. Let's see Daniel Para Fowler Parlier, Mayo Alma
Bertrand filed to run as well. That looks like they're
(32:58):
against uh Buddy man and does James Cuss running? But
so's Mike Carbassi, Fresno City council member for the county
Clerk Registrar of Voters. Now, if Carbasi wins, they have
to give up his city council seat, and he was
in here talking about it the other day. Let's see
here Congressman McClintock District five, his tenth term. He was
(33:22):
first elected in two thousand and eight. Michael Barkley of
Mantiqua running again. He's a guy that McClintock trounts two
times in a row. An engineer Michael Masuda's running, and
an educator Angelina Sigala. They're in District five against McClintock.
Other Democrats District thirteen, Adam Gray, John d'Arte. He's not
(33:44):
there anymore, unlikely going to run a lot of ads
against Gray already popping up, just like Valladeo Duarte has
not filed a run again. Series Mayor Javier Lopez, a Republican,
is the most serious vallenger there against Adam Gray, So
we'll have to reach out to Mayor Lopez. Valadeo District
(34:06):
twenty two. Rudy salis gonna try it again. He lost
to Valdeo in twenty twenty two and twenty twenty four.
Looks like Vicel Unified Trustee College of the Sequoias Professor
Randy Viegas Democratic Vicelia also filed a run against Valadeo.
Vince Fong won the special election. He doesn't have a
challenge there as well. Jim Costa one challenger is expected. Well,
(34:32):
there's a long list. Looks like Esmuel Dasoria as Sparza
going to run to Secede Ana Cavalio for Senate District
fourteen there in merced All right, a lot of action
going on. We'll see Pereos. She's gonna run the Similey
District thirty one against all the building healthy community Ceo
(34:54):
Sandras salid On. Yeah, the burnt Town George Floyd woman,
we got us, We got us a lot of radicals.
Man I don't hear a whole lot of Republicans in there,
conservative things that popped up. We something's got to happen, guys.
We just turned the county red in the in the election,
the landslide Trump had, So where's that? Swell Man?
Speaker 2 (35:17):
Assistant Trevor Kerry Show on the Valley's Power Talk