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unidentified
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More than a hundred people in China and new cases have been confirmed around the world. | |
So you don't want to frighten the American public. | ||
unidentified
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France and South Korea have also got evacuation plans. | |
But you need to prepare for and assume. | ||
Broadly warning Americans to avoid all non-essential travel to China. | ||
This is going to be a real serious problem. | ||
unidentified
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France, Australia, Canada, the US, Singapore, Cambodia, Vietnam, the list goes on. | |
Health officials are investigating more than 100 possible cases in the US. | ||
Germany, a man has contracted the virus. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
Japan, where a bus driver contracted the virus. | ||
Coronavirus has killed more than 100 people there and infected more than 4,500. | ||
We have to prepare for the worst, always. | ||
Because if you don't, and the worst happens... War Room. | ||
unidentified
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Pandemic. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Okay, it's Thursday, the 6th of May, the Year of Our Lord 2021. | ||
You're in the war room live from the nation's capital on the John Frederick radio network on real America's voice dish channel 219 Comcast 113 and of course on Roku Pluto all those platforms and in Mandarin to the diaspora the Chinese people On g-news and GTV and later in the day blown through the firewall so that Lao Bajing the deplorables of China can Get the word from folks that are on their side of the football in trying to make sure that they win their freedom from the International criminal organization is the Chinese | ||
Communist Party now with wait for it almost 51 million downloads in the podcast Yes, at a clip at about 2 million a week. | ||
unidentified
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Oops. | |
So great. | ||
Okay. | ||
Remember, that's the fifth type of distribution. | ||
I want to thank all of our distribution partners. | ||
We're very honored to have in the house. | ||
We want to spend time going back over the Elise Stefanik. | ||
Blockbuster interview we did today, but we've got other wood to chop. | ||
We've got the one and only Nigel Farage in studio, Boris Epstein in studio, Maureen Bannon on Skype as our co-host. | ||
Nigel, I want to cut right to it. | ||
You warned us. | ||
You warned us years ago. | ||
About this whole mess, and then this year when it started coming up during the COVID situation, you warned us about mail-in ballots. | ||
And you said this is going to be a disaster, you guys are going to be fighting about this for years to come, and now you're in the United States, we're going to talk about your tour, but this was a called shot from your experience in Europe. | ||
Yet Tony Blair started it, that great globalist. | ||
He began back in 2001. | ||
He opened up the door to mail-in ballots without any proof of identification whatsoever. | ||
You could just ring a number and say, oh, there are eight of us living here. | ||
Please send us eight mail-in ballots. | ||
We've had 20 years of it, and we've had person after person go to prison. | ||
The truth is thousands should have gone to prison over this. | ||
There is no secure way of doing mail-in ballots. | ||
And Steve, as we speak, as we speak, The London mayoral elections are taking place today. | ||
I say taking place today. | ||
They were finished three and a half weeks ago. | ||
Because three and a half weeks ago, the mail-in ballots went out. | ||
And I'll bet you, when we see the scores on the doors in the next couple of days, 40% of the vote will have been done by post. | ||
And in many of those communities in East London, and I'm talking about Muslim communities, where the women all get signed up for the postal vote, I don't expect many of them ever even see it. | ||
Time after time I said last year you know if America allows this to happen it'll be a disaster. | ||
On the 4th of August last year on your show I said what would happen I said Trump would win on the day but by three days later the result would be overturned and let's just for one moment reflect on this. | ||
The French don't get much right in life. | ||
unidentified
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But one thing... Didn't take long there, did it? | |
Well, you see, funny enough... And his name is Farage, too. | ||
Well, funny enough, there's been a bit of a naval mini-war going on around New Jersey, which we might talk about in a moment. | ||
You've deployed the frigates? | ||
For once, Boris Johnson has actually stood up and done the right thing. | ||
He sent the Royal Navy in, but of course it's polling day. | ||
I had a lovely report of an elderly woman going into vote this morning to say, Which is to shoot the Friendship Party. | ||
I think Boris has taken that today. | ||
But back to France, who, as I say, apart from lunch, don't do a lot right. | ||
And they have looked at this system and they've abolished it completely because they know it doesn't work. | ||
And over the last couple of weeks, I've been in the States. | ||
I've met Republicans, Conservatives who say, oh, well, if the left are really good, Harvesting ballots, but perhaps we should become good at harvesting ballots. | ||
No, no No, you will never ever win in this contest because you won't get conservative minded people to go out and cheat en masse They won't do it But of course those on the left who believe they're morally superior to us are prepared to do anything to achieve their goals On 4 August, you sat in here and Rahim and Bill McGinley in July started this paper that came out, this report called the Transition Integrity Project, where they basically told us what they were going to do. | ||
You're going to have the red mirage that Trump is going to win on Election Day, but two weeks later, Biden will be president. | ||
Did you believe at that time? | ||
That we would be in May of the following year and now we're in a dogfight. | ||
The Justice Department's dropping a letter on the folks in Arizona. | ||
This thing is ramping up in intensity every day and the MAGA people are not going to back down. | ||
Did you think it would play this far out into 2021 unresolved? | ||
It doesn't particularly surprise me at all. | ||
I mean, you know, we've been having endless arguments over this. | ||
I fought court cases over this. | ||
The trouble is, so much of the evidence around this is circumstantial. | ||
Actually proving fraud is not an easy thing to do. | ||
Like, would an audit be helpful, you think? | ||
Well, look, I think what's... Well, all the... I mean, the audit may just confirm that ballot harvesting on an industrial scale was going on. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
But look, the fact that it's... The fact the ballot... The fact the audit is happening is a very good, positive thing. | ||
And let's hope Let's hope. | ||
If we get some nice surprises, that can be rolled out elsewhere. | ||
And it's not just about the audit, right? | ||
It's the re-canvas. | ||
To your point about ballot harvesting, it's the canvas that will help determine whether there's a home somewhere in Maricopa County with 15 people living in it, and whether that's really true. | ||
Or one's an empty lot. | ||
Yeah, and what it may also reveal is, well, somebody knocked on my door and said I had to give it to them. | ||
Because that's what happens more than anything. | ||
I've watched this. | ||
I watched this in Manchester, right? | ||
I watched the postman going down the street delivering the postal ballots and the same trade union official who six months earlier had said to Mrs Smith, At your age, wouldn't it be easier to sign up for a postal vote? | ||
The same trade unionists going back to Mithis Smith's door and saying, I've come to collect your ballot. | ||
It's almost a form of intimidation. | ||
I've come to collect your ballot. | ||
It doesn't work at any level. | ||
Yeah, sure, you've got false ballots, but there's also this element of intimidation on the doorstep. | ||
The only way to vote safely is in the privacy of a polling booth. | ||
Oh, and by the way, Steve, while we're at it, You don't need machines or computers to count votes. | ||
Do you know what you do? | ||
You count them and put them in bundles. | ||
And you can see the size of the bundles is all the same. | ||
Do you know something? | ||
It works! | ||
Get rid of all of it. | ||
You don't need any of it. | ||
We've got to pull the machine. | ||
And listen, we're not machine guys about going after it. | ||
But in Arizona yesterday, After the audit team had to go back to Maricopa County, now we found out the situation with the routers, but what's most stunning, the password for the administrative part, they put that in the last two lines of the letter. | ||
They never came forward with anything. | ||
That is so shocking to me. | ||
It's explosive. | ||
And you think, with all the controversy, that Maricopa County would have been ahead of this, and say, hey look, here's what we got, here's what we don't have. | ||
Okay, so that's sort of the effect. | ||
Let's go to the cause. | ||
How is it possible that the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, who are in charge of their election, don't have a password to their own election machines? | ||
That is like me not having a key to my house, okay? | ||
Just to boil it down for folks at home. | ||
That is like somebody who's supposed to go into their home, know everything that's going on there, keep it secure, not having a key. | ||
And what is the answer? | ||
That they turned over the key to the House to Dominion. | ||
And I'm not using the term Dominion as this big spooky thing. | ||
I've never done that since we started talking about this election after November 3rd. | ||
I hadn't done it in the run-up to it. | ||
I've said that the machines are a free option. | ||
But if now the fact is that the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, which is the only county in Arizona, the largest county in Arizona, to earn over its election to Dominion, if they did it so fully as to give up the password, what is truly going... | ||
Who's in charge? | ||
That's a stunning thing. | ||
Who's in charge? | ||
Well, look, let's hope lessons are learned from this and let's hope that the Republican Party do not give an inch on this and get rid of this ludicrous mentality that somehow next time round they're going to beat Bolland at this game. | ||
It won't work. | ||
I've got to ask you something. | ||
You have been one man alone in your standing up for the United Kingdom to get their sovereignty back, right? | ||
And for many, many years you were dismissed and ridiculed and you've seen the mailed fist of a centralized government of what the party of Davos and what the World Economic Forum, through the control of Brussels, how they treat people. | ||
The Justice Department yesterday sends a letter that is very intimidating, implying criminal possibilities for people that are doing the canvassing, etc., but certainly meant as a predicate to go into federal court and shut this whole thing down for a group of people who are not worried about it. | ||
Are you concerned? | ||
And do you see it in the United Kingdom? | ||
I don't, but you're closer to it. | ||
This is a weaponization now, not a politicization. | ||
Biden's Justice Department, and this had to come from a senior level at the White House to approve this, had to, are now weaponizing the Justice Department. | ||
This is like a banana republic now, weapon either way against Rudy Giuliani or now for the people of Arizona. | ||
We've had it. | ||
I've suffered with the Electoral Commission. | ||
So I've suffered with regulators way overstepping the mark and Picking on me time and time and time again. | ||
I have to say to date. | ||
I've not really seen our judiciary Mobilized and weaponized in the same way and I say to people in America, you know If you don't have a genuinely independent judiciary, you don't have a free country. | ||
So it's pretty serious stuff. | ||
And what about law enforcement, right? | ||
The M.I. | ||
fill in the number. | ||
Could you imagine that? | ||
Could you imagine an entity like that getting in? | ||
Because in this country, people think, you know, a lot of three-letter agency. | ||
But the DOJ runs the FBI. | ||
So somebody gets a letter from the DOJ, they're getting it from an entity Under which, a part of which, is the Federal Bureau of Investigation. | ||
Could you imagine something like that happening in the UK? | ||
No, do you know what? | ||
Actually, I couldn't. | ||
I think at the moment, thank goodness, our judiciary is in good shape. | ||
And also, I think this, the Brexit victory and the destruction of socialism within the UK in the course of the last couple of years, puts us actually in a very, very good place. | ||
So, I'm not complacent about where we are, but I'm feeling pretty good about it. | ||
I want to go to, by the way, about that letter, the subtext was the intimidation of the people on the canvassing. | ||
We kept saying the canvassing here is, nobody's talking about that, but they're implying that if you're part of this canvassing and we can prove that you intimidated voters or brought up the secrecy of the vote, right, that you're in trouble. | ||
I want to go, because we've got more in the next segment we want to get to. | ||
In the United States, you came over here and I want you to tell our audience about the first couple of meetings you had in Florida and other places with how depressed people were and what you had to say. | ||
I've had a sense of this, Steve. | ||
You know, I've been involved with America for almost 40 years through work and through politics. | ||
I know a lot of people and so many conservatives are bewildered that Trump got 75 million votes and somehow they lost. | ||
Concerned at what's happening in the cities, the huge divisions occurring between black and white and being encouraged. | ||
Very worried about some of the constitutional ideas that the Dems want to push, you know, packing the court, etc. | ||
And I sensed there was almost a sort of disillusionment creeping in that it's all a disaster. | ||
The end is nigh. | ||
There's nothing we can do. | ||
And so I went to Amelia Island with Freedom Works. | ||
You have any sort of breakout weekends with a lot of people and I gave this message. | ||
Very simple message. | ||
We won the Brexit vote. | ||
The globalist establishment tried to stop us. | ||
We had a date to leave. | ||
March 29th. | ||
We didn't leave on that date. | ||
We woke up on March 30th. | ||
We were still in. | ||
And do you know what? | ||
We still, despite insuperable odds, came back and won. | ||
And we did it because we had a people's army on the ground and a positive mentality. | ||
And I actually think with the border crisis and everything else, if we can overcome those odds and get Brexit, you can come back, smash the midterms and get back in the White House in 24. | ||
And Congress of the women said to me, thank you, you've cheered me up. | ||
We were feeling very down. | ||
And it's only if we get to the bottom of what happened on both November 3rd and with the Wuhan China virus. | ||
Because the China Communist Party virus. | ||
Because if our people don't have answers, that positivity you talk about Nigel, that confidence and that power and strength, they're going to be sapped. | ||
They need information. | ||
They are thirsty for knowledge of what truly happened. | ||
And that is why I'm convinced, a big part of the reason why the Democrats, including the DOJ, are so intent on stopping that knowledge. | ||
Well, I tell you what, I tell you what, the other thing they must do is have an answer to the border crisis, because every state's becoming a border state. | ||
Well, you saw this, we're going to get into this, this is the migrant crisis of 2015, which changed politics in all of Europe, and I think it's going to change politics here. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
Nigel Farage has got his social schedule set up that we have one more segment with him in-house, so we're going to take full advantage of it. | ||
Nigel Farage, Boris Epstein. | ||
Boy, I get a murderer's row here today. | ||
In studio. | ||
Captain Bannon remote. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
We're going to return in The War Room in just a moment. | ||
unidentified
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War Room, pandemic, with Stephen K. Banner. | |
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Okay, the DNC came out yesterday. | ||
They've got 20 people besides the President of the United States to do an op-o-wan. | ||
One of them, believe it or not, was Mike Lindell. | ||
Tucker Carlson and Mike Lindell were the two kind of, I think, unconventional guys they threw into that mix. | ||
It's the Pillows. | ||
It's the Pillows. | ||
Mike Lindell has been out in Arizona. | ||
He's all over fighting for this to make sure he gets to the bottom on November 3rd. | ||
We're very proud to be part of the MyPillow family. | ||
Go to MyPillow.com right now. | ||
Promo code WAROOM. | ||
You get up to 66% discounts on many goods, but sales on two for one Giza sheets, and of course 40% off the slippers and moccasins. | ||
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Now, I don't want to take up Nigel Farage's time talking about the grubbiness of domestic politics, but since CNN plays in the background, MSNBC, they literally are in meltdown. | ||
unidentified
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Obsessed. | |
Obsessed. | ||
The War Room this morning, when they put the War Room logo up and they got CNN's over top of it so you don't have to see our logo. | ||
You know somebody's over there trying to measure. | ||
Blow it up! | ||
You do notice that my face is never on there. | ||
It's always stephanic. | ||
But I would start with you and I want to go to Nigel. | ||
This whole issue with Cheney, right? | ||
And how they're now trying to promote her. | ||
Is like the greatest politician in the world is somebody bringing the country together where, I mean, this is about a controlled opposition. | ||
So walk through what they're trying to do. | ||
They're going after Stefanik in the worst way possible to try to beat her down before they have this historic vote next week. | ||
If aliens came to America 15 years ago, okay, touched down, checked it out, and then rolled out and came back, they would be so shocked that the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, and other mainstream media and Democrats treating Liz Cheney As if she's the second coming. | ||
Liz Cheney. | ||
These are the people who have hated the Cheney. | ||
They treated the Cheney, Darth Vader, the whole thing, they called her what. | ||
But they are all so triggered by Donald J. Trump. | ||
So obsessed with trying to eradicate MAGA. | ||
This is the, again we talk about this a lot, this is the unit party. | ||
The establishment of the left, combined with the establishment from the right, yes, Club for Growth, yes, Heritage, who are trying to push back, but they're failing. | ||
Liz Cheney won her last vote, what, two and a half months ago, by actually a pretty wide margin, to stay as conference chair. | ||
And, you know, people thought maybe it's done, but she chose to double down, she chose to keep going, and MAGA has had enough. | ||
And Kevin McCarthy heard it loud and clear. | ||
Steve Scalise heard it loud and clear. | ||
And now we have Elise Stefanik. | ||
She's stepping up. | ||
Carly Fiorina's on CNN screaming, this is sexist. | ||
unidentified
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Hello! | |
And calling her a liberal. | ||
Hello! | ||
Elise Stefanik is a strong, young woman with political and policy chops who's going to be our next conference chair, and I'm proud of that. | ||
The reason that CNN and MSNBC are pushing it, because they understand that the Cheney model and the Romney model can't win national elections anymore. | ||
Right, ever. | ||
Ever. | ||
Gotta tell the story, MSNBC, Morning Joe, you're in Jackson, introducing Trump in 16, and they're sitting there going, and Joe Scarborough's saying, this shows you're banned and doesn't know what he's doing, so clueless. | ||
They got a British guy in Jackson, and we're playing to the Pensacola audience. | ||
We know we gotta, in the panhandle, we gotta get to 90%. | ||
He's there and the place is going crazy. | ||
Why? | ||
This is about working class people. | ||
It's about a new alignment. | ||
The new realignment. | ||
That Nigel Farage speaks to them because they understand Brexit and the same type of person in the Midlands, the working class, that caused Brexit. | ||
They came in late at night. | ||
You know that. | ||
Stefanik knows that. | ||
Walk us through, where do you think, why are they attacking her so relentlessly by the Cheney Blair crowd? | ||
Because they are not a media outlet. | ||
They are a political organization. | ||
They've been overtly political. | ||
You know, ever since 2016. | ||
And the politics they're playing actually is quite clever politics. | ||
Because what they want is a nice, soft, gentle opposition. | ||
A party that can never win. | ||
And I saw this, by the way, in Brussels. | ||
I saw. | ||
Farage was this terrible monster figure. | ||
I mean, the demon from hell. | ||
You know, and I was worse, I think, than many 1930s fascist leaders as far as they were concerned. | ||
But they cosied up. | ||
The new Oswald Mosley. | ||
Oh yeah, absolutely. | ||
But they cosied up to the soft sceptics. | ||
So the soft Eurosceptics actually got favoured status in Brussels because they wanted the world to see there was an opposition. | ||
What they didn't want the world to see was an abolitionist. | ||
So I've seen this kind of game played before. | ||
That's what CNN and the others are up to. | ||
But you know what? | ||
It isn't going to make any difference. | ||
Because as you say, the old divides of left to right are gone. | ||
John Howard, who won four elections in Australia, as a great conservative leader, said to me, you know, conservative parties in the Western world can only win with blue collar support. | ||
Romney could not get blue collar support. | ||
Cheney will never get blue collar support. | ||
If you look at the map, and I've been thinking about this a lot, because look at 16, look at 20, if you look at the map, I think what's going to happen long term is, and I don't want people in the chatroom to come to my house for saying this, I think it's likely Texas becomes purple. | ||
And I think Arizona's likely already purple. | ||
But what we're going to see is that whole northern belt. | ||
We're going maybe, maybe as far as Oregon, but definitely starting right east of it, all the way across the country. | ||
Michigan is going to be long-term red, Ohio long-term red, Pennsylvania long-term red, and you heard it here. | ||
Elise Stefanik from New York, next conference chair of the GOP, New York with everybody leaving the city, and upstate New York becoming more powerful, long-term you could see New York turning red. | ||
And that is the repositioning of the electoral map in the United States. | ||
Hang on one second. | ||
One caveat to that. | ||
The demographic change that CNN and everybody says, that is in our favor. | ||
In the Rio Grande Valley, remember, African American families, Hispanic families are naturally very conservative, family oriented. | ||
When you get the economics right, with populist economics and protectionism, right? | ||
When you bring those jobs back, our sovereignty with a wall and security, and the jobs, working class Hispanics, you saw that in the Rio Grande Valley, historic turnout for Trump. | ||
We are going to win a majority of the Hispanic vote, working class and middle class, because culturally we're on the right side, same with African Americans. | ||
We just got to get the economics right, and that means cutting off The Cheney, Romney, Wall Street donor class. | ||
We've got to align around these policies. | ||
What you did, the Brexit vote, as Brexit was in 16, that was the forerunner for the vote. | ||
That's why I said, hey, we've got momentum now. | ||
What happened in Brexit, because it was Labour voters. | ||
The north of England, the north of England was always Labour. | ||
It's been Labour since the First World War in every single election. | ||
Well, you know what? | ||
Large parts of it now are barely Labour at all and it was these issues around patriotism, these issues about border controls, these issues about Brexit and these issues actually about giving ordinary people a break in life. | ||
The reason the Tories have such a huge majority today is because Dominic Cummings also understood that in this last thing and the problem I see with the Tories right now is the difference between the Singapore on the Thames, the awfully awfully crowd Right. | ||
And more working class that want to bring manufacturing jobs back to the United Kingdom, etc. | ||
So we're going to play through this. | ||
OK, you're here in the United States. | ||
You're on a tour. | ||
You're with the guys at Freedomworks, the men and women over there. | ||
Fantastic. | ||
We've got a couple of minutes. | ||
You've got to walk through exactly what you're doing, because I know you're going to go to different locations. | ||
People want access to the wisdom and wit of Nigel Farage. | ||
Well, they can do that. | ||
America's Come Back 2021 dot com. | ||
And they can have a look at that and see the public events I'm doing. | ||
I'm doing several next week. | ||
America's Comeback 2021. | ||
I like that. | ||
I like the name. | ||
I like that. | ||
It's good branding, isn't it? | ||
So we're doing that. | ||
We're doing events all over the place. | ||
The key purpose, as I said, is to rally the troops to say, don't get down, don't get mad, get even. | ||
You've got to start planning and preparing and getting ready for these big battles in the midterms. | ||
Because they're coming up next year and I'm finding people, they love that message that Brexit looked lost but we got it back. | ||
They worry America's been lost but I'm optimistic, I believe that they can get it back and I should go out and do that between now and the end of the month. | ||
Are there going to be opportunities for people in this audience to go to public places and hear you speak? | ||
Yes, if you look at that website, you can see public events where they can come, sit in a crowd, ask questions. | ||
I'll shake their hand afterwards. | ||
I can't promise to have a beer with every single one of them, but I'll do my best. | ||
And the British sartorial style at its best. | ||
So for those on the radio, I can guarantee you that. | ||
You have to, by the way, when I went over in 13 and then in early 14 and followed around Nigel Farage as you went around these things, you have not lived if you love politics. | ||
Until you've heard Nigel Farage take the stage. | ||
First off, he'll have a couple of pints beforehand. | ||
I walk in, he's having a couple of pints. | ||
I'm usually nervous, pacing, as my comms director knows. | ||
unidentified
|
He's having a couple of pints. | |
A couple of Guinnesses, he walks on, no notes, and it's unbelievable. | ||
Yeah, but it's easy. | ||
You see, the couple of pints mean the nerves have gone. | ||
And you don't need notes, because if you believe in this stuff, you're speaking from the heart, you're saying what you really think, and you know what? | ||
People actually connect with that. | ||
And these staged politicians who get up and give these scripted speeches, I wouldn't travel to the end of the street to listen to anybody giving me a scripted speech. | ||
I want to see a real person, and I can like him, I can dislike him, but it's a real person. | ||
What would be your advice, we've got about a minute, what would be your advice to MAGA now about what MAGA should be focused on and what they should do? | ||
The border crisis is the issue in my opinion. | ||
It's the issue, and you touched on 2015 a moment ago when Mrs. Merkel opened the doors. | ||
The migrant crisis. | ||
Yep, the migrant crisis coming across the Med. | ||
It completely reshaped the Brexit debate. | ||
It allowed us not just to get Brexit, we've destroyed the Socialist Labour Party because you see, you know, the Socialists living in big houses in the city. | ||
They think open doors are absolutely marvelous, darling. | ||
And whereas their working class voters don't. | ||
That, to me, that is you with some optimism and with some discipline. | ||
And lastly, with all these different conservative groups, I know there are lots of egos out there. | ||
They've got to start working together because you know what? | ||
The left do. | ||
Mo, you've got 30 seconds for Nigel Farage. | ||
What do you got for us? | ||
I was just going to say that Elise Stefanik, the American people can relate to her. | ||
Like she said this morning, she was the first one in her family to go to college. | ||
Many American people cannot relate to Liz Cheney and the political elite, so Liz Cheney needs to be ousted immediately. | ||
Boy, you're hardcore. | ||
Okay, one last thing. | ||
You're getting some work out of her. | ||
Our Comms Director's actually got this. | ||
You're getting some work out of her? | ||
I poached her. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, I poached her. | |
I poached her. | ||
I poached her. | ||
I think she thought, Steve, she thought I'd be easier than you. | ||
She's learning different. | ||
You know, she was the first to ever get me on TV, by the way. | ||
unidentified
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Ever! | |
In 2008. | ||
She's legendary. | ||
She's legendary. | ||
My bark is a lot worse than my bite. | ||
I think your bite's a lot worse. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
unidentified
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The epidemic is a demon, and we cannot let this demon hide. | |
War Room. | ||
unidentified
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Pandemic. | |
We'll be back in the War Room in a moment. | ||
War Room, Pandemic, with Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room, Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Okay, welcome back to the War Room. | ||
We're going to get into Taiwan. | ||
Frank Gaffney is going to join us in a little while. | ||
The Wuhan, as Boris said in the last segment, until we get to the bottom of the Wuhan lab, the CCP's involvement in this virus, and to November 3rd, we can't move forward. | ||
For this audience, we understand some people think it's a bioweapon, some people think it's a hoax. | ||
And people are everywhere in between, okay? | ||
One thing we do know, you have a personal responsibility you've got to take to boost your own immune system. | ||
Go to warddefense.com, go there today, get the free vitamin D3 and the zinc, pay shipping and handling, and get access to information about your immune system and what else you can do. | ||
So make sure you go there today, take action. | ||
This is about human agency. | ||
It's all on your plate. | ||
This is something you can decide and you can do. | ||
WardenDefense.com. | ||
Get the Vitamin D3 and the Zinc free shipping and handling. | ||
Okay, we're trying to get, we've got a couple of, Frank Gaffney is going to join us. | ||
We're trying to get this audience ahead of the curve. | ||
We've talked about this now for over a month. | ||
Of course, The Economist, number one magazine in the world for the elite. | ||
Finally catch up with us. | ||
It's the most dangerous place on earth. | ||
Taiwan. | ||
OK, this is going to be a massive problem. | ||
And this is as much as we'd love and support the freedom of the Chinese people. | ||
People in the United States got to understand it's that. | ||
But it's much more. | ||
It's about this economy. | ||
It's about advanced chip design. | ||
And the Chinese Communist Party have got us right. | ||
Taiwan is Silicon Valley. | ||
West of Gaffney on later. | ||
We're trying to get Presley Stutz. | ||
From South Carolina. | ||
He's the chairman of the United Patriots Alliance. | ||
He's one of the guys in there. | ||
I guess they're fighting McKissick and the establishment. | ||
There's a huge range war going on in South Carolina. | ||
A convention coming up. | ||
Some lawsuits dropping today. | ||
But, Boris, you went around the country. | ||
Here's either Georgia, Arizona, Michigan. | ||
We've got Marilyn Todd from New Hampshire. | ||
You've got these patriots that are fighting, and here's what they're fighting about right now. | ||
They're not just going to be shined on. | ||
About November 3rd, right? | ||
And now, and this is the blockbuster, people should understand what's been found already in Arizona, in the audit. | ||
For somebody who's out there from the day you showed up, we're 200,000 votes behind. | ||
And Fox called it at nine o'clock two nights before. | ||
So you kind of feel kind of foolish. | ||
Hey, Fox, their decision desk must know something, right? | ||
Particularly calling it that early. | ||
That was my assumption was that they were dead wrong, to be honest. | ||
It was the whole time. | ||
I thought so too. | ||
I was shocked. | ||
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As soon as they called it. | |
We had Barris. | ||
We had our own pollster. | ||
And I said, what are we missing here? | ||
He goes, I don't know. | ||
I have no idea what they're doing. | ||
But when Fox calls it that early and you're 200,000 votes down. | ||
But my thought when they called it was that either, I did a double take, either A, they made a mistake, or B, sadly, and I wish I didn't think that, I wish it didn't turn out, the fix isn't. | ||
That Murdoch, whoever else, made a bet that this is the way, after they're done counting, this is the way this election is going to go, and, you know, let's get out in front of it early. | ||
But when we got to Arizona, it was so clear that the voting system was a mess, that I actually did believe that, but when they were actually done counting, President Trump Give me two minutes about the mess. | ||
We can't get Presley in so we're going to go to Frank Gaffney here and talk about Taiwan. | ||
Give me two minutes. | ||
When you got out there and said a mess, because I think that's what we're seeing and this is why you're seeing It started with Perkins Coy and these local NGOs, the 70 lawyers, Dominion getting nervous, or, I don't know, Dominion's been a power player, this kind of thing, and now all of a sudden Secretary of State drops in, and now they've brought in a weaponized Justice Department to shut this down. | ||
When you say mess, what do you mean? | ||
I thought Katie Hobbs was on top of things. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
And Doug Ducey, right? | ||
And by the way, people at home, signal not noise, it's bipartisan. | ||
That's the key issue. | ||
Mess. | ||
The fact that they were using markers to mark ballots? | ||
Okay. | ||
The media is telling us, oh, don't worry, that happens all the time. | ||
Just think as my five-year-old would, okay? | ||
If you want to mark something, and be specific, And not have it go all over the place. | ||
Do you use a marker? | ||
You don't use a marker. | ||
They were using markers in Arizona to mark ballots. | ||
Duplicate ballots, which means fixed ballots. | ||
No monitoring. | ||
Nobody knows how they looked at ballots that had an issue, a defect, and how they were fixed. | ||
Do they take? | ||
You know, I don't want to sit here and speculate, but we are being told that over 250,000 ballots were fixed, or duplicate ballots, which means something was wrong with the ballot, it didn't go through, it was fixed. | ||
We have no idea. | ||
Adjudicated. | ||
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Adjudicated. | |
We have no idea how that process was done. | ||
A mess. | ||
Observers on counting mail-in ballots, unclear, a mess. | ||
Mail balloting versus non-mail balloting in Maricopa? | ||
It literally, literally, the number is something like 80-85% mail to in-person balloting, okay? | ||
How can anybody, unless you're obviously a Democrat and this goes in your favor, and you expect to win every election from now until the coming of time, how can you be comfortable with that? | ||
We have an election in this country. | ||
Elections run up to an election date. | ||
And the fact that the mail balloting, unchecked mail balloting, where you have no idea where the ballots are going, you have no idea who's at home signing them, How can you be comfortable with them determining elections? | ||
Okay, press the app, okay, hang on for one second. | ||
I want to say too, I think from 1990 to 2016, the voting population of registered voters increased by one million in state of Arizona, which is a growing state. | ||
2016 to 2020, 800,000. | ||
800,000. | ||
Come on. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Stop it. | ||
Okay, first of all, Steve, that's totally normal. | ||
And he got 80 million votes! | ||
Get to Frank Gaffney in a few minutes. | ||
I want to bring in Presley Stutz. | ||
He's chairman of the United Patriots Alliance in South Carolina. | ||
Filed a big lawsuit. | ||
Presley, what's your beef down there? | ||
What's the problem in South Carolina? | ||
I know the party's fighting. | ||
There's another civil war down there. | ||
What's going on and why did you file suit today, sir? | ||
unidentified
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Hey, Steve. | |
Thanks for having me on. | ||
Listen, for years, the South Carolina GOP has failed to abide by their rules. | ||
They interpret the rules for their own benefit. | ||
They work on many different ways to disenfranchise all of the delegates, to disenfranchise those participating, and we've had enough. | ||
And so we filed a lawsuit today, and the latest... I'm getting a bad echo here on my phone, I don't know why. | ||
We can hear you perfectly. | ||
Just keep rolling. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
Yeah, keep rolling. | ||
Okay. | ||
Sure. | ||
Yeah, that's much better. | ||
Well, a little bit of an echo, but the bottom line is they changed, by statute of the state of South Carolina and by South Carolina Party rule, they are supposed to have a convention in May at a location, a singular location. | ||
What they did, they met a couple, about a week or so ago, I think they saw Utah. | ||
I think they saw Mitt Romney, how he was being received, correct? | ||
Is that what they're afraid the MAGA people are going to sit there and go, hey, we're not digging this, and they may have a boo or two. | ||
They may not get a standing ovation. | ||
I think they saw Utah, I think they saw Mitt Romney, how he was being received, correct? | ||
Is that what they're afraid is the MAGA people are going to sit there and go, hey, we're not digging this, and they may have a boo or two, and they may not get a standing ovation? | ||
Is that what they're nervous about? | ||
unidentified
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I think it's that, but also they are clawing, this is a fight to the death, kind of like King Kong or Godzilla. | |
They are fighting to the death to hold on to their power. | ||
There's a lot of money that flows through this party, a lot of, you know, hands are greased, a number of things are happening, you know, within this party, and people just do not want to give up their power. | ||
And that's what's going on, not only in South Carolina, I think we are the epicenter of what's going on right now. | ||
But this is happening all over the nation. | ||
And the Republican Party... Hey, Preston, this is Boris Epstein. | ||
Yes, Boris, go ahead. | ||
I have a quick question for you. | ||
Who would you consider to be the most powerful political name politician in South Carolina politics right now? | ||
Who's running the show? | ||
Well, as far as the local party... State officials, state elected officials, who's, you know, who is the person who's pushing the current state GOP chair? | ||
Who's pushing the current sort of establishment, you know, setup of the South Carolina GOP? | ||
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It's most likely Lindsey Graham and some of those others. | |
Lindsey has over $100 million in his own personal political action committee. | ||
And a lot of these people, Drew McKissick and several of the other party people, when Lindsey asked them to jump, they asked how high. | ||
And so... Would you call that crowd a MAGA crowd? | ||
Oh, no, no. | ||
They're not a MAGA crowd at all. | ||
In the MAGA crowd here, Boris, we are pissed off with what has happened in the November 2020 election. | ||
We're seeing the same kind of cheating happening here in South Carolina. | ||
You know, Paul Simon wrote a song back in the 70s called 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover. | ||
Well, the GOP has created 1,001 ways to cheat the delegates, and that's what's been going on here in South Carolina. | ||
And the people have had enough, and that's why we filed this lawsuit. | ||
We're pressed for time, but real quickly, the one or two things in the lawsuit. | ||
Why are you going to court, and what are you trying to accomplish? | ||
unidentified
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Well, the reason we're going to court is because we don't have any other remedy. | |
They won't listen to us. | ||
They won't talk to us. | ||
They won't return our emails. | ||
And so our only venue is the courts. | ||
What we're trying to accomplish is we're asking the judge to give us an injunction and that we would move this convention, that this convention would be moved back to follow the law and to follow the rules of the SCGOP, that we would have a convention in one location. | ||
They're trying to give us all types of excuses, but the excuses don't have water. | ||
They just don't want to put us all together. | ||
And maybe you're right. | ||
Maybe Drew McKissick doesn't want to get booed. | ||
But we're trying to hold them accountable. | ||
They have violated multiple rules over and over and over again. | ||
And they've disenfranchised the people. | ||
And the people have had enough. | ||
A question for you, and by the way, I completely echo your sentiment. | ||
I think people, MAGA crowd, Republicans, Conservatives across the country are sick and tired of being silenced, being muted, being quieted down, being told to sit down and shut up. | ||
Here's a question for you though, you know, Lin Wood is a very controversial figure, right? | ||
And he's made statements in the last six months which I absolutely was not comfortable with. | ||
And I've said that publicly and I'll say it again here, okay? | ||
Part of the key to being successful is to having the right vessels, having the right leadership, right? | ||
Is Lin Wood, with everything that comes with the baggage, is Lin Wood the right option for South Carolina going forward? | ||
It may not be the current state GOP chair. | ||
I don't know the situation down there inside and out, but it sounds like it's not the current option. | ||
But is Lin Wood the best option? | ||
unidentified
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Lin Wood is a disruptor. | |
He calls balls and strikes the way he sees them. | ||
He's much like Donald Trump in the way he disrupts the establishment status quo. | ||
We need that to happen in South Carolina. | ||
We looked at a few other people before we found Lin Wood. | ||
And they all said, well, if you can guarantee me I'll win, I'll jump in the race. | ||
I'm sorry, I don't need that kind of leadership from behind. | ||
Lin Wood has been willing to jump in the race. | ||
I understand he does make some controversial comments, but I'm going to tell you, he stands by his principles and he fights. | ||
And Lin Wood has said, I'm not here to run this party. | ||
I'm here to give this party back to the people. | ||
The people should be running the party. | ||
And one of the things that the people want to see is a whole cloth rewriting of the SGGOP rules to keep us all on a level playing field. | ||
And Linwood is willing to do that if he's elected. | ||
Presley, we've got to bounce, but tell people how they get access. | ||
We're going to put the lawsuits up in the live chat and push it out there. | ||
How do people get access to you? | ||
What's your social media? | ||
unidentified
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Our social media is unitedpatriotsalliance.com. | |
United Patriots with an S, alliance.com. | ||
You can go there, you can find us on Facebook as well. | ||
Presley, really appreciate you taking the time today. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, and we also have another initiative, and a big shout out goes to Jeff Davis, his wife Olga, myscgop.com. | |
That's an initiative that we have going on, and that's where we've been doing all of the Command Center work. | ||
On this specific project. | ||
Gentlemen, thanks for having me on. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Thanks so much. | ||
Presley, thank you. | ||
By the way, this is what happens when you get to PrecinctStrategy.com, when people start showing up and want to become precinct committeemen and start saying, hey, we want to be a part of this. | ||
Okay, short commercial break. | ||
Economist is now catching up with The War Room. | ||
Most dangerous place on earth? | ||
Taiwan. | ||
Frank Gaffney is going to explain why. | ||
He's been talking about it for months. | ||
In a moment. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Go to MyPillow.com. | ||
Promo code War Room. | ||
Do your shopping today. | ||
We're pressed for time. | ||
I can't do more of a read because we love this company. | ||
We love the products. | ||
Captain Ben, I'm getting blown up in the war room for cutting you off for two shows now. | ||
Back to back John Fredrickson war room. | ||
What do you got for us? | ||
I just want to say the more the left tries to tell us that this is a secure election, the more people are going to believe it's not and stand up and fight to get to the bottom of November 3rd. | ||
And if it was so secure, why are you trying to stop us from finding out every step of the way? | ||
It seems like every day. | ||
Every day the left is coming out with another thing to try and stop this audit from continuing in Arizona. | ||
And now it's not just the left. | ||
They've weaponized, not politicized, they've weaponized the Justice Department. | ||
For everybody in the live chat who wants to know about Navarro, he's been on a special project all week. | ||
I think we're going to have Peter Navarro back on the show tomorrow. | ||
He's been working on a special project. | ||
I've got to turn now to Frank Gaffney. | ||
Frank sent a letter, Committee on the Present Danger, China, ahead of things as usual. | ||
The Economist, number one magazine in the world. | ||
You've got to get it. | ||
You've got to read it. | ||
The most dangerous place on Earth on its cover, Taiwan. | ||
Frank Gaffney, co-founder of Committee on the Present Danger, China. | ||
You've been ahead of this. | ||
You and I have been talking about it for months. | ||
You finally got the letter and got it out, I think, in late April. | ||
Walk us through the letter. | ||
What did you say to drive this? | ||
And why is Taiwan, of all places, why is that the most dangerous place on Earth? | ||
It's the most dangerous place on Earth, I think, because the Chinese Communist Party, Steve, is intent on seizing it. | ||
They would prefer to get it without having to actually physically kinetically invade it, but they will seize it one way or the other. | ||
Their preference would be its surrender. | ||
And that's a problem on a number of different levels. | ||
As you say, the Committee on the Present Danger sent President Biden a letter with an attached white paper on the 26th of April essentially explaining what needs to be done to try to prevent the Chinese from taking this step. | ||
And they are seeking this important acquisition, partly because of a matter of longstanding Chinese Communist Party doctrine. | ||
You know, the Kuomintang retreated there when the Mainland fell to the Chinese communists, and ever since they've insisted it's part of China, they will get it back. | ||
But of late, and this is an important feature of the Economist article, and I think, by the way, the analysis was mostly right. | ||
I'm not sure the recommendations are as strong, but they did correctly say, as we did in our paper, part of the problem here | ||
The potential for terrible loss of life, the prospect indeed of maybe even a nuclear exchange over this island, the danger of losing more of the free world to the domineering ambitions of the Chinese Communist Party, but not least, the world's economy—not just ours, but literally the world's economy—is now critically dependent | ||
Upon TSMC semiconductors and chips manufactured in an enormous infrastructure that's been built up over the past few decades in Taiwan. | ||
We depend upon it to the point where we're not getting enough production out of there. | ||
And we're seeing American plants, even now, without the Chinese Communist Party mucking about, shutting down or slowing down their production, cutting back their hours, not producing I just want to get to this point and people understand how critical this is to your lifestyle. | ||
This is why you should care. | ||
If you don't care about freedom and supporting democracy and the Judeo-Christian West and what we stand for, our values, on your own practical TSMC, the advanced chip design, you can't, you're backed up on refrigerators, you're backed up on trucks and cars because there's a lack of chips right now. | ||
Just explain, why is this advanced chip manufacturing and R&D, how did it end up in Taiwan? | ||
Why they call this Silicon Valley West and why is it so vital to our economy? | ||
Well, it's a microcosm of the larger problem that we've been having mostly with the mainland. | ||
And you document this day in and day out. | ||
Clyde Prestowitz, among others, is one of the great country experts on this subject. | ||
We have allowed corporate America to think of itself not as an American institution, but as a globalist institution. | ||
And they have seen fit to look for the cheapest places in the world to manufacture their stuff. | ||
We'll mostly do the design, particularly the advanced chips here still, but we allow others to manufacture much of the electronic gear, in this case, the semiconductors and chips. | ||
It's even worse with respect to China, of course, where we've allowed supply chains, and again, you've documented this extensively in the War Room, Steve, including medicines, for heaven's sakes, in China. | ||
And this same basic idea that We can be indifferent to who has the control of the rare earth minerals that are critical to almost all of this stuff, or who's got the production lathes and capabilities and so on for the stuff that we rely upon, maybe even for our very lives, in the case of medicines most especially. | ||
And that's crazy. | ||
It has been a mistake. | ||
It's been decades in the making. | ||
It can't persist. | ||
And we are in the process of trying to move some of that production of these chips To the United States, I think to Arizona as a matter of fact, but it's going to take years to do it. | ||
In the meantime, we could be in a world of hurt if the Chinese get Taiwan. | ||
Frank, we're pressed for time. | ||
How do people get access to your letter to Biden and the white paper they should read on the situation in Taiwan? | ||
How do they get there and what's your social media? | ||
Yeah, it's presidentdangerchina.org is our site for this information and a whole bunch of other stuff. | ||
We are about to spring another letter to the president about Bill Burns, the CIA director who should resign. | ||
This is a great resource. | ||
My personal website, I think that I would recommend is securingamerica.tv, the Real America's Voice show that we do with you all. | ||
I want to have you back on to do Burns maybe tomorrow. | ||
Frank Gaffney, a great American, a great patriot. | ||
Boris, what's your social media? | ||
I'm at Boris Epstein on Twitter. | ||
Boris underscore Epstein. | ||
Boris underscore E-P-S-H-T-E-Y-N. | ||
It's been great to be back here. | ||
Great. | ||
You don't ever change. | ||
Your tan looks great. | ||
Boris Bannon Jr., can you give your social media? | ||
I am Maureen underscore Bannon on Twitter and real Maureen Bannon on the gram. | ||
Okay, tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock, it's going to be explosive. | ||
Then we've got a very special guest on the 5 o'clock show. | ||
There's a big rally, America's first rally, down at the Villages in Florida tomorrow. | ||
We're doing the pre-game at 5 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. | ||
Okay, a lot going on. | ||
See you back here at 10. | ||
Boris, thanks for coming by. |