Speaker | Time | Text |
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This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
Pray for our enemies, because we're going medieval on these people. | ||
Here's another time I got a free shot of all these networks lying about the people. | ||
The people have had a belly full of it. | ||
I know you don't like hearing that. | ||
I know you try to do everything in the world to stop that, but you're not going to stop it. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
And where do people like that go to share the big lie? | ||
unidentified
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MAGA Media. | |
I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
unidentified
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Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | |
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Band. | ||
In the words of the late Lee Greenwood, I'm proud to be an American. | ||
And I'd argue there is nothing more American than having a healthy adversarial relationship with those in power, even if you voted for them. | ||
And while I know this hasn't been a very uplifting speech, if it helps at all, there's one final thing I'm going to be genuinely excited for on Tuesday, and that is, if Donald Trump loses this election, he's basically finished. | ||
I know he would put us through hell. | ||
He would put us through hell before he left the stage, but when the dust settled, he'd have lost two elections in a row, and we'd be campaigning as an 82-year-old next time. | ||
I think he'd be done. | ||
And doesn't that sound great? | ||
And I know... | ||
The problems that he's a symptom of would, of course, remain, but we wouldn't have to deal with him anymore. | ||
Wouldn't it be great to live in a world where he's no longer an active threat, just an annoyance? | ||
Where this photo could just be funny, rather than having geopolitical implications. | ||
Where he can yell about ice cream machines and complain about windmills, and we all have the option of just not giving a s***. | ||
I don't know about any of it at all. | ||
I want so badly to live in that world. | ||
And I hope everyone does everything in their power in the next 48 hours to make that world possible. | ||
Welcome. | ||
It's Monday, 3 November in the year of our Lord. | ||
Oh, it's actually, it's 4 November. | ||
It's 4 November. | ||
It's Monday, 4 November in the year of our Lord, 2024. | ||
Listening to John Oliver right there whine. | ||
That ought to be cut into a campaign slot. | ||
It should incentivize people for nothing more than you shut up John Oliver, right? | ||
Right there whining, the kind of whinging of these folks. | ||
We can put an end to all that. | ||
You can shut them all up. | ||
You can make Rachel Maddow cry by turning out tomorrow. | ||
Remember, today is actually the biggest political day in the calendar for activists. | ||
This is when people are canvassing, folks all over. | ||
We've been obviously in communication and talking to you guys all weekend besides the expanded broadcasting. | ||
And I want to thank Real America's Voice for that. | ||
We're going to have some scheduling notes later. | ||
We'll be back for the 5 o'clock, 5 to 7. | ||
Then later, Charlie Kirk is going to come back on tonight and do the last Trump rally in the 2024 campaign from Grand Rapids, Michigan, where we ended the 16 campaign in the middle of the night. | ||
That may go late. | ||
I'm going to talk to Charlie to the degree we can be part of that. | ||
We're going to be part of that also. | ||
So all day long here and then obviously tomorrow. | ||
But today and tomorrow up until the polls close is when the work's got to get done. | ||
Everybody said, where are you going to be at election night? | ||
We're going to be in a very historic setting we'll talk about later, but the work is today and tomorrow. | ||
And if you look at these numbers, this has all come about because of the grassroots effort, the registrations, all of it. | ||
Mark Halperin's going to join me in a moment to talk about Wisconsin, because it went viral last night when he was on it, but I'm going to start with Bill McGinley. | ||
Bill, two things. | ||
Number one, I want to talk about the get-out-the-vote, and particularly just, you sent me something breaking news out of Pennsylvania. | ||
Did we lose Bill? | ||
unidentified
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No. | |
Okay, he dropped. | ||
Is he at the studio? | ||
The Trump campaign in West Palm Beach has a studio, which I think is one of the best things they've done, is they put in a studio there. | ||
Bill, you sent me this tweet with the math in Pennsylvania. | ||
Can we focus on that? | ||
Because throughout the day I'll be talking of people that are working... | ||
The grassroots activists in Pennsylvania tonight at 7 o'clock, we have a huge kind of tele-town hall pep rally and all that. | ||
But can you talk to me what these numbers show you? | ||
Yeah, what they show is that the Democratic turnout for early voting and mail-in is way down. | ||
And so, you know, what it means is that if our people turn out on Election Day, we'll be able to overcome that number. | ||
The important thing to remember here, Steve, is the grind goes on. | ||
People should not get complacent. | ||
People should not be satisfied with where we are. | ||
We need to run through the tape or play all four quarters, and that's kind of the message of the day. | ||
This fight goes on. | ||
This political fight goes on, and we need everybody to get out there and cast their ballot. | ||
We need everybody to call 10 friends, family, neighbors who agree with President Trump and want to Country to get out there and vote and that's what we're gonna do so you know one of the things that that that I've kind of focused on over the last couple of days in my head says you know we need to look at some of the Republicans that have really showed. | ||
The courage of their convictions and commitment to this country if you look at the Bucks County Republicans. | ||
After we filed that lawsuit and was able to keep those centers open so they could do their in-person mail-in ballots. | ||
They stood in- some of them stood in line for five hours. | ||
These people were committed to saving this country. | ||
They were not going to be deterred from casting their ballots. | ||
And it's a real inspiration and frankly sets the standard for everybody, every other Republican in these battleground states. | ||
Look at Western North Carolina devastated by a hurricane. | ||
These people are trying to recover. | ||
They're trying to rebuild their lives. | ||
They went out and voted. | ||
And so, you know, we're seeing a lot of inspirational stories from Republican voters who are making the sacrifice to do what it takes to be able to cast their ballot. | ||
And I think it's a real something that everybody should stand up and take notice of and make sure that you're willing to make the same type of commitment. | ||
There's going to be long lines in some of these states. | ||
Stay in line and vote. | ||
Do not let yourself be deterred. | ||
This is your election. | ||
This is your country to save, and the power is in your hands by being able to vote. | ||
Exercise your franchise, and we'll have a good night. | ||
So, audience, you know what your marching orders are, and you're the ones that have brought us to the cusp of victory here, through the voter registration, the precinct strategy, all of it. | ||
So you know your task and purpose, and we've got to continue on. | ||
You've got to run through the tape, or it's like the Penn State-Ohio State game. | ||
The Penn State-The Ohio State game yesterday was, or Saturday, where they were on the three-yard line. | ||
I couldn't punch you in. | ||
We've got to punch this one in. | ||
And this is going to be... | ||
unidentified
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That's right. | |
This has got to be a power move. | ||
It can't be... | ||
No trickeration here. | ||
This is the perfect... | ||
This is what we work for. | ||
And if you told us on the eve of game day that we would be perfectly positioned with no firewall... | ||
And let me talk about firewall. | ||
Can you pull up the David Chapman tweet if Denver has it? | ||
I'll pull this up and then for our vast podcast and radio audience, Bill, I would like you to walk us through it because it has the 2020... | ||
This is the early vote in Pennsylvania. | ||
In 2020, basically 1,587,000 Democrats early voted against 547,000 Republicans. | ||
That's a gap of a million, right? | ||
This year, we were almost the same, but Democrats are down 700,000 votes. | ||
This is what I keep saying. | ||
They're down 700,000 votes. | ||
Hey, let's see if they show up on Tuesday. | ||
If they don't show up on Tuesday, we're going to go back and ask some questions, right? | ||
Because these guys didn't show up in 22, and I'm not even sure who they are or what they are. | ||
893,000 versus our 520 gets to 372,000 now. | ||
Bill McGinley, in your mind, David Chapman and others saying the firewall is gone. | ||
Do you agree with that? | ||
There's a 372,000 vote gap, but it ain't a million. | ||
It's 700,000 votes short. | ||
And if you look in more detail, African American men and Hispanic men... | ||
Are not voting for Kamala Harris. | ||
I'm not saying they're going to vote for Donald Trump. | ||
I think a lot of them are, but they're definitely not coming out and voting for Kamala Harris. | ||
Bill McGinley, your thoughts? | ||
Yeah, have the courage, have the strength, have the conviction and the discipline to cast your ballot. | ||
To continue my bad sports analogies, I will tell you never play to the level of your opponent. | ||
If they are down on their get out the vote operation, then double down on yours. | ||
We need to do this ground game. | ||
You need to be calling 10 of your friends, family, and neighbors and get them out to the polls, and you need to cast your ballot. | ||
When you look at that, we've seen over the past couple of years the voter registration surge in Pennsylvania and other swing states. | ||
These people are going toward the Republicans. | ||
Now, common sense would tell you that somebody's not going to change their voter registration from Democrat or Independent to Republican to vote for Kamala Harris. | ||
These are people who are new voters who are going to start showing up and cast their ballots because they understand the consequential nature of this election. | ||
And we need you to be able to carry it across the finish line. | ||
Steve, we spent a lot of time on this show talking about how the Republican Party is a bottom-up party, not a top-down party. | ||
And this is where the grassroots, the volunteer army, which is the most powerful force in politics, has the ability to deliver this victory if they can just motivate everybody and be disciplined and show courage on this. | ||
I think they really are. | ||
And we're seeing examples of this across the country. | ||
And everybody needs to stay focused. | ||
This is a get out the vote election right now. | ||
And that's what we need to do. | ||
As we've talked about before, the lawyers are all standing by. | ||
We're actively monitoring everything that's going on. | ||
Pre-election, we're trying to correct some of the issues and make sure that everybody's following the law. | ||
And, you know, we're doing this pre-election as opposed to what happened in 2020. | ||
And so the election integrity program is really trying to make it easier to vote and harder to cheat this time. | ||
And we want people to have faith in the process and confidence in the results because if our people turn out and cast their ballots, that's going to produce a great result for this country. | ||
And so really it's in your hands, Posse, and I hope that you're able to do it. | ||
I voted. | ||
I have called a bunch of people in battleground states who I know to make sure that they're getting out and vote. | ||
And we're seeing volunteers across the country just show up to start walking precincts. | ||
This is critically important. | ||
Draw inspiration from these stories and make sure that you're matching the energy and commitment that these people are showing. | ||
They had an analyst on CNN, I think Alex Castellano on last night, an establishment Republican, saying one of the unreported stories is that the shift in the makeup of the electorate given the voter registration efforts of Scott Pressler in this audience, because this is not a big money thing. | ||
People are not going to make a lot of money of it. | ||
That's why the consultants won't do it. | ||
This is what you did to change the makeup of it. | ||
That is one of the reasons you have this substrate When you look at really the mathematics of what is the architecture? | ||
Of the electorate that's going to show up tomorrow. | ||
Bill, while I got you, I got to go to the Hill newspaper, lead story. | ||
I've got it up on Getter now, and I think Grace put it up on Twitter. | ||
GOP primed to back Trump if he contests elections. | ||
And I put that Vice-Roy Mike Davis and our own Bill McGinley are leading this effort. | ||
Talk to me about this article. | ||
They're saying, hey, unlike 2020, Where the GOP was caught by surprise and the campaign, quite frankly, wasn't on top of things. | ||
It's totally different today. | ||
The RNC, the GOP, the state level, what you guys have done, you have a legal effort that's going to be no games. | ||
Your thoughts, sir? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Look, I mean, to me, the press needs to start asking the Democrats whether they're going to accept the results of this election. | ||
It's a question that we haven't heard asked, even though they're having webinars and making statements that they're getting prepared to fight this thing after the election. | ||
We're here to protect and defend you, the voters who cast their ballots for President Trump. | ||
We're here to protect President Trump because it's one team, one mission here on this on this issue. | ||
So the Democrats can do their false flag and PSYOP operations all they want. | ||
We need to stay focused. | ||
Never play to the level of your opponent. | ||
Make your game plan. | ||
Make your adjustments. | ||
And then execute. | ||
And that's what we're going to be doing here. | ||
But the bottom line is, this is all get out the boat now. | ||
Cast your ballot. | ||
get into the polling places and make sure that you stay in line don't be deterred and make sure that you vote and drag all the people that you know to the polls so that they can cast their ballots as well mcginley what's your social media people want to follow you where they go twitter at uh wj mcginley twitter is at wj mcginley and getter is at mcginley wj thank you brother Appreciate you. | ||
Thank you, Steve. | ||
That's a warrior right there. | ||
He was with us in 16. | ||
Don McGinn and McGinley had this thing wired. | ||
That's why, hey, they weren't going to challenge us because we locked down Wisconsin. | ||
We locked down Michigan. | ||
We locked down Pennsylvania. | ||
We drew to an inside straight, but we had the legal to back us up. | ||
And in 2020, this is the guy that went through Mark Elias' election integrity project. | ||
We knew exactly how they were going to steal it. | ||
Remember the red mirage and the blue wave? | ||
Hey, ain't going to happen this time. | ||
Because you've got guys like McGinley and Mike Davis and Boris Epstein. | ||
They're on point on this. | ||
And I don't care if MSNBC is going to cry and whine about it all day long. | ||
Go ahead and cry and whine about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's your host, Stephen K. | |
Okay, welcome back. | ||
I think, Why don't you try calling him? | ||
We've got guests stacked up like planes over LaGuardia on a Friday afternoon. | ||
So I want to get to Pennsylvania. | ||
I want to get to Georgia. | ||
We're going to get to Wisconsin. | ||
All of it. | ||
Let me just step back and put this all in perspective. | ||
First of all, on programming. | ||
And we will put up today, I'm doing a bunch of media in the afternoon in these shows, including, I think I'm doing Megyn Kelly at 1. | ||
Look, this stuff's all scheduled. | ||
Who knows if we're going to be able to pull it all off. | ||
Tucker is going to come on here at 11, theoretically. | ||
We're doing Megyn Kelly at 1. | ||
I think we're doing the Joe Pag show, the Jesse Kelly show. | ||
Then I'm doing a bunch of these things for the Get Out the Vote show. | ||
The Warren Posse that's working throughout the country and really want to give you guys a hat tip. | ||
The work that you've done has just been extraordinary. | ||
And then backward, 5 to 7. | ||
Natalie is coming in. | ||
She's going to be here in D.C. with us. | ||
So tomorrow we're going to have a team at Mar-a-Lago. | ||
We're going to have a team at the Convention Center. | ||
We've got a team at different studios of Real America's Voice doing analytics. | ||
We'll be at a historic location to do our coverage. | ||
We'll always do it from Washington, D.C., and this year shouldn't be anything less. | ||
Then tonight, Charlie Kirk at 10 o'clock is going to start on Real America's Voice and Charlie's, I guess, YouTube is going to do a... | ||
He's going to do a broadcast of Grand Rapids where we're going to close out the campaign, the historic Grand Rapids rally. | ||
In 2016, you remember, we decided we were going to end the campaign in 2016 in New Hampshire because that's where President Trump won his first political victory. | ||
Remember, in 2016, he did not win in Iowa. | ||
Ted Cruz, I think, won in Iowa. | ||
President Trump did not. | ||
He finished second in Iowa. | ||
He actually won the primary in New Hampshire. | ||
So we decided symbolically to go back to his first victory. | ||
And this is where they had the controversy about the Bill Belichick letter. | ||
Remember, Bill Belichick gave us a letter of endorsement. | ||
And, you know, people got on him. | ||
I think the NFL got on him. | ||
And I'm a huge Belichick and Patriots and Tom Brady fan. | ||
They called for it and asked for it to be returned, you know, electronically, to take it back. | ||
And everybody's like, oh my God, we had this amazing endorsement letter that President Trump was going to read, and he had to pull it. | ||
An hour later, we get a follow-on letter from Belichick, and it's two times as hard as the first endorsement. | ||
And I said, that guy, that guy's so MAGA. That's a warrior. | ||
Basically told the NFL, and quite frankly, even the ownership structure of the Patriots. | ||
And Kraft was kind of a buddy of Trump's, but I think he just wanted to stay out of the whole thing. | ||
Belichick doubled down. | ||
That's a man. | ||
So we had it there. | ||
It was going to be a very dramatic reading of the letter. | ||
We're going to wrap it up then. | ||
But as you know, we were discounted people mocking us. | ||
We're down three and a half points. | ||
You know, this thing's over. | ||
It's going to be a blowout. | ||
We thought differently. | ||
We had our own internal polling, kind of a combination of things. | ||
And we were focused on the blue wall from day one. | ||
And every day, Morning Joe would sit there and mock his bandit. | ||
Don't know what he's doing. | ||
He's never been on a campaign. | ||
All true. | ||
Because we basically had a plane, a candidate, a message. | ||
But we were hammering Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. | ||
And what was very obvious is that Hillary Clinton, the geniuses, Robbie Mook and these geniuses in Brooklyn, were not going to Wisconsin. | ||
And they were not going to Michigan. | ||
And our number said that we could, and Paul Ryan canceled this. | ||
He wouldn't let us come on the Sunday beforehand like yesterday. | ||
I think we did nine starting in Colorado or in Vegas early in the morning. | ||
Maybe it was like dawn. | ||
It was a dawn launch. | ||
I think it was in Colorado we did a rodeo. | ||
At like dawn and went to Vegas. | ||
We did nine. | ||
You know, pull up to the tarmac. | ||
We got canceled by Paul Ryan. | ||
Paul Ryan says, no, you're going to lose. | ||
I won't be on stage. | ||
I will not let Ron Johnson go on stage. | ||
And so I asked Ryan, I said, what's going on here? | ||
We got this. | ||
We're right over the target. | ||
We have to show up. | ||
We need that free media. | ||
And Ryan comes back and tells Ryan, no, I lost Wisconsin with Romney. | ||
And if I'm on a stage and we lose Wisconsin again and national, my political career is over. | ||
And I go, oh, that's lovely. | ||
This Schmendrick, Paul Ryan, who? | ||
This Schmendrick's putting himself... | ||
He's like the budget chairman. | ||
Well, I guess he had stepped up. | ||
I guess Boehner was gone. | ||
But he's essentially the budget chairman to me. | ||
He's a bean counter. | ||
So we didn't go. | ||
We got blown out of Wisconsin. | ||
We had to do other kind of things over that weekend to make sure we stayed in the news in Wisconsin. | ||
Because in Wisconsin, we ended up winning. | ||
But we got a plane. | ||
We diverted to Minnesota and rolled up on a tarmac to like 20,000 people. | ||
My point is that then we figured out that, hey, this Michigan thing's right on the cusp. | ||
And so Bossy and myself and Jared, we talked, we talked to the candidate, talked to Jason Miller, and we were able to pull off, to leave New Hampshire at the end of this massive rally in this arena, which was very historic for Trump, and to leave there and to fly to Grand Rapids and to close it out in Grand Rapids. | ||
I don't think we got to Grand Rapids because President Trump on this, we're running late because the speeches are taking longer, the rallies are so jacked up. | ||
And I don't think we got to Grand Rapids till like midnight, 1230 in the morning. | ||
I don't think we got out of there at 130. | ||
And it was insane. | ||
Just insane. | ||
So I think that'll be tonight. | ||
Remember, this tonight, when we win tomorrow and President Trump will continue to do rallies, And he'll do rallies like we did, you know, the victory tour. | ||
He'll do additional rallies in the future, and he'll be involved in other campaigns in the future. | ||
But tonight will be the last rally that Trump does as a candidate. | ||
And so it's historic. | ||
And so we'll get information. | ||
We would love as many people as possible to join at 10 o'clock. | ||
Who knows when they're going to take stage? | ||
But I'll talk to Charlie. | ||
I'm going to try to join that. | ||
Although our crack team, we're working to shift the flag over to where we're going to do the broadcast tomorrow. | ||
Let me go back here to, if you go from my getter, and if Grace can put it up on Twitter, a pretty smart analysis from Brother Olson. | ||
Over at the New York Post, where he walks through his call looking at the analytics in some of the polling in the early vote. | ||
He kind of combines everything, and he comes out with a Trump squeak victory state by state. | ||
It gets to 297, because he's got the southern states. | ||
You know, we take North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, Nevada. | ||
He adds in Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania has Trump losing Michigan. | ||
All of this only comes true if people go out tomorrow. | ||
These are going to be razor thin at best. | ||
That's why Georgia hangs... | ||
North Carolina hangs in the balance. | ||
You've got to go out and represent North Carolina. | ||
Of course, Georgia. | ||
MTG told us, hey, this thing's far from over. | ||
You're going to have to go vote. | ||
Same in Arizona, same in Nevada. | ||
Now, the early vote numbers, I think, look very solid. | ||
And here's the key point, as we just read that tweet that the guy Chapman put up a moment ago. | ||
This is what we said. | ||
They have not built a firewall. | ||
They had not built a firewall on the early voting. | ||
That's critical. | ||
And I think if North Carolina, if the Tar Heels come through tomorrow, that we've cut off, and this is very different from six weeks ago. | ||
Six weeks ago, as I used to do in my civics lecture, my government lecture at Danbury, Think about the irony of that. | ||
I'm in a federal prison. | ||
Not a camp. | ||
I'm in a prison, in a cell block, in a cell. | ||
I'm in a prison for contempt of Congress and a misdemeanor. | ||
I never had a misdemeanor in the history of the prison, so I'm there as a misdemeanor. | ||
And I'm teaching civics, but I'm there, you know, oh, you're an insurrectionist, but I'm teaching civics, and the crew couldn't get enough there. | ||
The inmates, they're just fantastic. | ||
It was just amazing. | ||
Most of them were non-violent drug dealers. | ||
Hispanic, black, white was the bulk of the class. | ||
But they couldn't get enough, and particularly the numbers. | ||
And I kept saying, she has multiple paths to victory. | ||
Multiple paths. | ||
And her field is kind of narrowed over time. | ||
That's why she's spending all day today in Pennsylvania. | ||
And she's going to Pennsylvania. | ||
She's going to some of the—she's going to Allentown, I think, which is a Hispanic-majority town. | ||
President Trump's going to Redding. | ||
I think Redding's Hispanic-majority. | ||
But if you look at the numbers and the detail of the early vote in Pennsylvania, her problem is the problem is African-American men are not going to vote for her. | ||
I can see this in Danbury. | ||
The first step—they consider her the queen of mass incarcerations. | ||
They consider Trump as the one guy that's ever tried to do something for him, which is to have this thing called the First Step Act, which is to give them the opportunity, if they perform, to cut their sentence time down, to reunite their families, to do rehabilitation, programming, that if they do this, to reunite their families. | ||
And they have taken that to heart. | ||
And like I said, I'm not saying that a majority of African American men or Hispanic men are going to vote for President Trump. | ||
That I don't know. | ||
What I do know is that Hispanic and African American men, to a large extent, detest her. | ||
They're not turning out. | ||
You see this in the numbers in Philadelphia and others where they're coming up with this air pocket. | ||
That's why she's going back to Philadelphia. | ||
That's why... | ||
And if you're on the last day and you're trying to shore that up, it's not good. | ||
It's not good. | ||
I don't care how many Iowa, you know, Morning Joe is Iowa, Iowa, Iowa, Iowa, Iowa. | ||
I don't buy that poll. | ||
I just don't. | ||
When you look at the architecture of the cross tabs, the composition of the poll, I just don't buy it. | ||
I think the unreported story of this is African-American, Hispanic men who are not voting for her. | ||
Full stop. | ||
Didn't say vote for Trump. | ||
Not voting for her. | ||
And the fact that this audience and Charlie Kirk's group and Scott Pressler, Johnny Appleseed, over four years did this mass registration and changed the electorate in these states. | ||
Modern Day Holy War is going to take us out. | ||
I want to thank Birch Gold, our sponsor, birchgold.com slash bannon. | ||
The end of the dollar empire. | ||
We're not doing it. | ||
You're not doing it. | ||
The elites in this country are doing it. | ||
$100 billion added to the debt on Friday. | ||
$100 billion. | ||
I kid you not. | ||
We'll talk all about that in what is in front of us today and tomorrow. | ||
After a short commercial break... | ||
unidentified
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Here's your host, Stephen K. Band. | |
Okay, welcome back. | ||
I want to go to Pennsylvania, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Jim Worthington. | ||
Jim, thank you for joining us. | ||
The numbers are in for the early vote, right? | ||
And I guess the gap is, what, 357,000 votes. | ||
It was over a million in 2020. | ||
What happened to the Democrats? | ||
Why have they had this lack of theories? | ||
I'm not buying the theory of the case that, oh, now they're all mesmerized by voting on game day. | ||
It strikes me as odd since Democrats around the rest of the country like voting early. | ||
What do you think happened? | ||
unidentified
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I think what it is is that their low propensity voters aren't voting by mail. | |
If you look at statistically, they just haven't came out. | ||
And they've got their hardcore voters, the people that support them, their base. | ||
But the other people, there's no enthusiasm. | ||
I think a lot of what they've discussed here, this Kamala enthusiasm, has been manufactured. | ||
I just don't see it. | ||
I do think they have a certain base that is rabid about getting her re-elected, but it hasn't carried over to the To the people that, you know, used to vote from the couch. | ||
They're just not voting from the couch. | ||
They haven't applied for the mail-in ballotings, and that's where their numbers are down. | ||
Big. | ||
I mean, huge. | ||
When you say huge, walk our audience through it, because the campaign tells me that if you want to talk about somebody who understands Pennsylvania, Worthington's the guy. | ||
So talk to me about this. | ||
These numbers, the numbers in Philadelphia, African American men, it just seems like the bottom's falling out of this, but the mainstream media refuses to report it. | ||
Although the New York Times, I think, has a story today, wow, Democrats are kind of worried about Pennsylvania. | ||
Have you noticed a real drop in intensity of the Democrats in supporting her? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, let's put it this way. | |
The state party chair, Lawrence Tabis, lives in Philadelphia. | ||
We communicate three times a day for months. | ||
And he will tell you that in 2020, you couldn't walk five feet in Center City without seeing Biden signs all over the place. | ||
So you walk through Center City now, Rittenhouse Square, downtown Philly, you're lucky if you see anything about Kamala Harris. | ||
There's no enthusiasm. | ||
They're just not interested. | ||
And, you know, particularly the black male in Philadelphia, they're just not convinced that she's going to do anything for her. | ||
And that's one reason why I think Kamala's going to be there, what, tonight? | ||
You know, she's going to be there tonight. | ||
And it reminds me a little bit of Hillary in 2020. | ||
Like, you know, you shouldn't have to worry about Philadelphia if you think you're going to win Pennsylvania. | ||
If you're camping yourself out on Monday night, the night before the election in Philadelphia, you've got a problem. | ||
And, you know, you were talking earlier, I mean, just some broad statistical numbers. | ||
I mean, vote-by-mail differential was four by one. | ||
Early voting was four by one, four Dems to one Republican in 2020. | ||
Now it's less than two. | ||
You know, two to one. | ||
I'll tell you, my county, Bucks County, which is a pivotal county in not just Pennsylvania, in America, it's 1.4 to one. | ||
In fact, they'd probably be closer, but they made it so difficult to vote over the last few days when they had the early voting that the lines were six hours long. | ||
It would be probably even less. | ||
So, yeah, I think they've got a real problem, and it's too late to correct it, because there's no way you can herd all those people to the polls. | ||
I mean, there's a reason why they are early voted and voted by mail, because they don't like going to the polls. | ||
And to think that you're going to get them there tomorrow, that's asking a lot. | ||
It's literally hundreds of thousands of people just have not—I think it's 900 and some thousand people have voted early for them, which is way down from what it was previously. | ||
Yeah, it was 800-something. | ||
There's 700,000 light on early voting. | ||
This is what MSNBC and CNN, they never mention. | ||
You want me to buy the fact that low-propensity voters that miraculously appeared in 2020... | ||
But, oh, didn't vote in any congressional races because we picked up 15 seats, net 12. | ||
We crushed Nancy Pelosi, really gutted her ability. | ||
She did a great job for her people, I think, with a two- or three-seat majority, but we gut her. | ||
So these magical low-propensity voters that turned up, okay, that never turned up in 22, didn't vote, never voted in 22, which we won the popular vote on the House by five or six million votes. | ||
Then we come to 2024, and guess what? | ||
They're missing. | ||
Oh, you know what the number is? | ||
Hmm, 700,000. | ||
Isn't that interesting? | ||
And now they expect me to believe on MSNBC talking about this. | ||
They expect these people, after seeing the lines of a couple hours long in Lancaster, they expect these people to show up tomorrow and stand in line for how long? | ||
A low-propensity voter that has not voted since they voted by mail in 2020 is going to miraculously show up tomorrow? | ||
That's basically the pitch they're making to win this thing. | ||
Am I incorrect on that, Jim Worthington? | ||
unidentified
|
No, I agree 100%. | |
I don't see it materializing. | ||
But that being said, I'll tell you, it really comes down to You know, all these numbers are, you know, way in our favor. | ||
But the bottom line is, tomorrow we need everybody that's a Republican voter, Independent, that's voting for Trump, Donald Trump, to come out. | ||
They need to tell, not only they need to vote, they need to get all their friends, their family, they need to tell their friends and family to get their people out to vote. | ||
It really is going to be a turnout. | ||
We have an opportunity to win Pennsylvania by two, three, four points if everybody just does their job. | ||
But, I mean, you know, I'm calling on everybody. | ||
Tonight I'll have J.D. Vance. | ||
I'll get up on the stage. | ||
I'll have three or four minutes before he gets up. | ||
And that's going to be my whole focus, to tell people you need to. | ||
Now, voting yourself is important. | ||
Getting everybody you know to the polls tomorrow and making sure they show up. | ||
It might take two or three phone calls tomorrow, two or three texts, whatever it takes. | ||
Everybody's got to get there tomorrow. | ||
We can win this convincingly. | ||
Leave no doubt. | ||
Leave no room for any shenanigans. | ||
Like President Trump says, we need to swamp the vote. | ||
Too big to rig. | ||
That's what we need to do tomorrow. | ||
We have that capacity. | ||
We've got a lot of it. | ||
As many voters, by the way, if you look at our numbers, we've gotten a lot more low propensity voters in our base of early voters than they have. | ||
That's another thing if you compare numbers. | ||
We've got more of our low propensity on a percentage than they have. | ||
So that's a great sign. | ||
Every indicator, black, Hispanic, Jewish vote, union, I mean, every single thing that could happen good in Pennsylvania, voter registration, 800,000 difference in 2020, Dems versus Republicans, more Dems. | ||
Now it's below 300,000. | ||
We've closed that gap by 500,000 votes. | ||
And, you know, I got to give credit to the Trump Force team, Michael Watley, you know, Laura Trump. | ||
The state party's done a good job over the last couple of years. | ||
And Scott Pressler has been amazing. | ||
There's been a lot of—my group's been amazing. | ||
There's so many groups that have chipped in to work together. | ||
But I will tell you, the change at the RNC has really, really made a difference. | ||
Michael Watley and Laura Trump. | ||
And, of course, the Trump campaign team is just their A-plus from Susie Wiles, Chris Lasaveta. | ||
James Blair. | ||
I mean, everybody. | ||
Meredith Rourke. | ||
I mean, the president has an assembled and a phenomenal team. | ||
This is just, this is the A team. | ||
This is the A++ team. | ||
They're all excellent. | ||
No, this is about who wants it more and who's going to close tomorrow. | ||
You're absolutely correct. | ||
We've pushed this, all the grassroots groups, all the different groups. | ||
This audience was one of the big efforts to force change at the RNC. Obviously, the RNC is much more grassroots-focused, much more about putting lead over the... | ||
On the target here to make sure that we win. | ||
What is your call? | ||
What should people do in this audience? | ||
Because we have a huge Pennsylvania audience. | ||
What should people do today to make sure they can assist you in all the different groups in their efforts to get people out tomorrow? | ||
unidentified
|
You know, honestly, they should do what I did all day yesterday and I'll do the rest of it today. | |
I have over a thousand contacts on my phone. | ||
I started texting them all at noon yesterday, reminding them to get out the vote individually, each one, and reminding those people to get their circle out the vote. | ||
It really is roll-up-your-sleeves time. | ||
There's no magic wand. | ||
There's no social media posts. | ||
Anybody that thinks they're going to go up there and put a, you know, hey, you got to vote tomorrow and get 10 likes is going to make a difference. | ||
No, it's contacting every single individual you know, telling them to vote, telling them you're going to follow up with them tomorrow in the morning to remind them, following up again tomorrow afternoon to check that they did. | ||
If they did, say fine, make sure you get your circle out and check with them. | ||
And if they didn't, tell them to get their rear ends to the poll. | ||
We need them to vote. | ||
It really is just... | ||
It's gonna be all matter of rolling up your sleeves and working around the clock. | ||
And you know, it's not a lot to ask for people. | ||
People like you and me have been doing this, you know. | ||
For months, in the last couple of years, being on the President Trump train. | ||
So it started two years ago. | ||
But for people now, they always say, what can I do? | ||
Well, even poll watches. | ||
I get it. | ||
Watching the polls is great. | ||
We need those people to do it. | ||
But today, you should be getting out the vote and making sure everybody you know. | ||
Let me give you one other statistic, Steve. | ||
We lost by 87,000 votes in Pennsylvania in 2020. | ||
Do you know how many... | ||
People don't realize how many people that were registered Republicans that sat home. | ||
It was close to a million. | ||
If you get 9% of them that have voted in 2020, Trump is president again. | ||
You know, to argue with your neighbor who's a Democrat is fruitless. | ||
Get your neighbor on the other side of your house that's a Republican. | ||
One in four of them didn't vote. | ||
Get him to vote, you win. | ||
It's simple. | ||
Simple formula. | ||
Big time. | ||
Worthington, you're a grinder, and now we're in the part that we've got to grind. | ||
Where do people go? | ||
Social media, your group site, where do folks go? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, look, if they need help in Pennsylvania, they can just text me and call me. | |
267-972-3637. | ||
I give that number out. | ||
I was up on stage with the Before J.D. Vance at my place on September 29th, I made a call to action. | ||
I gave my phone number to 3,000 people in the audience. | ||
By the time I walked off the stage, 800 people had texted me 15 feet later. | ||
If you have problems around the state, reach out to me, text me, call me. | ||
And if you're somewhere where you know your Trump force team in a county, In any of the other 66 counties in Pennsylvania, reach out to Trump for us. | ||
But, I mean, the biggest thing to do is just reach out to your tribe of people. | ||
You know, honestly, there's no secret formula, there's a secret sauce here. | ||
It is just rolling up your sleeves. | ||
I've said it three times. | ||
And if they need any help, there's any indiscretions, anything there, and you're having trouble getting a hold of anybody, just call me, text me. | ||
I'll be doing the next two days. | ||
Other than tonight, I have J.D. Vance. | ||
His closing event is in my field house. | ||
We expect 4,000 people. | ||
So you're in the drive time of Bucks County. | ||
It's free. | ||
Obviously, the tickets, you don't need a ticket. | ||
It's 120 Pheasant Run, Newtown, Pennsylvania, Bucks County. | ||
Come to see J.D. Vance. | ||
There's a reason he's coming to Bucks County. | ||
This is the single most important district in the country. | ||
8.30 tonight, and doors open at 6.30. | ||
8.30, Bucks County. | ||
Worthington's putting it on. | ||
J.D.'s going to be there. | ||
Worthington, thanks, man. | ||
Thanks for grinding, brother. | ||
Talk to you tomorrow. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks for all you do. | |
Appreciate it. | ||
Thanks, brother. | ||
So, Oren Posse, there's no meme, there's no commercial, there's no, you know, Fox and Friends are sitting on the sofa, they want Nikki Haley up there on the stage. | ||
None of that. | ||
unidentified
|
It's you. | |
Your work over the last four years has shifted the makeup of the actual electorate itself. | ||
They don't want to talk about that. | ||
First time it got mentioned on CNN was last night. | ||
That's the Scott Pressler in the precinct strategy groups getting people signed up. | ||
Now, let's get him to vote. | ||
And what's so amazing is the low propensity. | ||
We're not cannibalizing game day. | ||
We're getting low propensity voters out. | ||
That's key. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
Make sure, by the way, I can't have you on the injured reserve list because you've got a financial problem because somebody's in and taking your title or taking a second mortgage on your home. | ||
Your home's not on your castle. | ||
It's 80% of your net worth. | ||
Maybe 90%. | ||
If you're fortunate enough to own a home. | ||
HomeTitleLock.com. | ||
Go check it out today. | ||
Find out if it's security of your home title is something that interests you. | ||
I think it will be. | ||
But go check it out. | ||
Make your own decision. | ||
When the man comes around, one of our many versions, short commercial break. | ||
Going to Georgia next. | ||
The Georgia Peach. | ||
Jenny Best Martin. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's your host, Stephen K. Band. | |
Okay, how do we get jacked up here in the morning? | ||
Many different ways, but the primary way is Warpath Coffee. | ||
Go to warpathcoffee.com and check out, put in War Room to get your discount. | ||
That dark roast, we worked for about a year and a half of that. | ||
Remember, the theory in Warpath is quite simple. | ||
They're Navy SEALs. | ||
Tasia the Navy SEAL did security for me for years. | ||
It says Navy SEALs has the best weapons, the best equipment, the best communications equipment, best diving, parachuting, all of it. | ||
But it drinks basic Navy brew that's on every destroyer. | ||
So he wanted to go out and make a premier coffee company that the coffee was the equivalent of his gear in the SEALs. | ||
And as you know, we're aficionados when it comes to coffee. | ||
A lot of people pitch us on coffee. | ||
There's a lot of good coffees out there. | ||
Don't get me wrong. | ||
A lot of good folks doing coffees. | ||
But Tej put his heart and soul on this and came back and man, oh man, oh man, Warpath Coffee. | ||
It's something special. | ||
5,000 Let me repeat that. | ||
5,000 five-star reviews on its website. | ||
Don't take it from me. | ||
Take it from the War Room Posse. | ||
Just go check out the reviews, see the information, find out how they do it, how they brew it, and then pick your favorite blend. | ||
I totally promote the Dark Roast because that's my baby, but you get the blends, you get the holiday blends, all of it. | ||
WarpathCoffee.com. | ||
Let's go to... | ||
We're going to go back to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, our own Dr. Peter Navarro, who will be with the president later today in Pittsburgh, I believe, not Reading, in Pittsburgh. | ||
Dr. Navarro, give me your assessment. | ||
You've been on the bus, I think, since Friday, going around Pennsylvania. | ||
Give us your assessment, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, this is steel country, California. | |
I'm looking at one of those beautiful cities in America, Pittsburgh. | ||
It came all the way from Philly down the Pennsylvania Turnpike. | ||
And everywhere I've gone, I've seen the evidence of Donald Trump's first term in terms of creating jobs, whether you start in Philly. | ||
unidentified
|
You've got the Philly shipyard, which he went from 80 workers on the verge of bankruptcy. | |
It's well over a thousand. | ||
Donald Trump, the dad, he moved to Coastal. | ||
Peter? | ||
Peter, Peter, hang on one second. | ||
The president just walked on the stage in Carolina. | ||
We're going to go live to that. | ||
We want to hear what he has to say. | ||
This is open. | ||
I'll come right back to you. | ||
Hang on. | ||
Let's go to North Carolina, outside of Raleigh, around Raleigh, for President Donald John Trump. | ||
This is one of those deals that if we get our vote, we're leading every swing state, which is unheard of for the Republican Party. | ||
They're always up at the end. | ||
They always were... | ||
Good finishes or bad finishes, depending. | ||
Sometimes they'd get there, but you'd always go in by losing hundreds of thousands of votes, and you'd watch it like a racehorse, and sometimes they'd get there, and sometimes they wouldn't. | ||
But with North Carolina, I always got there because we won every race. | ||
So essentially, you know, they have an expression. | ||
I hate the expression, actually, but it's ours to lose. | ||
Does that make sense to you? | ||
It's ours to lose. | ||
If we get everybody out and vote, there's not a thing they can do. | ||
And if we don't, they have to get every person that ever signed anything in that horrendously dangerous party that's going to destroy our country. | ||
And it already is destroying our country. | ||
We just can't let that happen. | ||
We cannot let that happen. | ||
So here's my only purpose in even being here today. | ||
Get out and vote. | ||
You know that. | ||
I'm thrilled to be back in this beautiful state with thousands of proud, hardworking American patriots. | ||
That's what you are. | ||
You're patriots. | ||
You built this country. | ||
You built this country. | ||
But I'd like to begin by asking a very simple question. | ||
Are you better off now than you were four years ago? | ||
Are you better off now than you were four years ago? | ||
I've never had one hand go up for the other. | ||
With your vote tomorrow, I will end inflation. | ||
I will stop the invasion of criminals coming into our country. | ||
Which I happen to think is the absolute worst thing that has ever happened to our country. | ||
I've never seen it. | ||
They're putting in murderers, releasing all of their prisoners from jails all over the world, not South America, all over the world, into our country. | ||
I think it's the worst thing. | ||
You know, in the polling, When I see the polling, I see that inflation and the economy are number one, which is sort of standard. | ||
But I really would like to put that, because we're going to close up that border so fast. | ||
We're going to get those people out there. | ||
And she's not going to do it. | ||
She couldn't do it if she wanted to. | ||
She wouldn't know what to do. | ||
They have open borders. | ||
And you know what? | ||
If things weren't bad today, you would have, and tomorrow, you would have Open borders, the first day of that, and you'll have, they have 21 million people that they let into our country. | ||
Many of these people are murderers. | ||
Think of it. | ||
13,099 are murderers. | ||
The big drug lords. | ||
The prison population from countries all over the world. | ||
And if I ran a country, I'd say, get my prisons. | ||
Open borders. | ||
They just walk in. | ||
No vetting. | ||
Think of it. | ||
No vetting. | ||
We have no idea who they are. | ||
You're not allowed to ask. | ||
You're not allowed to ask. | ||
They just walk right into our country. | ||
And they killed people. | ||
You have murders. | ||
See, you have 13,099 murders. | ||
Many of them have killed far more than one person. | ||
Bad things are going to happen. | ||
And you have terrorists at levels that we've never seen before. | ||
We had terrorists down the lowest. | ||
I had, in 2019, and this isn't done by me. | ||
This is done by Border Patrol, which, by the way, endorsed me. | ||
They gave me a great endorsement. | ||
unidentified
|
They said, he's the greatest president ever. | |
He's the greatest president. | ||
The head guy, Floyd Paul, was great. | ||
He made a beautiful speech, but he said, he's the greatest president our country has ever had. | ||
I said, does that include Lincoln, Washington, and a couple of others? | ||
But it's very nice. | ||
But they gave me the strongest endorsement. | ||
And I have to say this, in the same little speech, they said she's the worst thing to ever happen to our country. | ||
And it's very hard for them to say that She never made one phone call in four years to the Border Patrol. | ||
How are we doing? | ||
I used to drive them crazy. | ||
They probably said, oh, no, it's the president again. | ||
Yes, we're fighting our president. | ||
I used to drive them nuts when I had nothing to do. | ||
I said, call the Border Patrol. | ||
And we got... | ||
Just drop that chart, please. | ||
He's my all-time favorite shirt. | ||
unidentified
|
My all-time favorite shirt I love that chart. | |
I sleep with that chart. | ||
I kiss it every night before I go. | ||
Because I wouldn't be here if it weren't for the chart. | ||
If you take a look at the arrow on the bottom, that was the day I left office. | ||
That was the lowest illegal immigration we ever had. | ||
And I kept it pretty good. | ||
And then you take a look. | ||
And we had Mexico pay for their soldiers. | ||
They didn't want to pay for their soldiers. | ||
I said, you have to give us soldiers while we build the wall. | ||
And they paid so much money to us, and they said, we're not going to do that. | ||
They actually laughed at me when I suggested it, and I said, here's what I'm going to do. | ||
I'm going to put a tariff of 100% on all your cars and everything that comes into the United States. | ||
They said, you know what they said? | ||
Sir, we would be greatly honored to let you have our soldiers free of charge. | ||
Thousands. | ||
How many would you need, sir? | ||
I said, as many as it takes. | ||
And they were great. | ||
They made a big contribution to our security, let me tell you. | ||
But they got to stop with, now we're talking Turkey. | ||
One of the first calls I'm going to make is to Mexico. | ||
You stop letting people come in through our border and come in through your southern border and you stop it. | ||
Because Mexico and I had a great I had a great relationship with the president, but he retired now. | ||
He left. | ||
He was a good man. | ||
He was a socialist. | ||
You can't have everything, but he was a good man. | ||
But they paid a fortune for the soldiers along the border. | ||
We were able to have great numbers as well. | ||
We built 571 miles of wall. | ||
I was going to add 200 more. | ||
By the way, far more than I said. | ||
I was talking about 200, 250. | ||
We built 571 miles. | ||
Nobody talks about it. | ||
And you know what I did? | ||
Because we had a Congress that was not behaving. | ||
I said, I don't care. | ||
This is an invasion of our country. | ||
I'm taking it out of the military. | ||
And I took it out of the military because I gave them... | ||
I gave them $725 billion. | ||
I say, congratulations, fellas. | ||
I'm taking out 10. | ||
What is it for, sir? | ||
It's called a wall because we're being invaded by Mexico. | ||
But now we have a new president in Mexico. | ||
I suppose a very nice woman, they say. | ||
I haven't met her. | ||
And I'm going to inform her on day one or sooner that if they don't stop this onslaught of criminals and drugs coming into our country, I'm going to immediately impose a 25% tariff on everything they send in to the United States of America. | ||
And the reason I delayed that, you're the first ones I've told it to. | ||
Congratulations, North Carolina. | ||
And it's only got a 100 percent chance of working, because if that doesn't work, I'll make it 50. | ||
And if that doesn't work, I'll make it 75 for the tough guys. | ||
And I'll make it 100. | ||
And at some point, they'll have so many soldiers on their southern border, you know, their southern borders. | ||
unidentified
|
Come back. | |
President Trump's in North Carolina. |