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Sept. 6, 2016 - Rush Limbaugh Program
36:53
September 6, 2016, Tuesday, Hour #1
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Welcome to today's edition of The Rush 24-7 Podcast.
It is so good to be back.
I cannot tell you how happy I am to be back.
Such.
Man, I've been chomping it a bit.
I almost called everybody in yesterday, and I realized I wouldn't be able to find everybody.
So I've been chomping it a bit all day, and here we are, folks, back at it.
And according to the usual conventional wisdom, it's now after Labor Day, which means a campaign is really begun.
Which means that Trump is in the lead.
In no less than a CNN poll.
He's up by two points, it's margin of error.
This is stunning when you consider the firepower in what I call a summer of hate.
The summer of hate, the hatred directed at Trump, when you look at all of the firepower from everywhere you can find every sector of the drive-by media has been launching one salvo after another at Trump.
And then the paid supporters of Hillary have been running their ads as well.
But even without the ads, just the tenor and the tone and the substance of the drive-by media coverage.
Trump ought to be at 20% in dead.
And Trump hasn't spent much money at all.
And yet he has now edged ahead.
CNN is reporting this, their headline nine weeks out, a near-even race.
Which of course not what the headline should have been.
The headline should be something like presidential poll, Donald Trump pulls ahead of Hillary Clinton despite our best efforts.
And it really is it's incredible.
It is incredible.
Now, you know, we you you go with the flow on the polls.
I can't tell you the number of people.
Rush, do you really think the polls are right?
I've I tell you what my answer is.
Yes, I believe them.
It's too it's too risky to choose to select a poll you want to believe one day and ignore one the next.
It doesn't make any sense.
You gotta go with what they report.
Uh it's it's the path of least resistance, and it generally is accurate as too.
I mean, there's some some obviously outlier polls which get it wrong.
And even some of the some of the high brows, some of the highly respected polls get it wrong, and of course, polling data is used to make news rather than reflect it.
We all know that, but it's just it's simpler to to uh to go with it.
Uh this could be, you know, if you believe in fake polls, this could be fake.
And it could be fake designed to get everybody all revved up and heped up, and in the next CNN poll's gonna show Hillary up by five, and you're gonna supposed to get depressed and so forth.
I don't want to play that game.
I don't I don't want to get into that kind of analysis of this.
We'll just take it as it comes.
Hillary Clinton and Trump start the race to November on uh essentially even ground.
Trump edging Clinton by a scant two points among you would think that Trump's had a 20-point lead, and it's down to two points the way they write this.
Trump has come back, depending on the poll you look at, and down 12 to down seven, down five.
Now he's up two, and in a Reuters Ipsos poll, Trump catches up to Clinton, latest Reuters Ipsos poll finds.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pulled into an effective tie with Hillary Clinton, and if you take a snapshot of the two candidates, one of them looks towering, one of them looks strong, decisive, and dare I'd say even presidential on occasion.
And the other one can't stop coughing.
The other one barely shows up.
Hillary Clinton sh hardly shows up at all, and I think we're beginning to see why.
Have you seen, did you see the the uh the two episodes of Hillary Coughing in Cleveland, one on the plane and one at the uh at the uh uh the appearance in in Cleveland.
I mean, I you know, folks, this is uh people are joking about this.
Obviously, it's a presidential campaign and people having fun with it.
But there something uh something's not right here.
There's something that that's potentially really wrong, this kind of- I I in fact I'm gonna say this after I watched the videotape of Clinton in Cleveland, I actually started asking him who on her staff allowed that to continue.
Who put her out there?
I mean, that that's you know, her only recovery line was, yeah, it's allergies.
This this happens to me every time I I think of Trump.
And there was moderate laughter and uh and applause.
I think we know why she is sequestered.
I think we know why she is.
Well, she's sequestered for a host of reasons, but this is clearly one of them.
And I really was curious, you know, who who put her out.
I mean, I guess that they figure at some point we got to put her out there at some point.
It can't continue to hide our candidate for weekend on weekend, week after week after week.
But if you haven't by any chance seen it, uh we have the audio coming up, and it takes four minutes to go through this.
It is a painful four minutes to watch.
And I think listening to it without seeing it may even have more impact.
Because you will paint the picture of what she looks like in your mind as you listen to her cough.
I will set the stage for you.
She's at the podium, she's smiling, she's uh not wearing the house coat, by the way.
Another curious choice by the campaign staff, that house coat.
You know, with the four cat and kangaroo pockets.
It just it's it's it's strange.
Strange stuff.
Looked like she had a lot of tacos this weekend.
I mean, I when I watching the uh coughing video.
But whoever decided to put her out there, they must be they must folks.
I'm telling you, the Clinton campaign, I don't think it's all sweetness and light and and roses and sunshine and uh upbeat positive.
They they haven't put her out there.
Her numbers are going down.
Trump is it's a combination.
Trump's catching up and she's losing ground.
Two things are happening.
And in some of the polls, Trump isn't gaining any ground at all.
Hillary's losing it.
But no matter how you look at it from the Clinton camp, there is serious reason for serious, serious concern.
And let's review some of the things that happened just while I was gone.
I think to put this in context might be a wise thing to do.
Now we supposedly have the lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer, where everybody takes off and it's a two or three-month period of uh relaxation and vacation and what that's not at all what we have just completed here.
Particularly the last crazy days.
This last holiday weekend, everybody is trying to cram in the last few hours of summer before the inevitable days of fall, the days getting shorter.
You know, that always has a change in impact on people's moods.
Some people get really revved up going from summer to fall.
Some people get depressed, and it just depends.
But the days get shorter and the memories of summer vanish.
We had a slow news weekend, to be sure.
No, we didn't, actually.
I was going to say that we did, but we didn't.
First, we had this hurricane, which nobody knows how to pronounce.
Turned out to be really just another strong rain and windstorm, despite the best efforts of the drive-bys to whip it into a massive hurricane so that it could promote climate change.
Trump went to Mexico.
This happened last Wednesday.
I can't tell you the number of people.
You better get back behind the microphone.
You can't let this go without anybody hearing what you think about it.
You were saying that too, right?
Trump's in Mexico coming out of Mexico, Trump looking presidential, the president of Mexico acknowledging Trump as an equal on the stage as a world leader, and the word is they talked about the wall, they talked about who's going to pay for it, or then they agreed to talk about that later.
The trip was a shock.
The drive-bites couldn't believe it.
They couldn't believe the president of Mexico was such an idiot to elevate Trump's stature that way.
Trump looked presidential, everybody was saying, Oh my God, this man actually pulled it off.
He seemed of stature, he seemed reasonable, he carried off the whole aura of being president, and then he went to Phoenix.
And then he gave his immigration speech, complete with the specific ten-point plan, and the same people praising Trump in Mexico started savaging him for once again destroying the great reputation or great picture that he had created,
standing side by side with the president of Mexico, then goes to his usual campaign rally, and he appeared to be in a totally different persona that they thought subtracted from the great gains he had made by appearing to be an equal on the stage with the president of Mexico.
And the press conference that he had, most presidential.
And if politics is all about optics, if politics is like acting, in the sense that nobody will ever remember what you say, but they will never forget how you make them feel.
That's the key to acting success, by the way.
I mean, who remembers an actor's lines other than one or two?
Play it again, Sam Technicks.
By the way, which wasn't ever said.
Trump made everybody feel very confident.
Trump made a lot of detractors feel very all these people that have invested in Trump who are being criticized for doing so felt vindicated.
So that was a home run for those who look at things as optics.
Then he goes to Phoenix has his speech on immigration, 10-point to-do list or plan.
And he made a point of saying that there's no equivocation, no flip-flopping, no softening.
And after the, I guess a couple of hours after the speech, maybe a few hours the next day, there hasn't been any more on that speech in the drive-by media.
And I think the reason is they didn't want to call any more attention to it than it already had achieved.
But Trump wasn't through after visiting the president of Meiko, and then giving his 10-point immigration plan where he assured everybody that he wasn't flip-flopping, and he wasn't softening, and he wasn't changing anything.
In fact, he doubling down.
Then where did he go?
He went to Detroit.
He went to an African American church in Detroit.
He danced.
He gave a nice inclusive speech.
He got a standing ovation.
He was honored by the pastor with a special prayer and a prayer shawl or prayer robe.
I had to ask myself, when is the last Republican nominee or president being treated so gloriously respectfully well in a black church, particularly in a solid Democrat city?
There Trump was reaching out to a voting block that he supposedly has no chance at the African American vote, 92%, 93%, locked up, Democrat Party, guaranteed, nothing you can do about it.
There he was.
He told him he came to learn.
But he also went there to speak.
And he made his pitch.
He said, Look at you've been doing what you've been doing for 50 years.
Why not give me a chance?
What you got to lose?
A line that the drive-by say is a pathetic line.
It's a horrible line.
It's a pessimistic line.
It's an apocalyptic line.
It's a doom and gloom line.
Trump doesn't know what he's doing.
And yet he keeps connecting.
You notice that whenever Trump goes anywhere and speaks to people personally, he connects.
There is a connection established.
And it's this connection, folks, that has the Democrats and Trump opponents everywhere, wherever you find them in the Republican Party in the media, It has them buffaloed.
They don't understand the connection.
Despite how many attempts and efforts by me to explain it over the many recent months, they still don't understand.
Maybe they understand it or resent it.
It's not something that can be taught.
It's not something that can be coached.
And it isn't something that can be consulted.
The ability to connect with people one-on-one when speaking to thousands.
You realize how hard that is.
The trick here is Trump is speaking to an audience, in this case, what was it, 250, 500, whatever the number was in church, but everybody there thought he was speaking to them individually, even when he wasn't looking at.
That's the trick.
That's the trick to connecting with people.
You have the ability to address thousands, millions, whatever the number is, who are watching or listening to you, and have each of them think you're talking to them individually.
That's what can't be taught.
That's a, it's not even charisma.
It's a communication skill that is, you know where it resides in the psyche.
It resides in whatever part of the brain that provides you confidence.
The ability to connect with people relies and resides in that part of the brain where you feel confident in yourself.
And if you're afraid of public speaking, if you're not confident, most people aren't.
Most people are obsessed with their faults and think that everybody's going to notice them.
It's going to be tough to connect.
You can do it in those circumstances.
Honesty and confidence.
Now, not to say that everybody who has this is a saint.
I mean, there have been a lot of bad actors who've had the same talent, the same ability.
But that's another story, a little bit of a derivative.
Nevertheless, Trump goes to a black church.
It's not supposed to be possible.
Supposed to get booed out of there, supposed to be hated and despised.
Remember, he arrives as a racist.
He arrives as a bigot.
This is what the media, the Hillary campaign, the Democrat Party has characterized Trump as being.
He shows up, but yet he's greeted with uh open arms and open minds.
Now to refute all this, Hillary Clinton was forced out of her whatever she's in, wherever she's going to rehab and rest.
And she was forced out of debate prep, I don't know what she's doing, but she was forced out of it.
And she ended up giving a tepid, wandering speech to the American Legion.
She looked ill.
She didn't manage to have a coughing spasm.
She did manage not to have a causing spasm during this speech, but clearly Hillary is in reactive mode.
Hillary is reacting to Trump.
I'm sure the Clinton strategy is to let Trump own the stage and destroy himself.
Everybody knows the silent Hillary is the stronger Hillary.
The more she has to appear, the greater the odds are her numbers and approval numbers are going to go down.
It continues to happen.
I can take a break here and we'll continue.
Don't go away, folks, just winding up now.
So to continue the review of what happened, I was gone.
Trump continues to have huge crowds, amazing photos of his Ohio rally with Tom Pence.
And guess what?
Mike Pence, the uh the gang over at 538, Nate Silver, the wonder can God saver for the left, is now saying Trump can win Ohio.
And the left is panicking.
And Trump and Pence had a massive rally, great appearance in Ohio.
Huge crowds.
Um there are no photos of the crowd where Hillary had her first coughing fit of the Labor Day weekend.
Four minutes, that audio is coming up.
Then we have the Obama humiliation tour.
He jets off to some what?
The G20 Economic Summit in China, hosted by the Chicoms who dissed him.
The moment the plane landed, they wouldn't roll up the big stairs.
Did you hear about that?
They wouldn't roll up the big stairs of the red carpet.
Obama had to get out of the plane underneath the kitchens.
The galleys, they call them.
The service stairs.
Obama had to get off the staff entrance of Air Force One.
And then the new president of the Philippines, who Obama calls a colorful guy, called Obama the son of a hoe.
I mean, it just off the charts.
And this is the continuation, and then of course we his name is Rodrigo Duterte.
And then Putin and Obama have this stare down, that's over over Syria.
Continuation of eight years of dissing, disrespect, and humiliation for the Obama regime, starting when Hillary was Secretary of State.
I mean, it was all on display.
And the world was going to love us.
The world was going to respect us.
Obama was going to restore America's respect and greatness around the world, recover from how everybody hated Bush.
And we just see one humiliation after another when Obama now travels to foreign countries.
And I'm still not through with the review, so hang on.
Readings, my friends, welcome back, Il Rushbook, continuing a brief review of what all went on when I was away.
Much of it we are going to return to and visit in a little bit more depth.
So the Obama humiliation tour goes to the G-20, is disrespected in any number of ways.
Which, look, part of this is the fact that he's a lame duck, and world leaders do not have to kowtow or bow down to Barack Hussein Obama because he's on the way out.
But this is all the more relevant because Obama campaigned as the guy that was going to fix all this.
Obama was going to take over the world.
He was going to reinvigorate the world.
He was going to make the United States the most revered, the most respected, the most loved nation on earth simply by being there.
So reviled was George W. Bush.
So hated by the world.
So disgusted by the Iraq War was the world that Obama was going to unite everybody.
And now look.
There is no unification in our own country.
Quite the opposite is taking place.
And there isn't any around the world.
And Obama is considered to be a paper tiger by pretty much every one of our serious military-endowed enemies.
It's not a pretty sight.
I mean, you even have the president of the Philippines with a huge C. He's apologized for it since it wasn't one of his better moments, and he's taken it back, and Obama covered it well.
Said, yeah, I know the guy's quite colorful.
And these kind of crazy colorful things happen at these meetings and so forth, but the I don't I the fact that it was said in the first place, and it was about U.S. intervention, and it was about the U.S. thinking it knows best, and the President of the Philippines not wanting any of it.
Putin with the stare down of Obama.
Actually, Putin had to stare up because he's shorter than Obama, but it uh it didn't matter.
The humiliation of the Obama administration includes Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State.
Let's not forget that Russia has on several occasions buzzed U.S. Navy battleships.
Iran has captured and embarrassed our corpsmen.
We have paid a ransom for them to be released.
It's just it's unprecedented.
And then Phyllis Schlafley passed away, the mother of conservatism, if you will, along with William F. Buckley and a few others way back.
And I remember Phyllis Schlafley was tough.
Phyllis Schlafley was demanding.
When it came to the principles of conservatism, she harbored no infiltrators.
She harbored nobody insincere about it.
And she was able to identify those who were trying to capitalize on it but were not sincere about it.
She could spot them mile away.
When I first came on the scene, which would have been August 1st of 1988, it took a year or two for well, it actually didn't take that long.
The first year, all kinds of conservative leaders from every walk of life, from academe to politics to well, wherever you found them.
Who is this guy?
They said, because I had not networked.
I don't network today.
I don't I don't have a group of people on a that that I'm constantly networking and just I just I'm a lone wolf.
And as such, nobody ever heard of me.
And that was they couldn't figure that out.
I mean, the conservative movement is unique enough that most everybody in it, prominent, should have been known.
And I had no idea who I was, and there were many of them were hands off for a while, very protective in the movement, understandably so.
I mean, you don't you don't want to be infiltrated by a bunch of people who intend to do it harm.
And Phyllis Schlafley was, as I say, extremely demanding.
And what actually, I mean, I I look, she was never disrespectful, quite the opposite.
She was always welcoming and appreciative, thankful it was and it was mutual.
And I did a number of appearances where she was also in attendance and appearances at her request.
But when my mother met Phyllis Schlafley is when Phyllis Schlafley finally decided that I was okay.
And my mother became relatively close for not being in the movement through mutual friends, and traveled with Phyllis occasionally when she went to Florida for winters over in uh in Naples.
But she was something.
She was tough, she was unrelenting, she defined the whole idea of sticking by your principles, standing by them, and as I say, she did not tolerate anybody halfway.
And she was, it's not that she wanted to excommunicate people, and she wasn't exclusionary in any way, shape, manner, or form.
It's just she believed it.
And she led, and she was insistent that anybody in a prominent role actually be real and not a pretender.
You know, every every movement that has a claim and fame has people who want to be part of it because they want personal aggrandizement or fame.
She was on the lookout for those kinds of people.
And as long as they were genuine, as long as they were really conservative, as long as they were really interested in advancing the principles, she was fine.
But if you weren't, and if you happen to be a liberal, she she was she was, you know, just as tough and inspirational as anybody in the conservative movement has ever been.
And she could be as nice and outgoing and as engaging as anybody you would meet, but if you riled her up, you knew about it.
She was a great role model for a lot of people.
She passed away at 92 and has left everyone with her last book and column.
Big Trump supporter, big Trump advocacy.
I think it's interesting, you know, that m many in the conservative movement uh look at Trump as destructive and damaging to the conservative movement, because they don't believe that he is.
And Phyllis was all in.
And nobody will ever challenge Phyllis Schlafley's conservative credentials.
Oh, she had her critics.
She wasn't perfect, and she might have people think that she was off the rails here or there a time or two.
But the fact that she was all in for Trump was inspiring to a lot of people, and she led a lot of people to Trump because of that.
And she really did finally decide on this whole establishment versus uh everybody else alignment.
She believed in it, and she thought that the establishment, elites, ruling class, and so forth had many pretenders claiming to be conservatives when it came time to campaign and get votes, but they they failed.
And it was her opinion they should go, and that's why she was uh rabidly pro-Trump.
But I can't leave out something else that happened, and that was on Friday, a typical Friday move by the regime, a document dump, Hillary Clinton, and all of these unknown FBI documents relating to their interview of her, and even some more emails, and it was simply incredible what we learned in it.
And you know the divide in this country is never better illustrated by the reaction to this.
On the left, the tr the the reaction I have seen is that everything the FBI released in that document dump proves Hillary Clinton didn't do anything wrong.
She didn't violate a single law, she didn't lie, she didn't lead anybody astray.
She was totally above board and honest, and you read, and they believe this.
And then on our side, you look at this, and it's the admission of one crime after another, and the realization that she's told one lie after another.
It is incredible the things she told Comey and the FBI.
For example, I didn't know that C meant classified in an email.
I thought it was just representative was right in front of a paragraph.
I thought that was paragraph C. I didn't know that the C meant classified.
Really?
Where was paragraph A, then?
Where was paragraph B?
There weren't any paragraph A or paragraph B in these documents.
I mean, it's that kind of sophistry.
This woman gets away, she plays down the sex card, she plays down the race card, or sometimes the victim card, and at other times, she's actually totally comfortable with portraying herself as dumb or ignorant.
Here's the smartest woman in the world, right?
And Barack Obama and Bill Clinton both said at the Democrat convention there has never been anybody more qualified to be president than Hillary Robin Clinton.
Sorry, President Lincoln, sorry, FDR, sorry, Bill, Obama said, but Hillary's better than all of us.
And yet this woman is totally at home.
I I didn't know.
I I can't recall.
I don't remember.
I I see, I thought that was the beginning of the paragraph C. I classified, nobody told me that.
She's totally at home portraying herself as an ignoramus.
Which means Hillary Clinton is entirely comfortable with acquiring support by way of sympathy.
I have never seen anybody market sympathy, feel sorry for me as a means of gaining and growing support, and yet she tries it.
Folks, there's a reason that she's at 39% in these polls.
There's a reason that people don't respect her.
There's a reason that people have serious questions about her.
The drive-by media try as hard as they have, are not able to hide.
The character deficiencies.
She's been on the public scene for 30 years.
I mean, the simplest question to ask Hillary Clinton when she campaigns on any issue.
Mrs. Clinton, why isn't this done?
You've been at it for 30 years.
You've been saying you want to accomplish the same stuff for 30 years.
Why isn't any of it done?
You've been Secretary of State, you've been Senator New York, you have been first lady, you ran the first step at health care.
Why is none of your agenda any closer to being achieved than 30 years ago when you started it?
Now, I don't know that people ask that question consciously.
I think it's a subconscious thing that people realize.
And then the lying and the fact that there isn't any excitement, you can't fake that.
She doesn't draw any crowds.
Nobody's busting down barriers to hear her speak, and people know this.
So they're running a totally defensive campaign.
The Democrat Party, the Hillary strategy is to shut up, cough in silence where nobody can see it, and hopefully watch Trump self destruct.
But Trump's not playing the game, despite the drive-by's doing everything they can to cause him to self destruct, a report that he's self destructing.
It just isn't happening.
We'll be back.
We'll continue in mere moments, folks.
Don't go away.
Now they killed off one of my favorite characters in that show, and I can't.
I was shocked.
I was stunned.
No, no, no, no.
Major crimes.
Major crimes, one of my favorite shows.
And the last time I'm watching it, part one of a two-part finale.
And they killed off Robert Gossett.
Robert Gossett plays Russell Taylor, police captain, assistant police captain.
It's just a great show.
It's a it's the uh it's the uh sequel to the closer.
And Robert Gossett is one of the most naturally funny guys.
Um I understand he's a stage actor, too, but man, what a shock.
What a shock.
I hope it doesn't mean the show's over.
Anyway, folks, back to the phones.
I want to start here.
We've got Mark in Springfield, Missouri.
You're up first today.
Great to have you on the EIB network.
Hello.
Thank you for taking my call.
Yeah.
My question, or I say even more or less, Louis.
My honest opinion that this current election is a garbage election.
I think Hillary Clinton deserves a jail cell, and I think Trump deserves a padded one.
Well, so what do you attribute this to?
I mean, how did these two end up being the nominee of their parties?
Uh, I think, you know, uh Clinton has the you know, the political machine behind her.
Uh that that is no doubt, and has no problem engaging in controversies when it comes to accepting millions of uh dollars in the world.
Okay, Trump, how do you how do you explain Trump?
How do you explain what what many people on the Republican side thought thought was the best field in 20 years, best field maybe in 50 years.
All those 15 re not one of them could beat Trump.
Why do you think that was?
I think the idea initially was that yeah, he's an outsider, he doesn't have the political clout.
But that exactly actually speaks to a point that bothers me on the Republican side is that many of the talking heads opposed Obama by being a community organizer.
He had no experience for the job.
Despite being a senator and having a law degree and teaching law, he was not anything but a community organizer, absent the prerequisite requirements and experience when he went and became the president.
Now, those exact same requirements are now thrown to the side when Trump goes for office because he doesn't have a political uh experience, none whatsoever.
He has no law degree, never taught it.
Right.
But somehow, but somehow the very requirements, the very prerequisites that existed for Obama can now be overlooked hypocritically in my opinion.
Yeah, but but see, you're you're saying something.
You're getting really close, you're getting warm, but you're not getting close enough to get hot.
And I'm gonna tell you what it is.
Celebrity.
The guy who wrote on the Huffing and Puffing Post last week that politics has become a reality show.
Trump's a celebrity.
Jeb Bush is not a celebrity.
Kasich's not a celebrity.
Ted Cruz is not a celebrity.
Yeah, Rush, well, that's right.
It's politics.
Folks, there's been a whole lot of cultural evolution going on out there while some people haven't been paying attention.
Trump's a celebrity.
You think you think Anthony Wiener's through?
He got through.
He's a celebrity.
He'll be back.
Mark my words.
He's a celebrity.
We are at this point in time in the evolution of our culture.
We are immersed in a celebrity conscious.
I I'm not quite nailing it here.
I'm because I'm it sounds like I'm cheapening things, and maybe it is uh in a way.
But there's a there's a reason.
I've I've I played golf with a bunch of different guys over the week, and that's what I did.
And every one of them, I mean, they all desperately want Trump to win because they just I mean, folks, they are scared, and it's all about Supreme Court.
They hate Hillary, they're afraid of Hillary, Supreme Court.
They die if Democrats get Supreme Court, we're we're done in in these guys.
I'm talking 15 or 20 people here, and they're all please tell me he can win, Russ.
Please tell me he can win.
And not all of them like him.
And some of them start lamenting that it is Trump.
Even though they want him to win, they can't believe one of them thought Kasich was the down home total best candidate.
We have said, why didn't he win?
Why if this is the best Republican field we've ever had, or in 20 years or 30, why didn't one of them, Jeb Bush, 115 million dollars, He's got three delegates to show for it.
Why didn't any of those, why weren't any of those people ever able to make a serious run at Trump?
By the way, not one of them blame me, interestingly.
And I, folks, I'm going to continue this, obviously, but I can't now because I've taken an obscene profit break.
We'll be back.
Don't go away.
No, no, no, no.
I'm not saying that there isn't any substance to the support for Trump.
In fact, if you want to name the one reason Trump beat all these guys, I give it to you one word: immigration.
Immigration, immigration, immigration.
15 people ended up being wrong on it.
As far as we're Republican voters are concerned.
Anyway, don't go away.
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