All Episodes
Nov. 9, 2022 - Sean Hannity Show
31:37
Chris Sununu - November 8th, Hour 3
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
This is an iHeart Podcast.
Next, our final news roundup and information overload hour.
All right, news roundup, information overload hour here on the Sean Hannity Show.
It is election day.
We'll get to some of your calls.
800-941-SEAN if you want to be a part of the program.
I am hesitant.
I know this hour we will have exit polling data.
Now, you're not supposed to share it, but pretty much every election year, you know, everybody on every network says, I've got the feeling that such and such is going to happen because just my gut is telling me.
Meanwhile, they're reading directly from the exit poll data, which has been wrong.
Remember, in 2004 on this show, it came out that Bush-Cheney were going to lose re-election.
And they were going to lose Florida, and they were going to lose Ohio.
And Dick Cheney lands his plane, 535, calls into this program, begging Florida and Ohio to vote.
They had no problem in Florida or Ohio.
Or 2016, the exit polls.
Hillary Clinton's president or John Kerry's president.
I mean, they get it wrong all the time.
So I'm reluctant to even share anything.
The only I would tell you is when you look at these Senate races, Georgia, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and I'm not discounting Wisconsin or Ohio.
They're very important, but I think we're going to win those races.
And then you add Arizona, Nevada, maybe Washington State even.
All of those races combined are going to be decided by less than 100,000 votes.
Remember, in 2016, Donald Trump won three swing states by a grand total of 70,000 votes.
In 2020, Joe Biden won Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona by 43,000 votes combined.
Your vote matters.
You still have time.
Joining us from the live-free or die state, the granite state, the governor of the state of New Hampshire, Chris Sununu, is with us.
Governor, how are you?
Doing great.
It's been a heck of a day here.
Weather's terrific.
Turnout was unbelievable.
We're out at the polls today, man.
I got to tell you, people were, there were lines, not just during the morning or the lunch or even now what we're now seeing at the coming home.
There were lines at 10.30 in the morning, right?
Normally kind of the quietest time of the day.
So turnout is incredibly high.
We'll set a record here for sure.
My guess is you're going to see that across the country.
And that very likely plays into the hands, at least into the two and a half point bump for Republicans across the country because people are frustrated.
They're angry and they're going to vote on the inflation issue that's hitting all of them.
Anecdotally, I've only gotten limited information out of New Hampshire.
One was what you just said.
The turnout has been very, very high.
Anecdotally, some people said there might be an issue involving people that are skipping the Senate race altogether.
We talk a lot about polling on the program.
And, you know, for example, some people just, you don't really count under votes, which would be a pretty interesting phenomenon.
Are you hearing anything similar to that?
Yeah, we are.
Look, so, you know, we have General Bulldock who's running against incumbent Senator Hassen.
Senator Hassan just is not very popular.
There's just no way to sugarcoat that.
She's just not popular.
But the question is, did the general kind of have enough time in these past six weeks and money to really get his name out?
So the question is, will folks say, well, I really don't know much about him, so I'm just going to skip that race altogether.
They're not going to vote for Hassan, but are they going to skip the race because you have a newcomer to the race?
And that could be a phenomenon in a lot of places, but here most especially because our candidate, our primary, is so late.
It's in mid-September.
Our candidate won with very little money and then had some money behind him in the past four to six weeks.
But the question is, was it enough?
And you saw him skyrocketing in the polls, closing a 10-point gap to basically taking the lead in some polls.
But that undervote, as you said, is never calculated in a poll.
So, you know, what will that really mean?
I think he wins.
I think he wins slightly.
It's going to be a very close race either way, but that's a very big unknown.
And if it's just one or two points either way, could make the difference.
I think one of the big factors, if in fact, General Bullduck wins, and by the way, you've got to admit, this guy's military service record is incredible.
Ten tours of duty, two Purple Hearts, five medals of valor.
But the most important thing that he got in this election cycle was your support because you're one of the most popular governors in the country.
And I'll tell you one of the reasons why I watched you with Chuck Todd, and you were just smiling ear to ear and just eating him alive.
It's something, by the way, your dad was really good at also.
And I'm watching this, and I'm like, this is amateur hour.
All these other politicians are afraid to go on these Sunday shows or they get all nervous about it.
First of all, nobody's watching, but just a side note.
And then secondly, it's like you give it right back to them, and he had no answer for you while you were supporting General Bullduck.
Look, God bless it.
Thank God I got my mother's personality.
But I definitely got my father's taste for kind of going at it with the media a little bit.
And I don't mean anything.
I don't have no ill wishes against Chuck Todd.
I like Chuck Todd.
We don't agree on anything politically, but I like the guy.
But when you start, anyone who's pushing, and this isn't just him, it's a lot of this liberal media, this concept that 2020 is going to dictate people's votes in the voting business.
No, not at all.
We don't have high voter turnout because of what may or may not have happened two and a half years ago in the election.
We have a high voter turnout because people can't pay the mortgages, man.
And so that's really the message there.
And I just think that sometimes media, especially on that side, kind of starts talking in an echo chamber.
At the end of the day, though, when you go back to General Bullduck, he's a war hero, right?
He's one of the first individuals that really stood out and talked on mental health in the military, which is such an important issue.
But he's just a bit unknown.
So I think he's going to do it.
The more people know him, he just keeps going up and up and up in the polls.
I guess the question is, do we have enough time to close the gap?
But unifying as a party, that's the foremost responsibility, I think, of anybody in any state.
When the party is unified, even though you might not agree, right?
Interfamily squabbles are nothing new.
But when you unify as a party, it gives independents confidence.
It gives the independents confidence that you have your act together as a party.
They're going to go right down that red column for you on election day.
So we think we've done it pretty well here.
And if we can bring both him and our congressional candidates over the line, all the better.
Yeah.
Now, let's talk about the polls closing in New Hampshire.
I read, and it was a little odd to me, they cannot close before 7.
And I'm like, what does that mean?
It means they don't close before 7 p.m.
Yeah.
And so some will close it.
Well, wait, wait a minute.
Now you're making me sound like Chuck Todd.
Hang on a second.
Meaning, you know, usually you say polls close at seven.
You don't say they can't close before seven.
So it's not an odd question.
It's not an odd question as you're making this thing out to be.
Man, you're turning me into Chuck Todd.
I don't like it.
No, no, no, no.
I just mean, no, the law is just that simple.
You can't close at five or six.
In other words, our law was designed to make sure that people coming home from work would always get a chance.
You didn't want, we had, you know, way back in the day, you could get people shutting down polls at five or six because they didn't want working class folks coming in and voting.
So we'd established a law a long time ago.
You can't close before seven.
But all of our closed, all of our polls will close either at 7 p.m. or 8 p.m.
And then the numbers start rolling in.
We'll get some initial towns.
I mean, Dixville Notch, everyone knows Dixville Notch voted at midnight last night.
And I won 4-1, all five votes.
Of the five votes, I did win 4-1, so happy to say.
But they'll start rolling in around 805, 810.
We'll get some initial numbers.
I'll say this, when it comes to New Hampshire, people are watching nationally.
Some very big key towns will come in very late because they're large, conservative towns.
They have multiple polling places.
They typically won't announce their results until about maybe 12 or 1 in the morning.
And depending on how big the general wins those towns, and he will, will dictate where this race goes.
But other significant towns, Wolfboro, Bedford, Littleton, New Hampshire, these are bellwether towns.
And that will give us a good sense around 9 or 10 o'clock where this thing is heading.
If he's won or lost by a certain amount, will dictate kind of where this is going.
But the biggest, most conservative towns tend to be later, so it's going to be a late and exciting night.
So it's about an hour and 45 minutes you have left if you're in the great state of New Hampshire, the live-free or die state.
Don't you think that would be a great title for a book?
Phenomenal.
I can't believe.
Oh, wait a minute.
I think it was a bestseller.
It was number one for weeks on end.
It was a huge big bestseller.
By the way, and the subtitle is America and the World on the Brink.
I wish I were wrong about the on the brink part.
I just didn't think on the brink would be this quickly.
I want to ask you a serious question because I'm very concerned about it.
And General Bullduck has spoken of it.
You've spoken about it.
It's been reported now widely that there is a chance this winter.
And I asked you the last time you were on the show, but I want people to really hear you, that there might be a blackout for the entire power grid all throughout New England, not just New Hampshire.
It gets cold in New Hampshire in the wintertime.
You have some of the best ski resorts in the entire country there.
But the entire electric grid might black out this winter.
And on top of that, the projections are a minimum of a 30% increase.
Whether you heat your home with natural gas or oil, it doesn't matter.
You're about to have a heating cost rise, the likes of which I can't think of anything similar, at least in my lifetime.
I mean, that scares me.
It's scary.
It's true.
And it was preventable.
And that's why the policies out of Washington matter.
So we get about just over half of our electricity grid is based on natural gas, always has been.
And there's nothing wrong with that, except when you can't get natural gas out of the United States for a reasonable cost.
Do you know it's cheaper for me to go buy natural gas from Europe than it is to get it out of certain parts of the United States right now?
That's insane.
It's insane.
It's absolutely insane.
And because of the Jones Act, I can't even ship it here because we don't have the American ships because only American ships can bring it in from the Gulf up to Boston or the rest of New England to build our reserves up.
Governor, we have over 200 years worth of supply of natural gas.
We have more natural gas than any country on earth.
And it's a clean, burning, you know, fuel.
It is, you're telling me people in New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
Well, Massachusetts, I don't care as much about New Hampshire.
I like the people of New Hampshire better.
I'm only teasing, by the way.
No, but seriously, the people in New England could be freezing this winter because of something so preventable as being energy independent and having enough, we might run out of natural gas to even power the grid, might have a blackout, and we're paying massive price increases.
That's what this winter is like?
That's it.
That's it.
And then if you're not on natural gas, let's say you have, because if you're on electricity, that'll affect that.
Maybe you have heating, heating oil.
Well, that costs $1,300 right now to fill up a 270-gallon tank, and that's a huge percentage of folks.
Propane, a lack of actual kerosene.
Forget the price.
How about just a lack of reserves of kerosene is what we're hearing?
That's insane.
You know, here's one thing.
And you know, diesel fuel, by the way, is in a shortage throughout the entire Northeast right now.
Absolutely.
And folks aren't talking.
The new federal guidelines for CDL drivers have made it so much more difficult just to make, just to create truck drivers.
You cannot get the product from here to there if you don't have truck drivers.
And these new federal regulations that went into effect not even a year ago under the Biden administration are insane.
So all the different pieces of the logistics to make the system move have been clogged up by politics and bad policy.
And again, we've lost about 7,000 megawatts.
Surrounding states have shut down natural gas.
What does that mean?
Most people won't understand that.
So on a really big day, New England will use about 20,000 megawatts, like on a really hot day, you know, let's say.
And everyone's using a lot of electricity.
So to take 7,000 off of usage, that's a huge, that's about 20% of the potential electricity grid has been reduced because all these other states around me, frankly, these very liberal states around me, are shutting down their systems.
Now I'm tied into them.
New England is tied together in a single grid.
Look, I know it gets complex, but it is real.
And the most important part is you got millions of people in New England that are at risk of going cold.
And that is very real.
That's a very real policy.
People should be upset.
They should be nervous.
And they should get to the polls as fast as they can to start changing policy and saying enough is enough and getting back to putting America first and tapping into our own reserves.
And it's not about politics.
It's just about keeping people warm.
And the Biden administration, the Democrats have to start understanding that.
Listen, you have an hour and 20 minutes to push.
Well, Governor Sununu is going to do well.
General Bullduck is in a fight for his life in New Hampshire.
An hour and 20 minutes until the polls close in New Hampshire.
If you're in line, by the way, you still get to vote.
So stay in line.
Governor, I pray that doesn't happen to your state or New England.
Thank you for being with us.
And I'll congratulate you in advance of your victory today.
You've earned it.
And the people of New Hampshire are speaking loudly in your favor today.
And rightly so.
Well deserved, sir.
Hey, Team Effort, I think we're all going to do well.
Let's go get them.
Thanks, guys.
An hour and 20 minutes.
That's all you've got.
General Bullduck, if he wins in New Hampshire, it would be a massive victory for the Republicans.
That was not even on the radar a month ago or six weeks ago.
So let me tell you where we are so you understand.
Everything that we have seen leading up to today, all indicators are we have been dead on accurate, that Republicans will take over the House, but that should not stop any of you from voting.
I'm very careful about stuff like this, but anecdotally, I've been getting information all day from all over the country, and Georgia, we expect to be close.
We expect it to be close in New Hampshire.
It is a dead heat in New Hampshire.
General Boulduck can win, and you got, well, an hour and 32 minutes to vote in New Hampshire.
You got Georgia, an hour and 32 minutes to vote for Herschel.
In North Carolina, you got, you know, two hours and two minutes to vote for Ted Budd.
Same with Ohio.
You got two hours and two minutes.
Florida is not going to be a problem for DeSantis or Rubio.
I don't see that happening.
Pennsylvania is a dead heat.
You have to pick them at this point.
If anything, probably early voting gave Federman an advantage because they didn't have the debate until the end of the campaign.
You know, so every vote is going to matter.
But if you look at all of these swing state Senate races combined from Georgia to North Carolina to New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, Washington State, and I'll even add, although I don't think JD is going to have a problem in Ohio or Ron Johnson's going to have a problem in Wisconsin, I am telling you, it's going to be probably like 50,000 votes that determines the balance of power in the Senate.
What does that mean for all of you listening right now?
Get your ass out and vote.
You have no excuse.
We'll get the government we deserve.
Sean Hannity Show talking about what's right for America with a renewed commitment to keep you up to date on the breaking news stories.
25 to the top of the hour, toll-free.
It's 800-941-Sean, if you want to be a part of the program.
I have made an executive decision.
I'm not going to go down the road of exit polling data, which I have.
And you're going to say, Hannity, why not?
I'll tell you why.
Because in 2004, if you were listening to this radio program, you would know that in fact, the exit poll showed that Bush and Cheney were going to lose Florida and Ohio.
Dick Cheney was on a plane.
The exit polls came out about 5.20.
And by 5.35, he was on this radio program asking people in Florida and Pennsylvania to get out and vote because he saw the same exit polls I saw.
John Kerry, I voted for 47 billion percent voted against it.
He was supposed to be president.
That didn't, I was in the exit polls also.
That never happened.
Exit polls in 2016 had Hillary Rodham Clinton as the next president of the United States.
That obviously didn't happen.
2020, they had Joe Biden winning almost by a landslide.
Very few states that Donald Trump would win.
That didn't happen either.
Three states, swing states, total of 43,000 votes separated the two candidates.
So all I'm going to say to you is my admonition that I've been pushing now for weeks remains the same.
And that is that these key Senate and gubernatorial races, you've got to anticipate that your vote is going to be the vote that pushes your candidate over the top.
That means Georgia, Herschel Walker.
That means North Carolina, Ted Budd.
And I don't want to forget about Tim Scott in South Carolina.
He deserves people's votes.
What a great guy.
He went out of his way to help so many people in this race.
Ted Cruz, same thing.
Amazing.
I don't want to forget about John Kennedy in Louisiana.
I don't want to forget about Ram Paul.
I don't want to forget about Chuck Grassley.
They all deserve to be reelected.
They've all done good jobs.
But when it comes to Georgia, North Carolina, New Hampshire, you've got an hour and 23 minutes to vote for General Bullduck.
It is within reach for General Bullduck in New Hampshire.
Take my word for it.
It is that close in New Hampshire.
It is a winnable race in the next hour and 23 minutes.
If enough of you hear my voice and go vote, he can win that race.
And you should assume the same for Ted Budd in North Carolina and the same for Herschel in Georgia.
Dr. Raj, we've already known this is a tight race.
That race is going to be decided probably by less than a percentage point.
If you're in Pennsylvania and you don't want this radical that wants to open up your prisons, end fracking, no limits on abortion, legalize drugs, have you pay for safe heroin injection sites, then you need to go vote in Pennsylvania.
That is going to be a tight, tight race.
If I had to guess right now, that race will be decided by fewer than 20,000 votes in Pennsylvania.
That's how important your vote is.
And by the way, Pennsylvania closes, I believe, at 8 p.m.
So that race is a problem.
Wait, wait, wait, but don't forget in Luzerne, they're going to stay open until 10 because they didn't have enough ballots.
Make sure you're air.
Luzern County, the judges ruled that those polls won't close.
They extended voting in Luzerne County because they ran out of ballots.
How do you run out of ballots?
How do you have these problems?
Always the same states have the problems.
Anyway, North Carolina.
So in Georgia, the polls close at 7.
New Hampshire, the polls close at 7.
North Carolina, 7.30.
Ohio, 7.30.
At 8 o'clock, Florida, Pennsylvania, the polls close there.
Then we have 9 o'clock, Arizona, and New York.
The polls close there.
Blake Masters, Carrie Lake, they need your support.
We've had problems.
Washington Post confirming that, in fact, fully 20% of the, what's the word again?
The tabulator.
Tabulators.
What is a tabulator?
So the tabulators.
Don't explain.
I don't even want to know.
But 20%.
It tabulates.
It tabulates.
That's what the first definition says.
All right.
Then at 10 p.m., Nevada, Adam Laxalt's in a close race.
Blake Masters and Carrie Lake are in close races.
Tiffany Smiley's in a close race.
Gretchen Whitmer probably is right there in Michigan unless you put Tudor Dixon over the finish line.
Lee Zeldon can still win in New York.
It's very hard.
Odds against us, but why not?
Wouldn't that be great for New York?
So I'm not expecting that.
And by the way, every congressional seat, some of these congressional seats won't be decided for weeks and weeks from now.
You know, which is, by the way, in and of itself, unreal.
All right, let's get to your phone calls.
You've been very patient today.
This Election Day edition of the Sean Hannity Show.
Anyway, let's go to the great state of Alabama.
What's going on, Gary?
How are you?
Welcome.
Happy Election Day, sir.
Happy election, Sean.
Thank you for being a voice of sanity and a sea of stupidity.
Well, there's a lot of stupidity out there for sure.
Yeah, it was so easy.
We walked up, signs on the door, voter, you know, you have to have your picture ID available.
Walked in.
They're sitting there with iPads.
They scanned my ID.
It pulled up from the voter database.
The lady verifies it.
A couple of little clicks, flips the screen over.
I got to sign it with a stylus.
Thank you, sir.
Walked around behind her.
There's a lady there, pulls a paper ballot.
Guy next to her puts it into a privacy folder, hands it.
It's real simple.
I mean, about the biggest hiccup, there was a guy that was a couple of people in front of me.
He's an older gentleman.
He's maybe not so computer savvy.
He had a little bit of time as far as signing it with a stylus.
Other than that, it was simple.
I don't understand why all these places across the country are having all these problems with their voting machines.
I mean, you know.
By the way, everybody in the 40-plus states that do it right should be pissed off because guess what?
The election impacts them.
Yeah, it pisses me off.
I have no vote in Pennsylvania, but I'm hearing of this moron up there who's who, you know, no, it's something that's affecting me.
I want the people of Pennsylvania and the people of Georgia getting in some good people because it's going to affect me, and there's nothing I can do about it because of these two idiots that somehow have gotten into the running.
You know, it's ridiculous.
It's insane.
Anyway, Gary, thank you, my friend.
Appreciate it.
Matt is in Arizona where they had 20% of Maricopa machines or tabulators.
I guess, I don't know what hell a tabulator is, malfunctioning.
It's unbelievable.
And they put up a sign, but they don't want you to take a picture of the sign as if somebody's not going to take a picture of the sign.
That sign is out there.
I'm sure it's all over the Twitterverse as we speak.
Anyway, well, they might actually, well, maybe Elon Musk won't.
Maybe he'll actually let it go through.
Matt in Arizona, what's up, Matt?
How are you?
Hey, Sean, I'm going to double down with Gary from Alabama.
Rather easy going into the voter poll.
Scan your ID, be verified, get your paper ballot.
But when I got to the tabulator, Sean, and I'm going to sum this up for you real simple.
Like that vending machine that keeps spitting your dollar bill out at you.
I hate that.
I hate that.
Anyway, I'm at the tabulating machine.
There's two of them.
Guy on the left of me, his spits it back five times.
Mine comes back ten times.
They ask us to go back into the lengthy line.
At this point in time, I do this three more times, Sean, for about a total of 47 times where it's not reading my ballot.
Are you kidding me?
So what'd you do?
Serious.
I said, what are my options?
The poll workers were very gracious to help me out.
She said, you can put it in the unreadable ballot slot, which is just like a mailbox slot in the tabulating machine, and it will be manually counted sometime when voting is over.
I said, I don't want to do that.
Good for you.
She said, or you can spoil your ballot, and we can set you up over at the computer touch screen, and you can do it over there.
So I opted to do that.
It spits out your ballot, prints it out on a printer with a QR code on it.
She goes, perfect.
Now you have to go back to the tabulating machine and run it through there again.
Went through, first shot.
Thank you very much.
But it dawned on me, Sean, with elections passed years ago, we cannot use the felt marker pens.
The people that were using ballpoint pen and ink pens had no problems with theirs going through the tabulating machine.
There's no excuse.
I used the example earlier.
We send people to the moon.
When did we first land on the moon?
When did we first walk on the moon?
When did we bring people back from the moon?
You know, if we could send people to the moon and bring them home safely, I think we ought to be able to have a tabulator, whatever the hell that is, work properly.
And, well, no, when's the first time we landed on the moon?
One giant step of man.
Yeah.
One giant step.
Thank you for the call, Sean.
Come in.
Anyway, thanks for the call.
69.
1969.
What year is this?
2022.
You'd think you'd be able to tabulate.
Anyway, Pennsylvania, Jeff, very close race for Oz, and it is a very important race.
And you don't have a lot of time in these states to get out and vote.
You've got to get in line now.
What's going on?
So my wife and I are both registered Republicans.
I went to vote in person, but I'm going to tell you the gross incompetence of our system here in Pennsylvania.
My wife never even got her ballot.
She had to travel for work well in advance of the election, three weeks before we requested her ballot.
Pennsylvania said, yes, received, yes, approved.
Your ballot will be mailed.
It's coming up to her travel time.
We don't have the ballot.
I go to the election office, our county election office, they said, don't worry, you're going to receive it.
Well, it's the day that she's traveling.
I go back over and they're like, well, trust us, it'll show up in today's mail.
Well, it didn't show up in the mail.
I went back to the county election office and I said, what is our recourse?
She wants to vote in this election.
It's going to be a close election.
They basically said, we're sorry.
There's nothing we can do.
Wow.
Unbelievable.
What county are you in?
Center County.
Where's that?
I'm not sure where that is.
Where is that?
Penn State University, right in Pennsylvania.
Gotcha.
All right.
Listen, Oz needs help.
If you're in Pennsylvania, get out and vote.
I'm telling you, it's close.
These races are close.
Georgia is close.
North Carolina is close.
New Hampshire is very, very close.
Pennsylvania, very, very close.
Arizona will be very close.
Nevada will be very close.
I can't say it with more urgency.
If you want this insanity to stop, you have to get there and you have to stay in line.
If it takes a few hours, I'm sorry.
Is your country worth a few hours of your time?
The answer is overwhelmingly yes.
Let's say hi to Rita's in South Carolina.
I hope you voted for Tim Scott today.
I did.
Hi, Sean.
How are you?
I'm good.
How are you?
Glad you called.
Thanks.
I'm nervous.
I'm seeing 2020 happen all over again with all these irregularities and the stories that the callers are telling about how they were disenfranchised.
And the next step is they're going to stop counting at 3 a.m.
I'm terrified that we're going to have a repeat of 2020.
The saddest thing I've heard all day is a report.
Well, we might have 99% of the vote in Arizona counted by Friday.
How come 40 states can give us an answer tonight and the same states can't give us an answer for days and days and days and days?
It makes no sense.
It is.
None whatsoever.
And it's not fair.
It's not fair to the people in other states.
It's not fair to the people in state.
It's not fair to the country.
And we're capable of doing better.
Sometimes simpler is better.
And that same day voting, make it a national holiday.
Make exceptions, absentee ballots.
You apply for it if you're old, infirmed, if you're going to be out of town.
Short of that, make it a national holiday, paper ballots.
Everyone goes in, you write out your ballot, hand count, you have observers watch the whole process all day long and then watch the vote counting all night long and then give people the answer as fast as you can.
And if it's close, count it again.
That's it.
It's not that complicated.
We don't have any questions ever.
Again, we don't need this every single year.
Anyway, let's say hi to Jim in North Carolina.
What's up, Jim?
Hope you voted for Ted Budd.
Great American Sean Hannity.
Thank you for taking my call.
Yes, sir.
We're a great American.
What's on your mind?
I would like to tell you about my voting experience last week, and I have a couple of suggestions for voters across the country if we have time.
I did something last week I had not done before.
I participated in early voting.
I went in, they gave me a paper ballot, and it was darkening in the circles, and then put it into the machine, and the machine instantly tabulated what I had chosen.
And if anything goes wrong, we have a paper copy.
And I really like that.
I like the idea of a paper copy also.
And that's something that we should institutionalize as well.
Because if people save them, if there's any questions about their vote, you can be able to retrace the steps and see if they got it right.
I like that.
Anyway, Jim, I'm going to move fast.
Dan in New York, you're going to have the last word, Dan, on this election day.
What's going on?
Hey, Sean, thank you for taking my call.
I just want to let you know, I know I'm in New York.
I know we're a deep blue state, but I want to let you know, Lee Zeldon really has a chance to pull this off.
And I'm hoping you keep promoting him and, you know, keep telling people in New York, go out there, stay online, vote for him.
Let me end with this.
You're right.
Everybody, I hope that's hearing you.
You're right.
If you haven't voted yet, get online before the polls close.
If you're online and the polls close, you still get to vote.
It's a lot on the line here.
You know, I've been very cautious, unlike others, about the red wave, red tsunami.
I don't believe in that.
You vote as if your vote is going to be the one that puts it over the top.
We'll continue.
We have a lot of ground to cover.
Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, the state of Washington, and everywhere in between.
We'll get the government we deserve.
We'll be back here tomorrow.
Thanks for being with us.
Export Selection