In the final hour, Sean Hannity confronts rising violence and political rhetoric across the country. With guests including Paul Morrow, former NYPD counterterrorism head, Hannity examines Chicago’s crime crisis, Governor Pritzker’s leadership, and the national pattern of leniency toward criminals. They explore how political agendas have undermined safety and public trust, and Hannity challenges listeners to stand for accountability and community values. The show closes with reflections on hard work, purpose, and America’s shifting moral compass.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What I told people, I was making a podcast about Benghazi.
Nine times out of ten, they called me a masochist, rolled their eyes, or just asked why.
Benghazi, the truth became a web of lies.
From Prologue Projects and Pushkin Industries, this is Fiasco, Benghazi.
What difference at this point does it make?
Listen to Fiasco, Benghazi, the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
News Roundup Information Overload Hour.
Here's our toll-free telephone number this Friday.
It's 800-941.
Sean, if you want to be a part of the program, Letitia James in Virginia getting a rain today, saying the justice system is being used as a tool of revenge and a vehicle of retribution.
Listen.
But this is not about me.
This is about all of us and about a justice system which has been weaponized.
Now, I ask all of you, is this the same Letitia James that ran on a platform to go after one man, one family, one organization, yet Trump.
Let's go back in time, shall we, to the campaign of Letitia James.
I will never be afraid to challenge this illegitimate president when our fundamental rights are at stake.
I believe that the president of these United States can be indicted for criminal offenses.
Will you sue him for house?
Oh, we're going to definitely do.
We're going to be a real pain in the name personally.
That man in the White House.
Who can't go a day without threatening our fundamental rights?
Yes, we need to focus on Donald Trump and his abuses.
We need to follow his money.
We need to find out where he's laundered money.
We need to find out whether or not he's engaged in conspiracy.
It's important that everyone understand that the days of Donald Trump are coming to an end.
I look forward to going into the office of Attorney General every day, suing him, defending your rights, and then going home.
Well, that's pretty much what she did.
Pretty unbelievable.
And we had J.B. Pritzker confronted by Brett Baer over Chicago's astronomical murder rate.
Remember, it's five times that of New York City.
That's saying a lot.
Since he's become governor, 4,000-plus homicides in his state.
But he's too busy, you know, claiming that Trump is a Nazi and a fascist and calling him every other name in the book.
Listen.
Why does Chicago have the highest murder rate of all the big cities?
Well, we are not in the top 30 in terms of our murder rate.
Indeed, our murder rate has been cut in half over the last four years.
And every year it's gone down by double digits.
And if you look at all of the violent crime over the last four years, they've all gone down.
17.47 per 100,000 population.
Chicago is number one over Philadelphia, Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Phoenix, Los Angeles, New York, and San Diego.
What I'm explaining to you is when you want to fight crime.
Look, you can pull statistics up.
These are murders.
I'm explaining to you that our murder rate has been cut in half.
And very importantly, Brett, you got to hear this.
Very importantly, we've been doing the things that are necessary to bring crime down, right?
We've invested in community violence interruption.
We've invested in police.
I've added more state police than any governor in quite a long time.
It's very important that we do both of those things and more to invest in our communities so that we bring crime down.
We're doing that.
You know who's doing the opposite?
Donald Trump.
That's not what we need.
Obviously, he's running for office.
You know, and then, of course, comparing ICE agents and ICE raids to Nazis and Pinochet and other authoritarian regimes.
Listen to this answer.
What I can tell you is that Alberto Pinochet was an authoritarian.
There are lots of authoritarians that I could point to.
It happens that I know best because I helped build a Holocaust museum sitting next to Holocaust survivors about what the Nazis did in those early years.
I'm not talking about the Holocaust.
I'm talking about what they were doing, taking away people's rights, arresting people, asking them for papers.
Early on in an authoritarian regime, wherever it is in the world throughout history, this is what happens.
It's the beginning of something very bad for our country.
We are now living through one of the most violent times.
And rather than, you know, reducing the murder rate and putting the proper law enforcement in place to protect the lives of people in Chicago and in his state, you know, he'd prefer to spend every spare minute, every hour of every day trashing Donald Trump.
But, you know, if you look at all that's going on around the country, Minnesota man arrested for a murder for a higher plot targeting Pam Bondi.
Cash Patel vowing to prosecute pro-illegal alien activists, Democrats that are now using the master ICE tracker, which will only put a bullseye on the foreheads and then the backs of ICE agents that are doing their job and enforcing the law.
I mean, I have example after example.
There's a terrible poll that came out today.
Those celebrating, remember the alleged murderer, Luigi Mangioni, the United Healthcare CEO.
And anyway, you look at young Americans, 40% of them aged 18 to 29 believe that citizens taking violent action, quote, against the rich is sometimes justified.
We now live in an assassination culture.
Charlie Kirk, two would-be assassins of Donald Trump.
He came within a millimeter of losing his life.
And you got a main Democrat with a Nazi tattoo.
And now we find out made homophobic statements as well.
And it goes on and on and on.
Anyway, joining us now is Paul Morrow, formerly ran the counterterrorism operations for the NYPD Intelligence Unit, a Fox News contributor.
Thank you, sir, for being with us.
This is a scary environment right now.
It really is, Sean, and thank you for having me.
You know, you encapsulated it very well.
We have the thought leaders on the left who are either in abject denial or who are leading the charge.
It looks very much like the latter when it comes to those who are seeking higher office.
And there's no secret here of the people who were driving it.
Pritzker, which you amply noted, you have AOC who wants Schumer Steet.
You have Brandon Johnson in Chicago who's done nothing to help that town.
We could go on and on.
And even the assassination of Charlie Kirk and the attempts on Donald Trump don't seem to calm things down.
And I don't think they will calm down because I think they just are so bitter about the fact that not only did Donald Trump win a second term, which none of them counted on, but he's doing what he said he would do and what the country voted for.
And as they unwind, that is, the Trump administration unwinds all the predations of the Biden years, they're watching their agenda slip away.
And Victor David Hansen makes a very good point, which is along with that, they're starting to see now that Trumpism very well may survive Donald Trump's term.
And as we go into maybe J.D. Vance or Marco Rubio, it's here to stay.
What do you think it is?
I mean, take a guy like J.B. Pritzker, five times the murder homicide rate of New York City.
New York City is pretty bad.
It's not like, you know, that's your prime example.
And you got a situation five times worse since he's been governor, over 4,000 dead people.
And all he wants to do is lash out at Donald Trump, who is offering, you know, aid and support to keep the city of Chicago and other violent areas safe and secure, which I argue, Paul, is a prerequisite to pursue happiness.
If you don't have law and order, safety, security, you cannot pursue your God-given talent in life.
Absolutely.
I mean, this is why people formed nations to begin with.
Going back to biblical times, you band together to safety because there's strength in numbers.
And we seem to have lost track of that prime directive.
And somebody like Pritzker, and he's not the only violator here, but somebody like Pritzker really just does seem willing to assume a willful blindness and just has decided that there is an acceptable casualty rate because it doesn't happen in his neighborhood.
You and I both know that, that famous video of him walking around Lakeside and saying, look, see, everything's calm at six in the morning with his security detail.
I was there for the DNC with you, Sean.
And I went out to some of the rougher neighborhoods.
And it was interesting talking to some of the very young people there, high school level age girls and in a car next to me.
I was talking to them.
They just assumed, seeing me in their neighborhood, that I was there to report on yet another shooting.
It's just, it was just assumed.
That doesn't happen in Pritzker's neighborhood.
He doesn't care.
No, I remember your coverage.
I remember very well.
I mean, you know, I don't really talk about issues involving being in the public eye that often.
But over the years, I mean, I'm a little more willing to talk about it now because of all that we're living through at this moment.
You know, white powder sent to me and thoughtwas on my head and death threats galore.
I mean, you can't get a New York City pistol carry permit unless you have like a thousand death threats.
And I qualified.
Let's put it that way.
And then it was getting worse and worse and worse in the Trump era.
It's like my very presence would trigger people and you'd see nothing but disdain and disgust on people's faces.
And it got to the point, Paul, that I felt like when I would take friends and family into a restaurant for crying out loud, I might be putting them at risk.
And I didn't feel comfortable letting that continue.
Yeah, and isn't it telling that the reverse is not the case?
You can take the most visible liberal from Hollywood and put that person in a hotel in some of the reddest districts of America or in a restaurant in any heavy Republican area, and they won't get the same treatment.
You have to say to yourself why.
And I always devolve to the old chestnuts that the right thinks the left is wrong, but the left thinks the right is evil.
And in their minds, that justifies any action.
And unfortunately, that theory has kind of moved to the mainstream of the Democratic Party and, in fact, to the forefront.
And that's the charge they're leading now.
We saw it at No Kings.
All right, quick break.
Right back.
More with Paul Morrow, who formerly ran the counterterrorism operation for the NYPD and their intelligence unit.
More with him on the other side than your calls this Friday coming up.
800-941-Sean is our number.
The interviews you won't hear anywhere else.
Every day.
Every day.
That's what we do.
And you're on the Sean Hannity Show.
And you're on the Sean Hannity Show.
And we continue with Paul Morrow, formerly ran counter-terrorism operations for the NYPD Intelligence Unit.
You know, we lived under David Dinkins in New York, and it became an unmitigated disaster.
Rudy Giuliani, he did such an amazing job cleaning up New York City.
Times Square, Exhibit A, 42nd Street.
You remember back in the old days, 42nd Street?
I mean, it was, you know, triple X rated peep shows, drug dealers up and down the street, left, right, and sideways.
I mean, that's what I was growing up for crying out loud.
And he beautified it.
He Disney-fied it even.
And it became a place where, you know, people could safely walk through it.
New York City now is changing dramatically.
I report out today a new poll out today that shows over 25% of New Yorkers are considering leaving the city if Kami Marks's Mamdani wins.
And I don't have a lot of hope that New York City is going to wake up in time and not elect this guy.
No, I think you're right.
And, you know, all of these polls, it's interesting to me that of all the polls you see, they all put Cuomo head to head with Mamdani if Sli-Wa were to drop out.
Isn't it interesting that you never see the reverse?
And that is to say, were Cuomo to have dropped out after he lost the primary and was rejected.
By the way, there's not one poll that shows Cuomo beating Mamdani head to head.
Not one.
That's right.
Yeah, because the Sli-Wa voters won't come over to him because they remember his depredations way, way too well.
But you're entirely right.
New York City's sliding backwards.
I don't care what the numbers say relative to the crime.
You know, so they have made some gains in violent crime, but the bottom line is the quality of life here, the quality of life crimes are not even prosecuted anymore.
They don't get captured in the statistics.
You and I both know walking around the city that the city is becoming as bad as it was back then, if not quite as violent with violent crime.
Quality of life is way, way down.
And while Times Square is not Disneyfied as much as it was, which, by the way, the left was entirely against, they talked about the Disney vacation of Times Square.
They took Rudy to court every other day.
He had to fight every step of the way.
That's right.
And by the way, the mafia controlled all that, Times Square, all the peep shows and everything that you're talking about.
So essentially, they were doing the mafia's dirty work.
But now we have the different issue, which is this homeless everywhere, scaffolding.
You have street-level crimes that are not reported.
People have essentially given up.
Shoplifting is our sport here.
And there's something like 330 recidivists citywide who are responsible for a full third of all the shoplifting.
But because of the revolving door justice that we've put in, it continues.
There's some very simple measures that could fix all of this.
And they just are unwilling to take those measures.
Well, they're down about 10,000 officers.
I know Curtis would hire 7,000 more.
Cuomo said 5,000 more.
You know, Mom Donnie wants to send in the social workers.
And I'm sorry if you're dealing with a deranged human being threatening to kill people on the subway system, having some social worker say, sir, sir, ma'am, ma'am, we have a moment.
Is there something in your childhood that might have triggered you and brought you to this moment in life where you want to kill everybody on this train?
I mean, how idiotic is that?
Yeah, and it's not going to work.
And we should recognize that it's been tried.
The de Blasio administration put out similar measures.
They had this program called Violence Interrupters, which I doubt you've heard of, and that's by design because it was very quietly put in.
It was one of those mysterious de Blasio initiatives like Thrive New York for mental health.
Over a billion dollars did absolutely nothing.
Same thing with violence interrupters.
They were supposed to be out there as the liaison between violent offenders and the police department.
Many of them were gangbangers themselves.
I'm sure half of them are still on the payroll.
They did nothing.
I've never seen one.
I've never seen a story that mattered from any of them.
But it's realistically just another form of a social safety net.
Let's give away the public's money.
And this is why people are leaving this town.
Paul Morrow, thank you.
Appreciate your time as always.
When I told people, I was making a podcast about Benghazi.
Nine times out of ten, they called me a masochist, rolled their eyes, or just asked, why?
Benghazi, the truth became a web of lies.
It's almost a dirty word, one that connotes conspiracy theory.
Will we ever get the truth about the Benghazi massacre?
Bad faith, political warfare, and frankly, bullshit.
We kill the ambassador just to cover something up.
You put two and two together.
Was it an overblown distraction or a sinister conspiracy?
Benghazi is a Rosetta Stone for everything that's been going on for the last 20 years.
I'm Leon Nayfock from Prologue Projects and Pushkin Industries.
This is Fiasco, Benghazi.
What difference at this point does it make?
Yes, that's right.
Lock her up.
Listen to Fiasco, Benghazi, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's so interesting to watch.
I think Joe Rogan is a very eclectic, interesting person.
He's not that political, to be very honest with you.
I know he played a pretty impactful role in the last presidential election.
President Trump, I think, spent over three hours with the guy.
And I like him because of his love of UFC and his love of mixed martial arts.
And, you know, he's a guy's guy.
He seemed like a regular guy.
I don't know him.
I've never talked to him.
And all these people, it's so funny.
They like beg to be on his show.
Linda, I beg not to be on people's shows.
I'm like, I got my own shows.
I don't have enough time to do anybody else's show.
But I do do some for friends, as you know.
But I got a pretty intense schedule and I'm very happy, you know, putting all my work and focus into radio and TV every day.
But people begging him.
And Gavin Newsom, who I have invited repeatedly to come back on this program, I have texted him directly, offered him a full hour on TV, a full three hours on radio.
Why would you do that to your audience?
Do you hate us that much?
Oh, my God.
I don't hate you, but I mean, you know, such a blabber message.
I'm not going to stomach him for two minutes, let alone an hour.
I'll tell you why, because Joe Rogan is not immersed in the day-to-day weeds of political.
It's not his wheelhouse or what he does.
He's a very different kind of host, and I admire what he does.
I think he's great at what he does.
However, politics really isn't that much of his thing, if you pay attention.
He pays attention to it.
I think that resonates every day, man.
Listen, I don't want everyone to do the same show.
I like the fact that he's different.
I do like that.
And I think he's very likable and very smart.
And anyway, so Gavin has been like trolling and begging Rogan to come on his show.
Now, the one thing I picked up, and tell me if I'm wrong, the people that are always begging to be on his show, he never puts them on, does he?
Definitely not.
Yeah, it's like, no, you're not coming on.
I'm like, no.
And especially people with political agendas.
Anyway, so, you know, he's watching.
He's not afraid of Gavin Newsome, you know, but he made this joke the other day that I thought was pretty funny.
And this is what he said.
What Donald Trump should do is when he leaves the office, run for governor of California and just take over California and fix it.
It would be hilarious if he did.
It would be one of the funniest things of all time if an 82-year-old man steps into the office of Governor of California.
We're going to fix everything.
You've got to drop with water.
I know how to get the water.
It would be hilarious.
You know what I would do if he'd ever decided to invite Gavin Nussamon?
I would, I might try to contact Rogan.
And you know what I would do?
I would hit him with all the information he'd ever need, and it would be an unmerciful slaughter.
Bro, he moved.
He left California.
That's all the ammo he needs.
He left the place he loves like so many other Californians because he had enough.
He had enough.
It was gross.
I thought another funny moment.
So we have this, you know, Spanberger, Abigail Spanberger, running in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
And yeah, she's a woman.
So is Winsom Earl Sears, who's the current lieutenant governor running for governor.
In the case of what's going on in Virginia, it's very, very interesting.
This woman, Spanberger, won't condemn Joey Jones, who called, you know, for assassinating the Speaker of the House and his kids and bringing harm to them.
And she won't tell this idiot to drop out.
And it's had a huge impact on the race.
He wants to make Virginia a sanctuary state, the Commonwealth of Virginia, all in favor of this, you know, men and women sports and locker rooms nonsense.
And her polling is dropped like a rock.
That's why I'm telling you, if you live in New Jersey or you live in New Jersey, by the way, early voting starts on Saturday, just like New York.
And anyway, and so, and it already started in Virginia.
So she has all of these issues.
Polls are dropping like crazy.
And then you listen to Liberal Joe and MSDNC.
Now you have two women in the race for governor, but they're blaming sexism for the problems that Spanberger is having in Virginia.
And I'm like, hello?
Can you pay attention here?
Because you have in Winsom Sears, an American, a Jamaican American immigrant who's the current lieutenant governor that's running for governor against the other woman.
Listen.
It really is incredible when you have Abigail Spanberger, Mikey Cheryl, her background, all the different jobs that she has held in the military.
And also like Alyssa Slotkin.
I mean, my God, these women are incredible.
And to them, I would say fight, fight, fight, because we need them.
Yeah.
We need them.
And Mikey is like, she's doing a ton of interviews.
You know, when I talked to them, when I was in the car, you know, it was this car.
She had gone from interview to interview to talk to talk to, but, you know, you still see the anxiety.
Yeah, Cheryl did have a few missteps in her campaign, but she still has, as you say, about a five or six point league proposing.
Spanberger's leading Virginia a little bigger than that.
But, you know, both still competitive races here heading into the last couple of weeks.
But to me, to Molly's point, I mean, this is something that a lot of Democrats are grappling with right now as they've elected, they've nominated women two of the last three elections for the presidency, lost both.
There are some who say, well, we can't do that again.
The stakes are too high.
But of course, that does fall into the same misogynistic trap.
Other countries have no problem electing women.
Okay.
I mean, how do you say it's misogynistic?
And in the case of Mikey Sheryl in New Jersey, she didn't walk with her class at graduation.
Another, you know, transgender, you know, men and women sports champion.
She won't pledge not to raise taxes on the people of New Jersey.
And, you know, on top of that, she made $7 million.
And she has no idea how.
She can't give an explanation.
I don't know.
$7 million just showed up in my bank account.
I mean, Linda, $7 million shows up in your bank account tomorrow.
I think you might notice.
Oh, I would notice.
You would notice too, because I wouldn't be coming in anymore.
You'd be like, where's Linda?
She's got $7 million.
She has no idea where it came from.
So if you hit the lotto, you would not work anymore.
For $7 million?
Let me tell you what I would do.
Do you want to know what I would do if I had $7 million?
What would you do for $7?
What would you do?
You win the lotto.
First of all, I'll tell you what I'm going to do.
First of all.
First of all, I'm going to give $3 million to Curtis Lewis' campaign, and I'm going to crush Kami Donnie first and foremost.
Next, I'm going to give $1 million to my siblings.
Then I'm going to pay off everybody's mortgages.
And whatever remaining money I have left, I'm going to buy a big farm and save all of the sheltered dogs in America and cats.
Okay.
And I'm going to hire veterans to come and work with the shelter dogs.
So it's a win-win for everybody.
Sheltered dogs?
You're going to work with the dogs?
Yeah.
And the veterans are going to love it because I'm going to respect them.
They're going to live on the farm for free, room and board, and they're going to get nice meals and they're going to have a good time with the dogs and the cats.
And to me, that would be an amazing life.
Well, Linda said it in her cat, who was five times the size of a normal.
You know what?
Are you all right?
Are you okay?
That cat is fine.
She was low.
The cat was five times the size of a put the picture on Hennity.com then.
No.
Of the cat when it was a fat cat.
No, she's very shy.
She doesn't want her picture shown.
Chris in Connecticut on the Sean Hannity Show.
Happy Friday.
Hi.
Chris, are you there?
What's going on?
Yeah, Sean, can you hear me okay?
I can hear you fine.
What's going on?
So listen, I was listening to your show about two days ago, and there was a young man that called in.
I think he was calling from the Penn State area, said he had gone to some of these Kings of Pro, you know, No More Kings protests, right?
And I was really impressed by how you spoke to him and how you asked questions.
And then you wrapped it up by talking about work ethic and young folks.
And I really wanted to applaud you.
The way you spoke to the young kids was really commendable.
And the fact that you talked about work ethic with young kids is really what we need to start doing again in this country.
These are the conversations.
I'm not going to say that this came out of nowhere.
I mean, I have kids in my 20s myself, and I talk to them about this all the time.
And I'm like, you got to work.
You got to serve.
And I always go back to my example.
You're not, everybody has a purpose.
God gave everyone talent.
I really believe that.
And the best thing that can happen in your life is you find your talent, then you find a way to make money using your talent.
I mean, I had no idea I had a big mouth.
All I knew is I liked talking on the radio.
And, you know, I just, whatever it is that you love, pursue it, find a way to make money at it.
And you'll live your best life in that way.
And you'll be contributing in the best way possible because that's what you were born to do.
But I find with a lot of young people, you know, they don't have a work ethic.
And I keep telling my kids, you're never going to be trust fund brats.
And I'm not letting that happen ever.
Ever.
You go to a restaurant.
You get greeted by somebody.
That person seats you.
Then I go through my whole list.
Somebody brings over and fills your water glass.
Then somebody comes over and takes a drink order.
And then somebody makes the drink.
And then they bring the drink to your table.
And then you order appetizers.
And then somebody takes the order and then goes back.
And the cook makes your appetizers.
Then somebody brings it to your table.
And then somebody comes, cleans the table, and on and on and on.
We're not kings and queens.
We're here to serve other people in some capacity.
And in the process of doing that, that's the honesty and the real beauty of capitalism is that then you serve other people in whatever profession you're doing.
And, you know, but I want kids to have a work ethic today.
I mean, I worry a little bit.
You know, I see some young people, there's a little bit too much of an entitlement mentality among some, among some, but a lot of them are great kids and they just, they need a little guidance.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
And, you know, you mentioned something, you know, sometimes I feel like, you know, money is a dirty word and it shouldn't be.
It's a reward for hard work, right?
You exchange your effort, your hard work, and you get money in return.
And it kind of, you talked about something else, right?
You talked about some bankrupt government programs, you know, Medicaid and disability and some others.
And we need to embrace kind of fiscal responsibility.
It goes hand in hand because if we don't do it now, it's these young kids that are going to be bearing the burden because we weren't disciplined today and we haven't been for the past probably 20 years or so, correct?
100%.
And we've got to stop robbing from our kids and grandkids.
It has to end.
We have to draw a line in the sand.
I am confident that under President Trump, you're going to see revenues increase if we can get a control of spending.
And this is where I like the idea of Connie Mack first introduced it in the House and Rand Paul still supports it.
And that's the penny plan.
I like that a lot.
You know, cut $1 out of one penny out of every dollar you spend and you stop baseline budgeting, which has built-in increases and everything.
And it would be a way to get your budget in balance.
And if you increase revenues because of the tax cuts, the $17, $18 trillion in new committed monies for manufacturing investment and oil monies that this country should be having dividends from in the years in the future, I think that it's an I think it's a formula for great success.
And I hope it is.
I really do.
But anyway, I'm glad you liked it, Chris.
God bless you, man.
You have a great weekend, all right?
Likewise, do the same yourself.
Thank you.
800-941-Sean, if you want to be a part of the program.
We have a minute left.
Let's go to Paul in New York.
What's up, Paul?
We have a minute.
It's all yours.
Take it and run.
Good afternoon.
How you doing?
I'm a retired police officer.
I was 27 years almost.
I was for 19 years.
I was an elected representative PBA delegate.
I was on the political committee.
I want to talk about the mayor's race.
The idea, excuse me, that Cuomo, who already lost to Mondami, can now come back and beat him is a bit far-fetched.
Some of the reasons for that, they're assuming, they're making assumptions that the Republicans, if Cuomo drops out and all these Republicans are going to vote for Cuomo.
That's not going to happen.
Definitely not going to happen.
The die-hard Republicans will never do that.
The moderate Republicans remember some of the reasons why we're in the position we're in now because of him, because of his actions, the crime.
I totally agree with your analysis.
There's not a single poll head-to-head Momdani and Cuomo that shows Cuomo close.
And, you know, we always say we want politicians that are principal.
Curtis is like, I can't be bought and I'm not getting out and you're not pushing me out.
That sounds like he's standing on his principles.
And we're going to criticize him for that.
I'm not.
I won't do it.
I think that's going to wrap things up for today.
All right, the president, it's a 24-hour trip as he heads to various countries in Asia, culminating with his meeting with President Qi of China.
We'll have full, complete coverage of that.
Democratic meltdown.
We're on Schumer's shutdown watch.
Will they open the government or are they going to let people, poor people in the country go hungry?
Anyway, we'll be monitoring all of it.
Have a great, great weekend.
We'll be back here on Monday.
Thank you for making this show possible.
When I told people I was making a podcast about Benghazi, nine times out of ten, they called me a masochist, rolled their eyes, or just asked, Benghazi, the truth became a web of lies.
From Prologue Projects and Pushkin Industries, this is Fiasco, Benghazi.