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Nov. 14, 2025 - Sean Hannity Show
28:45
Government Shutdown: America's Response
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This is an iHeart podcast.
All right, news roundup information overload hour.
Here's our toll-free telephone number.
You want to be a part of the program.
It's 800-941 Sean.
If you want to join us, we are in our nation's capital.
We are in the DC swamp, although it's a lot cleaner swamp than it used to be.
A lot fewer alligators out there.
A lot of criminals are not in the way anymore.
Amazing difference, discernible difference.
Definitely safer.
This is not made-up BS.
This is real.
Even the Democratic mayor, Mural Bowser, admits so.
We're here for a good reason.
We're interviewing, I interviewed earlier, and it will air tonight.
JD Vance, the vice president, and we go through a plethora of issues.
Pam Bondi, she and a conflict with Gavin Newsome.
We'll tell you about that tonight.
And RFK and Dr. Roz together on the lies about Obamacare and subsidies and Medicare and Medicaid.
We're going to get to all of that.
Wow, look at this.
In studio in Washington, D.C., you know him as the great pollster, Matt Towery, Insider Advantage.
And he apparently got to meet with President Trump.
Now, my understanding is, and correct me if I'm wrong, and that is President Trump heard you were in town and said, that's the guy that always gets me right because he watches my show and he sees you on.
You nailed 2016.
You nailed 2020.
You nailed 2024.
And I will say in this recent off-year election, you saw the bottom drop out.
It was looking like it could be a close race with Spamberger and Winsom Earl Sears.
You told me about a week before the bottom is beginning to fall out.
And then you sent me your last poll.
It was double digits.
She was down.
I'm like, holy moly, how did that happen?
And then you gave me a great explanation.
Anyway, it's good to see you.
I never get to see you in person.
When did we first meet?
In 1992 or three, when you came to Atlanta.
Have I changed much?
Not at all.
We look exactly the same.
And we never age in our own minds, Annie.
I mean, I still think we're the same, although we have gotten a little older and I am older than you.
I know you always point that out.
No, it's not that.
I mean, do you feel any different than you felt then?
Because I don't feel any different.
I really don't.
I think some days, you know, I exercise more, play a little golf occasionally, like every day.
And I didn't do that before when I was in D.C. or Atlanta because it was cold and I was doing work all the time.
So I, yeah, I feel great.
But you now have been doing political research, polling, et cetera.
And then you also, at one point in your career, you ran for lieutenant governor.
You were a state assemblyman.
Yeah, House Representative.
House of Representatives.
That's my political shame.
Yes.
Political shame.
Is that how you view those years?
I don't like elected office, to be honest with you.
I wasn't cut out for it.
As a nominee for lieutenant governor, I was 30 years old.
Newt Gingrich, our mutual friend.
He said, how are we run?
It's only going to cost a little bit of money.
Yeah, it costs millions.
What year was that you ran?
90.
Okay, that's before I got there, before I knew.
Now, if I had been on the air, I would have been on your notice as soon as I arrived at 92, everything changed.
Everything started to change in your life.
You see Newt's victory when he was Speaker of the House that night.
I MC'd that.
Yeah.
You know, there's actually occasionally I'll see shows and has old footage, and you can see me behind Newt.
Yeah.
And I lost my voice that night, like I lost my voice after the Patriot Awards the other night when you're on stage screaming all night.
That's what you do.
Well, you talk a lot.
No, it's not.
I can do radio and TV perfectly fine in a podcast all day long.
Right.
But when you get on stage, you project a lot more.
My audience is tough.
I mean, it really is.
You did a great job, by the way.
We watched it.
We watched the whole thing.
That was what a great program.
It's really not about me.
I just want to make sure I don't screw that up.
You did a great job.
Because it's really about the people that we honor, the unsung heroes.
There's no award show like it.
Like the Grammys and the Academy Awards.
Let us pat each other on the back.
We think we're the best in the industry.
What are you wearing?
Real people.
Real people.
You didn't ask me what gown I was designed.
But I did see that white suit you had on.
Yeah, I was giving you trouble about it.
I'm not in charge of wardrobe.
Let's put it that way.
There's one way to put it.
That's obvious.
Well, it's great to see you.
Great to see you.
So the president has been following you all these years.
Were you aware of that?
I guess I was to some extent.
You know, the funny thing about it is my wife, I'm not allowed to give to political campaigns, but my wife, Dolly, who's here with us, and it was her birthday celebration partially while we were there.
That's what everyone wants to do on their birthday.
Go to the DC swamp and walk around when it was 20 below zero.
And by the way, can I tell you two things about this place?
Because I've been here a long time over the years.
You'll still notice no one ever smiles on the street.
You'll never see one human being smile.
That's like New York.
Have you ever been in a subway?
Forget that.
I've talked to DC.
The other thing in D.C., number one rule, everybody is more important than you are.
Everybody.
Right, Linda?
Everybody's more important than you are.
It's like in Florida in these wealthy neighborhoods.
Guess what?
You're not the richest person in town.
There's always somebody rich.
There really is.
You know what?
I like that.
I like that too.
I like being humble.
Can I ask you a question?
How much of a role did I play in getting you to come to Florida?
Tell the truth.
I worked on your rear end all the time.
Well, first of all, I always had a place down in Florida.
I know you did.
I had a place.
Probably 20 years.
But all my kids growing up years, that's where we went on vacation.
That was it.
I'm talking about moving.
I started thinking about it seriously in 2014, but because of where my kids were with education.
Here's an interesting part of the story that nobody knew.
I had studios outside of New York City for years and years and years before COVID ever hit.
You know, I had my own studio and I never went into the building.
You know, when I occasionally walk into the Fox building, it's like shock and awe.
Like, oh, you know, he's entered the building.
But I like it.
I'll tell you why I like it because I get to focus more.
Some people need the stimulation.
When I prepare, when I write my monologues, I have to be quiet and still.
I can't have TVs on.
I can't have any distractions at all.
I really need to dial in.
I turn my phone on mute.
I mean, I just, I have to focus.
So it's just the way I prepare.
I just remember sending you pictures in 2020 as we moved into the new house.
I remember.
Have all the palm trees down there.
I remember what I wrote you back.
Yeah, I'm not going to repeat that.
I'm going to.
I hate you.
That's what I used to write you.
Yes, you did.
You want to know what happens now?
What is that?
When this snowstorms and horrible weather.
You send him pictures of the budget.
Of course I did.
Yeah.
So I'm telling you, we worked on him to get him to Florida.
I knew he needed to be there, right?
He did.
Linda, you're never leaving New York.
And by the way, it's so good to see James and Stephanie and all these other people.
I know.
It's like great.
And you know, MK, our killer security guard.
You don't get to see anybody.
And these are my buddies for over the years.
So I'm just so happy with you.
All these years, I've never had security.
Now I have to have security.
Oh, God.
Let's not even talk about that.
I don't even want to think about it.
I mean, I used to get threats in Atlanta back in the day.
You did.
You know, mostly from Dolly, your wife.
Yeah, but you know, when you got to Atlanta, you and Borts were going up against each other.
That is a great untold story.
I can tell you great radio war stories.
Oh, I know them.
You can tell one if you want to.
Well, I come to Atlanta.
Neil Bortz was a legend.
He's, by the way, he's both our friends.
We're friends with him.
I did Neil's show almost every day for years.
And he was extremely gifted and talented.
I think he's Mensa, isn't he?
He's like genius.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
And he's on that spectrum.
However, it was the best thing that ever happened to me.
So he goes to what he called the ex-wife.
He went to a competitor station.
Yes.
All right.
It was a big deal, got paid a lot more money.
I go into Atlanta, audition for two days, and it came down to me and Dick Williams, who was very famous in Atlanta politics.
Yeah.
God bless him.
And I think they just decided they wanted to go younger at the time.
And I was a little more, let's just say, edgy.
Did Sluggo?
Was he the one?
Sluggo.
Yeah.
And I'm still friends with him.
I'm friends with everybody that's ever hired me to this day.
And so I go in, audition two days.
I get an offer.
And so I had been in Huntsville, Alabama.
How did you turn this into a discussion about me?
Because I'm interviewing you, Hannity.
You just don't realize that this is my show now.
You've now taken over.
And, but this is the best part, though.
Yeah.
And I'll never forget that then Neil was supposed to go up against Rush.
Rush crushed him.
Right.
And then, because he had always been on nine to noon, and those were my hours.
And I take my first vacation.
I'm driving to Hartsfield Airport and I'm listening to Borts.
And he goes, Hannity, I know you're listening.
I'm like, how do you know that I'm listening?
It was true.
I was listening.
And he goes, Hannity, your phone's going to ring.
Don't pick it up.
It's going to be Sluggo.
And Sluggo is going to tell you to get back to work because starting Monday morning at 8:45, a 15-minute jump on me, I'm coming back to my old slot and I'm taking my audience back and running you out of town.
So Neil.
It is so Neil.
Then I found when he went there, I remember one morning driving in and I'd flip back and forth between the two stations, see what news each station was covering because we were news and talk.
And at 6:15, I'm in my car driving to work.
I'm on at nine o'clock.
And Neil Bortz was on the air with Scott Slade, who's one of the best morning news hosts in the country.
And he's telling he had read every newspaper.
He had his entire show planned out.
And I hadn't read a thing at 6:15.
That was the last day I was ever in a car at 6:15 in the morning.
I was getting there at five o'clock every day.
Yeah.
And every day at 6:15, I would tune in, and Bortz would give away his entire show.
So I knew exactly what he was doing.
I remember this story.
This is so cool.
It's a great story, right?
This is like the old radio war days.
Oh, yeah.
Tell it.
All right.
So then one day he announces that he has, he never had guests.
So like if he was going to talk about a story, I'd tell my producer, Eric Sanger, still who still works for me.
And I tell him, get that, get that, get the person in the story and get him booked and put him on at nine o'clock.
So if he's talking about the story, I have the guest of the story.
That's how I would compete against him.
And he was more libertarian.
Newt was coming to power.
I was the MC the night he became speaker.
He wasn't a Republican.
He was a libertarian.
That's right.
Okay.
So one morning he says, oh, we're going to have a guest today at 10 o'clock, Robert Shapiro.
And I'm like, I go, first thing I said to Sam, well, why didn't you get him?
He goes, well, I was listening to 99X.
One day we did an April Fool's joke and we switched shows and an alternative music, you know, shock jocks.
I did their show, made their listeners take chastity vows, and they came on my show and were advocating for gay marriage on the air.
So that went over well.
It actually did.
It was like a really good radio bit.
Again, fun radio wars.
So Stanger calls over to 99X, says, yeah, is Robert Shapiro's rep there?
Blah, blah, blah.
Any chance you're free at nine o'clock to come on?
Well, we happen to have a free hour.
We'd love to come on.
We got him before Neil.
And here's the more sinister part.
You know, we're getting close to 10 o'clock.
I know where he's supposed to go.
I act stupid.
I'm like, you know, I have so many more questions.
I could talk to you all day.
Any chance you can stay a little bit longer?
You snaked his time.
I know you did.
And then he goes, you know, he turns to the lady and she knows exactly what I'm up to.
And tell the next people we're going to be a little late, but we're coming.
And he finally leaves at like 10.45, goes over.
It was just down the block.
Neil comes out of the studio and he was ready to kill because he knew exactly what had happened.
And, you know, I mean, but I will tell you, because Neil was so smart, gifted, talented and prepared that I realized if I didn't work, I'd never survive.
Yeah, it was a good way to get to the top of your business is going against Neil Borst.
He was a good guy.
There were three ratings books in a row.
The ratings books back then were three-month intervals that we both had between the two of us, a 12 and a half share with men 2554.
That means one quarter of the entire Atlanta metro market, that's Atlanta and pretty much all of Georgia, was listening to one of the two of us.
Well, and he had a clear channel station too, and GST wasn't.
During the day, it had a clear channel.
That's right.
When I was on, I had 50,000 watts.
That's right.
Yeah.
They went down in the evening.
We had the same, we were equal power at that time.
But if it wasn't for me discovering all that and being motivated to realize I had to work hard, he would have crushed me.
And he ran more people out of town in 40 years than you could name.
And then he swears I ran Hannity out of town.
Meanwhile, Greg Moshery admitted to me he was sending out tapes of me all over the country to get me out of the market.
That's Neil.
Well, he's retired now in Naples.
Oh, it's over.
And he's in some sort of bus or whatever it is he goes to.
Oh, the Borts bus.
All right, you are staying now because considering I've wasted your half hour.
Actually, I've been interviewing you, and I thank you for being on the show.
All right, quick break more with my friend Matt Towery.
He runs the polling company Insider Advantage, more on the other side, 800-941 Sean.
More with Matt as we continue from D.C. All right, my dear friend, Matt Towery's with us, Insider Advantage, one of the best, we are rated one of the best pollsters in the country.
We are by the people who are fair, like Real Cure Politics.
Now, there's some ultra-liberal groups that always try to find a way to say, oh, we're not transparent enough or whatever, but they don't know.
What does that mean?
Transparent enough?
You'd put your date out.
They don't even understand it, Sean.
I mean, literally, I had, there's a Snopes article that came out.
I just saw it recently.
It's just the craziest thing in the world.
We did a poll right after, remember we were dealing with the bombing of Iran.
And I think we collaborated.
I said, let's get a poll out.
Got a poll out.
We showed Trump up.
He was at like 54% approval, which is correct.
Some kid from, I don't know, I assume from Seattle, who's a stringer for Snopes, writes, who is this firm?
We can't find anything about them.
There's an about us on our website.
It says we don't know if their address is a real address, and we don't know if they have a track record.
Well, the whole thing says we poll for all the Fox affiliates for years.
It's just, this is the kind of garbage that they put out so that it'll show up on Google when you Google us.
And you'll think, well, these guys are a bunch of idiots and you just can't fight it.
Listen, the reason I don't read social media unless I really want to feel bad about myself is you have these anonymous keyboard warriors.
I imagine them in their underwear or naked in their parents' basement and they can say anything they want.
And then on top of it, you don't know whether they're real or fake because bots are a real phenomenon.
So you're in D.C., your beautiful wife Dolly's here with you.
Yes.
And the president finds out you're here.
He knows that you polled him right in 16, 20, and 24.
He sees you often on Fox on my show in particular.
He's mentioned, who is this guy, Matt Tower?
Who's Robert Canal?
He wants to know who you are.
Robert was with us yesterday.
He was in town to give a speech.
We actually came up from my university, had a dinner, and that was a good time to take.
What snobby Ivy League institution did you go to?
Cambridge University in England, even worse.
That's way worse.
Yes.
Yes.
I mean, look.
I went to Cambridge.
Look, I loved Cambridge and I love my college modeling.
Okay.
I love you guys.
But I made, if you took my degree, I maybe made 50 cents off of it.
My law school, where Pam Bondi went, Stephen Law School, first law school in Florida.
Great university.
Great law school.
So you spend years in politics.
It's your passion.
Yep.
And I ran a business, too.
And Insider Advantage was crushing it for years and years and years.
And at one point, you wanted to retire.
I didn't want to.
I did.
And then you, and then you forced me to come back out.
What do you mean I forced you?
I can't force you to do it.
You can.
You called me, said you got to poll.
And so I did it.
But I told you I was going to do it on my way.
I do the polling.
I do Laura's show.
She asked me on Friday nights.
By the way, last night I wore a tie for the first time.
And I started the show by saying, That's the beauty of doing my show.
You don't have to wear a tie.
I wore a tie today.
Let me tell you, I always wear my golf shirt.
That's my shtick.
Linda knows that.
Linda helped me invent it.
That's my shtick and my blazer.
But I told Laura, I said, I have a tie on tonight.
She said, you dressed up for me in D.C.
I said, yeah, but I'm going right back to this golf shirt and blaze her, blaze her on Friday or whenever we do it.
Because I just love being in the real world.
See, you say that I dragged you back into it.
No, because I could tell you were bored.
And I could, you know, it's funny.
My son, when I was threatening my son, I said, you know what?
I think I'll go to your guy's office and I'll work with you guys every day because he works with his buddies.
He runs three businesses and he's like, he goes, dad, that's a bad idea.
And I'm like, what do you mean it's a bad idea?
He doesn't want me there every day.
Well, of course not.
Okay, I don't blame him.
That's fair.
Except if I was there every day, we'd probably be having more steak lunches and probably me saying, Ab, let's bail and let's go play golf like you do.
So, Sean, before I ever did polling, my family owned a company.
It was one of the largest printing companies in the Southeast.
My dad founded it.
He was ready to retire.
I took it over.
We together doubled the size of the company and sold it publicly.
But I had the, thank goodness I had the honor of working with my dad.
Now, he was tough, really tough.
But fortunately, he's like all Toweries.
He wanted to quit early too.
So he would come in at 10 o'clock in the morning, leave for lunch at 11.
I'd see him at 4 o'clock.
So that time period, I got everything I wanted done.
We built the company up and we sold it.
We really, I mean, that was probably the most fun I've ever had in my whole life.
But you did miss it when you left.
And I remember, I didn't really have to convince you.
You were ready to miss.
I did?
Yeah, of course.
Listen, my son.
I was persuasive.
My son was running it at the time.
Now, he moved on to the British Consulate.
Now he actually is with another polling unit.
And by the way, a very well-respected poll.
Absolutely.
He's a tremendous pollster.
He really does a great job.
And he doesn't consult with me at all.
We have different political views.
And God bless him, but he does a great job.
Yeah, I mean, I was glad I came back.
I was getting a little bored, but I do like playing golf.
Now, I'm going to get to the golf story in a second.
How did you get into the Oval Office to meet the president yesterday?
You got you and your wife, Dolly.
How long were we with the president?
Well, he was gracious enough to spend a pretty good amount of time with Robin.
How long is a pretty good amount of time?
Maybe an hour, hour and a half, something like that.
An hour and a half in the oval with President Trump.
Yeah, but I mean, let me make it very clear.
Oh, you're going to just downplay this?
No, no, just let me make you very clear about one thing.
We're talking about stuff.
It's not changing my polling.
I mean, if I poll Trump and he's not doing well, he's not doing well.
He knows that.
We're straight up pollsters.
But I think he just wanted to know where we are right now.
And we told him the truth.
The country is not feeling the economic positive vibes that perhaps it should be feeling.
And that's got to change.
A little too much emphasis on foreign policy.
They elected him to put money in their pocket, get the government out of their life.
And, you know, one of the things he points out, and I will say this, started up here in D.C. in the U.S. Senate with Mac Mattingly and Newt Gingrich, who both of whom were tremendous mentors to me and are still friends.
Talk to Newt all the time, talk to Senator Mattingly.
He's 90-something years old.
Talk to him all the time.
Great person.
The Senate is old-fashioned, out of touch.
There are four or five people in it who prevent us from eliminating the filibuster.
And so the audience, listening audience, will know the filibuster is something that's not in the Constitution.
It is a rule of the Senate they've had forever.
And it basically says that if you can't get 60 individuals to vote to end a debate, invoke what they call cloture, that debate can go on and on and on.
And that's how you used to actually speak up there till somebody, you know, I mean, a real filibuster, not I'm threatening a filibuster, therefore we're not showing up for it.
But they got lazy and just said, okay, well, we don't have the 60 votes, so we're just, you know, we're not going to be able to do anything.
And I think that the Trump administration's being stymied by the fact they can't pass anything between all the lawsuits.
Do you support getting rid of the filibuster?
Absolutely.
Because the Democrats will get rid of it in a heartbeat.
This is a different Democratic Party.
And it changed the other night, you know, as we were on the air when you and I were on the air.
That's what really changed it.
Now this Democratic Party, they're emboldened.
The left is more emboldened.
You're going to see changes in the Senate leadership.
And I guarantee you, if they were to get control, they would eliminate the filibuster first thing.
And they'd reverse everything true.
How is this move towards the radical left going to play out?
I mean, if you ask me today who the Democratic nominee is in 28, I'm going to tell you it's Gavin Newsom.
I agree.
I agree.
And that's very dangerous for the Republicans because he's slick.
Very slick.
He makes a great.
But he has a horrible track record.
Yeah, but nobody knows about this stuff.
I mean, well, I mean, that's what campaigns are about, right?
You have to.
Yeah, but you know, we've talked about this over the years.
I believe that in these off years, Republicans and conservatives should be running ads, educating the public about what they're achieving and what the other side's not doing.
And they've never done it.
And then they sit around and they cry when they see approval ratings that are upside down and they see that.
I mean, right now, most people don't know, but the generic ballot for Congress, the Democrats are ahead by four or five points.
Now, and I hear all these Republicans go around and say, oh, the Democrats are at the worst place they've ever been.
People don't like the Democrats.
They don't like the Democrats, but they don't like the Republicans either.
And they're drifting to the other side.
And so there's a lot of work to be done very quickly, or the midterms are going to go to the Democrats massively.
Well, if the economy, as I suspect, turns, that I would assume, will have a big impact on the elections in next year.
Well, but you got to think about this.
Part of the shutdown goal for the Democrats, it wasn't just healthcare.
They knew every day they kept the government shut down, they were inflicting harm on this economy.
So now, when the GDP number comes out and when the consumer sentiment numbers continue to come out, they're going to be terrible.
They're not going to be as good as they are.
So they didn't care about people.
They didn't care.
They just all politics in this town, baby.
I mean, it's just people don't matter.
all right do you want to tell the golf story and how i got in your head and messed up your we're not going to say the name of the golf course Okay, fair enough.
There's a famous golf course.
Famous, famous golf course.
In my home state of Georgia, where I was born.
Well, you just told the whole world what golf course it is.
There's several.
I'm a member of a famous club in Georgia, in Atlanta.
So it could be any one of them.
And I get invited, and it's election time, and like I'm nervous as anything about playing there.
And I've got to deal with all these polls and not screw them up.
So every night, and I'm in the middle of a hurricane.
No, remember, which, by the way, you blew my cover on my cars getting, you know, he did this to me, Linda.
So my cars get wiped out because that's the one part of the house that wasn't.
I remember.
And I tell him on the phone one night, I said, well, really, they're getting sort of old.
I don't really mind.
So the next three nights, live on the air, Handed E says, well, I know you don't really care about your car.
The adjuster had not agreed to give me a check.
I finally told him, I said, Sean, if I don't get my money, it's coming from you.
You were doing.
But you also kept jabbing at this famous golf course and telling me, hey, you told me how bad I was going to play.
I said, no, it was going to be the worst day you play in your life.
Yeah.
And then you came this close because there's certain identifiable.
Oh, I remember.
Yes.
You almost got there.
And of course, if that had happened, I would have gotten a phone call the next day saying, Mr. Tower, you're never coming back.
Never invited back.
No.
And by the way, you were invited this year and you've chickened out.
I just want to make it clear.
I picked up golf clubs.
I gave it up for seven years.
I know.
Only recently picked it up, played maybe 10, nine whole rounds.
You have a great drive.
You had to do it.
I do.
But, you know, I was lifting.
I have a compressed nerve in my neck.
No, it's not an excuse.
I mean, I can kick your ass.
You know, compressed nerve or not.
Hey, look, I'm not pushing on that.
Okay.
I know you can.
I was lifting.
I'll tell you what I was doing.
I was doing a lat machine because I had a rotator cuff issue, so I can't do pull-ups anymore, which I love doing.
Right.
And so I do lats.
I can do those.
And yeah, I just, it just tweaked.
I think it was about 185 pounds.
Okay.
So when are you going to get back to playing golf?
As soon as it's better.
It's getting better.
And I'm coming over to play with you this winter.
Yes.
We're going.
Soon as I'm better.
Absolutely.
I've had some great days.
I am shocked that my game came back.
I mean, I literally, I told you about the one round I had with my son and my business partner, and they couldn't believe and was stunned.
How far did you drive the ball?
Oh, 260.
That's pretty darn good.
You're going to, you're out to get it.
And that's, I swing easy.
Do you?
By the way, I will tell you this.
The one thing, because I haven't gotten you new clubs, XOXO Clubs.
They're great.
You love them.
You know what?
I'm sitting next to a guy last night at this modeling Cambridge dinner.
I don't think he agreed with any of my politics, but he's a golfer and obviously a very wealthy guy.
I paid for the whole dinner for the whole college.
And I said, so we talked golf.
I said, I got these new clubs.
He has them.
Now you know.
Well, Matt Towery, thanks for stopping by.
Good to see you, my friend Dolly.
I don't know how you put up with him.
Pretty cool hanging out with the president for an hour and a half.
We love you, Sean.
It's great to be with your group.
And we love you.
Looks he didn't answer the question.
All right.
We love you back.
Of course, it was cool.
Yes.
We are in the D.C. swamp.
JD Vance, Pam Bondi, and Dr. Oz and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tonight.
All right.
That's going to wrap things up from the swamp.
We have Vice President JD Vance tonight, 9 Eastern on Fox.
Also joining us, Attorney General Pam Bondi, the battle against Gavin Newsom, also RFK, Dr. Oz, Healthcare.
You need to know information for your family.
You won't get elsewhere.
Check it out.
We'll see you tonight.
Back here tomorrow.
Thank you for making this show possible.
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