1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:02,480 Speaker 1: Hi. This is new due to the virus. I'm recording 2 00:00:02,520 --> 00:00:05,440 Speaker 1: from home, so you may notice a difference in audio 3 00:00:05,559 --> 00:00:11,399 Speaker 1: quality on this episode of News World. I am really 4 00:00:11,480 --> 00:00:14,800 Speaker 1: excited to talk about something I know a lot about personal. 5 00:00:15,240 --> 00:00:18,640 Speaker 1: Back when I developed the contract with America, I knew 6 00:00:18,680 --> 00:00:21,040 Speaker 1: that it was a vital to have a team commitment 7 00:00:21,160 --> 00:00:24,640 Speaker 1: and a team effort to a big enough idea that 8 00:00:24,920 --> 00:00:28,200 Speaker 1: you could attract people to pay attention. And that's why 9 00:00:28,280 --> 00:00:33,839 Speaker 1: this year, watching Republican House Leader Kevin McCarthy develop his 10 00:00:34,040 --> 00:00:37,720 Speaker 1: commitment to America, I really saw a parallel to what 11 00:00:37,800 --> 00:00:41,240 Speaker 1: I had done back in nineteen ninety four. Leader McCarthy's 12 00:00:41,240 --> 00:00:45,120 Speaker 1: commitment to America is a set of key promises, including 13 00:00:45,760 --> 00:00:50,000 Speaker 1: restoring our way of life, rebuilding the greatest economy in history, 14 00:00:50,360 --> 00:00:54,720 Speaker 1: and renewing the American dream. This election is about socialism 15 00:00:54,840 --> 00:00:58,120 Speaker 1: versus freedom and is the most important election I think 16 00:00:58,480 --> 00:01:02,160 Speaker 1: since eighteen sixty four. I am pleased to welcome Congressman 17 00:01:02,240 --> 00:01:06,360 Speaker 1: Kevin McCarthy, who proudly serves California's twenty third district and 18 00:01:06,600 --> 00:01:09,840 Speaker 1: is currently the Republican leader in the US House of Representatives. 19 00:01:10,520 --> 00:01:13,160 Speaker 1: Kevin was first elected to Congress in two thousand and 20 00:01:13,240 --> 00:01:17,000 Speaker 1: six and is a native of Bakersfield and a fourth 21 00:01:17,040 --> 00:01:21,200 Speaker 1: generation Kern County resident. The grandson of a cattle rancher 22 00:01:21,240 --> 00:01:23,640 Speaker 1: and the son of a firefighter, Kevin grew up in 23 00:01:23,680 --> 00:01:27,640 Speaker 1: a working class family and is committed to preserving and 24 00:01:27,680 --> 00:01:41,240 Speaker 1: promoting the American dream for hard working Americans. I am 25 00:01:41,280 --> 00:01:44,800 Speaker 1: delighted to have a friend of many, many years, going 26 00:01:44,880 --> 00:01:47,000 Speaker 1: all the way back to a brief prayord he had 27 00:01:47,000 --> 00:01:51,480 Speaker 1: in the US House working on House Administration Committee, to 28 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:54,600 Speaker 1: the period where he was as a freshman the leader 29 00:01:54,640 --> 00:01:59,320 Speaker 1: of the Republicans in Sacramento in the Assembly, to his 30 00:01:59,520 --> 00:02:01,920 Speaker 1: rise as a member of the House where he played 31 00:02:01,920 --> 00:02:07,120 Speaker 1: a key role in two ten as Speaker. Bayner regained 32 00:02:07,120 --> 00:02:10,880 Speaker 1: the majority with a Pledge to America. So I know 33 00:02:11,000 --> 00:02:17,200 Speaker 1: that Kevin McCarthy knows about every aspect of the contract 34 00:02:17,240 --> 00:02:20,519 Speaker 1: with America, a pledge to America, and he's now developed, 35 00:02:21,080 --> 00:02:25,239 Speaker 1: for this day and age, very powerful approach which has 36 00:02:25,240 --> 00:02:28,720 Speaker 1: been called the Commitment to America, and which he's gotten 37 00:02:29,360 --> 00:02:33,160 Speaker 1: House Republicans to sign up to. And it draws a 38 00:02:33,360 --> 00:02:37,600 Speaker 1: very very sharp contrast with where the Democrats have been 39 00:02:38,000 --> 00:02:42,000 Speaker 1: and where Pelosi and the Harris Biden ticket would take him. 40 00:02:42,360 --> 00:02:45,160 Speaker 1: Let me say, welcome, Kevin. Why don't you start by 41 00:02:45,480 --> 00:02:49,200 Speaker 1: sharing with people what you think the commitment means and 42 00:02:49,280 --> 00:02:52,680 Speaker 1: why you think it's really important. Well, thank you, Speaker, 43 00:02:52,720 --> 00:02:55,280 Speaker 1: and I appreciate the opportunity in the years of friendship. 44 00:02:56,400 --> 00:02:58,079 Speaker 1: Let me tell you a little bit about it. You 45 00:02:58,160 --> 00:03:01,680 Speaker 1: need to go back two years ago. Remember what happened 46 00:03:01,760 --> 00:03:05,840 Speaker 1: two years ago Nancy Pelosi was elected Speaker and she 47 00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:09,919 Speaker 1: made this promise to the majority. She told the country 48 00:03:09,960 --> 00:03:13,840 Speaker 1: that the majority that she would serve with the responsibility 49 00:03:14,160 --> 00:03:17,880 Speaker 1: to seek common ground. Well, now we have a record. 50 00:03:18,360 --> 00:03:21,799 Speaker 1: She did the opposite, and I asked the country, name 51 00:03:21,880 --> 00:03:26,160 Speaker 1: me one problem this Democrat majority in the House has solved. 52 00:03:27,639 --> 00:03:30,480 Speaker 1: Name me any of her results. And I believe, no 53 00:03:30,520 --> 00:03:33,600 Speaker 1: matter what you do before the American public, you need 54 00:03:33,639 --> 00:03:36,200 Speaker 1: to tell them, and you needed to make a commitment 55 00:03:36,240 --> 00:03:38,800 Speaker 1: to them what you would do with that majority if 56 00:03:38,800 --> 00:03:41,480 Speaker 1: they would trust you. I lay it out in three 57 00:03:41,560 --> 00:03:45,720 Speaker 1: big sections. The first one is, we want to restore 58 00:03:45,760 --> 00:03:49,000 Speaker 1: our way of life, and you cannot restore a way 59 00:03:49,000 --> 00:03:52,680 Speaker 1: of life until we defeat the virus and keep America healthy. 60 00:03:53,800 --> 00:03:55,680 Speaker 1: So we make a commitment to the American public that 61 00:03:55,720 --> 00:03:58,800 Speaker 1: we're going to triple the COVID testing and develop a 62 00:03:58,880 --> 00:04:03,200 Speaker 1: vaccine that is safe and effective that is available this year. 63 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:07,560 Speaker 1: Cut drug prices will make therapeutics go up, and we'll 64 00:04:07,640 --> 00:04:11,920 Speaker 1: end the surprise billing, and we will protect pre existing conditions. 65 00:04:12,080 --> 00:04:14,720 Speaker 1: But you can't restore a way of life by just 66 00:04:14,800 --> 00:04:16,960 Speaker 1: defeating the virus. Because what we have going on in 67 00:04:16,960 --> 00:04:19,960 Speaker 1: the streets of America, we need to ensure the safety 68 00:04:19,960 --> 00:04:22,760 Speaker 1: and security of our communities. And this is where there's 69 00:04:22,760 --> 00:04:25,560 Speaker 1: a great contrast for a decision to be made this 70 00:04:25,680 --> 00:04:28,679 Speaker 1: November while we watch what is happening in our cities 71 00:04:28,839 --> 00:04:31,760 Speaker 1: Compton in my home state, where an individual walked up 72 00:04:31,800 --> 00:04:36,000 Speaker 1: in shop, two sheriffs and the head, it's not should 73 00:04:36,040 --> 00:04:39,160 Speaker 1: we defund the police, We actually should spend more. We 74 00:04:39,240 --> 00:04:41,520 Speaker 1: make a commitment that we'd spend one point seven to 75 00:04:41,640 --> 00:04:46,719 Speaker 1: five billion more for better police training, community policing, and 76 00:04:46,800 --> 00:04:51,479 Speaker 1: to purchase five hundred thousand more body cameras. On the 77 00:04:51,560 --> 00:04:54,200 Speaker 1: last part, to really restore a way of life, we 78 00:04:54,320 --> 00:04:57,760 Speaker 1: need to preserve those freedoms under the Constitution. So we 79 00:04:57,800 --> 00:04:59,920 Speaker 1: make a commitment where we're going to uphold free speech. 80 00:05:00,040 --> 00:05:03,240 Speaker 1: People have a right to be heard, but we also 81 00:05:03,279 --> 00:05:05,880 Speaker 1: have a right to make sure we protect the religious liberties, 82 00:05:06,240 --> 00:05:09,000 Speaker 1: we defend the unborn, and we safeguard the Second Amendment. 83 00:05:10,000 --> 00:05:12,400 Speaker 1: That's the part that you start to restore a way 84 00:05:12,440 --> 00:05:15,000 Speaker 1: of life. But how do we rebuild going through the 85 00:05:15,080 --> 00:05:17,680 Speaker 1: number of jobs that we lost, We're going to rebuild 86 00:05:17,680 --> 00:05:20,599 Speaker 1: the greatest economy in our history. We've done it once 87 00:05:20,640 --> 00:05:22,600 Speaker 1: and we know we could do it again. So we 88 00:05:22,640 --> 00:05:25,960 Speaker 1: make a direct pledge to this country that we will 89 00:05:26,000 --> 00:05:29,200 Speaker 1: get America working and we will add ten million new, 90 00:05:29,279 --> 00:05:31,920 Speaker 1: good pain jobs. We have a plan that shows you 91 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:36,480 Speaker 1: how to do that, to tax proposals, opportunity zones, expending 92 00:05:36,520 --> 00:05:39,680 Speaker 1: that two thousand dollars child tax credit, but really focusing 93 00:05:39,680 --> 00:05:42,760 Speaker 1: on the small businesses have been hurt so far, and 94 00:05:42,960 --> 00:05:45,400 Speaker 1: we're going to do this by ending our dependency on China. 95 00:05:45,480 --> 00:05:48,760 Speaker 1: We're going to bring that supply chain back to America, 96 00:05:48,839 --> 00:05:52,680 Speaker 1: which increases more US manufacturing jobs. And then what we 97 00:05:52,720 --> 00:05:56,240 Speaker 1: need to do is upgrade and modernize the American infrastructure. 98 00:05:56,279 --> 00:05:59,440 Speaker 1: We're going to bring high speed internet to every household, 99 00:05:59,440 --> 00:06:02,279 Speaker 1: and we realize how important that is today now, especially 100 00:06:02,320 --> 00:06:04,680 Speaker 1: with the education. We have a five year plan to 101 00:06:04,720 --> 00:06:08,560 Speaker 1: fix our roads, our airports, our bridges, which want to 102 00:06:08,560 --> 00:06:12,440 Speaker 1: renew the American dream and the best way to do that, 103 00:06:12,480 --> 00:06:15,680 Speaker 1: which you have really been a person that advocated for 104 00:06:15,720 --> 00:06:18,440 Speaker 1: this forever. To make sure that every child in every 105 00:06:18,440 --> 00:06:22,520 Speaker 1: neighborhood can attend an excellent school, allowing the students to 106 00:06:22,560 --> 00:06:24,640 Speaker 1: go to the school that the parents believe is best 107 00:06:24,720 --> 00:06:27,800 Speaker 1: for them. We need to honor our veterans. We expand 108 00:06:27,839 --> 00:06:30,400 Speaker 1: the VA Choice Bill. But the other thing we do, 109 00:06:30,440 --> 00:06:33,280 Speaker 1: we guarantee any veteran that wants the job will have one. 110 00:06:34,080 --> 00:06:38,240 Speaker 1: Then we also support our citizens success by expanding career 111 00:06:38,279 --> 00:06:42,599 Speaker 1: and technical education. If we do that, if we restore 112 00:06:42,600 --> 00:06:45,520 Speaker 1: our way of life, if we rebuild the greatest economy 113 00:06:45,520 --> 00:06:49,080 Speaker 1: in history, and we renew the American dream, we will 114 00:06:49,120 --> 00:06:55,040 Speaker 1: reunite this country. And every election, in every November, people 115 00:06:55,080 --> 00:06:56,919 Speaker 1: have a decision to make and they have something to 116 00:06:56,960 --> 00:07:00,320 Speaker 1: weigh to both sides. What is the agenda? If they 117 00:07:00,320 --> 00:07:03,479 Speaker 1: had no results for their majority, they do say the 118 00:07:03,560 --> 00:07:08,160 Speaker 1: Democrats want to defund the police. You have AOC putting 119 00:07:08,160 --> 00:07:11,720 Speaker 1: it out there, dismantle America. What did they do? They 120 00:07:11,800 --> 00:07:15,400 Speaker 1: wasted their majority on an impeachment because they didn't agree 121 00:07:15,440 --> 00:07:19,480 Speaker 1: with who won the election. The Democrats focused on impeachment 122 00:07:19,520 --> 00:07:23,360 Speaker 1: when the coronavirus was coming to America, and then they 123 00:07:23,360 --> 00:07:25,560 Speaker 1: want to destroy your way of life. On the very 124 00:07:25,640 --> 00:07:28,440 Speaker 1: first day, Joe Biden said he wants to raise taxes. 125 00:07:29,160 --> 00:07:31,760 Speaker 1: So you have a contrast. But you're at a point 126 00:07:31,800 --> 00:07:35,560 Speaker 1: in life and every election is important. But we know 127 00:07:35,680 --> 00:07:39,640 Speaker 1: what this is much different. It's not Republican versus Democrat anymore. 128 00:07:40,040 --> 00:07:43,480 Speaker 1: It's almost a socialism versus freedom. And I thought it's 129 00:07:43,600 --> 00:07:46,160 Speaker 1: very important for the American public to have a very 130 00:07:46,280 --> 00:07:50,600 Speaker 1: clear discussion what do you commit to do if you 131 00:07:50,640 --> 00:07:53,680 Speaker 1: are trusted with the majority. I want to reinforce what 132 00:07:53,800 --> 00:07:57,080 Speaker 1: you just said about the importance of this election. Victor 133 00:07:57,160 --> 00:08:01,760 Speaker 1: Davis Hansen, who's a brilliant classic scholar at Stanford at 134 00:08:01,760 --> 00:08:05,640 Speaker 1: the Hoover Institution, gave a speech recently in which he 135 00:08:05,680 --> 00:08:10,840 Speaker 1: said this is actually between civilization and anarchy, and that 136 00:08:10,920 --> 00:08:13,440 Speaker 1: he never thought that he would be telling us that 137 00:08:13,480 --> 00:08:18,160 Speaker 1: Donald Trump was the key to preserving civilization. But if 138 00:08:18,160 --> 00:08:20,360 Speaker 1: you look at the other side right now, and as 139 00:08:20,360 --> 00:08:23,000 Speaker 1: you said in Compton, it wasn't just that somebody walked 140 00:08:23,080 --> 00:08:26,080 Speaker 1: up and shot the two sheriff's deputies in the head. 141 00:08:26,440 --> 00:08:28,800 Speaker 1: There was the crowd that gathered at the emergency room 142 00:08:28,920 --> 00:08:31,560 Speaker 1: entrance and Chan had let them die, you know, And 143 00:08:31,680 --> 00:08:35,400 Speaker 1: I think in that sense, this is an unbelievably important election. 144 00:08:35,800 --> 00:08:38,439 Speaker 1: Now when you go out and you start explaining all this, 145 00:08:39,200 --> 00:08:42,800 Speaker 1: obviously Republicans like it, hardcore left wing Democrats to only it, 146 00:08:43,120 --> 00:08:45,839 Speaker 1: but there's a huge block in the middle that really 147 00:08:45,920 --> 00:08:48,720 Speaker 1: isn't quite sure what they're doing. One of the things 148 00:08:48,760 --> 00:08:55,080 Speaker 1: they ask you about your commitment, the number one thing 149 00:08:55,120 --> 00:08:58,120 Speaker 1: they ask when they look at it. They want their 150 00:08:58,160 --> 00:09:00,800 Speaker 1: life to go back to what they knew it was 151 00:09:01,040 --> 00:09:05,079 Speaker 1: before the COVID. They knew America was the strongest in 152 00:09:05,160 --> 00:09:07,679 Speaker 1: economy ever before, and it didn't matter what color of 153 00:09:07,760 --> 00:09:10,079 Speaker 1: skin you were or what age you were. But then 154 00:09:10,080 --> 00:09:12,880 Speaker 1: they're sitting back and they're watching that not only was 155 00:09:12,880 --> 00:09:15,960 Speaker 1: it the COVID, now they're concerned whether even safe to 156 00:09:16,000 --> 00:09:19,319 Speaker 1: go down their streets. They're watching night after night after 157 00:09:19,480 --> 00:09:22,559 Speaker 1: night in these major cities where they're wondering if the 158 00:09:22,600 --> 00:09:25,600 Speaker 1: police could even come and protect them. When they really 159 00:09:25,640 --> 00:09:28,199 Speaker 1: start having an in depth discussion about it, they begin 160 00:09:28,320 --> 00:09:33,000 Speaker 1: to realize that it didn't happen just yesterday. It happened 161 00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:36,080 Speaker 1: when they voted for what they thought was a nice person, 162 00:09:36,760 --> 00:09:40,600 Speaker 1: but had these very socialist beliefs in a da that 163 00:09:40,679 --> 00:09:44,280 Speaker 1: now in America, why do you question what's right or wrong? 164 00:09:44,559 --> 00:09:47,640 Speaker 1: That if somebody leads you, now, that's not wrong if 165 00:09:47,640 --> 00:09:51,360 Speaker 1: they needed something, And they're wondering where in this country 166 00:09:51,360 --> 00:09:54,600 Speaker 1: did that happen? Where was that debate taking place? And 167 00:09:54,640 --> 00:09:57,440 Speaker 1: then they watched these mayors and they watched the speaker 168 00:09:57,440 --> 00:09:59,800 Speaker 1: of the house. When somebody riots, they people do, what 169 00:10:00,120 --> 00:10:03,520 Speaker 1: will do? When will somebody stand up that the rule 170 00:10:03,559 --> 00:10:06,199 Speaker 1: of law is equal for all? And they also talk 171 00:10:06,240 --> 00:10:07,839 Speaker 1: about and this is what we talk about in here 172 00:10:07,840 --> 00:10:12,440 Speaker 1: with police reform. George Floyd should not have been treated 173 00:10:12,480 --> 00:10:15,920 Speaker 1: that way. He should be alive today. That's why we 174 00:10:16,040 --> 00:10:18,720 Speaker 1: deal with every single issue in front of us. And 175 00:10:18,840 --> 00:10:21,640 Speaker 1: they look to the Democrats at this moment and say, 176 00:10:22,280 --> 00:10:26,120 Speaker 1: I've watched your two years. There's no results. What are 177 00:10:26,120 --> 00:10:45,000 Speaker 1: you promising to do next? This entire effort to elect 178 00:10:45,600 --> 00:10:49,600 Speaker 1: anti police pro criminal district attorneys has just had a 179 00:10:49,679 --> 00:10:53,440 Speaker 1: devastating effect because it puts back on the street the 180 00:10:53,600 --> 00:10:57,040 Speaker 1: very person who you just arrested, who then is emboldened 181 00:10:57,080 --> 00:10:58,839 Speaker 1: because they know you're not going to be able to 182 00:10:58,920 --> 00:11:01,600 Speaker 1: keep them and you back out. They had a guy 183 00:11:01,640 --> 00:11:04,440 Speaker 1: in Portland this last week who had set a fire 184 00:11:04,640 --> 00:11:07,360 Speaker 1: in the middle of all this terrible fire season. They 185 00:11:07,400 --> 00:11:10,360 Speaker 1: picked him up, booked him, released him because they have 186 00:11:10,440 --> 00:11:13,960 Speaker 1: a system where you normally don't get bail, and the 187 00:11:14,040 --> 00:11:16,600 Speaker 1: next day he sets six different fires. I think this 188 00:11:16,720 --> 00:11:19,880 Speaker 1: done actually kept him locked up. But it's this whole 189 00:11:20,400 --> 00:11:24,160 Speaker 1: rotating system now where even if the police do their job, 190 00:11:24,559 --> 00:11:28,439 Speaker 1: the district attorneys very often will not support or reinforce 191 00:11:28,520 --> 00:11:31,520 Speaker 1: the law, but instead let people out. And you have 192 00:11:31,640 --> 00:11:34,280 Speaker 1: this in Los Angeles. You have it even more in 193 00:11:34,360 --> 00:11:37,480 Speaker 1: San Francisco in terms of the district attorney there, who 194 00:11:38,120 --> 00:11:44,520 Speaker 1: is a very hardline Venezuelan dictatorship, pro castro kind of 195 00:11:44,640 --> 00:11:47,120 Speaker 1: left winner. And I think somehow we've got to get 196 00:11:47,160 --> 00:11:51,400 Speaker 1: across to people that these policies have consequences. But a 197 00:11:51,400 --> 00:11:54,200 Speaker 1: lot of what we're seeing not work is a function 198 00:11:54,240 --> 00:11:57,080 Speaker 1: of policies that were just wrong. And I think that's 199 00:11:57,080 --> 00:11:59,319 Speaker 1: part of why I like what you're doing here, because 200 00:11:59,320 --> 00:12:03,880 Speaker 1: you're laying a plan which allows people to understand the details. 201 00:12:04,360 --> 00:12:06,800 Speaker 1: I mean when you talk about opportunities zones, for example, 202 00:12:07,280 --> 00:12:10,360 Speaker 1: and the ability to really focus on growing areas that 203 00:12:10,400 --> 00:12:13,480 Speaker 1: have been poor, I think people be in realized this 204 00:12:13,520 --> 00:12:17,560 Speaker 1: is something that could work. You're correct. You know what 205 00:12:17,600 --> 00:12:20,760 Speaker 1: George Soros has done, and I've watched it in California. 206 00:12:20,840 --> 00:12:23,160 Speaker 1: Now they want to move it nationally. He's got into 207 00:12:23,160 --> 00:12:25,880 Speaker 1: these cities where he's spent millions of dollars on a 208 00:12:25,920 --> 00:12:28,760 Speaker 1: district attorney race that you've never seen before. You've only 209 00:12:28,800 --> 00:12:32,320 Speaker 1: heard about these things on a national campaign from San Diego, 210 00:12:32,440 --> 00:12:35,559 Speaker 1: Contra costs on others, and there's two places he focused 211 00:12:36,160 --> 00:12:40,320 Speaker 1: district attorneys and secretaries of state because he wants to 212 00:12:40,360 --> 00:12:43,280 Speaker 1: determine when it comes to election law. He wants to determine, 213 00:12:43,559 --> 00:12:45,840 Speaker 1: especially what you're talking about right now. We just heard 214 00:12:45,880 --> 00:12:50,000 Speaker 1: from a DA in California who said after there was looting, 215 00:12:50,360 --> 00:12:54,040 Speaker 1: not to prosecute anybody because they needed it. We now 216 00:12:54,120 --> 00:12:57,240 Speaker 1: have to determine when someone steals something, if they felt 217 00:12:57,240 --> 00:12:59,720 Speaker 1: they needed it, it is no longer breaking the law. 218 00:13:00,640 --> 00:13:03,000 Speaker 1: They don't have the right to do that. We believe 219 00:13:03,040 --> 00:13:05,040 Speaker 1: in the rule of law. This has been a long 220 00:13:05,440 --> 00:13:10,280 Speaker 1: term program by the Democrats, and now we're watching the 221 00:13:10,360 --> 00:13:13,960 Speaker 1: ramifications of what they have done in these cities that 222 00:13:14,040 --> 00:13:16,480 Speaker 1: have been just controlled by Democrats. They want to do 223 00:13:16,520 --> 00:13:20,240 Speaker 1: it on a much larger scale. We have a perfect example, 224 00:13:20,920 --> 00:13:24,400 Speaker 1: the Democrats for the number of years thinking that government 225 00:13:24,720 --> 00:13:28,280 Speaker 1: can own and control and send you a check determine 226 00:13:28,280 --> 00:13:30,680 Speaker 1: that we will change the outcome of your life in 227 00:13:30,760 --> 00:13:34,679 Speaker 1: the poorest communities of America. Or could we give an 228 00:13:34,679 --> 00:13:38,719 Speaker 1: opportunity zone where private money comes in faster, you get 229 00:13:38,760 --> 00:13:41,120 Speaker 1: a piece of the pie, you get to move up 230 00:13:41,200 --> 00:13:44,160 Speaker 1: in the economy, and that we're not going to hold 231 00:13:44,200 --> 00:13:46,760 Speaker 1: you to a bad school. We're going to let the 232 00:13:46,840 --> 00:13:49,400 Speaker 1: parent choose and we're going to give the best school 233 00:13:49,640 --> 00:13:54,760 Speaker 1: for you to go to. You're really developing a program 234 00:13:54,800 --> 00:13:58,760 Speaker 1: of individual responsibility, an individual choice in a sense, taking 235 00:13:58,800 --> 00:14:02,760 Speaker 1: power back from government and putting it back with individuals. 236 00:14:03,600 --> 00:14:06,240 Speaker 1: And it strikes me thus much closer to the original 237 00:14:06,280 --> 00:14:10,720 Speaker 1: American model where people went out and pursued the American dream. 238 00:14:11,800 --> 00:14:14,840 Speaker 1: I'm in California, and California is a great example because 239 00:14:14,880 --> 00:14:17,760 Speaker 1: it's a beautiful state. It has everything you would ever want, right, 240 00:14:18,520 --> 00:14:22,440 Speaker 1: but it also has what the Democrat policies have brought 241 00:14:22,480 --> 00:14:26,360 Speaker 1: over after a Ronald Reagan, after George Duke Magin had 242 00:14:26,400 --> 00:14:29,800 Speaker 1: made this such a promising state. Right, we now pay 243 00:14:29,880 --> 00:14:34,800 Speaker 1: forty percent higher electricity. We now have our electricity turned 244 00:14:34,840 --> 00:14:37,800 Speaker 1: off because they can't provide enough to the grid. But 245 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:40,400 Speaker 1: what else we have is an example of what the 246 00:14:40,400 --> 00:14:43,760 Speaker 1: Democrats say, like everybody should be equal. Well, now we 247 00:14:43,840 --> 00:14:48,360 Speaker 1: find that Nancy Pelosi doesn't have the same rules. So 248 00:14:48,520 --> 00:14:51,440 Speaker 1: once she got caught of going and getting her hair done, 249 00:14:51,560 --> 00:14:54,120 Speaker 1: they opened up for everybody else. When they kept the 250 00:14:54,200 --> 00:14:56,880 Speaker 1: gems closed, and when they finally found out that the 251 00:14:56,960 --> 00:15:00,520 Speaker 1: only gems that weren't closed were the government g so 252 00:15:00,600 --> 00:15:03,200 Speaker 1: the government employee could still go there. Now they open 253 00:15:03,320 --> 00:15:06,280 Speaker 1: up the public ones. So when these socialists tell you 254 00:15:06,400 --> 00:15:09,640 Speaker 1: it's making it equal for everybody else, it's not always equal. 255 00:15:09,760 --> 00:15:13,360 Speaker 1: We learn that from the Soviet Union. The elect few 256 00:15:13,520 --> 00:15:16,920 Speaker 1: still get something more. But I believe in an idea 257 00:15:16,960 --> 00:15:19,600 Speaker 1: that gives your own power, it doesn't hold you back 258 00:15:19,600 --> 00:15:21,960 Speaker 1: to what you can achieve. And what they have done 259 00:15:22,080 --> 00:15:25,160 Speaker 1: to the school districts to hold people back, what they 260 00:15:25,200 --> 00:15:27,560 Speaker 1: are now trying to do to the rule of law 261 00:15:27,600 --> 00:15:30,640 Speaker 1: of making our streets not safe. This is a much 262 00:15:30,760 --> 00:15:35,120 Speaker 1: different election than we've had in the last century, whether 263 00:15:35,120 --> 00:15:37,320 Speaker 1: it was in reaction to Trump or just because of 264 00:15:37,320 --> 00:15:41,360 Speaker 1: the gradual evolution of the system. The degree of their 265 00:15:41,400 --> 00:15:43,560 Speaker 1: power of grab is much greater now. And when you 266 00:15:43,600 --> 00:15:46,800 Speaker 1: see a governor such as a Nevada who says it's 267 00:15:46,840 --> 00:15:49,640 Speaker 1: okay to get together at a casino, but you can't 268 00:15:49,680 --> 00:15:53,200 Speaker 1: get together at a church, Well, that's virtually a dictatorship. 269 00:15:53,240 --> 00:15:56,600 Speaker 1: He's telling you what you can and can't do with 270 00:15:56,720 --> 00:15:59,880 Speaker 1: no reference to the rule of law and no reference 271 00:16:00,040 --> 00:16:02,880 Speaker 1: to individual liberty. And it seems to me that what 272 00:16:02,920 --> 00:16:05,840 Speaker 1: you're trying to do with this kind of a commitment 273 00:16:06,320 --> 00:16:09,880 Speaker 1: is get us back to a country where people have 274 00:16:10,040 --> 00:16:13,400 Speaker 1: choices within a framework of law, and where the workforce 275 00:16:13,480 --> 00:16:16,240 Speaker 1: has the right kind of education, and where there are 276 00:16:16,240 --> 00:16:19,880 Speaker 1: incentives to create jobs so people actually can work their 277 00:16:19,880 --> 00:16:23,760 Speaker 1: way to a dramatically better future without having to rely 278 00:16:23,880 --> 00:16:28,320 Speaker 1: on government. That's an enormous gap between where the Democrats 279 00:16:28,320 --> 00:16:31,520 Speaker 1: are and where we are. I'm gonna tell you a 280 00:16:31,520 --> 00:16:35,000 Speaker 1: personal conversation I had with my governor Gavin Newsoon during 281 00:16:35,040 --> 00:16:39,000 Speaker 1: this pandemic. Gavin Newsom shuts everything down as we begin 282 00:16:39,080 --> 00:16:43,040 Speaker 1: to phase out of it. He makes a rule about 283 00:16:43,280 --> 00:16:47,200 Speaker 1: restaurants opening up, and he bases it upon square footage 284 00:16:47,480 --> 00:16:51,520 Speaker 1: for social distancing, which I believe is fair. Restaurant for restaurant, 285 00:16:51,720 --> 00:16:53,920 Speaker 1: how large you are is how many people you can 286 00:16:53,960 --> 00:16:57,280 Speaker 1: have based upon square footage. He then later makes a 287 00:16:57,360 --> 00:17:00,440 Speaker 1: decision about whether you can go to church, and he 288 00:17:00,560 --> 00:17:04,320 Speaker 1: makes a uniform decision regardless of the size of your church, 289 00:17:04,480 --> 00:17:08,359 Speaker 1: you can only have a hundred people in it. So 290 00:17:08,800 --> 00:17:11,119 Speaker 1: I text him and say I need to talk to 291 00:17:11,359 --> 00:17:12,960 Speaker 1: He has his chief of staff call me in the 292 00:17:13,000 --> 00:17:15,359 Speaker 1: Secretary of Health and I asked him a question, how 293 00:17:15,400 --> 00:17:17,919 Speaker 1: did you determine for restaurants and they said, oh, we 294 00:17:18,080 --> 00:17:20,840 Speaker 1: based it on square footage for the science and social distance. 295 00:17:21,040 --> 00:17:23,159 Speaker 1: I said, did you use that same for churches. No, 296 00:17:25,440 --> 00:17:28,359 Speaker 1: they want to pick and choose. And I said, last 297 00:17:28,359 --> 00:17:31,200 Speaker 1: time I read the Constitution, I didn't see anything in 298 00:17:31,240 --> 00:17:34,399 Speaker 1: there about restaurants, but I believe it had religious freedom 299 00:17:34,440 --> 00:17:37,879 Speaker 1: in there. And once they're Reactually when you say that, 300 00:17:37,880 --> 00:17:41,040 Speaker 1: because I've been amazed that their willingness to run over 301 00:17:41,119 --> 00:17:47,119 Speaker 1: religious liberty. It's almost internally they don't care. They're going 302 00:17:47,200 --> 00:17:50,480 Speaker 1: to take this moment in time. And when the protests came, 303 00:17:50,760 --> 00:17:54,639 Speaker 1: there was a video it's shoulder to shoulder for a 304 00:17:54,840 --> 00:17:58,840 Speaker 1: mile long of people down in LA protesting. You will 305 00:17:58,880 --> 00:18:01,639 Speaker 1: not hear one question about that. Coming to a spread 306 00:18:01,720 --> 00:18:04,720 Speaker 1: in New York to Blasio told them, you cannot track 307 00:18:04,720 --> 00:18:07,760 Speaker 1: and trace if somebody comes in and has COVID, asking 308 00:18:07,760 --> 00:18:10,720 Speaker 1: if they've gone to a protest, you cannot ask them. 309 00:18:11,720 --> 00:18:14,359 Speaker 1: They view that is different. Another discussion I had with 310 00:18:14,440 --> 00:18:18,920 Speaker 1: Gavin Newsom, these churches have daycare, so during the week 311 00:18:19,000 --> 00:18:22,600 Speaker 1: they could provide daycare for a number of children, but 312 00:18:22,720 --> 00:18:25,399 Speaker 1: on Sunday we cannot meet. So I guess COVID only 313 00:18:25,440 --> 00:18:29,240 Speaker 1: comes on Sunday. It's almost to the point that they're 314 00:18:29,240 --> 00:18:33,040 Speaker 1: putting their own personal beliefs forward. That's why in the 315 00:18:33,040 --> 00:18:36,480 Speaker 1: Commitment to America we put in we will preserve our 316 00:18:36,520 --> 00:18:40,560 Speaker 1: freedoms under the Constitution because we're going to uphold free speech. 317 00:18:40,640 --> 00:18:43,840 Speaker 1: You can go protest, your voice needs to be heard, 318 00:18:44,080 --> 00:18:46,960 Speaker 1: prow our con but we're also going to protect your 319 00:18:47,040 --> 00:18:49,480 Speaker 1: religious liberties, and we're going to defend the unborn, and 320 00:18:49,480 --> 00:18:52,280 Speaker 1: we're going to safeguard the Second Amendment. If you go 321 00:18:52,359 --> 00:18:55,200 Speaker 1: to any store that is able to sell a gun, 322 00:18:55,480 --> 00:18:58,520 Speaker 1: there is a line around. And the interesting part is 323 00:18:58,960 --> 00:19:01,760 Speaker 1: it is the house wid and the young women that 324 00:19:01,800 --> 00:19:03,800 Speaker 1: are wondering do they need to buy a gun to 325 00:19:03,840 --> 00:19:06,680 Speaker 1: protect themselves because they do not feel safe and secure 326 00:19:06,680 --> 00:19:27,439 Speaker 1: in their own neighborhoods. What are you sensing as you 327 00:19:27,520 --> 00:19:29,040 Speaker 1: go around the country because I know that you have 328 00:19:29,080 --> 00:19:32,800 Speaker 1: been directly involved with every single Republican candidate for Congress. 329 00:19:33,160 --> 00:19:35,600 Speaker 1: What are you senses you talk to them around the country. 330 00:19:36,200 --> 00:19:40,480 Speaker 1: I am watching this grow like never before. You saw 331 00:19:40,520 --> 00:19:43,080 Speaker 1: this happen before anybody would see it in nineteen ninety four, 332 00:19:43,119 --> 00:19:46,720 Speaker 1: because it doesn't happen on that November day, it happens 333 00:19:46,760 --> 00:19:50,760 Speaker 1: almost a year or two before. Take for instance, who 334 00:19:50,880 --> 00:19:53,959 Speaker 1: would actually put their name on the line to run? Okay, 335 00:19:54,000 --> 00:19:57,760 Speaker 1: the record for women running as Republicans was one hundred 336 00:19:57,800 --> 00:20:02,199 Speaker 1: and forty three. This cycle, we had two hundred and 337 00:20:02,240 --> 00:20:05,960 Speaker 1: twenty nine women running as Republicans. Now you know the challenges. 338 00:20:06,000 --> 00:20:07,680 Speaker 1: You first have to win the primary to be ever 339 00:20:07,800 --> 00:20:11,080 Speaker 1: win the general. The record for women winning a primary 340 00:20:11,520 --> 00:20:14,720 Speaker 1: was in two thousand and four, there was fifty three 341 00:20:14,800 --> 00:20:17,600 Speaker 1: women won the primary. Do you know how many women 342 00:20:17,640 --> 00:20:21,520 Speaker 1: we have today who won the primary? Ninety five thirty 343 00:20:21,560 --> 00:20:25,639 Speaker 1: two percent of the fifty three. Most challenge races that 344 00:20:25,720 --> 00:20:29,119 Speaker 1: I have are going to have women as a representative 345 00:20:29,160 --> 00:20:33,920 Speaker 1: as Republican. I have more than seventy five minority candidates, 346 00:20:33,960 --> 00:20:36,399 Speaker 1: something we have not seen in the Republican Party at 347 00:20:36,440 --> 00:20:39,640 Speaker 1: any given time. And what's interesting, as we battle through 348 00:20:39,840 --> 00:20:43,080 Speaker 1: making sure we're a more perfect union. The country has 349 00:20:43,160 --> 00:20:47,480 Speaker 1: not studied where did Jim crow Law come from? And 350 00:20:47,560 --> 00:20:49,639 Speaker 1: I love how much you love history, and I know 351 00:20:49,680 --> 00:20:52,520 Speaker 1: you write so many books. I want to collaborate with you, 352 00:20:52,560 --> 00:20:54,320 Speaker 1: and I want to write a book. What if Lincoln 353 00:20:54,359 --> 00:20:58,359 Speaker 1: was not assassinated? Think for one moment, would we have 354 00:20:58,400 --> 00:21:01,320 Speaker 1: ever had Jim crow Laws. They were created because the 355 00:21:01,400 --> 00:21:05,639 Speaker 1: twenty three black Republicans getting elected to Congress. The Democrats 356 00:21:05,640 --> 00:21:07,800 Speaker 1: in the South decided that was wrong and made it 357 00:21:07,840 --> 00:21:10,679 Speaker 1: more difficult for people of colored even register. But what 358 00:21:10,800 --> 00:21:13,920 Speaker 1: we're finding today across this nation, I have more veterans, 359 00:21:14,119 --> 00:21:17,960 Speaker 1: more minorities, more women that at any given time running 360 00:21:18,040 --> 00:21:20,960 Speaker 1: as Republicans. And it's the belief that you have in 361 00:21:21,000 --> 00:21:25,119 Speaker 1: the individual rights. It's the belief that this country is 362 00:21:25,160 --> 00:21:27,600 Speaker 1: more than a country, that it's an idea, and the 363 00:21:27,720 --> 00:21:31,200 Speaker 1: challenge that they have never seen before, that it's not 364 00:21:31,280 --> 00:21:34,639 Speaker 1: a Republican versus Democrat. Kennedy's can no longer win a 365 00:21:34,680 --> 00:21:39,080 Speaker 1: primary and a Democratic party this has now become the 366 00:21:39,160 --> 00:21:43,800 Speaker 1: party of an Aociena talib a woman who was born 367 00:21:44,040 --> 00:21:48,040 Speaker 1: in Somalia put in a refugee camp. And then what 368 00:21:48,080 --> 00:21:50,880 Speaker 1: does America do. She opens her arms in her greatness 369 00:21:51,040 --> 00:21:54,560 Speaker 1: and brings her in to become a citizen, and then 370 00:21:54,680 --> 00:21:58,040 Speaker 1: she gets elected to the US House of Representative's. Less 371 00:21:58,040 --> 00:22:01,679 Speaker 1: than eleven thousand people have ever had the ability to 372 00:22:01,680 --> 00:22:04,560 Speaker 1: be a member of Congress. Right, and what does she say? 373 00:22:05,160 --> 00:22:08,520 Speaker 1: We should dismantle this nation instead of duplicate this nation. 374 00:22:09,359 --> 00:22:12,879 Speaker 1: That's the fundamental and philosophy of what we're debating today. 375 00:22:13,560 --> 00:22:15,560 Speaker 1: They raised the really interesting idea. I would love to 376 00:22:15,640 --> 00:22:17,919 Speaker 1: someday co author some books of you, but I have 377 00:22:17,960 --> 00:22:20,080 Speaker 1: a hunch you're going to have a long stretch of 378 00:22:20,160 --> 00:22:22,800 Speaker 1: Speaker of the House before then, and that will keep 379 00:22:22,800 --> 00:22:26,160 Speaker 1: you rather busy from getting all of these things done. 380 00:22:26,640 --> 00:22:29,520 Speaker 1: I'm very impressed. I've watched this develop over the last 381 00:22:29,520 --> 00:22:33,360 Speaker 1: couple of years, and I've watched the energy building in 382 00:22:33,400 --> 00:22:36,600 Speaker 1: the House Republican Party. Now, if people listen to this 383 00:22:36,720 --> 00:22:39,040 Speaker 1: decide they want to be helpful, where do they go 384 00:22:39,080 --> 00:22:41,760 Speaker 1: and what can they do to be helpful in this quest? 385 00:22:42,359 --> 00:22:44,480 Speaker 1: The first thing I want everybody to do is go 386 00:22:44,520 --> 00:22:48,720 Speaker 1: to commitment to America dot Com. Read through it, because 387 00:22:49,119 --> 00:22:51,800 Speaker 1: this isn't just something we're putting on paper. We are 388 00:22:51,840 --> 00:22:54,240 Speaker 1: making a commitment to you, because we are committed to 389 00:22:54,280 --> 00:22:57,280 Speaker 1: this nation. We will not leave if we win or 390 00:22:57,320 --> 00:23:00,760 Speaker 1: lose this election. That's not who we are believe in 391 00:23:00,920 --> 00:23:04,480 Speaker 1: fighting for this nation and fighting for our beliefs, our freedoms, 392 00:23:04,520 --> 00:23:07,840 Speaker 1: and our constitution. If you like what you are reading, 393 00:23:08,040 --> 00:23:09,960 Speaker 1: I then want you to go to one more site. 394 00:23:10,320 --> 00:23:14,160 Speaker 1: Take the house dot com. Join us, be a part 395 00:23:14,160 --> 00:23:18,600 Speaker 1: of something bigger than yourself. And you know you love history, 396 00:23:18,680 --> 00:23:21,600 Speaker 1: and that's one thing I've always admired about you. And 397 00:23:21,680 --> 00:23:23,679 Speaker 1: you've been to my office. In my office, I have 398 00:23:23,800 --> 00:23:28,399 Speaker 1: that portrait of Washington crossing the Delaware. Everybody remembers it 399 00:23:28,400 --> 00:23:30,399 Speaker 1: and sees it, and they know of that painting, the 400 00:23:30,480 --> 00:23:33,840 Speaker 1: famous painting, and the thing people don't quite realize that 401 00:23:34,000 --> 00:23:37,520 Speaker 1: wasn't painted by somebody who watched that event on Christmas 402 00:23:37,560 --> 00:23:40,440 Speaker 1: in seventeen seventy six. It was painted by a man 403 00:23:40,520 --> 00:23:43,680 Speaker 1: named Emmanuel Lenz, who was an immigrant who had lived 404 00:23:43,680 --> 00:23:47,160 Speaker 1: in America and went back to Germany. He wasn't there. 405 00:23:47,240 --> 00:23:50,280 Speaker 1: He painted in eighteen fifty one, and he painted it 406 00:23:50,600 --> 00:23:54,119 Speaker 1: because he wanted it inspire Germany to have a revolution 407 00:23:54,440 --> 00:23:57,919 Speaker 1: based upon the values of America, believing in the individual. 408 00:23:58,520 --> 00:24:00,840 Speaker 1: So he gets it. Historically, and correct. But he puts 409 00:24:00,920 --> 00:24:04,280 Speaker 1: Washington in a rowboat with thirteen people, but he only 410 00:24:04,320 --> 00:24:07,719 Speaker 1: shows you twelve faces. Well, Washington historians will tell as 411 00:24:07,720 --> 00:24:10,680 Speaker 1: he crossed in the Durham boat. He has Washington standing 412 00:24:10,760 --> 00:24:14,240 Speaker 1: up wearing a ceremonial uniform with his hand on his chest. 413 00:24:14,560 --> 00:24:16,719 Speaker 1: You look at George Washing think this man has probably 414 00:24:16,760 --> 00:24:19,520 Speaker 1: never lost the battle, but history tells us he had 415 00:24:19,560 --> 00:24:22,200 Speaker 1: never won one. Yet that was our first victory when 416 00:24:22,200 --> 00:24:25,399 Speaker 1: we surprised the Hessian. But go online and look at 417 00:24:25,440 --> 00:24:27,879 Speaker 1: who's in that boat. When you look at the second rower, 418 00:24:27,920 --> 00:24:30,679 Speaker 1: he's wearing a barret. He's Scottish. But look at the 419 00:24:30,680 --> 00:24:33,280 Speaker 1: person directly across from him in the green jacket. He's 420 00:24:33,320 --> 00:24:36,399 Speaker 1: African American. Come down to the middle of the boat 421 00:24:36,400 --> 00:24:40,520 Speaker 1: and that red rowing very feverously is a woman, and 422 00:24:40,600 --> 00:24:43,920 Speaker 1: in the very back is a Native American. I can't 423 00:24:43,920 --> 00:24:46,240 Speaker 1: tell you from a historical fact if they were in 424 00:24:46,240 --> 00:24:49,520 Speaker 1: the boat, but this young immigrant who lived here ten years, 425 00:24:49,720 --> 00:24:52,200 Speaker 1: that's who he believed would be in the boat. Now, 426 00:24:52,200 --> 00:24:54,760 Speaker 1: the second to last person is this farmer, and he 427 00:24:54,800 --> 00:24:57,640 Speaker 1: has his hand across his face, and it's the hand 428 00:24:57,680 --> 00:25:00,439 Speaker 1: of the thirteenth person that nobody sees you see what 429 00:25:00,440 --> 00:25:03,399 Speaker 1: Emmanuel was saying here. We are not even a nation 430 00:25:03,480 --> 00:25:07,560 Speaker 1: but an idea, an idea about liberty and individual rights 431 00:25:07,560 --> 00:25:11,000 Speaker 1: and freedom. And we've never won a battle before, but 432 00:25:11,080 --> 00:25:14,040 Speaker 1: we're willing to risk everything on our holiest of night. 433 00:25:14,640 --> 00:25:16,720 Speaker 1: Here's a hand. Would you get in and join us? 434 00:25:17,240 --> 00:25:19,920 Speaker 1: That's as true today as it was then. We need 435 00:25:19,960 --> 00:25:22,439 Speaker 1: you in the boat together. We need to all row 436 00:25:22,520 --> 00:25:25,280 Speaker 1: in the same direction. We're going to have choppy waters, 437 00:25:25,400 --> 00:25:27,560 Speaker 1: we're going to be in fights that people are going 438 00:25:27,600 --> 00:25:31,480 Speaker 1: to give the odds against us. But come November, we're 439 00:25:31,520 --> 00:25:33,480 Speaker 1: going to shock the world and we're going to have 440 00:25:33,480 --> 00:25:35,760 Speaker 1: a commitment of what we're going to do, and we're 441 00:25:35,760 --> 00:25:37,840 Speaker 1: going to have a plan and we're going to carry 442 00:25:37,880 --> 00:25:40,480 Speaker 1: it out because we will keep our commitment to this 443 00:25:40,560 --> 00:25:43,920 Speaker 1: nation and once again will make sure the next century 444 00:25:43,960 --> 00:25:47,520 Speaker 1: is ours. That's really well done by one short of 445 00:25:47,600 --> 00:25:51,000 Speaker 1: book called to Trimen's Souls about that crossing. And I 446 00:25:51,000 --> 00:25:52,760 Speaker 1: don't think I could have done nearly as good a 447 00:25:52,840 --> 00:25:56,560 Speaker 1: job of painting the picture you just painted, which is 448 00:25:56,600 --> 00:25:58,720 Speaker 1: really not a picture about Washington. It's a picture about 449 00:25:58,760 --> 00:26:03,280 Speaker 1: America we can be and why we represent everyone who 450 00:26:03,320 --> 00:26:07,240 Speaker 1: believes that we can come together and that we can 451 00:26:07,280 --> 00:26:09,879 Speaker 1: create a better future. I want to thank you. I 452 00:26:09,920 --> 00:26:13,280 Speaker 1: want everyone who's listened to us today both to go 453 00:26:13,480 --> 00:26:16,440 Speaker 1: to the two websites. They're going to be listed on 454 00:26:16,480 --> 00:26:18,760 Speaker 1: our show page. With an addition, I want them to 455 00:26:18,840 --> 00:26:21,879 Speaker 1: know that these are big ideas. When we did the 456 00:26:21,920 --> 00:26:25,560 Speaker 1: contract with America changed history. When you helped John Bayner 457 00:26:26,040 --> 00:26:29,159 Speaker 1: and you put together the pledge in twenty ten, you 458 00:26:29,200 --> 00:26:32,159 Speaker 1: guys actually won ten more seats than we won in 459 00:26:32,240 --> 00:26:34,960 Speaker 1: nineteen ninety four, so that was obviously a big idea. 460 00:26:35,400 --> 00:26:38,040 Speaker 1: And I think now you're back at it again, and 461 00:26:38,080 --> 00:26:40,600 Speaker 1: I think that this is a very very important moment 462 00:26:40,600 --> 00:26:43,080 Speaker 1: in our history, and I think you have captured the 463 00:26:43,200 --> 00:26:46,640 Speaker 1: essence of it. So I wish you godspeed and safe travels. 464 00:26:47,280 --> 00:26:50,159 Speaker 1: Just keep pitching from that election day. Well, thank you, 465 00:26:50,200 --> 00:26:59,399 Speaker 1: mister speaker, Thank you to my guest Kevin McCarthy. You 466 00:26:59,480 --> 00:27:02,320 Speaker 1: can read more about the commitment to America on our 467 00:27:02,320 --> 00:27:06,120 Speaker 1: showpage at Newtsworld dot com. News World is produced by 468 00:27:06,119 --> 00:27:10,840 Speaker 1: Gingwish three sixty and iHeartMedia. Our executive producer is Debbie 469 00:27:10,920 --> 00:27:14,720 Speaker 1: Myers and our producer is Gornsey Sun. The artwork for 470 00:27:14,800 --> 00:27:18,919 Speaker 1: the show was created by Steve Pendley, special thanks to 471 00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:22,439 Speaker 1: the team at Gingwich three sixty. Please email me with 472 00:27:22,480 --> 00:27:26,560 Speaker 1: your questions at Gingwich three sixty dot com slash questions. 473 00:27:27,200 --> 00:27:31,640 Speaker 1: I'll answer a selection of questions in future episodes. If 474 00:27:31,640 --> 00:27:34,399 Speaker 1: you've been enjoying Newtsworld, I hope you'll go to Apple 475 00:27:34,480 --> 00:27:38,160 Speaker 1: Podcast and both rate us with five stars and give 476 00:27:38,240 --> 00:27:40,520 Speaker 1: us a review so others can learn what it's all about. 477 00:27:41,480 --> 00:27:43,840 Speaker 1: I'm new Gingwich. This is newts World.