From the Kitchen Table: The Duffys - Democrat's Woke Agenda Pushes Hispanic Voters To The Right
Episode Date: October 28, 2022In this episode, Rachel and Sean sit down to discuss the Democrat policies that have pushed Hispanic voters toward the Republican party. Â Later, they break down key House races in South Texas that w...ill affect the balance of power in Congress, and why they believe that school choice is the most important issue that parents should be concerned with in this election cycle. Follow Sean and Rachel on Twitter: @SeanDuffyWI & @RCamposDuffy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey everyone, welcome to From the Kitchen Table. I'm Sean Duffy along with my co-host of the podcast, my partner and my wife, Rachel Campos Duffy.
Thank you, Sean. It's so great to be here on the podcast, although we're not together today at our kitchen table.
You're home with all the kiddos. And I'm just down at the border here in Del Rio because I have a town hall tomorrow that I'm doing for Fox and Friends. And I'm actually going to be coming to live for Fox and Friends weekend from the border.
The boys, Will and Pete, will be in studio in New York City.
But I will be coming live from Del Rio, Texas on Saturday morning.
So I'm here. you're on kid duty. And Sean,
I decided to come to the border because Kamala Harris and Joe Biden won't.
They won't, they won't go to the border. That's right. And as only those border states have
thought that the border is open and the border is a problem Now, because governors of Texas, of Florida, and a little bit out of
Arizona have sent busloads of migrants to liberal cities that are sanctuary cities and sanctuary
states, all of a sudden, everyone in America realizes that an open border is an American
problem, not just a border state problem. It is an American problem. But I'll tell you what,
it is a problem for the Democrat Party. So right now, and this is an unbelievable thing that's happening. Right now, if you look at the races in Texas, along the border districts, so we're talking about District 23 in Texas, District 28, District 15, District 34. These districts used to be all Democrat represented by Democrat members of Congress.
And it looks like if you look at the polling, Sean, that Tony Gonzalez will win again.
That'll be a reelection for him in 23. Cassandra Garcia would win 28.
for him in 23. Cassandra Garcia would win 28. If Monica wins in 15 and Myra Flores in District 34,
you will have, for the first time in history, an almost entirely Republican-represented border between Mexico and Texas of all those Southern districts along the Texas border.
That has got to be scaring the you-know-what out of Democrats.
Yeah, so I want to talk quickly about Texas 23, right?
So that's Tony Gonzalez's seat.
That was first won by Kiko Canseco in 2010, the year that I won and came to Congress.
And then when he left Congress, Will Hurd, a Republican, ran and won in that seat.
And now Tony Gonzalez has kept it.
But every year that was the most hotly contested seat because it leans Democrats.
And by the skin of their teeth for the last 10 years, Republicans have been able to win Texas 23.
But every other district along the southern border has been solidly Democrat.
Republicans don't stand a chance.
They just hope to keep the Tony Gonzalez seat, Texas 23.
But as you mentioned, Rachel, this year, Republicans could pick up four of those border districts in Texas.
There's one that's still Democrat, solidly Democrat.
The Republicans probably will not win, but they would have four out of five border districts in the state of Texas, which is historic.
And it speaks volumes about what's been happening in the Hispanic community and why they've
gone from Democrats to now being Republican voters.
Yeah, I mean, we brought up the border.
I mean, obviously the border security issues, the open border, the trauma really that it's caused in these
cities along the border, these little towns that just don't have the infrastructure or the
resources or the services to manage the inflow. I mean, you see New York City freaking out over
a fraction, I mean, a tiny, tiny fraction of what these towns are feeling along the border.
And they have far less resources in New York City.
And so this has affected their ability to get health care.
You know, I've told you about, you know, in Yuma, Arizona, for example, we have friends, you know, who say we now have to go take our kids 100 miles away because we can't get them into the hospital because it's overrun by people who have come here illegally.
So there's all kinds of issues like that, as well as the crime situation that has increased.
And then sort of the long term problems that happen when you have illegal immigration.
You know, wages go down. It makes it just harder to live in these towns.
And so that's a big issue. But also, I think what's affecting not just this area,
but other areas, you know, you see Nevada, you know, the Hispanic vote in Nevada might be what
turns that election, the governor election over for Republicans and also a Senate seat there.
There's elections all along, you know, in Arizona and so forth that will be
affected by the Hispanic vote. And it's not just the border. It's that I think the Democrat party
has gone so far left, the school situation with transgenderism being taught instead of,
you know, math and science and reading.
People are just feeling like in the Hispanic community, which is a community that's so faith based, so family oriented.
They just feel like the Democrat Party, they don't recognize it anymore.
So there's all of those issues. And then you add inflation, which is the number one issue.
And it's just it's devastating for the Democrats,
Sean. And I think what the problem is for them is that it's not just this cycle. You know,
from my own family history that my, you know, my father was a, came from a union Democrat town. He
voted Democrat his whole life until he voted for Ronald Reagan. And, you know, once you
vote Republican, you might not go back. You're not that solid, dependable Democrat vote anymore.
And certainly in the case of my dad, he never turned back to the Democrat party again
for values issues more than anything else. Well, I think you look and say, well, what do the
Democrat party of politicians have to offer the Hispanic voter, right? So you mentioned, you know, immigration and how it's overrun communities, whether it's, you mentioned the hospitals, it's the social services, it's the crime, it's, you know, housing.
legal migration. And it's been devastating the communities in which Hispanics live. You're right.
Inflation has been been crushing the value of the hard earned dollar by the community.
The economy has been falling off in Texas, especially you have a lot of oil and gas. When Joe Biden attacked oil and gas, he's attacking the jobs of Hispanic workers.
A lot of Hispanics work on Border Patrol. So when Joe Biden calls border patrol racist, those are Hispanic families that he's calling
racist. And then I think you're right when you, most families and especially immigrant families
understand, or those who have recently come from immigration, we all understand that a good
education is our way to the middle class in America. And when you want to teach my kids about racism and about transgenderism, one that's that you're taking away my pathway or my kids pathway to the middle class.
But also, this isn't a front to my faith.
This is an affront to who I am as a human being.
What drives me in life is my faith.
And they came here and they want to be American.
You want to be an American.
They love America. They serve in the military, Hispanics do, especially at a rate much higher than other
groups in America. And to think that Democrats want people and support people who kneel for the
flag, who maybe burn the flag, who want to teach in our schools to hate America. These are all
issues that repel, I would argue, the Hispanic voter. And they then look to Republicans to say, hey, maybe I have a home here.
Maybe this is where I should be.
And I think it's fascinating that of the names we read, Mayra Flores, Monica de la Cruz, and Cassandra Garcia, Cassie Garcia, three Republican women Hispanics.
Garcia, three Republican women Hispanics, right? It's the mama bears in the Hispanic community coming out and going, I'm not raising my family with Democrat values. I love America and I love
my faith and I love my family and I'm going to be a Republican. And the women, Hispanic women,
are running, which is fascinating. You know what? I was thinking about this today. What people really want is they don't want to think about politics.
What the average American family, whether you're Mexican-American or white or Asian or black, what you want to do is you just want to work and spend time with your family.
Right. And when the people in charge aren't doing their job, then you suddenly and you live in Texas along,
you know, where I'm at right now.
Now you got to think about the border all the time.
You know, you got to think about the border because the people in charge aren't taking
care of the border at your schools when they come in with all their ideology.
You just want to be able to send your kids to school and help them with their homework
when they come home.
But now because the people in charge are screwing up the schools and indoctrinating your kids with racist CRT and transgender ideology.
Now you got to go to the school board meetings all the time.
And now you got to fight, you know, and get involved in politics to change the whole situation at your school.
You know, you just want to go to the grocery store and buy food and think about the birthday party or Thanksgiving meal that you're going to make. And now you're worried, like,
can I invite my whole family because I can't afford the food anymore? Or I just want to go
to my kid's game. Can I afford to even put my kid in that sport? Because I don't know if I can
afford the gas to drive them. I just want to go to grandma's house
and now I can't get there
because I can't fly to grandma's house for Thanksgiving
because plane tickets have skyrocketed.
I mean, and then if you're a grandma,
you're worried about, do I buy my medication
or do I heat my home?
I mean, these are the things
that Americans don't want to
think about. And I think the problem the Democrats have, Sean, is that you don't have to go back to
the 80s to think of the good times. You can go back two years, two years to the Trump administration
and go, we had record economic numbers. Hispanics and Black blacks never did better than under the Trump economy
in the history of us keeping track of these economic numbers. This is the problem that
the Democrats face because people who are apolitical, and there are lots of people who
are apolitical in this country, just think back and go, it's kind of that Reagan thing, Sean,
you know, was my life better four years ago or not?
And, you know, in this case, it was just two years ago.
I think it's a really good point. And if you look at states, we didn't mention Florida, but
large Hispanic voting base in Florida, that used to be a purple state, maybe even leaned a little
blue. Ron DeSantis is going to cruise to victory as governor. Marco
Rubio, with probably not as big of numbers, is going to win easily in Florida. And that's a big
part due to the Hispanic vote. So I think the American political map is shifting and changing,
and a big part of that is the Hispanic vote. But I want to bring this up, Rachel, because
as more Hispanics have been elected to Congress,
they create a caucus, right?
There's a Hispanic caucus in Congress.
There's a congressional Black caucus in Congress.
And these caucuses are normally open to both parties.
So it's- What do these caucuses do, Sean?
So if you're a congressional Black caucus member,
you'll talk about issues that you can all agree on, that you can all work on together, that you think affect your community as a whole.
And you can work in block to push legislation, holding your votes hostage to make sure you get certain things in bills or you won't vote for it.
It's a very powerful tool to get certain pieces of legislation in bills.
And Hispanics have had a growing caucus in the Congress, and it's powerful to push issues that they think
are going to help the Hispanic community out.
And oftentimes they're good ideas.
They're good pieces of legislation.
It's, you know, they're ideas that will not just help
the Hispanic community, but they'll help every American family.
So it's not a bad thing. But what's interesting is normally they're bipartisan. I remember that when Mia Love came to
Congress, Mia Love from Utah, African-American, she's Haitian-American woman, Republican. She had
to kind of fight tooth and nail to get admitted into the Congressional Black Caucus. But she was part of the caucus, but she did get in?
She did get in.
She did.
And there was kind of an internal fight, but she did get in.
And they thought, you know what, this is appropriate.
We have open doors for everybody.
And this is a big tent.
We're going to let a Republican and a conservative Republican
and Mia Love come into our caucus.
Well, Mara Flores wanted to join the
Hispanic caucus. And in the bylaws of the caucus, they don't say that it is exclusionary to
Republicans. It's basically the criteria is you have to be Hispanic and a member of Congress and
you can get in. So she applied, Rachel. And what did the Hispanic caucus, which is full of a lot
of Democrats right now, but it's going to be less Democrats and a lot more Republicans.
But what do they say to Mayra Flores when she has to join?
They said, no, you're not you're not Latino enough.
She's the first member of Congress to be elected, who was actually born in Mexico.
Here's she was actually Laura Ingram had a great town hall the other night in Houston.
And Myra Flores was there.
And Laura asked her what, you know, about being rejected by the Hispanic caucus.
And here's what she had to say about it.
On June 14, I became the first Mexican-born congresswoman ever elected in Congress.
And that's not good enough for them.
And this shows that they're not
for the Hispanic community. They're just there for their political party. I don't need them.
The Hispanic community doesn't need them. We are the real voice. We are the voice of the Hispanic
community. And we stand for the values that we were raised with. God, family, and hard work. That is what we are all about.
So God, family, hard work. I mean, the Democrat Party simply can't claim that they, you know,
embody those values. And if you talk to any normal Hispanic person, they'll tell you that's the,
those are the values of their family and um i mean the democrat party
has gone so far away from the hispanic family values i mean they they basically vote with what
i mean i look at aoc i've told you this before sean i look at someone like aoc and she votes
like i mean to be fair she votes like her generation, right? Like as a, you know, Gen Z
millennial type person, but also she votes the same as all the ladies on Martha's Vineyard,
you know, Island. I mean, they, I mean, if you looked at the voting record of all the rich white
ladies there and you put it next to AOCs, I bet they would match up perfectly. But those, you know,
they would match up perfectly. But those, you know, radical abortion, socialism, you know,
anti-religion, you know, anti-religious liberty, all of these issues that she's, you know, climate change being the most important thing in AOC's life and making her not want to start a family
because she doesn't want to be an environmental eco-terrorist, you know, those things don't resonate with Hispanics. We don't think like that.
We just think we want to have a family and we want to have kids. And we just hope our
economy is an abiding economy because it sure makes it harder to do that.
We'll have more of this conversation after this.
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for a very limited time visit ancestry.ca to start your journey today offer ends december 3rd terms And so we're talking about this because, one, it's fascinating to us because Rachel is Hispanic.
She's a Latina, right?
We have nine Hispanic children.
And so that's important.
But what's more important and why everyone cares is because this matters.
important and why everyone cares is because this matters and this is why republicans um are feeling such a significant wave coming their way uh this november 8th it's because us a small group of
um of voters is changing party affiliation and taking an a d and moving it to an r it's it's
what's happening it's not a small group not a small group, Sean. Not a small group.
I mean, there are going to be, you know, in some of these states, you know, you're looking at
Arizona, one in four voters is Hispanic American, you know, a quarter of the voters.
You know, so, I mean, you're looking at, and also look at, we have nine kids, Sean.
So, I mean, you're looking at and also look at we have nine kids, Sean.
We're the most, you know, we're the demographic having the most kids. We're the youngest demographic, the fastest growing demographic.
So this has massive implications, politically speaking, for Republicans and Democrats.
And my point with that was if Lee Zeldin in his governor's race in New York is able to change 4% of the vote in New York City, that's not a huge percentage, but it's a huge voting block in New York City, in a really big state.
He can change 4%.
He can win the governor's race by just flipping that 4% who, again, they are pro-abortion.
Really? Is that right, Sean?
That's right. I never heard that. percent who again they are pro-abortion they're pro-immigration they're yeah they're they're
they're they're they're far left but their lives have gotten so bad that they're looking at primary
issues can i walk down the street and be safe yeah um can i afford to live in this city that's
gotten to be so expensive so dirty as you say, Rachel, it smells like urine and marijuana
whenever you walk through that city.
I don't want to live like that.
I said that once on air with Brian Kilmeade
and he said he wanted to start a new cologne
called Pot and Urine.
Only Brian Kilmeade, there was one liners.
But that's-
He can sell a lot of stuff.
So he sells both. It is significant that those,
that those shifts happen. And when it does,
Lee Zeldin will be a Republican who wins in New York for the first time since
what the early nineties, not early, early two thousands, I think early two
thousands. First time to have a Republican governor.
And it's because Democrats flat out are just so stinking bad.
And their ideas, I think it's always important to go,
Democrats have what they think are wonderful ideas.
And they've had the opportunity to actually implement fully their ideas
where they have all Democrat control, like California,
or like the city of San Francisco,
or the city of Chicago, or the city of Baltimore, or the city of DC, like complete Democrat control.
They implement their wonderful ideas. And what happens? They destroy the city. The city is
rot. And what even good Democrats are like i i voted for you people and i love your
ideas but this sucks i'm leaving i'm gonna go to a republican area and by the way they don't leave
their their their liberal ways behind they take their stupid liberal ideas and bring them to texas
and bring them to florida but whenever democrats have tried these dumb ideas they actually ruin
the places that they rule and so why would we give them complete
control of the United States? They will ruin it. And we saw in just two years, they've been
destroying our country in record time. They want to make America like San Francisco.
Drug use, urine infested, homeless all over, and people begging for another place to go.
Well, those of us who
love america go this we have to stand up and fight to make sure that can't be our future that can't
be the san francisco can't be the future of our kids where they walk down the street and they're
afraid of stepping on a on a needle that some drug you use to inject and they're going to get
you know some you know random potentially deadly disease just walking home from school because of Democrat
policy. So I think this stuff truly matters and winning. And you mentioned Donald Trump. It's so
important to go only two short years ago. You might not like all the tweets. You might not like
all the fights he got in, but God darn it, this economy was pretty good. And I didn't have to
focus on the school board as much.
I was able to focus on my family.
And by the way, I'm here without you.
I'm like, I can barely get the kids in the door.
I'm trying to get them fed, homework done, get them cleaned up, and get them to bed.
If I had to go to a school board meeting, shoot me in the head.
I mean, I barely have time.
Even if we're together, we don't have time to get in all these fights.
But that's what I find is so amazing.
American moms and dads have been coming out in droves, making time to go.
It's worth it.
And one of us, you stay with the kids tonight, honey, because I'm going to go to the school board meeting, and I'm going to fight like hell to get our school back? Well, I'm glad you brought up schools because this week, at the beginning of the week,
we had this, what's called basically the national report card come out. And so we're finally able
to see what some of the results are of these national tests that come out annually. And we
can kind of see where our kids are at academically, where they're scoring from year to year.
And it's fascinating because it's really obvious now that the data is in that those kids who were in Catholic schools performed wildly better than those in public school. Now, if you're a parent, you know,
watching this, you know, from, you know, the front lines here, I mean, that you knew this
was going to happen. But what's interesting is a lot of the people who, you know, the unions,
the teachers, the health bureaucrats who were okay with shutting down our schools and said,
oh, it's okay, they'll be on Zoom, it's all right, you know, we got to be safe, 100% safe.
You know, these scores are a real repudiation of what they did because at the same time,
Catholic schools and the unions were fighting the Catholic schools who really, they stayed open
because they care about kids. They also stayed open because they had to. I mean, they would have lost their schools because without tuition, they don't survive. So they, I tweeted out when I got these scores, Sean, unions lied, Catholic schools figured out, hey, we'll separate kids. We don't know what's going on. We'll take
these measures. We'll wipe things down. The schools, the public schools took gazillions of
dollars off of COVID money. And these Catholic schools bought Clorox wipes and wiped down tests
and separated tests. And there were no outbreaks. There were no deaths. And the kids survived. And not only that, academically, they thrived. So if Catholic schools were a state, they would be the most high performing state in our nation. So fourth grade, eighth grade math and reading scores just were significantly better than public schools and public school
kids actually went backwards. You know, politically, it's interesting too, because
Democrats are paid a lot of money by teachers unions for their loyalty to fight to get them
more money in their contracts. Sometimes have states, you know, take on more debt in their
pensions for school teachers. And there's a lot of wonderful school teachers out there.
You know, some really bad ones.
I think older teachers may be a little better.
A lot of these younger ones are coming out more woke.
But as Democrats partner with teachers unions,
which is a really, really small voting bloc,
Republicans are partnering with parents.
And there's a hell of a lot more parents in America
than there are teachers.
And parents are concerned and parents are going to vote.
And again, this is the issue.
They might be liberal on a lot of social issues.
But if you're not educating and teaching my kid or you're trying to indoctrinate my child,
I will fight you tooth and nail because I can't stand for that as a parent.
And if you're going to make me vote Republican,
Republican, so I don't like very much.
I'm talking about these liberal parents. I will, I will on a single issue.
That's why in the state of Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, who was up, I think 17 points three
weeks ago in the governor's race, is now in a dead heat with her Republican challenger
in the sole issue. Yes, it's the economy. Yes, it's inflation.
There's a lot of issues at play.
But the biggest issue, this is just like Virginia.
It's about teachers.
It's about unions.
It's about trying to push transgenderism,
trying to push sex onto kids in Michigan,
and the parents are revolting.
A pretty loyal voting bloc to a Democrat party is the Muslim vote.
Significant Muslim vote in Dearborn, Michigan.
We talked about this.
The parents came out and were like, listen, we don't want to play politics.
We want you to educate our kids, not indoctrinate our kids.
And we're going to rally around our children, not around any other political issue.
When you watch that rally, I guarantee you how every one
of those parents are going to vote because they know who is supporting their child and their
child's education and it's Republicans. And they know who's trying to destroy the child's education,
which is Democrats. It's not even that, you know, American parents have put up with bad academic,
you know, scores for a long time.
And we've been scoring in the middle of the pack.
We've been seeing Lithuania beat us in math and science and reading for years, for decades, for a decade or more.
We've been declining academically. I think that what's and I think American parents have been far too tolerant of that.
But now you want to steal my child's innocence.
You want to talk to them about their gender.
You want to ask them if they want a different pronoun when they don't even know what a pronoun is.
And you want them to do that without telling me.
You want to get them on a path towards puberty blockers.
You want to introduce pornographic books in your library and secretly talk to them about
sex.
I mean, it is just, it's gotten so off the rails, Sean, that parents are like, oh my,
I mean, this is a parent unite moment.
I love what you said about how they partner with unions and Republicans and conservatives
want to partner with parents.
Absolutely, that's the case. And by the way, Gretchen Whitmer in her debate, which I think
is going to cost her, if she loses that election, it'll be this moment that cost her that election,
which is she tried to gaslight parents during the debate and said that kids in Michigan were out of school
for three months, which is a blatant lie. You know who was out of school for three months?
The Chinese kids, 200 million of them, were out of school for like two months or three months.
That's it. And then they were back. And that whole year and a half, two years,
where our kids were either out of school or in and out of school, because, you know, if somebody coughed or got sick, then the whole class was home and zooming.
I mean, you got you look here, Catholic school students, average scores were 15 points higher, higher than the average score of eighth grade public school kids of their peers.
So, you know, you had Catholic schools that were doing the work and some private schools as well.
But these these teachers unions basically extorted millions and millions and millions of dollars out of the taxpayers.
out of the taxpayers saying, we'll open if you give us all these millions of dollars to like,
you know, get our schools all like ready for, you know, to, to, to fight against COVID.
And then they still didn't open, they took the money. They still didn't open the schools.
Um, and, and, and the money is just there, you know, it's not going to be used towards COVID money. They're using it in all their DEI, you know, diversity equity programs.
It was a complete scam.
Meanwhile, Catholic schools on a budget did the work.
And I think this is, you're right, this is going to be a big issue for parents when they go to the polls.
And I think more importantly, Sean, this is one of those issues that's going to have long-term reverberating effects. I think teachers have, I mean, parents kind of had a lot, you know, the unions had goodwill with parents for far too long, goodwill they didn't deserve for far too long. corrupt the teachers unions were and how it really was about teachers and not about kids.
And I think, you know, you saw in the last, I think it was a few months ago that Arizona
became, the entire state became school choice. And I think this trend is going to continue and
it could fundamentally change the way education is run in America.
Here's what I think is going to happen.
I think you're going to see shockwaves on all the issues we've talked about on the podcast.
It's going to shock the electorate on November 8th.
It's going to shock Democrats how bad they're going to lose.
That is going to be real.
They're going to feel it.
Here's what I think everyone has to recognize.
Democrats are not going to leave these issues.
They want your children.
They're going to continue to develop programs to indoctrinate your children, to separate your children from you.
That's their mission.
They're going to come back with a little softer approach. They're going to go, hey, we were maybe too out there on transgenderism and CRT
and our sex education books in sixth grade classes
and our instruction on how to access sex apps for little kids.
I mean, that might have been too much.
We shouldn't stop because we're right to do that.
We just have to do a better job hiding it.
And so we all have to be aware they are not going to leave. They're not going to be defeated and
change course. They're not going to have, you know, a 180 degree pivot. They are coming back
and they're just going to be stealthier. They're going to be sleuthier, if you will, in doing the
same things, but trying to do it under our nose, under the radar,
and so we don't pick it up. And so we have to have, once you win, the fight's not over,
the fight is just beginning. When you win on November 8th, it just begins to make sure that
not only do we take out the bad politicians, but we get policies in place and continue to be engaged in these spaces like
our county boards our school boards um our assembly races to make sure this stuff never
ever happens again because mark my words they are coming back there's a lot of aocs that have been
birthed in the last you know um you know a couple decades that are that are coming of age that are going to fight to destroy this
country. And it's our job to continue to fight them and to continue to beat them, not just on
November 8th, but in 2024 and 2026 and every year after until they rethink their methods
or crawl off to the corner in which their ideas came from.
You know, Sean, I think with school, with with education, you and I have just come to the conclusion that we can't came to the same conclusion Pete Higgs came to, which was ultimately public schools are Democrat camp.
And and that is what they have been using the school system to do to create little activists.
That's pretty much what it is. And I think you're right. I think they're going to get more stealthy.
And so I think the answer is yes, of course, to get involved in your school board, but ultimately
the only answer is school choice. The only answer is to attach the money to a child and not a system.
And once that happens, it will fundamentally transform education. You're going to see a revolution in schools and that competition, I think, will make our country better.
And I think, you know, you talk all the time about, you know, you lose hope sometimes, Sean, when you think about this next generation, because so many of them have been indoctrinated.
because so many of them have been indoctrinated.
And so I think the only answer to that,
you know, on mass indoctrination is a real diversity of schools
and the ability for other schools to grow
and for parents to have choice.
I think school choice is,
of all the issues that are on the plate right now,
school choice might just be number one or number two, because.
One of the most important ones, no doubt.
Yeah. I mean, it really is. I mean, I, I,
it's just so fundamental to the future of our country.
Listen, I couldn't agree more. Listen, Rachel, I love you.
I loved in the podcast with you, but I do have kids I have to feed.
So they're getting hungry. So it's been a great chat on and maybe the house is burning down right
now. I don't know the fire alarms might go off anytime soon. But it's a good chat about the
Hispanic community and this, this rebirth of Republican votes or a new birth of Republican
votes in the Hispanic community. It's really exciting. This is probably one of the most exciting periods of time that I've seen. It's such a huge fundamental shift,
not just Hispanics, but that the Republican Party is the working class party. All of these things
are going to have huge repercussions. November 8th is how many days away, Sean? Did you say 12?
I think 12 days away. On November 9th, you're going to wake up, or maybe even on the night of November
8th.
What's your prediction?
Really quick.
What's your prediction?
My prediction is this.
The wave is going to be so big that you are going to hear of governor's races, maybe even
Senate races, House races, of people who won that you had no idea were in a competitive race and could win.
You're going to be shocked by the people who win that the pollsters said didn't have a chance.
That's what kind of night it's going to be.
That's how angry people are.
That's how polling has been so bad in America, favoring Democrats, undercounting Republicans.
You wait, mark my words.
That's the real voter suppression, Sean. That's the real voter suppression.
I remember Sean Duffy on the podcast said I was going to see people who won that I never even
heard of. That's going to happen. That's how big this is.
I agree. I think it's going to be a tsunami. I'm looking forward to it.
Well, thank you all joining us as we're separated,
Rachel at the border, me at the house, all the kids from the Kitchen Table podcast,
which is not at our Kitchen Table today. We're disconnected, but thank you for joining us.
You had to lock yourself away from the kids.
I did. Actually, I pushed mute one time as I'm doing, I'm like, I'm yelling at the kids,
hey, get the baby. That's all too much information, you guys. I'm doing, I'm like, I'm yelling at the kids. Hey, get the baby.
That's all too much information, you guys.
I'm sorry, but that's what I'm dealing with. I wish you would let me hear.
No.
But listen, if you like our podcast, you can rate, review, subscribe to our podcast, wherever
you get your podcasts.
We appreciate you sitting down and having a conversation with us as we roll through
the next 12 days.
Choo, choo, choo.
Into midterm elections 2022.
They'll be over soon enough.
And make sure you vote.
Get out and vote.
All right.
Bye, everybody.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
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