The Daily Signal - Venezuela's Warning to Californians: Never Take Elections for Granted

Episode Date: January 7, 2026

While Congress argues over whether it was “overreaching by the Trump administration” to capture Venezuela’s dictator Nicolás Maduro, it’s important to remember that Venezuela was “ not a ...free and open society” for the past two decades, reminds Daily Signal California Commentator Elaine Culotti.     Culotti urges Californians to see Venezuela as a reminder to take their civic duty of voting seriously in the state’s upcoming elections. “ If we don't vote differently, we can't change things. And the fact that we have the power to vote is such a miracle. It's such a freedom. It's such an honor to have the power to choose the people that you want to run your country, your state, your town, your school, your insurance, everything… We should be celebrating it every day, and we should be taking advantage of it.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:27 Visit medcan.com slash moments to get started. The guy who ran Venezuela ran Venezuela for 26 years. 26 years is not a free and open society. It's not a democratic society. 26 years is a dictatorship. And here in California, which is my home, we have elections coming up. And if what happened in Venezuela has taught me anything, it has taught me how lucky we are that we have an open voting system in America
Starting point is 00:00:57 where we can choose who runs our country. country and how they run it and the only thing we have to do is vote hi i'm elaine calati for the daily signal otherwise known as lipstick farmer i felt compelled to do a podcast today about waking up to the regime change going on in venezuela we've had a lot of arguing in the house about it and I want to compare it to something, and I want to make a point that's valid to me. There is celebration in the streets, and there are a lot of people who think it's overreaching by the Trump administration. So it's going to go back and forth for a long time, and it'll be a while before it all shakes out. But what is for sure is that the guy who ran
Starting point is 00:01:50 Venezuela ran Venezuela for 26 years. And 26 years is not a free and open society. It's not a a democratic society. 26 years is a dictatorship or whatever you want to call it. And here in California, which is my home and where I prioritize my time and my thoughts and my goodwill, we have elections coming up. And I thought it would be a good idea and an appropriate time to do a podcast on what it means to have an election that you believe in and trustworthy elections. Because they're the difference, in my opinion, of a free society and a dictatorship. And we've called people names over the years. We've used the name dictator.
Starting point is 00:02:42 And what a dictator is is very different than what we've ever had in America. In America, we've never had a dictator. We've never been oppressed. We've never not had elections. Just skipped them. I think once during a World War, there was one president that stayed in an extra term. Generally speaking, we have elections every single year in some state or some municipality. We rotate mayors. We allow city council people to run. We have people that run for transportation, for school superintendent.
Starting point is 00:03:20 We have people who run for insurance commissioner, lieutenant governors and governors, secretary of states, attorneys, attorney generals. We have so many different positions that get to run to run the state. And that means to us Americans and people here in California is we have choices. We have choices that we can make. Having homes in the Palisades and spending a lot of time on air talking to people about the Palisades fires, I have read a lot of comments. And a lot of times comments will say, that's what you get. That's what you voted for. Now, as a person, coming from the palisades, that's pretty upsetting to me. But there is some truth and honesty to it in that if we don't vote differently, we can't change things. And the fact that we have the power to vote
Starting point is 00:04:10 is such a miracle. It's such a freedom. It's such an honor to have the power to choose the people that you want to run your country, your state, your town, your school, your insurance, everything. even your police department you can vote for the people that you want to run and we should be celebrating that and we should be celebrating it every day and we should be taking advantage of it we should take advantage of it we should demand better politicians better managers better servants of the state because that's what it is it is a service job for people who live in america we pay a fee for people to work in service in our country. They work for us, and we should pick who those employees of the state are far more carefully than we do. What we do, or what we tend to do, is we tend to pick either
Starting point is 00:05:07 party line. It's either blue or it's red, or even worse, we just dumb luck think we recognize the name. We stand at the voting booth unprepared and haven't read. We have one responsibility as citizens in voting, and that is to know who you're voting for. That's the only responsibility to vote for somebody who can bring meaningful change, who is going to do the right thing by the state, who's going to do the right thing by your town, who's going to work and do all of the things that they ran on. They make promises. They go to podiums. They talk to people. They say they're going to make change. And then they get into office and they don't do it. We have this magnificent thing called AI. AI, you can check. Someone's
Starting point is 00:05:52 voting record. You can go and put in their name and ask how they voted and it'll tell you all about them. You can pick your candidates before you show up. And if what happened in Venezuela has taught me anything, anything at all, it has taught me how lucky we are that we have an open voting system in America where we can choose who runs our country and how they run it. And the only thing we have to do is vote. And on that note, we have elections coming up in California. in 2026. We've just rung in the new year. And we had the opportunity to choose a new governor, a new lieutenant governor, a new insurance commissioner, a new superintendent, a new secretary of state, a new controller, a new AG. We have new people in Sacramento coming in and we can choose
Starting point is 00:06:46 the right people and we can run California and turn California around with people that we elect. that we want not pay attention to the party line stuff forget the party line stuff don't go with name recognition because you didn't do your homework tighten your belt and do your homework look up who's running and really educate yourself read the policy read what the job is read what the job does how's it going to affect you and make decisions based on what you want to see happen in your town in your home, at your schools, with your police, with your fire. Let's not do this again. Let's not make the same mistake twice. Let's take this opportunity to turn California around this year. And let's spend a lot of time learning. With that, I'm going to sign off from Daily Signal.
Starting point is 00:07:37 The party is over.

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