tv Hannity FOX News November 14, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm PST
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to is though that the sworn enemy of group think. tune in to in to my podcast. we're having a great show with chloe cole a 18-year-old girl who has struggled with detransitioning. thanks so much. i hope you have a wonderful evening. here's sean hannity. >> sean: did you have fun, enjoying filling in for tucker? >> tulsi: i sure did. >> sean: we have the greatest audience in automatic of tv. great job. thanks nor being with us. welcome to "hannity." mike pence will join us for an exclusive interview. his book has been getting a lot of buzz. first, we're now six full days removed from the election and more than a dozen key races are
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still up in the air. several states and districts are still counting votes and recounting votes. there's still no official call on who will take the house of representatives. but tonight we can tell you to take a deep breath. multiple outlets including "new york times" and nbc hardly members of the vast right wing conspiracy, they are acknowledging predicting republicans will in fact win the majority of seats in the house of representatives. now even joe biden, by the way, thinks that the gop will take a majority. i don't know if i trust his math skills. we'll have the latest results from the congressional districts yet to be called including ten races that republicans now look poised to win. make no mistake, gop control of the house is a big deal. i'm not going to understate, this it giveses republicans the power to set the agenda, committee assignments. it gives them the power to
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subpoena and investigate the biden administration on numerous important issues, subpoena witnesses, stop the left's radical agenda and of course they have the power of the purse. despite the lies from the media mob, we never predicted this red wave. in fact, we warned all year long that this election would be incredibly close because we were always talking about bellwether states. we talked about toss-up states with the balance of power decided in a few of these purple battleground states. i'm getting a little sick and tired of being lied about. we'll refresh their memory and remind you. >> three key swing states, if you go back to 2016 that put trump in victory. the combined vote of those three swing states, 70,000 votes. 2020, 43,000 votes in three states. that would be georgia, wisconsin and arizona decided the election. if you stay home, democrats,
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they are likely to win. you'll get the government you deserve. the senate is always tough. we have every bellwether state as you know. not every state is an easy run for the republican side. so let's be clear. this is not a guaranteed wave election. anyone that says republicans have a lock on the house and the senate, they're lying to you. they don't know. the races can be extremely competitive in every bellwether state. since day 1, we cautioned against all of this red wave exuberance. according to the polls, nearly every key race was within one or two points. certainly within the margin of error. some swing states like wisconsin, the republicans pulled out a win. doug mastriano, i don't independent be he's pro life but
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he did not support exceptions for rape or insist or the mother's life. that position was too radical for voters in that purple state. he lost by 14. senate candidate dr. oz held a much more moderate position. he lost by a lower level. odd split ticket in pennsylvania which is almost unheard of by double digits. now, still it was not enough. meanwhile in michigan, republicans likely underperformed because of the abortion referendum on the ballot. tudor dixon ran an amazing campaign. she had a great debate. just wiped the florida with gretchen whitmire. but still lost to lock down liberal governor. in other states where democrats fared well, the fear mongering, the lies were clearly effective more than i thought they would be. republicans were never going to
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ban social security. the democrats knew student loan debt being forgiven would not make it. biden is already backing away from the codifies of roe. the democratic talking point about democracy in peril, the biggest challenge to our republic is our inability to count votes, especially in places where democrats are in charge. again, here we are. another election year. unable to call more than a dozen key races. it is idiotic. are you happy with what you're witnessing in in the state of arizona, nevada, alaska and california? this is a national embar embarrassment. look at your screen. over half the country allows automatic of this early voting five weeks before the election,
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including 50 days in pennsylvania. no wonder why the trust fund brat waited to the last weak of october after hundreds of thousands of votes were cost. look at california and nevada. ballots are made automatically without applying for one. what could go wrong? in arizona, i have no idea why it taken so long to cast every vote. in alaska, we'll be lucky to know before thanksgiving. in the united states of america, is this the best we can do? are you happy? i don't care if you're a democrat or a republican. the system is broken. trust is shattered. of course, there's a clear pathway to improve the process. we send people to the moon. they land, they walked around. they get back in their rocket ship and they head home. and they land safely. we can't do better than what's going on around the country? why not make election day a national holiday? why not make it where every one votes in person, paper ballots?
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no exceptions except for the elderly and military, people out of town. we can make those exceptions. partisan observers watching the voting and watch the count. chain of custody protocols will ensure integrity in every election. confidence in every result. back to this year's results. while we don't have the final vote totals in several key states, the balance of power in the house seems all but certain. as it stands now, republicans need six more seats for a 218 person majority. last night the editor of the left-leaning cook political report said between arizona one, air 66, democrats dreams of holding the house majority probably died tonight. in arizona, one of the republican incumbents has a 3,000 vote lead. of the approximately 11,000 votes left, they are likely from red areas of the district. in arizona 6, the republican
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incumbent has a 2,000 vote lead. the 33,000 remaining votes, they are throughout to be mostly republicans. in california 3, republican kevin kylie has a six-point lead. as of today. there were a whopping 150,000 votes to count. california 13 remains tight with 50,000 votes left. over in california 22, the republican has a five-point lead with around 50,000 votes to be counted. republican mike garcia has a nine-point lead in california 27. kevin cal bert leads. michelle steele is up by 8, california 45. that's with 80% reporting. colorado, lauren boebert is holding on to a 1,000 vote lead. new york 22, the democrat would need to win 70% of the remaining handful of ballots in order to carry his seat. other outlets have already
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called this race for republican brandon williams. without a doubt, the state of new york has been a bright spot for republicans in the house as dave wasserman reported. you can't blame it all on bad redistricting. thanks in part to an incredible gubernatorial candidate, lee zeldin, he would have won his race if it wasn't for what i call accelerated migration. the northern liberal states, new york, new jersey, pennsylvania, midwestern states, you have wisconsin and indiana and michigan and illinois. they are fleeing these states in droves for warmer weather, lower taxes, a better lifestyle and last year 52% of michigan's migration was outbound. it was higher in new jersey.
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53%. 58% in new york. it was a majority in pennsylvania as well. florida, by the way, adding 500,000 new residents in the last four years. a 14% growth in the last decade. tennessee grew by nearly 9%, texas over 15%. the carolinas grew by around 10%. these political landscapes now are rapidly changing and republicans need to take note. newt gingrich will join us in a moment. first here with the election analysis, the political director of the nrcc, mike tom is with us. good to see you. let's go over the races as we know them. if republicans win arizona 6, california 3, which is kylie, garcia in 27, calvert in 41, steele in 45, it's already been called in oregon for dermer and
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new york, williams, does it get to us majority? >> yes. we're going to win majority. >> we have others that have been declared toss-ups. is it true what happened in arizona? >> yeah, we literally got balloted reported earlier and he grew his lead more. there's no reason why they haven't called all of the arizona races. we'll flip two seats in arizona. >> what about lauren boebert in arizona. is that leaning our way? >> yes. lauren boebert will return. we have about 4,000 votes outstanding. the democrat would need to get nearly 70% of the remaining votes to win. everything that we have seen is -- she is winning the ballots that are coming in post election
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day. >> a lot of those ballots are in rural areas that she's more likely to carry? >> correct. yes. she has been gaining on her lead. everything that has been coming in post election day. we also have a team of 15 people from the nrcc that are also making sure if ballots were not properly counted that they're getting returned in every single legal ballot is being returned and counted there. >> sean: what about california 13, 22, 47, 49? duarte, what about those races? >> and duarte in the central valley has a slight lead. everything that we have seen and the trends in california are everything that is coming in later are ballots that were dropped off on election day and skewing republicans. so all of what we're seeing are growing our lead. the last drop that we got in
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california 13, we got 54%. if it's tied, we only need to get 51%. we're in a really good spot with duarte. and david valadao is up 5%. the democrat areas are not as good for the democrats. i would much rather be us for california 13 and for california 22 than the democrats. >> so dave wasserman, you him? >> yes. >> sean: he's with cook reporting? >> yes. >> sean: he said that they're cooked based on his math. do you agree with him and how big the margin will be? >> house republicans are going to win the house. nancy pelosi will be fired. kevin mccarthy will be speaker. there's zero excuse why all of the national media has not
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called the house for house republicans. >> sean: we appreciate it, mike. good job. thanks for being with us. joining us now, former speaker of the house, newt gingrich is with us. one thing that puzzled me. you said something that every model you've known has been thrown off this election. we weren't supposed to pick up seats in 2020. we picked up 16, i think, in 2020. nobody expected that. here republicans win the 0 popular vote by about five million votes and picking up fewer than everybody thought but still getting a majority. your thought. >> well, first of all, the democrats were brilliant at targeting where to put resources. i talked two days ago with adam laxalt who said, you know, he was ahead and matching the democrat with advertising until two weeks ago. suddenly people decided he won, so they cut off his money.
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she outspend him three to one the last three weeks. look at some of these key places. in the case of bolduc, mitch mcconnell ran money that permanently made it harder for him to 1. some of this is one race at a time. the bigger story, kevin mccarthy recruited new people, this will be the most diverse house republican party in history. the most women. the most veterans. the most minorities. and in fact if we had kept our incumbents in 94 when we won and in 2020 when kevin picked up 16 seats, we didn't lose a single incumbent. if that were the case now, we would be closer to 230. so one of the things we have to do is go back and look at why did certain incumbents lose.
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what was happening there. what i've seen tonight, you know, and we were with kevin on election night. i had been campaigning him for three days, getting a feel for what's going on, we were all in a stake of shock. we all thought as you pointed out, when you look at the generic ballot, when you look at florida and new york, returning huge majorities, you had a sense it was going to be a great night. but it wasn't. i got curious about this. kevin is going to be somewhere between 218 and 224. there have been seven congresses since 1916 in which the march you'rety was in the 220 to 223, which including pelosi's last majority. kevin won't be faced with something unprecedented. denny hastert was at 221 in one
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election. so you can govern with a pretty narrow majority. it's challenging. it's exhausting, tricky. it can be done. i think the republicans are going to be in charge and as you know, passing over that gavel from pelosi to mccarthy is an enormous shift in the balance of power in washington. >> sean: it can. you cannot overstate the importance of this. you really can't. it is that big. look, i understand people looked at historically a president's first term ends with loss in congress and in this case it turned over the house. i can -- i never understood -- i look at every one of these senate races. i said, you know what? these are all toss-up states. these are all hard to win. you have to run the table on these. i'm seeing what i call accelerated migration, accelerated by covid. shut downs and parents wanting their kids to have in-class
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learning and the mass exodus to the carolina, tennessee and florida, texas. i'm looking at that and i'm thinking, there's a lot to be learned here. the sad part is the red states will be redder but the toss-up states will be harder for republicans to win the presidency. we have about 30 second. >> yeah, i don't know if that is true. in the end, the american people outweigh any kind of geographic line. we're gaining with latinos and african americans and asian americans. two more years of biden, we'll have a great 2024. >> thanks, newt. coming up, mike pence will join us to talk about a brand new book, the mid terms and more as we continue.
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talk about this and much more. >> all right. joining us now is vice president mike pence. "so help me god". it's at amazon.com, hannity.com. book stores everywhere. what an amazing live you've had. every interview you given, everybody wants to talk about one topic. and there are 52 chapters in the book. maybe two or three of the chapters deal with what seems the media only wants to talk about. there's more to you and to this book. it's a disservice not to go over it. let's talk about this life. here you are. you've been the vice president of the united states. >> sean, first, thanks. it's great to be with you. very humbling for me to have a chance to write my life story. growing up, the grandson of an
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irish immigrant. my father a combat veteran. a big irish catholic family. dreamed of representing my hometown in washington d.c. to have had the privilege to be congressman, the governor of my home state and serve as president of the united states. it's a testamentable to god's faithfulness in my life, the decision i made to put my life in jesus christ. my family supported me every step of the way and also to the testament of the vitality of our ideas. that whether it was my years in congress where i was fighting for conservative values or standing as a conservative governor, cutting taxes and growing the state's economy and standing for liberty or whether it was that remarkable four years of the trump pence administration where we took those conservative principals
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that you and i have talked about all of our lives and put them in to practice. and we left america stronger and more prosperous than ever before. we revived our economy and rebuilt our military and today up to our enemies. we had three supreme court justices. we gave america a new beginning for life. write about that and writing all the way to the end, the difficult days at the end. our administration didn't end well. writing about those four years is what so helped me god is all about. my heart's desire is it gist people hope and encouragement that what we did before we can do again. >> sean: i always say conservative works. liberty, freedom, capitalism, our constitution, lower taxes and less government. in the case of the administration, security borders.
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in the case of energy independence. we hadn't achieved that. free and fair trade, peace through strength. constitutionalists on the bench, law and order and how about a classical education? we covered most of conservatism. >> you do all of those things about the same time. i liked to say you take three steps back and america happens. the last two years as's been traveling all over the country, people have come up to me from time to time and said, you know, seeing the way things have gone down here at home, seems like we have an administration that is intent on weakening america at home and abroad. people say you think we can get it back? i always say we'll get it all back. you'll be surprised how quickly it comes back. that's one of the things that we proved particularly in those first two years of the trump-pence administration is when you have an administration
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that know what's makes america prosperous strong and secure and partners and majorities in the house and in the senate, it's extraordinary what you can accomplish. it take leadership. with the right leadership in washington d.c., we'll bring it back and then some. >> sean: your reaction to the election, republicans have the house. i think it's a big, big deal. and i was not one of those people out there saying this is going to be a red wave. i looked at the senate races. they are all bellwether states. they're all swing states. i thought they were hard. i can give you my reasons why i think things happened here or there. the reality is, we -- the republicans winning the house, albeit a small majority is a big deal. the last election, nobody thought republicans would pick up the seats than we did. >> it was a tougher year.
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the truth is -- >> sean: i did say the foundations were there. >> the truth is, we were fighting on their terrain. more than we were in 2010 when i was in the house majority. we won 63 seats. i knew that the possibility of winning 20 or 30 seats was there. it was a challenge. it was going to be tough. all that being said, a win is a win. i have to tell you, i was there the last time that we fired nancy pelosi. i couldn't be more proud of kevin mccarthy and steve scalise and every single one of the rank and file members that worked their hearts out. i traveled to 35 states. i campaigned with a lot of house members across america. i want to tell you, this incoming class of freshmen is going to make everybody proud. it's an extraordinary group of men and women, strong conservative principals. the day that nancy pelosi hands that gavel to speaker kevin
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mccarthy is a great day for america. if you remember, when we did before, we won the house in 2010. it would be a few more years before we won the senate. a couple years after that, we won the white house. this is step one and it an enormously important step to stop what the biden administration continues to do to pile more spending on this -- on the american people and future generations. i do believe whether it's the crisis at our southern border, whether it be this gusher of spending that is driving the worst inflation in 40 years, republicans are now going to be in a position with the power of the purse to drive forward policy changes and demand policy changes that will at least begin to move our country back to prosperity and security. >> sean: have chairmanships, the power of the purse, and also have the power to subpoena.
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there's been a lot of things that have gone uninvestigated. should that be their top priority? i don't know. i would prefer to see gas prices go lower and our boarders get security and prefer energy independence. joe biden answered the question last week, what will you do differently? he's word, nothing. >> not a thing. oversight is vitally important. i have every confidence that house republicans, the right committees will be creating that kind of accountability. i'm with you. i think it's important in these next two years that house republicans, if only passing it in the house of representatives produce essentially a portfolio of bills that show the american people the way back. even if they just pile up on chuck schumer's desk that we -- how do we get the economy turned
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around, how do we turn off the spigot of spending that is driving inflation. how do we achieve energy ends as we did under the trump pence administration. how do we secure or border. i'd love that bible verse that says without a vision people perish. house republicans have a majority to pass one bill after another that will lay out that vision that will remind people of the policies the trump pence administration, that will confront the challenges facing our country today and really lay a predicate for winning america back in 2024. >> sean: let's talk about america's election system. to me, what is going on in arizona, what's going on in nevada, we still have all of these california races. 50% of the vote counted, 60% of the vote counted. alaska, we might not know the winner until thanksgiving. is it time for the country, is it better for the country -- i
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would prefer if i could write my own election law that state has to do it constitutionally but to have same day voting, partisan observers, watch the vote count and watch the voting. we know the results at the end of the day. you have great britain does it, canada does it. all of these countries, paper ballot's. that's what they do. >> indiana does it. >> sean: okay. you can make exceptions for the sick, the affirmed. the military people or people that will be out of state or out of their precinct that day. i don't like -- seems like voting for months on end, bail-in balloting -- do you think the system -- >> when i say indiana, we actually -- we count the votes and we finish election day. we have early voting in the state of indiana. there's a long tradition of
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that. what is missing and it's a source of great frustration. i'm sure the people in arizona and california. it's amazing, sean, we're here a week after election day and waiting on the outcome of elections in critical states. i just -- i hold a view that early voting can be managed with real integrity. we've seen election reforms passed in states that have reinforced people's confidence in election integrity. but election day ought to be election day. we ought to be calling everybody in every one of their states should say, we might have to stay up late on election day to find out the results but we can count the votes and tell people -- >> i'm hoping we're getting reaction. never came in. >> absolutely important. >> sean: let's talk a little bit about your future.
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politically. are you thinking about getting back in the arena? on the fence? >> karen and i are seriously considering what role we might play in the future. including as a candidate for public office again. >> sean: only one office that you'd run for. >> you're right. for us, a friend of mine said to me, there's two kinds of people in politics. people are called are people that are driven. candidly as i write in so help me god, i've been both. i allowed my ambition to get ahead of me early on. i found myself caught up in campaigns that at the end of the day i wasn't proud of. when it cam back around a decade later, the year that i was elected to congress, the first time in 2000, karen and i had three small children. we stepped forward on faith. we put our lives and our careers
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in the lord's hands. we ran campaigns that we can be proud of. we laid out our conservative values and trusted god for the outcome. so what we'll look for in the days ahead is what our sense of calling is as a family. we have two in the military in the immediate family. because of deployments, we haven't all been together for three years. in indiana, we'll have the whole family back together over the holidays. we'll hear our kids out that have always been a part of our public life and karen and i will make a decision about where we think we might best serve. i promise to keep you posted, sean. >> >> sean: there's 52 chapters. you should have done this interview first. all of the others want to talk about you and donald trump, january 6. negate four successful years. i can go through the achievements. you can probably list them
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better than me. >> jesse: you were part of them. i wasn't. the four successful years together and culminated with an oval office meeting, one-on-one with you and the president that went on for 90 minutes or so. to me that talks about, okay, we did this together. was there much disagreement putting this one issue aside of january 6, was there much disagreement in the four years that you recall? i don't recall it. >> i have to tell you that as different as the two of us are, president trump and i actually forged a close working relationship. he was my friend. we spent time together every day when we were both at the white house. sometimes up to four hours a day. >> sean: you had an office. >> i had an office in the west wing and found myself back and
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forth back and forth on a regular basis. i chronicle that in the book. we had a very successful relationship that obviously didn't end well. i'll always believe i did my duty on that tragic day under the constitution and laws of this country. but in the aftermath of those difficult days, the president and i did sit down. why talked through it. i recount some of that in my book. as i told you, last fall when we get together, we parted amicably. we spoke a number of times after i left office. frankly when the president returned to some of the rhetoric about me and others that had taken a stand for the constitution, i thought it was best that we just go our separate ways. but the foundation of our ability to part amicably came from that relationship that was
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forged in those four years. i will always be proud of the record of the trump pence administration and what we did for this country. if you think about it, i mean, russia never tried to redraw international lines during our administration. that was the only administration in the 21st century for which that was true. we changed the national consensus on china. president biden meets with president xi today and promises more talks with china. we didn't just talk. we imposed $250 billion in tariffs. we strengthened our military alliances in the region. we maintained freedom of navigation. held them accountable for intellectual property theft. seven million good paying jobs. we cut taxes, rolled back regulations. unleashed american energy, achieved american energy independent. appointed conservatives to our
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courts and reduced illegal immigration by 90%. i chronicle how we did all of those things. we didn't get everything done that we wanted to get done. i write in that first year about coming up one vote short of repealing and replacing obamacare to see the way -- with the president's leadership, we rallied back and cut taxes and restored the strength and vitality of this country. >> sean: i'm not assigning blame, but john mccain was the one vote in that moment. >> he was. it was -- i tried to capture that moment. >> sean: people will read the book. you did multiple interviews to talk about that time, that period. i've known you for all of these years. going back to the time that you were a congressman and a governor and this whole other life and this whole book that you write. people want to focus on the one chapter. what percentage of the time did
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you have harmony in this relationship? i know you both. i've known your both for 30 years. i couldn't define two different people. very different. right? and but yet, what percentage of the time was it a perfect partnership in terms of getting the job done? >> you know, i recount a few moments where we had disagreements. but i always kept those in private. you know, i truly do believe in humility and orientation to authority. as vice president i believe my role was to be there to support the president. not to be just one more voice among a chorus of people with opinions. i think that created a rapport between of us trust. genuine friendship. it's part of what made -- what
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happened at the end so difficult. i knew what my duty was under the constitution of the united states. i made that clear many times over to the president. he made legal advisers around him that were telling him something different. we ended up having to have a disagreement, very loud disagreement in public. what made that even more difficult is because literally every step of the way from the day i was added to the national ticket all the way until election day 2020, we had a strong, close working relationship that was built on mutual respect. it's one of the reasons i'll always be proud of the record of the trump pence administration. >> sean: we cannot possibly capture the back but it's a comprehensive insiders view what it was like four very historic years what a life you've led.
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>> sean: all right. joe biden held a press conference earlier today during his trip to bali. he pushed more green new climate cult alarmism. by the way, he wants you to pay $11.4 billion a year and of course he had a lot more to say. we'll cam them joe biden moments. take a look. >> i'm confident that russia will not occupy or defend ukraine as they intended from the beginning. i'm having a hard time reading, this. reuters. >> mr. president, quick question on north korea. >> sean: and meanwhile, tonight vote counting is still on going in key house races including cali california. it's nearly a week after
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election. here with the author of "everything reminds me of something." adam corolla is back with us. you have countries all over the world, the u.s., france, canada. they have one ballot. paper ballots. they have people that can't be in their district or state that day. they do paper ballots, they have partisan observers watch the vote and watch the vote counting and then they get the results at the end of the night. nobody questions their election results. why don't we do that? >> i don't know. it's frustrating. it seems very third world. it's completely unsatisfying. it's like saying come in and watch half the movie and come back in a week or two and see how it independence. >> sean: we're just hearing there was a drop in arizona. looks like kari lake may have been called as having lost that
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race. i just look at the process. regardless of who won that race, if you're the person a week later that ends up on the losing end of this process, you know, marco rubio said it best. we had 7.5 million votes. we counted it in less than five hours. we knew the result. ever had confidence in the results. you move forward. how is it that we'll drop 20,000 votes today, later tonight we might drop another 40,000 votes. we don't know where they're coming from, we can't give you an exact count of how many votes are left. to me it's so unfair to the candidates, to the public in those states and frankly to the 46 states that got it right. this is only happening in nevada, arizona, california. your favorite state. and alaska. >> and it also undermines the entire process. it also makes people feel unsure
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about the same. like, you know, we have a mayoral race here in los angeles. i have no idea what the outcome is. nobody knows who won or who lost. it's a week old. people get sort of, who cares. whatever happens. i'm done. it gets people to check out of the system. >> sean: you know, the thing is you'd want more participation. if you make election day a national holiday, would that high pressure? would it help if you made exceptions for the military or people that were traveling that could a fly for a mail-in ballot, made exception for the elderly and the sick? everyone else, you get the day off. you get paid. you go vote. it's not that hard. >> yeah. we need to stop lowering the bar for everything. like oh, we have to show i.d. that's going to exclude a bunch of americans. it's voting. it's a privilege. it's a right. we're americans.
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so what if you have to wait in line. so what if you have to leave work early. so what? we're offering burgers and fries and days off to get people to do things that they should be doing because they're americans. >> maybe if we offered free ice cream cones joe biden would vote 100 times. honestly, if you can send somebody to the moon and they can land and then they can get back in their rocket and fly home and land safely and be alive, you know what? i think that says it all. adam corolla, thanks for being with us. thank you, sir. apparently they did have a drop in arizona. fox is projecting that democratic secretary state who should have recused herself, katie hobbs has been elected governor of arizona straight ahead.
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>> sean: unfortunately, that is all the time we have left. thank you for being with us. thank you for making this possible. please set your dvr so you never miss an episode of hannity. in the meantime, let not your heart be troubled. laura ingraham has a crazy big, insane wonderful show ahead. >> laura: you know what i love other than just this what we do? i love having -- just this thing. cross talk. i love having a group of people actually in the studio with me. which is i have tonight. it's so nice. i'm so happy. >> sean: i love doing townhalls. i love big crowds. it's fun. >> laura: no, not you hannity. there's no
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