tv Fox News at Night FOX News November 6, 2024 8:00pm-9:00pm PST
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is america's late news. fox news at night. and breaking tonight, the vibe is gone. the joy has switched parties. and a gop movement now underway as donald trump becomes the president elect and his supporters are enjoying what was thought to be an impossible milestone. for donald j. trump. [ ♪♪ ] >> a win in wisconsin. >> and after the historic comeback and seismic victory, democrats in the media cannot seem to figure out exactly what went wrong. >> i grew up a middle class kid. i grew up in a neighbourhood
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where folks were very proud of their lawn, you know. i'm out here in these streets. [ ♪♪ ] >> i have a glock. >> if anything, would you have done something differently than president biden during the past four years? >> there is not a thing that comes to mind. >> trace: meantime threats to democracy was a top voter issue in exit polls yesterday. democrats saw that as a win but apparently it was not. >> the people that said joe biden was the problem, it is probably the no the best idea that democrats orchestrated a very public stab fest, a proverbial stabbing of the sitting president. >> trace: not only did the american people reject the coup but rejected censorship, open borders, and progressive policies reflecting a historic
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realignment. we have team fox coverage. alexandria hoff is live for us in philadelphia where trump delivered the crushing blow, but we begin in palm beach florida where ayesha has more on a celebration that might just last a while. good evening. >> i think that's a fair statement. good evening to you, trace. president-elect trump is now hiring. he will first need to find a chief of staff and make some pretty important cabinet secretary positions and picks. so he has previously talked about rfk jr. and letting him, quote, go wild on healthcare. he's spoken about giving elon musk a department of government efficiency department to rein in the government. and also trump's campaign manager susie wiles. her name has been tossed around as a potential chief of staff, but nothing has been done yet. we got a message from his transition team saying in the days and weeks ahead, donald
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trump will be selecting personnel for his leadership to enact policies to make the lives of americans affordable, safe, and secure. they are planning to hold confirmation hearings at the beginning of the new here to help trump hit the ground running as soon as he is inaugurated, but his team says he can actually tackle some issues well before january. >> you think about the crises that are happening. you referenced iran just a moment ago. obviously we have what is hatching on the southern border there. are different things president trump can do simply by being the president-elect. >> so trump received a phone call today from vice president kamala harris to congratulate him. it was described as a very positive conversation. and president biden has now invited trump to the white house for a meeting to make sure this transition goes over smoothly, and trump has accepted that invitation. trace? >> trace: live for us in palm beach. thank you. meantime the former president's
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victory in pennsylvania might be the biggest surprise of the election. alexandria hoff is live for us in philadelphia. alex, good evening. >> hi, trace. good evening to you. and, yeah, how early that vote came in when it was not expected to come in that quickly. it was expected to take at least a couple of days, but we got it last night, and some would say trump was able to flip this state by breaking down the blue fortress that is philadelphia and its suburbs, but others would say that the harris campaign let that fortress fall. looking at last night, president trump had his best showing yet in philadelphia bringing in 4,000 more votes than he did in 2020. he invested heavily in philly and pennsylvania making frequent stops and holding star-studded event like the election rally on the art museum steps. but leader inside philadelphia have been critical for months of outreach efforts that her campaign had here especially with minority community and excluding some pennsylvania and philly natives.
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lindsay lee acknowledged to fox news today there were multiple campaign errors, one being she feels the vice presidential candidate should have been pennsylvania governor josh shapiro they have tim walz. the one thing i want to mention here is there was a heavy police presence here in philadelphia this evening that stems from multiple rumours spread on social media of planned looting tonight. we did see several businesses, many in fact that had closed their doors early citing safety concerns but right now no significant issues have popped up, trace. >> trace: good news. alexandria hoff live in pennsylvania. let's bring in aaron wexler, senior affairs vice president alexa henning and director julian epstein. you say the trump campaign had both the facts and the vibe on their side. what did you mean by that? >> well, i would say generally we all know the phrase that ben
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shapiro made famous that facts don't care about feelings. on the right we love logic and data, and that hasn't always worked for us. and what the left has done for a long time is make people feel so badly about voting for a republican candidate especially donald trump so that when they're in that voting booth, they can't even pull the lever for him. but this time this campaign they thought they would run a campaign off of joy. it was totally contrived. with he were the ones who had all the joy, and i think people really felt that. and listen. we saw the results yesterday with the popular vote. >> trace: certainly have the joy now. the retiring senator said the following here. watch this. >> donald trump didn't win just for the maga. he won for the centrist and independents in the middle. he was able to have a program that more people bought in than kamala did. that's the middle. >> trace: do you think that he won the middle? >> he did. if you look at the cross tabs, he absolutely won the middle. and this shouldn't be a surprise
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to democrats for a couple reasons. first of all if you look at the early vote, the democrats were down on enthusiasm as soon as early votes started. and you can trace back the decay of the democratic coalition for two or three years now starting really with the glen young victory in virginia. most voters are in the political centre. two thirds to three quarters of voters are either moderate or conservative. and democrats have gone extreme left. they have gone extreme left on endless government spending. spend something now 25% of the economy. and on cultural issues with crime and teaching gender ideology to 5th graders. those things are really out of touch with where most of americans are. and so you can trace this, you can trace the sort of demography destiny theory of the democrats in 2012. that has been on its death bed for at least two o'three years now. there's been plenty of data to show that on the part of the democrats, and they just haven't
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gotten it. >> trace: alexa, to you now. linda lee who was really a harris surrogate at the democrat national committee had this to say. watch. >> she needed to go out there and make the case that she wasn't going to be biden 2.0. she was going to be harris. unfortunately she blurred the lines between the two. that was her opportunity to say i am going to take drastic measures to bring down inflation. i am going to make sure that our border is secure. that was her opportunity. >> trace: alexa, you talked to the harris team, and the word opportunity, missed opportunity. you hear that a lot. >> yeah. i think it was a little bit worse than that. she didn't say that she didn't talk about issues at all. i mean she projected hate the entire time while donald trump projected hope. she talked about how the supporters of donald trump were racist and terrible and nazis and garbage, and you can't continue to put down half of the country or more than half of the country like that and expect them to endorse what you're saying. and i really think that if the
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democrats and especially her campaign don't understand what they did, that this wasn't just a mandate for donald trump. 312 electoral college vote, the popular vote. we flipped the senate f they can't understand that, then they have a serious problem. and it is seen from the meltdown today that they absolutely did not understand what they did and failed. >> trace: very right. fox news analysis has him up across. you look all the way across the board on all the demographics. he is up from 10 points to 2 points. it's kind of interesting because that is tough to beat when you're looking, like, in hindsight at these polls. if somebody told you he would be up across the board, it's yikes. >> it's believable because the left refuses to look within. they refuse to understand how they have alienated the american people, and i saw a post today that i thought was the perfect summary which is they lost so bad lark also night that they
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didn't even try burning cities down today. that's how badly they lost. i hope that sits with them. this is a good moment for them to understand why they lost this badly. >> it was a rout. bernie sanders brought this up. it was kind of going after the democratic party with a flame thrower. listen to what he said. oh, it's a full screen. so listen to what he id is a. he said it should come as no great surprise that a democratic party that has abandoned working class people would find that the working class has abandoned them. first it was the white working class and now it is latino and black voters as well. i mean this is kind of tough on your own party, julian. >> if you divide the democrats up, you'll find the redistributionist democrats and the growth democrats. and redistributionist democrats like bernie sanders dominate the party. they believe the way you get the working class is by buying them through greater government welfare. so you look at student loan forgiveness. you look at the entitlements for new housing projects, small
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business loan forgiveness, all the things the democrats wanted to do to increase spending. and that is patronizing to working class people who prefer what trump is offering which is try and protect the economy particularly from trade deals that they feel have betrayed them over the last two decades. >> trace: i think it's fair. i want to put this up because this is new jersey that kamala harris won by 5 points alexa, 5. >> yeah. the now new jersey is a swing state. i guess we can add it to the list. i travelled with the president for the last few weeks in pennsylvania and michigan and new york, and i saw first hand the massive coalition, the diverse coalition. people of all races and backgrounds that donald trump has brought together. and while harris and the democrats continued to talk about hate, he talked about unity and how he would fix the problems that biden and harris have just destroyed the last
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four years. >> trace: the party at mar-a-lago was just amazing to watch. aaron, alexa, julian, thank you. >> thanks so much. >> donald trump has been impeached twice. he was indicted four times, convicted on 34 felony counts. the kind of language we heard, it was mean. why has that seemingly become acceptable? >> we live in a right wing country. this is what it is, and people at this point want a strong man who is a bully. >> trace: not surprisingly the liberal media struggling to wrap their heads around the resounding trump victory. let's bring in news anchor for fox in l.a. the author of one generation way and district media group president beverley holland. at all for coming on. thank you, dana white got the crowd fired up at mar-a-lago. he said the following. >> nobody deserves this more than him and nobody deserves this more than his family does. this is what happens when the
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machine comes after you. what you have seen over the last several years. this is what it looks like. couldn't stop him. he keeps going forward. he doesn't quit. >> trace: i got a lot of messages today and the word quit, won't quit was if there a lot. >> it's a tremendous comeback for him. and i want to say even dana white who just spoke there, he pointed out theo vaughan was in the audiencea popular podcaster. joe rogan did endorse trump the day before the election. i think you see a real change in the media where it's not legacy media that is running the narrative that all people are turning to. it's actually new media. podcasts that people are looking at. i think that's one aspect of this that has been tremendous in this election cycle and i think is going to change legacy media for the future. >> trace: charlemain the god said this. >> i personally feel like donald trump speaks to empoor's grievances better than democrats do.
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people talk about misinformation and the dumbing down of society. i understand all of that. but you don't have to be intelligent to know you can't pay your bills. you don't have to be intelligent to know you can't afford groceries. people will never forget how you made them feel. >> trace: you and i talk to these people all the time. they say again and again things are too expensive. >> that's what it comes down to. it's the economy stupid. it was in 1992. it is again. it's not that complicated. if you can't afford groceries, you don't really care that much about democracy or other things. you gotta feed your family. and the main extreme media, a lot of folks in it aren't living in that reality. a lot of the celebrities that were campaigning for kamala harris aren't living in that reality, and they don't realize the number one issue driving things for the american people. >> trace: that's exactly right. meantime the media keeps, and this is to you. the media keeps saying it is just about racism. listen to some of this.
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>> yes. there is misogyny. but it's not just misogyny from white men. it's misogyny from hispanic men. it's from black men. >> among hispanic and black men, there's a lot of misogyny. >> trace: i mean you look at this and think back in 2020, she ran for president and it was only democrats voting and only democrats rejected her. were they also racist, misogynist, you name your-ist. >> last night was a rejection of the establishment by working class americans who truly felt ignored and overlooked. it was rejection of elites, corporate media, and celebrity endorse canments. last night the american people said we have had enough regardless of if they love donald trump's personality or not. a majority of americans united behind his politics. none of the crap we're seeing on your screen right now. my generation of first time voters are excited to be on guard by what has been, and we're tired of hearing kamala harris' cackling laugh. we don't have to deal with that
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anymore. it was none of that misogynistic stuff. >> trace: the media melt just a little bit more because it is the day after. watch. >> i can't help put wonder if the american people have given up on democracy. >> i would like to know what that says about us as a country. >> people who woke up this morning as a dream and are going to bed with a nightmare. >> trace: people had the dream of being able to afford the groceries they had in the cart. the drama just keeps going. >> it is pretty simple. a little introspection would go a long way for those in mainstream media. here's the reality. cam l.a. ran a campaign on identity politics. it didn't work. donald trump won across the board with so many new voters that republicans haven't gotten before. it is a very hard message for mainstream media to give when they say this is all about racism and misogyny. they are basically saying the voter is bad. not that kamala was a bad
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candidate. >> trace: said the following on cnn. watch. >> the constitution is not going to come to an end. we'll have an election in two years. we'll have an election in four years. >> trace: the odds are we're gonna be just fine even with the new president. >> let's hope so. look. two thirds of the country wanted a change. they think the country is going in the wrong direction. harris' biggest mistake was not breaking with joe biden on policy to make people feel like there was going to be something different. and so because people want to be able to afford their groceries, they weren't confident they would be able to afford them under her. >> i guess the final thought was you and a lot of people you hang out with have got to be very excited about what happened early this morning. i think ecstatic is the word to describe it. you can't win an election with pop stars, vibes, and no policies. gen z voted with president trump because he has policies to make the american dream attainable again. we couldn't be more excited today. >> trace: brylin, alex,
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beverley great to see you. thank you. >> thanks, trace. >> our hispanic communities aren't just leaving the democrat party. they're coming home to conservative values they never left. and there is nothing latino about letting criminals roam free. >> trace: while two of the crucial voting blocks that contributed to the president's victory are latinos and women, let's bring in gop central committee member and our deputy director of hispanic communications bianca rodriguez. it is fascinating. you look at this whole thing. the voter analysis, and we can put this up on the screen. this is hispanic voters. it has harris 56%. trump at 41%. that's across the board. that is a big jump. it is a seismic shift in a demographic for the republican party. bianca. >> yes, 100%. we have gained even more with
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the hispanic community. more than 6% is what we are estimating compared to 2020. but it all comes down to the same issues that everybody else has been talking about because all americans are suffering the same exact consequences. it's the economy. it's inflation. the cost of living, illegal immigration. the fact they were trying to make the whole joke about puerto rico more irrelevant than the fact that hispanics are offended by what ted cruz was mentioning. we have members across our communities. we have a puerto rican woman that nobody has called out on the fact that mimi rodriguez has been brutally murdered by somebody who was not supposed to be here to begin with. those are issues that at the end of the day mattered, and the election simply proved that. >> trace: and i think what ted cruz was saying there is it is fascinating. it doesn't matter if you're asian, black, jewish, latino, it doesn't matter. what matters is you have financial and physical security. that's what people want the government for, and that's it.
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>> yes. and there is so much that unites us as americans across all demographics, and i think what was so unique about this campaign is that he was able to speak directly to voters through these different mediums that they could hear from him directly which is also i think a key for the judger demographic apprehender hearing him through a filter. >> trace: i think that is actually a fair assessment. i wonder because i think i look at some of these people on tv, and here is msnbc's chris matthews, and you know they have been on for years. so i think he had he would get the hypocrite of the year, the decade award by saying this. watch. >> immigration has been a terrible decision for democrats. i don't know who they thought they were playing to. i don't think they were playing anything that was smart here in terms of an open border, and that's what it is, an open
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border. >> yeah. and i think he has been saying msnbc ignored this issue for years and were denying that it was happening down at the border. >> they were fine with the wall at the border when bill clinton was promoting this but now that donald trump was promoting it, it was racist. now they see the consequences of their own actions and that they reversed a hundred executive orders that were maintaining control at the southern border and lost the election. now it's one they claim they care about the issue. now the fact of the matter is republicans are the only ones that have pitch and consistently focused on the key issues that proved to be the most important one for our hispanic community. and they're the only ones that have not resorted to panderrering. they have actually acted on what it is that they promised and will continue to do so. >> trace: we talk about hispanics and black americans. what about the jewish population? did we think we saw a shift or did some of them decide not to
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vote at all? >> there was record jewish support for donald trump this election in key state. new york was one of them. a new york post article came out saying he gained 15 points in new york from the last election. a lot of that support came from their larger orthodox jewish population there. he flipped whole precincts there because the jewish support was so much in his favour. >> trace: it is amazing. thank you both. we appreciate it. [ chanting ] >> u.s.a., u.s.a., u.s.a. >> trace: the celebration of trump's sweeping victory continues across america tonight, and why the pollsters got it so wrong again. pollsters. [ ♪♪ ] —
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>> trace: much like 2016 and 2020, the pollsters got it wrong. in many cases they got it really wrong. for the third election in a row, they undercounted trump supporters. our international correspondent has another look. good evening. >> you're so surprised. sure you are. as you know, trace, polls getting it wrong is about as commones is having a glass of bourbon neat after dark in a nashville bar late on a saturday night. not that i would know anything about it. what is more common is polls getting it wrong to the benefit of the democrat in the race as time after time after time the polls boosted democrats in the 2024 cycle only to prove wildly inaccurate when they were actuallyst can a. take for example the des moines register. its polls showed harris leading
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mr. trump by 3 points in iowa, a state he won ultimately by 13 points. new york times siena college survey showed harris ahead slightly in not one but several battleground state. of course mr. trump won all of those decided on election night and is still leading the last two and will probably win them as well. even the marris had harris leading nationally 51-47. of course she was clobbered in the electoral college and trailing in the popular vote by i think 5 million vote at last count. even historian allen lickman who had accurately predicted nine of the previous ten elections got it wrong. shy trump voters say some slanted polling and wishful thinking while others say you report, i decide. >> trace: is i like one rock in my bourbon. >> one is nice. >> trace: one big rock. let's bring in pollster and political analyst frank luntz.
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we were just talking about the iowa poll. they missed it by 16 points, and everybody bit. >> and the problem is it actually changed the coverage. i think it was done to encourage harris voters to turn out, and every single news source, the networks, media outsets, everyone said this is a big deal without checking how the poll was done. they took it at face value because it had been a respected survey. you can't do that. in the end, it was an embarrassment. but i would argue we spent too much time on polling anyway and should be talking about policy, and the more you talk about policy in this case the better donald trump would have done because quite frankly whether you like him or don't, they preferred him to harris on the two big issues of affordability and security. >> and we were being led to
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believe that every female in america was going to vote for kamala harris. turned out also not to be the case. >> yeah, it wasn't. and i think you just have to use your common sense to understand why. so we were not moved by the iowa poll. we stuck to our guns and our priorities. we competently have been predicting this race for trump since september. we had him 3 points ahead in the last poll. something we got flack for but i think there was no logic to say women were breaking more for harris at this point than they were in 2022 with a smaller more highly engaged electorate. >> you found it interesting, and make you would disagree with me, but i think we played this sound earlier when kamala harris was on the view and she was asked would you change something over the past four years, and i said i can't think of one thing i would change. you can feel the election just going womp. >> it was more than that. she never told voters what she would do in the first hour, in the first day, in the first week, in the first month.
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and voters have the right to know, and she had the responsibility to tell them. in the end when she turned on trump and started to call him really horrific things and in the last ten days started to call him a fascist, her negative start to go up and popularity started to go down, and that was a significant impact. don't forget republicans also gained seats in the senate, and it looks like they're going to end up getting control of the house. this was not just a donald trump victory last night. this was republicans up and down the ticket. there will be some reckoning in washington in the next weeks and months. >> trace: fox news voter analysis. put this up on the screen. how much changed in the way the u.s. is run. total upheaval 27%. substantial change 50%. no change, 2%. you look at those first two numbers. you are talking about 83% of the electorate says they want some
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change, and these numbers don't seem surprising at all. >> absolutely. i saw that was always the way it was going to g just to talk about pollsters getting it wrong. it was ludicrous a lot of pollsters were giving harris an incumbency bonus. we did not. incumbents all around the world have been kicked out, and voters did not like this administration. they were not going to reward her for being a part of. >> trace: i am putting them up here. you can see they were pretty close to kamala harris for these averages but when you go to donald trump the real politics 48.7 and the actual vote 51.1. again for the third election in a row they undercounted the former president. and that's one of those things where they tried to as you were telling me last week they tried to off set that. they tried to do some kind of
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algorithm to make it work, and it just didn't. >> it was one of the reasons i didn't even trust my own numbers. i got to be candid with you. i had issues with how they were justifying the weighting trying to adjust the numbers to make sure you well represented trump voters. in the end, every trump supporter became a trump voter. harris cannot claim that, and it is incredibly difficult. but you know what? who is up and who is down matters so much less than what they're actually saying and what they're doing. and in the end, we gotta focus on substance, not on style. >> trace: but we're a country that is just obsessed with numbers and we want to see the markets and the odds and everything else, and we get drawn into these things. scarlet mcguire,s frank, thank you both. coming up, gen z voters including barren trump's best friend who helped get trump on the joe rogan podcast will join us live on why young adults are turning to donald trump next. [ ♪♪ ]
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[ chanting ] ♪ and the home of the brave♪ [cheering and applause] >> trace: students at auburn university in alabama chanting u.s.a. and singing the "star-spangled banner." we talked about key voting blocs that got trump re-elected but in addition to latino and women voters,s trump scored big with younger voters. let's bring in isabella de luca and conservative gen z influencer bo louden. bo, you first because you were at mar-a-lago last night with your buddy barren trump and elon musk was there. it had to be fantastic. how was it?
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what can you tell us? >> oh, my gosh. it was incredible. best night of my life. everyone was going up to president trump and saying congratulations long before it ever was called because it was so clear what was going to happen. we had kamala harris touting how well she was doing with gen z voters claiming her brat summer and whatever else when it was a, it was embarrassing for her. she ended up. ing 11 points lower than joe biden did in 2020 among young people and gen z voters. that was just a great night. it was awesome to see. the energy was unstoppable. >> trace: that's great. isabella, puck news writes the following here. kamala's wasted youth. it goes on to say despite the brat summer health, the demure posts and promise of generational change, in the end it turned out gen z wasn't very interested in kamala harris. what is it that you think is not interesting, isabella, about kamala harris? >> i mean, listen.
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she is running on a single issue that abortion is, like, the most important issue to women, and it's really not. for the better half of eight years, the left has spent their time demonizing republicans in general for wanting to protect the unborn, secure their borders, for butting america and americans first, for not wanting tax dollars to go to foreign wars and other countries. i don't think that message resonated with gen z this time around. >> trace: you know when i was saying last night to someone on the set here is that donald trump is 78 years old but seems to have the ear of young people. and i think a lot of that is because of what you have done and what baron have done recommending he go on podcasts like theo vaughan and joe rogan. joe rogan subsequently coming out and endorsing him. that's gotta feel good to say that was working with younger people, bo. >> 100%, and i couldn't be more happy to do it. i did it all out of respect for
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him and his mission, and i wouldn't be happy year see that. i had a lot of congratulations texts and things like that from people. it was awesome. it was great to see. but you know what, i don't even think i made the biggest deal. i think who made the real difference is all you people watching right now. all my audience, all you guys. you may not have millions of followers. you may not be some big celebrity to endorse him, but you guys made the difference because there are millions of you and even if you're posting something and your 500 followers are going up and telling them why, they made the real difference, and i couldn't be more proud of america for this historic night. >> trace: and i want to play some sound. this is a student in wisconsin. listen to him. >> i think people saw that donald trump wanted what's best for the american people. i was happy to see that he won. myself, i just thought that he had my own best interests in his
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mind for all the american people too. >> trace: isabella, this is something you talked about that young people want not just what's best for them but what's best for america. >> yeah. you know, young people want to get married, own homes, be able to afford things, and under the biden administration it's just been really difficult to do that. i think young people are really waking up to that. this administration has put america and americans last, and i think gen z is sick of it. >> trace: lastly, bo, to you. are young people changing or is the democratic party changing so much that young people are just shifting away? >> well, that might be it. as they said, they didn't leave the democratic party. it left them. last time on your show kamala harris and joe biden promised in 2020 they were going to make college free, and they obviously failed on that promise. trump says he will make college more affordable, and we know we
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have a president who makes promises and keeps them. that's why we voted for him and showed up for him like he showed up for us. we are tired of seeing him kicked around and bullied for wanting to save america. that's why gen z resonates with him, and he deserved our vote. we didn't want kamala harris who thought nothing else but we were stupid. >> trace: thank you both for coming on. >> this is a victory, a big victory. >> first thing i did is cry. tears of happiness. we won! >> trace: trump supporters feeling vindicated by the election results including a man you have seen on this show before. he says he has been fined repeatedly for hanging a pro trump banner on his property. not only is he refusing to take it down. he's got a new trump banner that he will unveil live next right after the break. [ ♪♪ ]
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we spoke to a florida man who say local authorities are violating his free speech for fining him by not removing a massive sign from his property supporting donald trump. he lives on the famous scenic highway in florida called 30a. let's bring in marvin peeney who has a brand new banner supporting the president-elect. great to have you on the show. another banner to go with all your other banners. nobody has seen it yet. so we'll do a little drum roll here. and we want to see it. here is the new trump banner. can you put it up on the screen? boom, there it is. and it says who's your daddy? mar marvin, what's the new banr about? >> it's up like i told you last week. i went on your show and said, look. we're gonna hang another banner. i held true to my word, so we dropped the sign yesterday afternoon by 4. everybody goes man, you're being
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awful cocky today. yeah, we are. i feel awful positive about trump, and we're moving forward, and sure enough, you know, trump voted free last night. we dropped another banner this morning and on tiktok around 11. it got close to 700,000 hits. and america was ready for a change, trace. and did we make a change? yes, we did. and people are standing up. our country is changing. i got up this morning. you know, i felt like a great godly american. i felt like going to the 1st grade and doing the pledge of allegiance and a little prayer. i had that vibe in my system. it feels great. we have taken so much over the years. it's time for good life coming ahead of us. >> trace: two things i want to know. did you get reaction? did you get response? and have you got any response from local authorities? >> i have no problem with the local authority.
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all the police, sheriff's department, all the big guys they back me up. they love me down there. we had probably a hundred people in my yard yesterday. i talked to probably 200 people this morning going up just walking out and talking just telling people, patting you on the back and thank you for expanding up we the people. we made a change with the peopl people, and people from all around. we never took the sign down. and here we are. >> trace: are you going to put something up? when is the next sign going to go up? >> those who dropped. grateful i'm waiting to keep up with what trump is going to put up next and what he's going to do for the country.
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i think were really coming on, it makes me feel good now that i think about it because they came against my constitutional rights. tried to beat me in my own god-given constitutional rights. now we're sitting back and watching what's going to happen. when is this judge gonna rule. >> trace: it's exciting. it's a great time. and the banners are classic. marvin, we will have you on when the next banner goes up because it's just what we do. thank you for coming on the show. >> thank you very much. appreciate the invite. appreciate it very much. >> trace: yeah. katy, if i can can we go to the empire state building? they lit it up red as we leave you. the people in new york say they were celebrating the end of democracy. there it is. thank you for watching america's late news at night. i am trace a d gallagher. we'll seal you right here again tomorrow night. my heart's pretty good.
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