me washington examiner chief political correspondent, byron york and washington times columnist kelly riddell. thank you, both for being here. and kelly, start with the narrowest advantage that clinton had, was 23 points in the electoral vote. it's widened as we showed you to 95. what do you think we're going to see? do you think we're going to see a continuing return to narrowing or what? >> well, depends on donald trump's actions as well as what's revealed with the wikileaks as we continue on look at hillary clinton's and john podesta's back and forth e-mails. i tell you what, the polls swinging rapidly from week to week. so a lot can change in one week by all means, hillary clinton, the mainstream media would like to believe that hillary clinton has run away with the contest. that doesn't seem to be true. when trump pivots back like he did on the debate. he learned some things, when he pivots back from, doesn't take things personal and puts back in the policy, he wins. lou: how did you react, byron, when you heard the republican nominee say he's going to take the shackles off? >> he is who