Transcript
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Hey everybody, we got Georgia on our mind. It is the center of the political universe. We just returned from a couple rallies there. We dive into the recent news and updates and so much more. Email us your questions freedomarliekirk.com if you want to support our program, it's charliekirk.com support and if you want to get involved with Turning Point USA, it's tpusa.com battleground georgia. Buckle up here. With we go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
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Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus.
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I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks.
C (0:38)
I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy, his spirit, his love of this country. He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, Turning Point usa.
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We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here. Hello everybody. Charlie Kirk here, host of the Charlie Kirk show. Check out charliekirk.com as always for all your latest news and information. House Republicans are in a historically favorable position even as a minority. If the current trends continue with votes still being counted and finalized, and in a few select races, Nancy Pelosi will have one of the slimmest majorities in nearly 100 years in the House of Representatives of only about nine seats. Almost every single expert out there predicted the exact opposite. They predicted that Nancy Pelosi would expand her majority from 28 to 30 seats to nearly 44 seats. Some in the prediction business, such as Larry Sabato and the Cook Political Report and Nate Silver, they went as bold to say that they thought Nancy Pelosi would get to 245 to 240 seats, 248 seats. And I think it's worth asking the question why is it as things stand right now, Nancy Pelosi has a an 11 seat majority where the final two races that are being decided, Marionette Miller Meeks, for example, who looks like she's going to win by six votes, and Claudia Tenney in upstate New York who is Currently winning by 12 votes, which will bring Nancy Pelosi's majority to just nine votes, 218 votes are needed for the majority. In fact, the activist media was so confident that Democrats were going to retain control the House of Representatives, they called the race, they called the house direction around 8:30pm Eastern before almost anything else they said CNN projects, cable news projects that Democrats will control the House of Representatives. And all of a sudden results started to come in from across the country and Elvira Salazar won in Miami by three points against Donna Shalala. Seats were starting to be flipped that no one expected and all those predictions were wrong. But I think it's worth exploring. Why were they wrong? And what was the reason why House Republicans did so well? Why did Republicans prove almost everyone wrong? Why did Republicans win historic seats in Texas, Florida, Ohio, South Carolina, California with Young Kim, Michelle Steele and Mike Garcia? Why did this happen? The answer to this question is actually one of the most critical questions we can ask right now. It impacts the Georgia Senate runoff, It impacts the voter integrity fights. It impacts us diving deep into stopping the steal in Georgia, which we're gonna dive into at great detail in this program. Cuz there is new footage out of Atlanta in Georgia by my friend Jackie Deason, who testified yesterday, which probably might be the most clear evidence of video captured voter fraud we have. But the answer to this question must be answered correctly. Why did Republicans do so well? So the conventional establishment, corporate Republican answer is because, well, we got our messaging correctly. We know that's not true. There's something deeper at play here as to why Republicans did so well in a shocking fashion in the House of Representatives. So I'm going to play tape from a friend of mine. I like this representative, he's a hero, he nearly died, but he's very wrong. In this piece of tape, Steve Scalise was asked by Bill Hemmer why he thought Republicans did so well. Maybe he was caught off guard, maybe he wasn't prepared. But I want you to listen carefully to what Congressman Steve Scalise says here when he was asked why did Republicans do so well? Which is a natural question that Bill Hemmer's asking. It's a good question. And again, this is not about Steve Scalise. I'm just trying to confront and thwart this line of thinking because it's not correct. Play cut 15.
