Daily Review with Clay and Buck - Mar 11 2026

3/11/202657 mincomplete
0:00This is an iHeart Podcast.
0:02Guaranteed human. Welcome to today's edition of the Clay Travis and Buck Suxton Show podcast.
0:09Welcome in. We are rolling into the Wednesday edition from all signs pointing towards Iran.
0:19Continuing what exactly is going to happen there.
0:22We will give you the absolute latest.
0:24Good numbers on inflation. Oil and gas prices, the number one story I would say
0:31right now at MSNBC. And let's see, not the case at CNN or at Fox
0:43News. Doing all my reading, getting ready for the show today.
0:47What stood out to me is several different things that I want to dive into
0:52with Buck here off the top.
0:54But there are quotes from President Trump via Axios, a conversation that he had.
1:02And I grabbed one of those quotes.
1:05It's not audio. But President Trump told Axios, anytime I want the war to end,
1:12it will end. And Buck, I think that is likely true.
1:17And here is, to me, still the big question that we have been asking since
1:21this all started. Who is the acceptable leader for Iran that would allow this situation
1:29in Iran to end in some way?
1:34With the understanding that we would now, at least the Iranians would know, that at
1:38any point in time we could decapitate their leader.
1:42If this son of Khamenei is still alive, Moktaba, or however you pronounce his name,
1:49if he's still alive. Moktaba.
1:51You've got to say it like that.
1:52Moktaba. Say it like that.
1:53Moktaba. If he's still alive.
1:55I like the way you say it.
1:56Sorry. I'm not an accent guy.
1:58I can't do accents. I can do my voice, and that's pretty much it.
2:03So, if he's still alive, which I think is very much in question because they're
2:08dancing around with cardboard cutouts of him, if you didn't see that, as the representation
2:14of their new leader. Here is what I would say if he is still alive
2:18and if he is able to recover because there are reports that if he is
2:22still alive that he is severely injured and was harmed quite a lot in the
2:27blast that took place to begin this onslaught in Iran, his dad, his son, his
2:35wife, and his mom were reportedly all killed in one of those opening attacks.
2:42Let me just put this to you, Buck, and to all of you out there.
2:46Would you be very fond or willing to work in an expeditious and pleasing fashion
2:54if a country killed your dad, your mom, your wife, and your son?
2:59I would submit to you that if he is still alive, it is a non
3:03-starter that he could be the leader left in charge in Iran because I would
3:08not blame him. I would want America to die on a level that, frankly, or
3:12any other country that did this, on a level that would burn in my soul
3:16for the rest of my life.
3:18I think this could actually be worse because it's, you know, you're wounded.
3:22You didn't kill a terrorist.
3:24That doesn't seem ideal. There's, you've done a lot of this study.
3:28Terrorists who are wounded and don't die often end up being the most virulent of
3:33terrorists in their future years.
3:35So I would start with this.
3:37Him being in charge is unacceptable.
3:40And so I don't know if we have a leader that is acceptable, but I
3:45would say if he's alive, he is an unacceptable heir to the Iranian leadership.
3:51I think that we have seen the total military intelligence and particularly aerial superiority of
4:00the United States and Israel on display and substantial, a substantial diminishing of Iranian capability,
4:08particularly to make war of any kind outside of its own borders.
4:13I am not seeing anything about there's some other faction or some other group that
4:22could theoretically oversee a transition, take over.
4:26And so what I think is going to continue to be the case, Clay, is
4:29we have our Department of War and Secretary Hegseth and Trump degrading Iranian military capability
4:38and taking out senior targets, I do not see how this turns into a different
4:42regime at the end of it.
4:43And I felt that way the whole time.
4:46Now, perhaps that is what was baked in all along.
4:51We're being told that regime change was never, the administration is saying regime change was
4:55not the goal. Okay. You're taking out all the leadership in this country.
5:02And then you're going to have, to your point, perhaps a more virulent leadership coming
5:08right and just justified, furious, like leave aside the politics.
5:12Again, everybody out there, just think if someone you knew killed your mom, your dad,
5:16your son and your wife, would you be likely to work in a in a
5:21positive manner with that country or that group ever?
5:24I think the answer is no.
5:28Yeah, that's obviously the correct assessment on that.
5:31So I think we're going to have a declare victory and cease aerial hostilities moment
5:39here within the next couple of weeks.
5:40I don't know when exactly.
5:41I'm obviously not on the high side, as we used to say.
5:45I don't have access to classified or any of that.
5:47And if I did, I wouldn't be talking about it here on radio.
5:49But my sense is that they're just going to realize the problem with our position
5:57on all this, our military position, is that if you can't force, if you don't
6:03have a ground force, you can't force change on the ground.
6:07And that is where we are.
6:09There is no Northern Alliance to work with.
6:12The Kurds, there's not enough of them.
6:14They don't want to get, I mean, they can't run the whole country.
6:16That's a non -started notice.
6:17People talked about the Kurds for about 24 hours until they took out a map
6:21and learned the basic demographics.
6:22We had that guy who was a military advisor in Northern Iraq, one of our
6:28listeners who wrote in and said, yeah, you're right.
6:30Yeah, of course. I was up there, too.
6:32I know the mindset of the Kurds with this stuff.
6:34They don't want any part of trying to police the rest of Iran.
6:38They couldn't do it on top of all that.
6:40So I don't see the way that this ends with a hopeful new future for
6:50Iran. I see this as we have defanged the snake, but there are going to
6:56be little baby snakes that grow fangs in time after this.
6:58That's how I don't see what the alternative is.
7:02There also is the question, and I think this matters, too, and I believe we
7:07have a cut of this, of other people talking about something that is being speculated
7:12quite significantly. It is, is the son actually alive?
7:16In other words, is this potentially an opportunity that Iran has taken to try and
7:24prevent the new leader from getting killed by actually elevating a leader who's already dead?
7:30And there's audio of that.
7:31I want to play that in a sec.
7:32But, Buck, the other part of this is if he is still alive, he may
7:37be protected from being able to be attacked because if they have him in a
7:41hospital, it's hard to take out someone in a hospital without killing a lot of
7:46other people. And then the same media that didn't care when Iran killed 30 ,000
7:52people is suddenly going to be leading stories with, look at Israel and the United
7:57States targeting people in hospitals.
7:59Or they got the guy being treated, as you're starting to see, Iran has moved
8:04whatever assets they have remaining for the state into schools, into residential areas, so that
8:13when we are attempting to strike these assets, then they immediately cry, oh, look, they're
8:18just targeting innocents, as if this regime has any moral authority at all, given the
8:24fact that they killed over 30 ,000 protesters just in the beginning of this year.
8:29We've seen this in authoritarian Muslim mid -east states for decades where the regime in
8:38charge, you have to remember that the regime in charge not only disallows there to
8:44be political opposition, they also recognize if they lose power, I mean, you just talked
8:50about the 30 ,000 protesters killed in the streets.
8:53Yes. You've got to think, if you are a member of the besiege, which is
8:57the Islamic Revolution's militia, if you will, the sort of street militia, street thugs, they
9:04had a very similar thing in Syria, I might add, called the shabiha.
9:08This is a common thing.
9:10You have the military, which you make sure is ideologically committed and radicalized to the
9:15overall cause of Islamism, jihadism, and then below that you have this paramilitary organization that's
9:22meant to know block to block, house to house, who's doing what, and they have
9:27the total blessing of the state to be as vicious and disgusting and tyrannical as
9:33they want as long as it's serving the interests of the state.
9:36Clay, those individuals, you have to always remember this, though.
9:38I know we've said there's an amnesty for the IRGC.
9:41Okay, well, that means that we're saying put down your arms and we won't blow
9:44you up. You brought up what happens if someone kills your wife, your parents, your
9:50kids, all of the above.
9:51You're going to forget that?
9:54If you're now part of the new regime, you're going to say, hey, when you
9:58guys killed those 30 ,000 protesters, you know what, let's let bygones be bygones.
10:01No. In fact, the Gaddafi effect is you better stay in power or you may
10:07up with a bayonet in a very uncomfortable place.
10:11Like, bad things happen, and so it's zero sum for the people in Iran who
10:17have been running the country.
10:19You've got America killing their leadership, and you've got whatever the opposition on the street
10:25could be, the Iranian street, if you will, if they come into power, at a
10:30minimum, you've got to think you might be going to prison in some hellhole and
10:34maybe even worse than that.
10:36So my point, Clay, is they'll fight to the very end.
10:38There's no off -ramp for them as far as they see.
10:40And that's not even taking into account the ideological commitment to stopping the Crusaders and
10:45Jews and all the, you know, death to America, great Satan stuff.
10:49That's just the basic hard, uh, uh, cold.
10:52the hard political reality of the situation they face which is why i was hoping
10:56that we would start to see uh oh wow there is some kind of door
11:00number two here or there is something that they've got planned no we're just completely
11:06annihilating their military capacity and then i think we're going to stop and then we
11:12might have to do this again it's going to be like mowing the grass but
11:15it's a lot more expensive and human and uh and monetary cost than mowing the
11:20grass and also again the question becomes who is even leading iran and i think
11:25this is the question the new supreme leader who they trotted out with uh cardboard
11:29cutout uh at the rally which doesn't suggest that he's actually that health help uh
11:34healthy yeah that's like the opposite of a proof of life when they have the
11:37cardboard cut out of you at the rally no no that doesn't look uh a
11:40lot of you also were laughing um uh in the comments you were saying hey
11:45maybe we shouldn't criticize iran that much about showing up with a cardboard cutout since
11:49we effectively had a cardboard cutout president for four years which is fair point uh
11:53yeah very fair uh but here's the washington post uh jason rezahan uh saying what
12:01i think is really being contemplated at a significant level is this guy even alive
12:06cut 12 i wasn't super surprised by his election there's been a lot of talk
12:10that he uh might succeed his father when his father died this this uh speculation
12:16has been around for more than a decade i also wonder if uh the fact
12:20that we haven't seen him indicates that he might not be alive i mean i
12:24don't think that there's a clear um indication that that uh anyone has spoken to
12:30him the president of iran masoud pazeshkian said today that neither he nor anyone else
12:35in his government had spoken with the younger khamini since he was uh appointed supreme
12:41leader on sunday so there's still so much confusion around this and buck it could
12:47be again an opportunity to make it seem as if uh he is the leader
12:52when it makes it harder to target the actual leader and there may be a
12:56relatively only handful of people that even know whether he's alive or not but when
13:01you name a new supreme leader and he isn't going to be seen that definitely
13:05raises questions about what his health actually is we'll take your calls on this one
13:11uh it's getting the point where i think a lot of people are running out
13:17of patience on the plan here whatever it may be um and i mean people
13:22who support trump i'm not talking about trump haters but maybe uh look the polling
13:26has said this pretty consistently clay as long as this is done this month people
13:31are like okay maybe it was necessary they they know they're on a time that
13:35our team is on a timeline with this and it's a tight timeline all right
13:39we'll get back to it in a second here the presence of first responders villages
13:43cities the the missiles that continue to rain down the drones that continue to rain
13:48down on israel uh the international fellowship of christians and jews has been working there
13:52for many years their entire team is supplying bomb shelters medical centers critically needed essential
13:58aspects of life as the attacks rain down on israel since we have gone into
14:04iran i saw for myself they have hospitals in israel that they have designed it's
14:10really kind of amazing to see they've designed them so that the parking garages can
14:15suck can uh be the hospital itself in other words they take everybody off the
14:20upper floors because of the danger of attack and they relocate everyone the entire hospital
14:27is taking place in the parking garages think about how crazy that is to have
14:32to do uh that is one of the things that the ifcj has helped to
14:35create they do tremendous work uh including the bomb shelters just trying to keep regular
14:41everyday innocent people healthy and safe you can help to support the work that they
14:46are doing right now by giving 45 dollars to rush life -saving essentials to the
14:51vulnerable under fire right now at 888 -488 -IFCJ you can also go online at
14:59ifcj .org we know the organization i've seen the work that they do we trust
15:04their work it is invaluable and it saves lives every single day website ifcj .org
15:11that's ifcj .org we're talking about iran in the first hour and now let's turn
15:26our attention for a little bit to the attempted uh terror attack in new york
15:33city now we we discussed this with you after it happened it was outside of
15:38gracie mansion which is the mayor of new york city's residence also holds events there
15:44but it's the mayor's residence i'll never forget when bloomberg preferred clay his 50 million
15:50dollar townhouse or whatever it was so he lived there and held only events at
15:56the that's quite a move when the official residence of the mayor of new york
16:00is like not quite up to your standards uh but it's a it's quite a
16:04property it's right on the east river and there was a uh a protest there
16:09people saying that they're worried and i don't know exactly what they said they're probably
16:14some of them said some things that aren't so nice about uh islam and they
16:20so nice said that they're worried about the Islamification of New York, et cetera, et
16:23cetera. A bunch of terrorist wannabes, or I guess just terrorists now, because they tried.
16:28They're attempted terrorists, showed up to throw bombs at them, to throw a bomb at
16:33them. And there was this fascinating series of events that occurred that we've seen now
16:38many, many times over the years, really over the decades now, where somehow, if you
16:44are a Democrat member of the media, you have to take a shockingly pro -Islamic
16:54terrorist tone, point of view, however that is.
16:59You say that we can never know the real motive when the guys are like,
17:02Allahu Akbar. We can never know the real motive, right?
17:06We aren't really sure yet what's going on here.
17:09If the guy happens to be of Middle Eastern or clearly of Muslim descent, we've
17:15got to bury that as long as we can.
17:17Again, if we have to leave out things in the transcript, like the guy, the
17:21terrorist, saying that he pledged allegiance to ISIS and he's doing this for Allah, they'll
17:25do that too. This is a clear pattern that has been in place for a
17:30long time. And we saw this play out, in this case, Clay, with the CNN
17:35piece that was, you know, it could have been a lovely day.
17:38It was 85 degrees when two men traveled over from Pennsylvania.
17:43And then they threw a bomb at somebody.
17:45It's like, well, hold on a second.
17:47Why would you ever frame this incident in that way as a news report?
17:51Like, why make it seem like everything was cool and fine?
17:54And then they just kind of threw a bomb at some guys and tried to
17:57kill them. Like, it's very strange.
18:00CNN's Abby Phillip, after this happens, after what I just told you, and they pulled
18:04that tweet down, which is very rare for CNN to admit we're idiots, we shouldn't
18:11have done that. But it was so dumb.
18:12It was so preposterous that they had to.
18:15Then CNN's Abby Phillip goes on.
18:17And this is now, Clay, I saw you point this out.
18:19This is off the teleprompter.
18:21Oh, yeah. So this was written by producers who went over this script beforehand, and
18:26then she read it aloud.
18:27I want you to listen closely to how CNN describes this attempted Muslim terrorist attack
18:34in New York City outside the mayor's residence.
18:38Play two. Two Republicans say Muslims don't belong here.
18:41After an attempted terror attack against New York's mayor, Zoran Mamdani, and the House Speaker,
18:47Mike Johnson, says nothing, really, to condemn those comments.
18:52Oh, okay. Notice what happened here, Clay.
18:56An attempted terror attack against New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani.
18:59It was an attack against him.
19:01It was an attack by Muslims against the guys who say that Muslims have too
19:05many terrorists in their midst, so we should probably rethink how many of them we're
19:08bringing into this country. That's their position.
19:10Protected by the First Amendment, by the way.
19:12You can dislike it. You can hate it or not.
19:14But it's clearly protected speech at a protest.
19:17But also, Clay, I notice how the real problem isn't the guys who tried to
19:24blow people up, maim them, have ball bearings shot into their chest and in their
19:29eyes, blind people maybe, et cetera.
19:31That's not the big problem.
19:33The big problem is the lack of Republican member of Congress, condemnation of the mean
19:40words the protesters said. Yeah, and I can't believe I'm going to say this, but
19:47I'm going to defend Abby Phillips here.
19:50Even if we play that again, she's reading off a teleprompter, and it seems like
19:55she recognizes that it's poorly drafted.
19:58And, again, this is being a TV nerd and understanding, having hosted some of these
20:04things before. Sometimes you read off the prompter, and you're like, this is not good.
20:09But as you're reading it, it appears that she is going to toss to a
20:13break. Play this again. I'll take you into the weeds here.
20:15But what I think is significant, Buck, is whatever the culture is at CNN, this,
20:22much like that article that made it out of through the editorial process and everything
20:28else, the errors you make, and I will say this as a guy who has
20:32run a media company, the errors you make reflect the culture you create.
20:38And everybody's going to screw up.
20:40Everybody's going to be imperfect.
20:42You and I screw up sometimes.
20:43We don't have teleprompters, so we're not reading anything at any point in time.
20:48I always hold it up.
20:50You can watch. You can look at this on the YouTube channel.
20:54I have a yellow legal pad, like I have for most of my career, that
20:58I jot down notes on that I read and run the entire show from.
21:02And you have a notepad in front of you, and you've got your computer.
21:05But there is no teleprompter.
21:07Play that for us one more time.
21:08As she is reading it, you can start to see she is thinking, hey, this
21:13doesn't feel right, but she has a commercial break that she's trying to hit, and
21:18this is the tease. But, again, the errors that you make reflect the culture that
21:22you create. The culture that CNN has created is there is no way that left
21:27-wingers could ever be responsible for anything negative.
21:30And that, I think, undergirds this error.
21:33Play it one more time.
21:34Two Republicans say Muslims don't belong here.
21:37After an attempted terror attack against New York's Mayor Zoran Mamdani and the House Speaker,
21:43Mike Johnson, says nothing, really, to condemn those comments.
21:47Okay. I saw an interesting comment, and I can't remember who credited it, but a
21:54lot of people believe that Momdani was the victim of a terror attack.
21:59That is intentional. Lots of people on the left who are not as engaged on
22:03stories as you are believe that Momdani was the victim of a terror attack.
22:09You can hear Abby Phillips.
22:10She recognizes, I think, that that is not an accurate tease that she is reading,
22:14but somehow that made it through CNN editorial.
22:16Somehow that, I believe, ended up on her teleprompter.
22:20And what this is reflective of is an attempt to obfuscate, to hide, to keep
22:27people unaware of what actually happened here, which is two Muslim -motivated terrorists decided to
22:35try to throw IEDs and kill people who were protesting the number of Muslims that
22:40have been allowed into our country.
22:41And brave NYPD police officers ran towards the bombs and were able to tackle the
22:49guys who were responsible for this.
22:52And this is James Gagliano, former director of the FBI NYC division, says the rank
23:01and file are furious because Momdani has in no way honored the NYPD officers that
23:07actually ran towards these bombs and caught the bad guys, which, again, goes to the
23:12intentional cultural hiding of this story and the way that it's been covered, cut 24.
23:18The other night, instead of hosting the two -star police chief who leaped over the
23:23barricades and ran this guy down who had thrown the bomb, the mayor decides that
23:29Gracie Manchin to host Mahmoud Khalil.
23:31I mean, he's sending such an awful, awful message here to the rank and file.
23:37And remember, the mayor, when he was a private citizen who had commented on Twitter
23:42then that he saw a cop crying in his car and nature was healing.
23:47This is something that, again, the men and women of the NYPD will do the
23:51right thing. They're going to enforce the laws.
23:53They're going to show up for work.
23:54But they understand that this man on the screen right now does not have their
24:00back. I think that's the key, Buck.
24:03And you're a New York City born and bred kid.
24:06The fact that this NYPD cop who jumped, if you haven't seen the iconic photo
24:11of this cop, jumping a barricade to chase down the guys who had thrown bombs,
24:17bombs that at any moment could have gone off, he ran towards danger, he arrested
24:22and tackled the culprits here.
24:25Mamdani, to my knowledge, Buck, hasn't said a word in favor of this officer's bravery
24:29and what he actually did.
24:32Instead, he brought the Columbia protester in and gave him a meal and took pictures
24:37of it. Well, you have to remember that Mamdani's base very much is comprised of
24:43and includes in considerable number the kind of people who agree with everything that those
24:51terrorists feel and say, but they have to technically draw the line at actual violence
24:57because that's against the law in a way that people notice and get upset about.
25:02So, his base is very supportive of the people who show up and want to
25:07silence the anti, you know, we didn't really have a good term for them.
25:13They call them white nationalists.
25:14I still haven't seen anything white nationalist.
25:16I've only seen anti -immigration and anti, now people can argue if they think that's
25:22white nationalists, but there are plenty of people who are concerned about the massive immigration
25:27into this country, particularly illegal immigration, who aren't white.
25:30So, are they white nationalists, too?
25:31Including legal immigrants, by the way.
25:33Right, yes. Huge numbers of minorities that have legally immigrated to the country.
25:38We're like, we're good. We have enough.
25:40Yeah, we've had enough here for a little while.
25:42So, that's not actually a white nationalist belief, per se.
25:46They can try to make that case, but I think that that's made in bad
25:48faith. My point here being that, yeah, Mamdani, like left -wing radical lunatics are Mamdani's
25:56buddies, so he doesn't want to upset them, but he does have to say, all
26:00right, like, don't try to blow up the white nationalists, quote -unquote.
26:03Just, you know, spit in their faces and do what Antifa usually does, but don't
26:08do that, because then I have to let the NYPD tackle some of them and
26:13do the things. I'm going to tell you this right now, by the way.
26:16It's going to take some time.
26:17The sentence that these guys get is going to be enragingly light, guaranteed.
26:26Now, they're going to be punished, because they know there are limits here to how
26:31crazy the system can be in New York before people really start to freak out
26:36and leave. But, Clay, I mean, you're going to see.
26:38Remember the guys who, during BLM, wasn't there a guy, it was a lawyer, actually.
26:43There you go. A lawyer who threw a Molotov cocktail into a cop car.
26:48They got slap on the wrist.
26:50Yeah, I remember that story.
26:52Slap on the wrist. Yeah, I remember that story, because I think it was a
26:56lawyer at a prominent law firm.
26:58And I remember thinking, how do you find yourself in a situation where you're lighting
27:02a Molotov cocktail as a lawyer on fire and throwing it into a cop car?
27:07That's how deranged everybody became on the left, in particular, in 2020.
27:13Probably got a... tenured professor position waiting for him at some local, you know, university,
27:21local college in New York.
27:23I wouldn't be surprised at all.
27:24Look, we had a blackout the other night.
27:27That's why I did a little Ask Me Anything.
27:29Most of you were nice in the AMA.
27:30Some of you not so nice.
27:31Most of you were nice.
27:33Blackout in the building that was not fun.
27:35I was taking the stairs.
27:36The lights were all out.
27:37It was a minor one.
27:38It only lasted a few hours.
27:39But it was a reminder that stuff can happen.
27:42And it was also a reminder that if I needed to talk to family, even
27:46if you had all the power out here and there were cell phone disruptions, which
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28:48We head now. I believe she is in Georgia.
28:51I know she is on with us to talk about the goings -ons in Georgia,
28:55one of the chief battlegrounds that exist in the country for the midterm, where they're
29:00going to have John Ossoff, the existing sitting senator, up for re -election.
29:06And they're determining who the Republican is going to be challenging him.
29:09And Marjorie Taylor Greene is being replaced in her North Georgia district.
29:14That primary, I believe, just happened yesterday.
29:17Ashley Brassfield with us now.
29:19Let's start right there, Ashley.
29:20Thanks for coming on with us.
29:22The Marjorie Taylor Greene race is to replace her.
29:26They now have Democrat and Republican nominees.
29:29How does that look? And what can you tell us overall, big picture, about the
29:33state of Georgia? Yeah, well, that Marjorie Taylor Greene race that you saw yesterday, the
29:38primary, happened with the GOP.
29:40A ton of people in that race.
29:42And we saw Trump -endorsed candidate Clay Fuller come out on top there.
29:46Colton Moore was another name that a lot of people were speculating, a state senator
29:50in Georgia that's pretty well known.
29:52That could have come out in that race.
29:53It ended up being Clay Fuller, though, and we'll see him go against a Democrat
29:57with the last name Harris in that runoff to see who fills that seat.
30:01Of course, Marjorie Taylor Greene's district is actually where I'm from in Georgia.
30:04So I know it well.
30:05And it's a very rural area in the northwest part of the state.
30:09And so it's, I think, a GOP stronghold there, even without Taylor Greene holding that
30:13seat. But like Kentucky, like you were talking about, the state of Georgia is seeing
30:17a big Senate race take place, a three -way tie right now with Buddy Carter,
30:21Mike Collins, and Derek Dooley.
30:23And it's very similar into that Kentucky race and what we are just now seeing
30:27in the Texas GOP Senate primary where there's going to be a runoff.
30:31Texas and Georgia, very similar, where they both have that 50 percent mark that the
30:36candidates have to get to in order for there to be no runoff.
30:39So that's going to be coming up on May 19th, and it's going to be
30:41a big race. Hey, Ashley, it's Buck.
30:44Thanks for being here with us.
30:45So I know you're covering this.
30:46And as you mentioned, it's particularly close to home as your district.
30:50You are a Georgian, and your district is one of the ones where there will
30:54be quite an interesting matchup playing out.
30:58But what can you tell us about the situation of the governor's race at this
31:03point? Obviously, Kemp is term limited, right?
31:05He can't run again. So you've got a pretty big field here of Republicans and
31:12Democrats. Can you break down for us what that's looking like at this stage?
31:16Yeah, that governor's race is going to be very intense.
31:18And I think there is that dynamic, and I've kind of touched on this in
31:21my Senate piece, of that dynamic between Trump and Kemp and the Trump -endorsed candidate
31:25here and who the Kemp -endorsed candidates are going to be here.
31:28Well, at the governor's race, I think you're going to see the Lieutenant Governor, Burt
31:31Jones, get both endorsements from Trump and Kemp on that one.
31:34Where it differs in the Senate is that Kemp has already endorsed former football coach
31:38at Tennessee, Derek Dooley, here in this race, and Trump has not endorsed a Senate
31:42candidate. So that's kind of the differences in the races here.
31:45But you see Brad Raffensperger, who's also running for governor.
31:47That's a familiar name you might remember back from 2022.
31:52And the attorney general that made the call from the president during the election fraud
31:56scandal. So there's a long history of feuds happening in the state of Georgia.
32:00As many know, it's a purple state.
32:02And so I think it's going to be a battleground.
32:04It's kind of been this powder keg that's been waiting kind of to explode.
32:07It's been kind of the Southern charm aspect to it where nothing's quite happened yet.
32:12But these primaries coming up, I had my eye on it personally.
32:16Like we just saw in Texas, it kind of exploded all of a sudden.
32:19And we don't know who the Trump guy is, just to be clear, right?
32:21They're still angling for a Trump endorsement in that governor's race on the Republican side?
32:27Yes, I believe so. If not, Burt Jones hasn't gotten it yet.
32:30But I think Burt Jones is kind of the guy that everybody's looking at.
32:34He's, of course, a former football, Georgia football player.
32:36And I will say that football characteristic in Georgia seems to play.
32:39I mean, we saw Herschel Walker back in 2022, Burt Jones.
32:42I was on the campaign trail.
32:43Back in 2024, he was at the Georgia Tech rally with President Trump on stage.
32:47So these are characters that are very familiar.
32:49You know, I would say that, you know, when the president was in Rome just
32:53about two and a half weeks ago, you saw on the stage Barry Loudermilk, Mike
32:57Collins, and Brian Jack. And those are kind of the key players here in these
33:01races. And if you really want to get into the lore and the deep insider
33:04knowledge of Georgia, I mean, you can go back to the dynamic with Governor Kemp
33:08and Trump. And people like Steve Whitcoff, Lindsey Graham, same characters we're kind of seeing
33:13in this Iram War stuff, playing those middlemen and making deals in the state.
33:16So I think you're going to be seeing more of that possibly as well.
33:19Ashley, this primary is May 19.
33:23I think you can correct me on the exact date.
33:27Yes, that's correct. We just talked yesterday with Michael Watley, who is running in North
33:32Carolina. And he said, and I can't believe this number.
33:35Actually, he said it might cost $600 million for that Senate race in North Carolina.
33:42I would have to think the numbers would be somewhat similar in Georgia, because this
33:47is why Georgia is so important for people out there who aren't paying attention to
33:50the map. It is by far the best chance for Republicans to take back a
33:55Democrat seat. And there is no math.
33:58If Republicans could win the Senate seat in Georgia, there's basically no math under which
34:04the loss of the Senate could occur.
34:07Ossoff's a favorite right now, but that's why so much attention.
34:10I know the governor's race is big, but in terms of national politics, that Senate
34:14seat is huge. Right. And it's going to be a challenge for Republicans.
34:18We've seen that back since 2020 when Loeffler and Perdue were running to replace and
34:23take over those seats. Democrats, Raphael Warnock and John Ossoff took them.
34:27We saw Raphael Warnock be challenged in 2022, and that was unsuccessful.
34:31So it's going to be a real test for the GOP without Trump's name on
34:35the ballot, like in 2024, to see if they'll be successful here.
34:39And, you know, to differentiate the candidates, you have the Kemp endorsed, Derek Dooley.
34:43And he has that governor's endorsement behind him from the start.
34:47Nothing from Trump yet. Mike Collins, he's done a great job of getting behind the
34:51grassroots support in Georgia, going to, I believe, 159 counties and counting.
34:55He was also at that Rome -Georgia event not too long ago with Trump on
35:00stage. And so while we also have Rep.
35:02Roddy Carter, Collins and Carter have been Trump allies for a very long time.
35:07Derek Dooley was not voting in those earlier elections for Trump, but still has that
35:10support from Kemp. I think that's going to be a very interesting dynamic of who
35:14can go up against somebody where John Ossoff is perceived by a lot of people
35:18as still a moderate, even though he might not be to a lot, but also
35:21in the state where it's purple.
35:23But he also has really great constituent affairs, and that's what I'm hearing from my
35:25in -state people who live there.
35:27So I think it's going to be a very big challenge for the GOP in
35:30the state, much like North Carolina is.
35:32And if you look at Georgia and North Carolina, the situations are flipped with the
35:35count, whether it be with the governors and the senators there.
35:38So it's very interesting. Ashley Brasfield with us from The Daily Caller, and she's in
35:42Georgia, and she's covering that Georgia election as the primaries coming up here very closely.
35:48Ashley, if you could just refresh my memory, we have to pay attention to a
35:52lot of political stories here.
35:53I recall Marjorie Taylor Greene was among the most pro -Trump, Trumpy members of Congress,
36:03and then there's been some, like, falling out, like a pretty big one.
36:07What happened? What was the issue, or where did this all go?
36:12It seems like one of the crazier turnabouts I've seen on the Republican side in
36:17a while. Right. It felt like, I think, for a lot of people that weren't
36:20following closely for a long time as this big explosion that all of a sudden
36:24happened. And, you know, I think a lot of it left everybody in dismay.
36:27But this, I mean, can go back all the way to, you know, when Trump
36:29got into office in 2024.
36:31Who was he picking as secretaries?
36:34And Marjorie Taylor Greene at one rally in South Carolina voiced that she would not
36:38mind taking the DHS position.
36:40You follow along. She became, you know, a big player in that Doge effort on
36:44the Oversight Committee. And I think she started to see some things happening within the
36:49Trump administration in those first six months that she wasn't exactly pleased with.
36:52Some policy changes, whether it be immigration, the tariffs that she was heading for a
36:56while, but she kind of switched her tune on.
36:58And then I do think she wanted to run in that Georgia Senate race.
37:01She's made comments about many of the candidates in that race that she's not thrilled
37:04about them. So I believe that there was some internal polling shown by the White
37:09House to Taylor Greene that showed her being, you know, beat in the, I guess,
37:13the general election with Ossoff.
37:15So I don't think she was pleased with that.
37:16And I think that's where things started to take a turn there.
37:19She kind of saw where the puck was going.
37:20And I think the relationship just continued to sour, especially, you know, she's become this
37:25very anti -involvement and war type of individual.
37:29And then you saw the big explosion take place back in, you know, December, November
37:33time period, and she is no longer in Congress.
37:35So now we're seeing this special election.
37:37But I don't think people understand the full scope of that story.
37:40And I think it was a very interesting one to see happen within the first
37:43year of the Trump administration from somebody like Taylor Greene, who's been a cheerleader for
37:46the president for the last four and a half years.
37:49And has there been any effort to reach out?
37:52You know, Brian Kemp, a lot of the Trump base nationwide, I think they've expressed
37:58it here on the show and in emails.
37:59They're frustrated with Kemp on different things.
38:02But Kemp, as I understand it, has been very popular within the state of Georgia.
38:06And while he can't run again, is there an effort under?
38:10Or is there any attempt at a rapprochement between Trump, MAGA, and Brian Kemp just
38:17for the purposes of making sure that we don't lose a third winnable and really
38:23should win Senate seat in the state of Georgia?
38:26Because it's starting to feel like we've got a problem in your home state.
38:30Yeah, well, you thought there would be some kumbaya after 2024, and it seemed like
38:35Kemp got on board. He went on an appearance on Fox News saying he supported
38:38the president. But I think it's kind of been this consistent cold war with the
38:42governor and the president since then.
38:44And you saw this when he decided not to take a run at the Senate
38:47in that GOP seat. And instead, he endorsed Eric Dooley, which I don't think was
38:50something that the White House looked fondly upon when he did it.
38:53So I'm not sure if it's a total kumbaya moment quite yet going into 2026,
38:58which might need to happen here if the GOP wants to secure the seat in
39:01general. So it's a matter of time to watch how it goes.
39:05I think that people probably need to keep an eye on Governor Kemp for higher
39:08aspirations of offices in 2028.
39:10We'll see there. But I think that's a strategic move by Kemp on purpose.
39:15And it seems like in the state, there's big players like the Brian Kemp's, you
39:21know, Mike Collins, Buddy Carter's, Derek Dooley's.
39:24And then even in the governor's race where you're seeing a lot of changing dynamics
39:27and one name that's not there is, of course, Stacey Abrams anymore.
39:30So it's really this inner party war that's happening within the party right now, I'd
39:34say. Yeah, I know a little bit about this, Ashley.
39:36Brian Kemp obviously is a wildly popular governor in Georgia, has done a really good
39:40job. He believes Derek Dooley's the best pick, and he had tried to persuade the
39:45Trump White House to also endorse Dooley.
39:48Instead, they have so far stayed out of this primary, which is about two months
39:52away. And hopefully we can wed the turnout to vote of Brian Kemp with the
39:58passion of Trump supporters, because that might be 100 % necessary, I think, to actually
40:04manage to win the Senate race.
40:06One question for you, Ashley, on the way out, because I know you're a former
40:09athlete, if I remember correctly.
40:11As we were talking to you, the Iranian women's soccer team, I think the story
40:16deserves way more attention than it's getting.
40:18A lot of the girls, women on that team, refused to sing the Iranian national
40:22anthem at an event, a competition in Australia.
40:26Six or seven different reports of those members of that team did not want to
40:31go back to Iran afterwards because they were terrified of what might happen to them.
40:35So Australia granted asylum to them.
40:39They have landed in Malaysia, and reports are that most of the women on the
40:45team do not want to continue on to Iran because they are terrified of what
40:50is going to happen to them when they land.
40:52We have a lot of examples of people like Megan Rapinoe, as you well know,
40:56Ashley, speaking out aggressively against the United States.
40:59Why do you think so many women's athletes that are quick to degrade the United
41:05States from soccer in particular are not speaking out to protect these women that actually
41:12put their lives legitimately on the line to speak for freedom in their home country?
41:17It feels to me like this story should be way bigger than it is.
41:21Right. Well, it seems to only matter to people like Megan Rapinoe when she's not
41:25getting paid enough in her book is the way I look at this.
41:28And, of course, she's getting on this cover of Sports Illustrated and magazines like that,
41:32but she doesn't care about the global issues like what those women on the Iranian
41:36soccer team are now facing.
41:37So I think that's just first world problems from Megan Rapinoe really not paying attention
41:42to this. But it is sad to see women, you know, especially women that are
41:45well -known like Serena Williams.
41:46They haven't spoken out on even, you know, men and women's sports.
41:50In fact, they've been more supportive of it, if anything.
41:52So I think that's the progressive agenda here being seen playing out within sports.
41:56And I think that even in places like Iran, where you've seen Khamenei be, you
42:02know, taken out by the United States and Israel, now we have his son taking,
42:07you know, his spot in leadership at this point.
42:09I think that's going to be a problem for these women going back to the
42:12country. And luckily, you know, Australia has granted them a place to stay.
42:16But I would be also fearful if I were them.
42:17I mean, Iran is not a place that's safe for women.
42:20And I think it's interesting that they even have a women's soccer team, that they've
42:23even been granting that in a place like Iran.
42:25No doubt. I mean, they didn't allow them to even go watch soccer games for
42:28multiple generations since the Mullis came into power.
42:34Hey, we appreciate you, Ashley.
42:35Keep up the good work.
42:36That battlefield in Georgia is going to be significant when it comes to control of
42:40the Senate. And we appreciate the update.
42:43Yeah, thank you, guys. That's Ashley Brassfield.
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44:00We are joined now by Senator Tommy Tuberville, the next governor of Alabama.
44:06We'll get into a bunch of things with him.
44:09But let's go ahead and start with this, Senator, because everybody, every day, we get
44:14asked about the Save America Act.
44:17I know you've been in meetings all day on Capitol Hill.
44:20People are fired up about the fact that this is not necessarily going to be
44:24coming up on the floor.
44:26What's the latest and what would you tell our audience to do if they're fired
44:31up about this as most of them are?
44:34Yeah. Call your congressman, call your senator, let everybody know what you feel about the
44:40Save America Act, because it is exactly what it means.
44:44We have to save America by making sure our voting is true and effective.
44:51You know, when I'm in Alabama, Clay, people ask me, Coach, is my vote going
44:56to count or is it just a false sense of security?
44:59And we want to make sure that people across the country know that their vote
45:02counts. Now, we have 15 states in the United States of America that are totally
45:07crooked, all the blue states.
45:10They want to make sure that they get elected, they elect their officials, but we
45:14have to give us some kind of opportunity to make these things as fair as
45:20possible because we have no chance.
45:22And if we continue to lose to blue states, eventually we're going to lose the
45:27White House and they are going to open the border up again, no law and
45:31order, give money away right and left, steal from the country, steal from the taxpayers
45:36and the country that you and I know will be over with.
45:40Let me ask you, Senator Tuberville, it's Buck, thanks for being here.
45:44Why not get rid of the filibuster if this is really about saving America?
45:47Because it feels like this is the game that we end up having to play.
45:52United States senators want to do something on the Republican side, but we need 60
45:58votes. We need 60. That's not a constitutional mandate.
46:01That's just a self -imposed restriction from the Senate.
46:03If it is saving America, then why not at least have the discussion about whether
46:08this is the time to do that?
46:09Because otherwise, aren't we just hoping for a filibuster, a standing filibuster at best?
46:15Well, first of all, you're exactly right.
46:17And when the Democrats take over, they're going to do away with the filibuster immediately.
46:21So we have talked, about 25 or 30 of us have talked to, we're blue
46:27in our face, to our colleagues who keep saying, oh, it's about tradition of the
46:31Senate. And I tell them, listen, I don't work for the Senate.
46:35I work for the people of this country and the people of Alabama.
46:38And it's time to understand this country has changed.
46:42We are not the same republic that we used to be.
46:45We have, the enemy is inside the gates.
46:48They are changing our culture, our moral values, changing our religions, just overtaking everything that
46:54we're doing. And so now is the time, don't panic.
46:58Let's just bust a filibuster and vote everything in we possibly can under the best
47:03president we've ever had and get this country back where it's going again and do
47:06not let them cheat on us in elections again.
47:10Senator Somerville, the other big question we're getting is about how to wind down the
47:17war in Iran. And I'm sure you're hearing from some of your constituents, price of
47:22oil and gas a major concern.
47:23I know Alabama, like Tennessee, fortunately, still has very low gas prices compared to much
47:29of the country. But you may have already talked about this with President Trump.
47:33If the president asked for your advice on how to handle the wind down in
47:38Iran, what would you tell him?
47:40Well, first of all, he asked me about three or four weeks ago, what do
47:43you think, coach, about Iran?
47:45I said, well, we've got them as weak as they've ever been.
47:47They're killing their own people.
47:49They have a radical group of people running that government.
47:53If we're ever going to make sure that the Middle East is safe to take
47:58out all these terrorist groups all across the Middle East and in our country now,
48:04now's the time to do it.
48:05And thank goodness, I truly believe this was the right thing to do.
48:11We'll never have this opportunity again.
48:13Now, this doesn't need to be one of those forever wars, and it won't be.
48:18He's going to do what he needs to do, and it's going to be over
48:21with. And he said four weeks, five weeks, I don't want to put a time
48:25limit on it. Let's do the job right and then get out and turn it
48:29over to the people in the Middle East where they can, whether they've got Khomeini's
48:34son or whatever, they're going to be so weak that they'll get help from the
48:38outside and hopefully turn this thing around.
48:40But this is the only way we could do it, guys.
48:42We couldn't sit back and let them get a nuclear weapon in the future because
48:46it's not like some of these other countries that have nuclear weapons.
48:50They have a lot more sense than this.
48:51These people live off of death.
48:53They preach death. They preach death to America.
48:56And we were going to get lit up, Israel or somebody was going to get
49:00lit up with a nuke if we allowed them to get a nuclear weapon.
49:04Speaking of Senator Tuberville. Senator, so you have, I assume, full faith in President Trump,
49:12Secretary of War Hegseth, the immediate team in the White House, Secretary Rubio, to make
49:18sure that they know when it's time to bring our assets home from overseas, or
49:24at least to stop the bombing.
49:25That's something that you have a high level of confidence in, you'd say?
49:28100%. And I've been in classified hearings.
49:31I've been in non -classified.
49:33I talk to them individually quite often, even the President, and this is not one
49:40of those where we're going in to try to build back their country, that we
49:45might give them help in some ways to some point.
49:49But again, this is not a prolonged fight.
49:53We cannot afford to do it.
49:54I heard you talk earlier about gas prices.
49:57Folks, if we can't live a few weeks with higher gas prices, to be able
50:00to take out one of the the most dangerous groups in the world that want
50:04to destroy the United States of America, then something's wrong with us.
50:08We have to put up with some high gas prices.
50:11But let me tell you this.
50:12I was coaching at Texas Tech back in 2010, 11, 12, 13.
50:16Okay? Every year I coached there, I lived right in the middle of the heart
50:21of oil country in the United States of America, Lubbock, Texas.
50:25Oil under Barack Obama was over $110 a barrel the entire time we were there.
50:32Nobody complained about it. We're paying $3, $4 a gallon, but nobody really complains under
50:38Barack Obama. Now, a couple of weeks, we have a little bit of a high
50:41gas price, and everybody's panicking.
50:43It's not going to happen.
50:44This will help not just gas prices go down, but it'll also help us put
50:49Chinese to where they should be, and that is maybe a bigger problem than I
50:53ran. We're talking to Senator Tommy Tuberville, next governor of Alabama, but in the meantime,
51:00senator from Alabama. You had to feel like your worlds were colliding.
51:04You just mentioned when you were coaching at Texas Tech.
51:07I was up in the White House Friday.
51:09Urban Meyer's there. Nick Saban is there.
51:12You've got a lot of people talking about the future of college athletics.
51:16You know this better than anybody.
51:17I just saw Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut chirping at you on the internet, on
51:23social media. What should happen?
51:25What's going to happen when it comes to fixing college athletics?
51:30Well, Chris Murphy's for tearing down college athletics.
51:33He's trying to unionize. That's the worst thing we could do, but at the end
51:35of the day, he's not relevant in this talk.
51:40That was a good talk last Friday.
51:43I didn't go. I had other things I had to do, but I've had a
51:47bill. Y 'all know this.
51:48For three years, I've put together a bill, which was really good, but it's all
51:51about unionization with the Democrats.
51:53We can't get a bill passed.
51:54Okay? So we're basically talking into the wind when this happens.
51:59The only person that can do anything to this is Donald Trump.
52:02And I've talked to him about this.
52:05I'm not into all this antitrust stuff.
52:07You know, the commissioners were there.
52:09They need more money, this or that.
52:11And that's fine. But you can't get that passed.
52:14Let's talk about reality. Here's what President Trump can do.
52:18Do an executive order for the rest of his term.
52:21Okay, folks, when you start your clock in college sports, you got five to play
52:27five. That's it. Nobody goes over that.
52:30Second thing is you get one transfer, one free transfer without penalty.
52:35Now, you can transfer again, but you have to go back to the old rule.
52:38You transfer, you set a year.
52:40We've got to do something about the transfer portal.
52:42The money is out of the back.
52:44I don't care what kind of money they make, because eventually what's going to happen
52:47is there's going to be donor fatigue.
52:50They can't keep spending this kind of money.
52:51They can't do it. And so we've got to get the transfer portal back, put
52:55education back into it, get your butt back in class.
52:59You're going to make money.
52:59That's fine. But you're going to go to class.
53:01You're going to keep your grade point up like you used to have to, and
53:04if you don't fulfill that requirement of going towards a degree every year in school,
53:08then you're going to end up losing your scholarship, and you're going to end up
53:12losing eligibility. Right now, there is no penalty for doing anything other than just going
53:18making money and playing. And what's happening is we're losing fans, and fans are the
53:23reason college sports are important, because they pay money to go watch these.
53:28And I'm telling you, they're getting fatigued from all this because of the non -loyalty
53:35of the athletes. Last question for you, and this just came down.
53:39You probably knew it was coming.
53:41Mark Wayne Mullen, one of your Senate colleagues, is going to have his confirmation hearings
53:46to be elevated to run the DHS.
53:48What can you tell us about Mark Wayne, and do you presume that those will
53:53go fairly smoothly? And not only will he get Republican support, but he'll even get
53:58– I know Fetterman has already said, hey, I'll be supporting this.
54:01He'll even be getting some, I would imagine, Democrat support.
54:05Yeah, perfect choice. He'd make a great head football coach back in the 70s and
54:1080s, walking in the room, demand respect, motivate people to do their job.
54:17Work ethic is unbelievable, understands this country, loves this country, and he is for America
54:24first, not illegal immigration. And so he's going to be perfect, and he's going to
54:28get quite a few Democrat votes.
54:30So he will get – he will get pushed through nomination next week.
54:33He's going to be perfect.
54:34Probably might be his toughest is getting out of committee.
54:37Once he gets out of committee, he'll have plenty of votes to get in.
54:40We need somebody hard -nosed, an offensive line coach basically, to go in and say,
54:44okay, we're going to put our nose to the grindstone here, and we're going to
54:47grind, and we're going to get this job done.
54:49I don't care about being on TV or doing any of that fancy stuff.
54:53We're going to be successful in immigration.
54:57Awesome. Good luck, Senator. We appreciate the time.
55:00Good luck in that governor's campaign.
55:01I'm sure we'll talk to you again soon.
55:03All right, guys. Thanks. If you walk around the Sexton household these days, you'll see
55:09a lot of toys on the ground for Ginger and Speed, and they're always fighting
55:12over whose toys they are, which is fun.
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