RUSH: I’m seeing and I’m hearing… Have you noticed, Mr. Snerdley? Have you noticed the growing — and maybe I’m seeing it where it doesn’t exist. Are you noticing the growing assumption that the Democrats are gonna win the House in 2018? You’re seeing it? But it’s growing. It’s growing. It’s almost in certain sectors of the media, it’s becoming a fait accompli.
And the reasons for it are people are wising up and they hate Trump, and they see Trump’s approval numbers as not very good, and the anger at the Republicans and so forth. And they are interpreting all this as Democrats winning the House back. What are they missing in all of this? There isn’t any affection for the Democrats. There is no clamor for Democrats to return to power. But the media thinks there is, or will be. And the Democrat Party — in its arrogance and in its condescending way — is beginning to believe that the country wants it back, because they’ve got themselves convinced that everybody else thinks of Trump and the Republicans the way they do.
GRAHAM: Well, he won; I lost. President Bush is still popular in the Republican Party. But Donald Trump couldn’t have won without rejecting the last 16 years, really, when you think about it. There were a lot of people like Bush running in our primary, and all of them got creamed. And Clinton was not the greatest candidate, but if President Obama was what the American would want — wanted — to continue, then Trump wouldn’t have won. So I’d say to both former presidents… I admire President Bush a lot. President Obama. I don’t think any of us get why Trump won.
RUSH: Well, now, he’s on to something. He may be further fellow ahead of the game than… Hey, James, do me a favor. Would you look up the title of Laura Ingraham’s book that just came out? Because she has… I’ll get this title to you. She has a new book that is excellent. What it does is provide a very comprehensive history of conservatism in our lifetime. It goes back to the Goldwater era — and, folks, I’m gonna tell you: Even though you have lived through it all… Well, some of you have.
Billionaire at the Barricades.
Laura Ingraham: Billionaire at the Barricades.
Even though you have lived through a lot of or some of this, reading this book will remind you how much of it you have forgotten. She starts with the history of conservatism starting with Goldwater, and what she does among other things is she lays all the steps out chronologically that led to Donald Trump, that we didn’t elect Donald Trump last year, that Donald Trump’s not the product of just the Obama years.
In fact, that Donald Trump is the product of the Republican Party trying to force establishment candidates down everybody’s throat, like McCain and like Romney, and she zeros in on the eight years of George W. Bush as having been devastating to the conservative movement. It forced conservatives into a necessary position of defending because Bush was under constant assault but that Bush and his administration really didn’t have a whole lot in common with conservatism.
It was more establishment Republican Partyism. To a certain extent, she’s right about this. There has been a — and I tell you, Bush’s focus on immigration and his unrelenting desire to get it done. I mean, there’s a great passage in the book where she makes the point that Bush would go anywhere in the world to defend the borders of a foreign country — such as Iraq or Kuwait or you name it — but he wouldn’t defend the borders of the United States.
Her book is Billionaire at the Barricades. It’s Laura Ingraham.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: You know, let me sum up the book by Laura Ingraham in one sentence. You really had to boil this thing down. Billionaire at the Barricades. It is summary and analysis of how, in Laura’s opinion, the Republican Party has shafted its voters for decades. That’s really because the voters are conservative. “Shafted” may be a strong word, but you get the drift.
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