had already voted. if you compare that to 2014, that is a 62% increase. now, when you break that down by party, this is where you get these nail biting, razor thin elections here in florida because that s the setup that we re starting to see here. take a look at these numbers. if you break down the early voting numbers, brooke, 40.1% are registered republicans. 40.5% are registered democrats. and then the rest, the 19.4% that are left are no party affiliation or other. now, since president trump took office, about 1 million voters have registered. now, there is this sense across the nation that most of florida voters are seniors. that is not the case. 52% are millennials, gen-zers
they have come to an end. at least in this election that s what we re going to show. people are going out and voting for something and not against. and by voting for something, we re returning the politics of decency and what s right and what s common between all of us. we ll worry about history later, but today, we re working to win. now, the governors race is locked in a dead heat. and if early voting numbers are any indication of what this race is going to be like, it will be nail biting. take a look at these updated numbers from the florida secretary of state. more than 5 million people have already voted, and if you break down those numbers from party, here s the breakdown. the republicans that are registered that have already voted, 40.1%. democrats, 40.5%. the rest, 19.4%, are no party
bombastic call? to say that the market will crash if i m impeached, i would call it fairly bombastic. no one knows what the market is going to do. neil: you did, because that is why i m happy. i absolutely do not. my crystal ball is not clear than anyone else. neil: the longest bull market because the last one technically started a few years earlier than we give it credit. can you explain that? sure, again, people will say that this is an argument around semantics. regardless of how long the correct phases have lasted, the 1990 pullback was 19.9%. people will say come around to 20. there was a correction then in 1998 there was 19.4%. does that qualify? no, that does not qualify because it does not perfectly round. in 2011, you had a decline in the market of 19.4%. by the way, that lasted almost twice as long as the one in
would grow and swamp us eventually. but that s not what they re doing. mark: they do look longball, and we don t. and we don t look as long as we need to. what we re focused in on russia, of course, and that s i think a perception that we have holdover from the cold war. russia is minuscule. economy that is less than $2 trillion. mark: what s the chinese economy? the chinese economy, they claim in 2017 was $12.8 trillion. mark: what s america s? 19.4. mark: so economy is much larger, but china s moved very fast on their economy. their economy is not quite as big as they say it is, but it s growing. the problem china has right now and we re seeing it the last few months is that it s reached the limit of what it can do within the current political system and with the current notions of state dominance. state dominated markets, state
would grow and swamp us eventually. but that s not what they re doing. mark: they do look longball, and we don t. and we don t look as long as we need to. what we re focused in on russia, of course, and that s i think a perception that we have holdover from the cold war. russia is minuscule. economy that is less than $2 trillion. mark: what s the chinese economy? the chinese economy, they claim in 2017 was $12.8 trillion. mark: what s america s? 19.4. mark: so economy is much larger, but china s moved very fast on their economy. their economy is not quite as big as they say it is, but it s growing. the problem china has right now and we re seeing it the last few months is that it s reached the limit of what it can do within the current political system and with the current notions of state dominance. state dominated markets, state