a revolution against trump. what do you think? those are two different questions. the first one has a more obvious answer. the fever is not gonna break. i wasn t arizona leading up to the midterms, went to a lot of kari lake events, let me tell, you this is a bottom up problem. it s always been a bottom-up problem. it s a republican base fighter that is demanding the denialism that is leading the republican party down the road to hell, so to speak. so the question is, now, they look at trump and say, okay, we ve gotten all we wanted to get out of him, and we can get all this, you, know and elite, and he extremism that we got from trump, but from someone who s a little more normal like desantis? that might happen. i m skeptical of might happen, but it might. but this underlying problem, the thing that led to the extremism, that led to democratic victories, that s not going anywhere. whoever replaces trump is not pivoting back to george h. w. bush land. it s still gonna be maga, just
the that was democratic, was redrawn by the republicans and the texas state house, and named republican. they were designed to win. that, in a nutshell, says it all. latinos came out, we were gonna see when the dust settles, and i m waiting for these headlines in the new york times that say the latino vote is the one that won nevada, arizona, pennsylvania, it s gonna help georgia pick at this, and even helps districts and southern texas and in north carolina. and we can have a different conversation on that, but it s not a surprise. as you say, it was a bit of a flop in places like texas. the republican who was supposed to be the gop s answer to aoc lost. she barely lasted a few months in congress, while aoc has been reelected twice now, i think? tim, as this one the gop favorite breaks? that s a question everyone wants to know the answer to. this is that when the republican party turns on trump? i don t buy. i don t think there s gonna be a revolution against trump. what do you