The Rick Robinson Show

06-10-26 The Voters Are Starting to Notice

1 h 58 min · I går
episode 06-10-26 The Voters Are Starting to Notice cover

Description

On this episode of The Rick Robinson Show, Rick argues that voters are starting to notice the gap between political slogans and real-world consequences. The show opens with Trump’s newly signed border enforcement funding package, the Senate fight over FISA, and the tension between giving elected leaders the tools voters asked for while refusing to hand the surveillance state a blank check. Rick then connects the Middle East crisis to kitchen-table economics, breaking down the U.S. Apache incident near the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s pressure strategy, Israeli-Hezbollah tensions, and how energy instability drives inflation back home. The second half turns to California, where San Francisco voters rejected a costly business tax measure, and Los Angeles’ slow-count mayoral race raised new election-confidence concerns around mail ballots, Skid Row registration payments, service-address voting, and alleged paid-vote claims. Rick closes by tying it all back to Oklahoma’s upcoming primary, warning that voters deserve more than slogans on taxes, schools, energy, insurance, state power, and public safety.

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episode 06-10-26 The Voters Are Starting to Notice artwork

06-10-26 The Voters Are Starting to Notice

On this episode of The Rick Robinson Show, Rick argues that voters are starting to notice the gap between political slogans and real-world consequences. The show opens with Trump’s newly signed border enforcement funding package, the Senate fight over FISA, and the tension between giving elected leaders the tools voters asked for while refusing to hand the surveillance state a blank check. Rick then connects the Middle East crisis to kitchen-table economics, breaking down the U.S. Apache incident near the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s pressure strategy, Israeli-Hezbollah tensions, and how energy instability drives inflation back home. The second half turns to California, where San Francisco voters rejected a costly business tax measure, and Los Angeles’ slow-count mayoral race raised new election-confidence concerns around mail ballots, Skid Row registration payments, service-address voting, and alleged paid-vote claims. Rick closes by tying it all back to Oklahoma’s upcoming primary, warning that voters deserve more than slogans on taxes, schools, energy, insurance, state power, and public safety.

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