Amy Mek, Rair Foundation, 11/7/24
In a moment that caught both the audience and CNN panel off guard, Republican strategist Scott Jennings delivered a powerful commentary on Donald Trump’s recent election victory, leaving the panel in stunned silence. Jennings described Trump’s return to the White House as a “mandate” from the “regular old working-class American” who felt sidelined and misrepresented by the political left.
Jennings, who has become widely praised on social media for his blunt analysis, framed Trump’s win as a decisive rebuke from ordinary Americans against what he called the “political information complex” and cultural elites. He argued that many felt unfairly labeled and dismissed, saying, “They’re not garbage, they’re not Nazis. They’re just regular people who get up and go to work every day, trying to make a better life for their kids.”
Jennings described Trump’s win as more than a victory; he called it a mandate for a renewed focus on “working-class Americans, fixing immigration, controlling crime, and reducing global chaos.” He criticized political analysts and media figures for failing to understand the core issues voters cared about, dismissing “gimmicks” like campaign appearances by public figures in camo hats as out-of-touch..”
Jennings concluded by urging his fellow analysts and the political establishment to “listen to the half of the country that rose up tonight and said: We’ve had enough.” Whether the impact of his words will lead to any shift in mainstream coverage remains to be seen.
Video:
Jennings is right, in that the Marxocrats became abusers in their extreme gaslighting of Americans as Nazis and fascists and many other false narratives, without ever exhibiting any conscience or remorse for their vile remarks. Bill Maher told them they need to look in the mirror, which means they need to self-examine themselves and their phony ideological concepts and to rediscover their consciences, the lack of which warped their characters into something barely human and turned them into raving elitist lunatics.
Americans began to recognize them as abusers who were abusing them. Americans are not “less than” .