Donald Trump is collapsing in Pennsylvania, the wheels have fallen off, even ...
magas supporters in Pennsylvania have abandoned him according to the latest economist Paul
“Trump's approval is net negative 22 points according to the latest Franklin and Marshall College”
Paul. Donald Trump's overall approval in Pennsylvania right now is 29% a 10 point drop over more than three months. The Franklin and Marshall poll director notes it's a sizable decline since our March poll when his positive approval rating was 39%. Still low, by the way, the administration's positive rating for handling foreign policy matters according to the latest Franklin and Marshall College poll declined from 42% to 29% from March to now. Trump's largest decline comes in
his regime's handling of inflation, falling from 31% positive in October to 17% today. 35% of voters say the economy, including unemployment, housing, real estate costs and higher gas and utility
prices is the most important problem facing the state. The economy is the top concern of every
partisan group and they are lifted at the Trump regime. I also think it's notable in Pennsylvania that 7 in 10 or 72% of registered voters favor a state law that makes it illegal to discriminate in employment or housing based on a person's sexual orientation or gender identity. So despite the fact that the Trump regime continues to spew hate and divisiveness and discrimination against the
“LGBTQ community and continues to try to attack people on the basis of gender. I think that people”
overwhelmingly support strong laws that prevent that type of behavior when Donald Trump was recently in Pennsylvania gave that speech at a trucking factory. It was in front of a very small crowd
and someone in the crowd was basically calling him petto petto protector. You remember when
that went down, he or play this clip. And before Donald Trump spoke in Pennsylvania, he was asked by a report was, hey, you know, you're about to speak in front of truckers over there and truckers that are at a high risk of losing their jobs. What do you say to them because they're struggling right now. And Donald Trump, no, they're not. They're having the golden age.
“Truckers of Pennsylvania are living their best lives. No, they're not. I mean, you screwed them over.”
You screwed over manufacturing jobs. You screwed over people across this country and in Pennsylvania play this clip. And I'm just with a couple of the great senators and congressmen, we're talking, it's actually hard to build a, you know, nobody's ever seen a time like this. We have right now so many jobs that are going to be available. And the biggest problem we have is getting the people. And of course, we got the latest jobs numbers out yesterday. Trump,
on the added 57,000 jobs per the latest report, far below the 115,000 economists expected, while April and May totals were revised down. May job totals revised down by 43,000 jobs. April revised down by 31,000 jobs. And if you actually look at the jobs that have
been created and lost during Donald Trump taking office, he's basically lost way more jobs than
he's created except in the health care sector is the only area where jobs are being created. And that's a sector, of course, that Donald Trump is attacking. I want to bring in Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro to talk about Donald Trump's rapid collapse as we approach the July fourth holiday, which should be a celebration of our nation's 250th and 10th instead. Donald Trump has made it a very divisive day. He's turned it into like a grotesque and weird thing.
When we all just want to join and unify and not deal with this craziness. I'll give Governor Shapiro a lot of credit. You know, he's been a unifying voice in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Let's bring in Governor Josh Shapiro. Now I want to bring in Governor Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania. Governor Shapiro, great to have you back. I want to talk about America's
250 right now because this should really be a unifying day.
makes this country incredible. And I just think there are so many people sick and tired of the
divisiveness trying to use this for personal agrandizement to further divide us along partisan lines.
“And I think that's what's just made people kind of really upset. And, you know, I'm glad to see”
in the great Commonwealth of focus on kind of a unifying principles around America 250. You know, question, look, I don't think patriotism belongs to one person or one political party. I really think it is about we the people. And the work that was done just a few blocks from here, I'm in Philadelphia right now 250 years ago. And so I think anyone who tries to personalize it, politicize it, does a great disservice to this country. And I think, unfortunately,
that's what you're seeing from the president every day trying to make it about him attacking people who don't think like him or look like him or vote like him. And to me, that's just erodes people's faith in the promise of our nation. And it politicizes a moment that should be all about coming together. Americans with all different political beliefs, all different views. People from all different walks of life no matter what you look like or where you come from, who you love or who you
pray to. I want everyone here in Pennsylvania across the country to be arm and arm celebrating the privilege we have that live in the greatest country on the face of the earth.
You know, in that spirit, I was hoping in the lead up to America's 250, there was finally
going to be a bipartisan bill that was going to be passed in Congress, a housing affordability bill.
“You know, and I think we could all rally around opportunities to try to make housing more affordable.”
I know you take lots of efforts with the state to do that. You know, and then on the day that it was supposed to be signed. And this was something we could have all rallyed around. You know, Trump doesn't show up. And then later he says, "It's really just a big yon to me." And, you know, I don't really get it. I don't really care about it. You know, and I just think, you know, yet again, when you take any of kind of Trump's,
you know, fake promises from his campaign to their logical conclusion, I think sadly you realize on the issue of affordability, on the issue of the release of the Epstein vials on the issue of no endless wars, it's all abroad. Like it's all of Fugazia. Oh, yeah. That's disappointing. Now, I mean, look, you have Democrats and Republicans in Congress who actually put aside
their differences, found common ground, worked on an issue that's incredibly important to the people of Pennsylvania and that would argue all across this country to build more housing, to have more access to affordable housing, to have more people in America be able to afford to be able to put a roof over their head. And Donald Trump just decided to throw a temper tantrum at the last minute and instead focused on his conspiracy theories about the election,
trying to nationalize our elections and take away the control that states have and counties have over running elections. And instead, put himself in charge. We're certainly not going to back down to that Pennsylvania. Hopefully the president get over his latest his defeat. He'll sign
“that bipartisan bill into law. And I think the same sample of the Congress of the United States”
finally, finally, meeting their article one responsibilities to actually legislate and to be a separate branch of government, not just simply being extension of the president of the United States. I thought that housing bill was an important step in that process and hopefully Congress will do more of that. You talk about the tantrum that Donald Trump threw. We can get into specific policies. But for me, leadership kind of begins and ends with character, keeping your word,
you know, and thinking about general future generations, you know, who who look to the presidency,
some, you know, should be the most important position, someone should be careful and and yet again
at just every day, these temper tantrums and the posts and the behavior, you know, to me, there's that aspect of it, which is doing deep damage, you know, within the country, reputationally end abroad when they just see this behavior and go, oh, just like that, who behaves that way? Yeah, you know, I think about this issue a lot and unless it's a governor and more as a father, you know, I know we're both fathers, like my kids are a little older than yours,
but my kid's entire frame of reference about politics over the last decade has been Donald Trump has been cruelty, has been personal attacks, has been, you know, attacks on social media,
Attacks in speeches, attacks in person.
most powerful person in our country, and that's something as a dad that's hard to deal with,
that's something that's hard to be able to save your kids, that's not behavior will accept, making fun of people with disabilities, it's just one example, and for them to be able to sort of know that they grew up at a time where the present of the United States, that's all he does is put down people with disabilities, attack them. You know, my wife sets a different examples. She's one of the leaders in the country on the special Olympics. She shows our children
that we need to treat all people with all abilities, with dignity and with respect, sadly we have a president of the United States who does the opposite. It's going to take us some real time in this country to help the generation of my kids and those around that generation to overcome the negativity that they've really experienced for this last decade. And if Donald Trump has his way, this type of politics will continue with J.D. Vance or Marco Rubio, and so I don't think we're
“sort of out of the woods yet on this, and I think it is certainly had a negative impact on”
my kids' generation, your kids' generation and many others. As a former attorney general, you've seen all different types of financial schemes and artifices. And when I looked at this last financial report that Donald Trump released 900 plus pages over 80 stock trades a day and seemingly with companies that he interacts with on a almost regular basis, seeing these crypto
schemes where by the way, if you look at it, Trump makes $2 billion. The investors lose $2 billion,
and that seems to be a consistent theme that's almost zero some mean coin game when you actually look at the disclosures as well. I'm just curious, you know, as a law and order governor and as a former AG, you know, when you see something like that, you know, I was speaking to brothers about it. The sheer numbers are so big that maybe it's hard for some people to billions here, billions there, but that doesn't mean we should somehow ignore it because it's so overwhelming in scope.
“Yeah. Let me make two points here. First, I think the administration, the Trump administration,”
has been defined by chaos, by cruelty, and by corruption. The latest example that is the $2 billion that Donald Trump has made during his time as president, whether it's from his crypto scheme or from Marilago and other things in between. But I think we're missing the broader point here, if we're just focused on the dollars he's put in his pocket. When you have a president of the United States who is focused on making money for himself, that corruption leaves us all worse off,
because it means he's picking favorites, not based on what benefits the American people,
but what benefits him and his children. He's picking sides in battles that ultimately are
on American because he's putting his own profiteering ahead of the needs of the American people. That's point one that his corruption has a real cost to the American people. Point two, though, is what he's doing seemingly is totally protected because the Supreme Court of the United States made one of its worst decisions, really, over the last century, to give this president absolute and total immunity. And so he feels like he can do anything.
So while he sits in that gilded oval office, he's not focused on solving your problems, getting you health care, putting a roof over your head, driving down your costs. Instead, he's focused on trying to figure out how he can make a buck for him and his family. And that is at odds with meeting the needs of the American people. So the first thing is, his corruption has a cost to you. And the second thing is, his corruption has been enabled
“by this Supreme Court who's given him absolute and total immunity. That's why we need real reform.”
That's why we need anti-corruption laws at the federal level. I could make an argument that we need a 28th amendment to our constitution to bake in some stricter guardrails to protect the American people from a president-in-state that lacks integrity and ethics and honor the way this president does. I think everything needs to be on the table. We need real reform. You know, a cruel euphemism that describes this disastrous Trump economy
as economists say. It's K-shaped. Which really means that most Americans are below the horizontal line in suffering and Trump's rich friends are getting wealthy. That also is how
His meme coins and his various kind of schemes look as well.
he and the kind of people in his inner circle made all the money and everybody loses all the
“money. We've seen the latest job reports come out anemic would be an understatement.”
The only growth sector seems to be health care in area that Donald Trump is attacking hospitality, shedding jobs by the tens of thousands. Every month, man, you factoring, really getting hit hard. I know your fightin's hard as you can in this state, but it must be kind of going against really tough tides because it seems that this Trump regime keeps fighting against you and other states that are behind you bring business to their state.
Yeah, and I mean, let's focus on health care for a minute since you mentioned it. Donald Trump is part of his scheme to get rich. He promised his friends at the very top
that he would give them a huge tax cut. So what's the first thing he does? He passes that
big bill, whatever you call it, to give a tax cut to the people at the very top who didn't need it. And how did he pay for it? He paid for it on the backs of hard working Pennsylvania's and their health care or their food assistance. I mean, this is not theoretical anymore. We've had about 90,000 Pennsylvania's lose food assistance. We think when all the damages down about 140,000 of our neighbors will lose food assistance. That's snap. At the same time,
we're going to have over 510,000 Pennsylvania's lose health care. We've already had about 150,000 of them lose their health care. And again, this is all to pay for a tax cut for people at the very, very top. And so when you want to think about health care, I've got a press A9 states who is working against who is making it harder for me to help the people in my state, who believes that we should give a tax cut to the people at the very top and pay for it on the
backs of middle class folks who are working hard, who just need a little bit of extra help to provide health care for them and for their families. That is wrong. That is immoral. And yet,
“that is Donald Trump. And that is the policies of his administration. So I think we got to”
try and put it into this. We have to try and have a stop or a check on this. And that's where these midterms come in. I think we need a national referendum on Donald Trump's chaos and cruelty. And corruption. Capital scene cruelty is when you take food assistance or or healthcare away from people who are in need. If people show up in every state, in every district to cross America and vote as it seems like their employees to do, we will have a
Congress of the United States that actually meets its constitutional obligation to be a check on the executive branch. And hopefully we can reverse some of these cruel policies that Trump has put forward. Governor, before we head out, I want to share a sneak peek at a video that you will be releasing on July 4th, the unifying video about America's 250th birthday celebration. Let's play that clip. Sure. Today, we find ourselves at a moment in American history.
When the foundational ideals that this nation was founded on are under threat, the chaos, cruelty and corruption being injected into our democracy every day are testing the very guardrails established by our founders two and a half centuries ago. But just as it was in 1776, American freedom is not the product of a single document where the result of a single man's actions. It is the result of each of us doing our part, rising up, demanding more, working to perfect our union.
Today, on the 250th anniversary of our nation's independence, we can take lessons from those who came before us. Before we go, go of great video. Before we go anything you want to say to our
7 million subscribers heading into the fourth. You know, I had the honor of standing at
Independence Hall when I filmed that video. Independence Hall where our declaration of independence was drafted and signed. Our constitution was debated, deliberated over, written and signed.
“A lot of words on those pieces of parchment, but maybe the most important words uttered”
in that space was when Ben Franklin actually left Independence Hall. Anyone out onto the cobblestone streets of Philadelphia and a woman walked over to him. Think about this at the time. She didn't even have the right to vote at that moment, but she walked over to Franklin and said, "Dr. Franklin, what do we have here?" A monarchy or a republic. Franklin looked in the eye and said, "A republic, if you can keep it." I think those words, if you can keep it,
There are arguably the most important words in our republic's history and the...
of our democracy because what it means is that the citizens are empowered to keep it.
“The citizens are called upon to have a unique responsibility as Americans to do this work,”
to try and reign in excess and promote progress. That is now the challenge that we all must meet
and that challenge falls to all Americans. And so on this Independence Day, I hope everybody is
“reminded of that unique responsibility we have as Americans. I hope everybody considers that”
as we go forward and certainly keeps that in mind when they go vote this November.
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