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The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

Hour 3 - Spending Like Drunken Sailors

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

iHeartPodcasts

Politics, News, Society & Culture, News Commentary, Daily News

4.5 • 11.4K Ratings

🗓️ 3 April 2026

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hour 3 of The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show closes out the Good Friday broadcast with a wide‑ranging, high‑substance discussion centered on crime reduction, economic strength, national security, and Senate elections, while continuing to monitor the ongoing Iran conflict and the fate of a missing U.S. pilot. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton open the hour with confirmation that one American F‑15 pilot has been rescued after the jet was downed over Iran, while the search continues for the second pilot. The hosts underscore the seriousness of the moment heading into Easter weekend, stressing hope for a safe recovery while acknowledging that this conflict has entered a more dangerous operational phase.

The conversation quickly moves into strong economic and public‑safety data, with Clay and Buck revisiting the March jobs report showing 178,000 new jobs added, far exceeding forecasts. They argue that the Trump economy has become a victim of its own expectations—so consistently strong that even critics struggle to attack it. Alongside job growth, the hosts highlight one of the most striking statistics of the year: the lowest murder rate in the United States in roughly 120–125 years, including a reported 21% national decline year over year. They attribute this drop to targeted federal‑local law‑enforcement cooperation in cities like Memphis and Washington, D.C., tougher U.S. attorney enforcement, increased incarceration of violent criminals, and the Trump administration’s prioritization of serious crime over politically driven investigations.

Buck introduces additional contributing factors rarely discussed in mainstream media, including declining alcohol consumption among young men, reduced crowd density due to remote work, and fewer daily interactions in high‑crime urban environments—each plausibly lowering violence rates. Clay emphasizes that these declines translate into thousands of lives saved and entire families spared devastating loss, calling it one of the most meaningful and underreported achievements of Trump’s second term. The hosts sharply contrast this approach with what they describe as Biden‑era FBI mispriorities, arguing that redirecting resources toward violent crime rather than January 6-related cases has produced measurable results.

Hour 3 also highlights another major structural shift: the fewest federal employees since 1966, a result of aggressive workforce reductions and buyouts championed by the administration. Clay and Buck frame this as a quiet but transformative achievement—shrinking the federal bureaucracy while simultaneously expanding private‑sector employment. While acknowledging the continued risks posed by national debt and runaway spending, they argue these two trends together represent meaningful reform.

Midway through the hour, the show welcomes Mike Rogers, Republican Senate candidate in Michigan, which Clay and Buck describe as the single most important pickup opportunity nationwide for GOP Senate control. Rogers outlines why Michigan is primed for change after decades of Democratic dominance, citing lost manufacturing jobs, declining education rankings, and stagnant wages. He makes the case that rebuilding the defense industrial base, restoring middle‑class manufacturing employment, and improving affordability are central to winning over independents and working‑class voters.

Rogers also addresses growing concerns about radicalism within Michigan’s Democratic primary, criticizing his rival who, according to Rogers, refused to condemn the Iranian regime or terrorist activity tied to Hezbollah. The discussion includes voter dynamics among Jewish and Arab communities in Michigan, including Christian Arab populations and Muslim voters who oppose Iran’s role as the world’s leading state sponsor of terror. Rogers argues that these shifting alliances create an opening for Republicans in a state long considered blue.

On foreign policy, Rogers offers a clear assessment of the Iran conflict, explaining that the U.S. military has moved from stealth‑focused strikes into a more conventional phase requiring lower‑flying aircraft like the F‑15E. He characterizes the downing of the jet as a fortunate but expected risk in this phase and argues the broader mission—eliminating Iran’s nuclear, missile, drone, and proxy‑terror capabilities—is succeeding rapidly and will likely conclude sooner rather than later.

The hour also features a compelling call from a former U.S. Navy pilot recounting how, during the Falklands War, Argentine pilots only learned of successful strikes from BBC news reports—illustrating how far intelligence, surveillance, and battlefield awareness have advanced since the 1980s.  The program closes on a lighter personal note, with Clay and Buck discussing Easter plans, family life, and coaching youth sports, reinforcing the show’s trademark blend of serious policy analysis and relatable conversation.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.3

Guaranteed Human.

0:04.4

Welcome back in, everybody, to the third hour of the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton show.

0:09.9

Still looking very closely at any updates on the second pilot.

0:15.6

One pilot retrieved successfully after a apparent shootdown of an F-15 in Iran.

0:24.2

We will continue to monitor this and bring you any updates on it that we have.

0:30.8

Something that I think is going to, well, hopefully going into this Easter weekend,

0:37.1

we'll have both them back safe and sound and can at least move to the next thing we have to look at in this conflict, which continues on.

0:47.0

Clay, we have much in the economy, I think, to look at as very powerful very strong right now despite the fact that there

0:57.1

are some high gas prices we played this one before this is uh... from the

1:00.8

first hour but just hit it again u s economy adding a hundred and seventy

1:04.4

thousand jobs in marches has cut one

1:07.3

the expectation was what sixty thousand jobs and it's 178?

1:11.1

Wow.

1:11.7

Yeah, look, the job market bounced back in a big way in March, and that is good news, really blowing away expectations.

1:20.6

Clay, I think one challenge the Trump administration has had from the very beginning with all of this is they're really they're almost victims of

1:28.7

their own success. The expectation is that the Trump economy will be strong. There'll be job growth,

1:36.2

stock market boom, all kinds of productivity on the rise and the American people becoming

1:43.9

overall more prosperous in a lot of

1:47.2

ways that can be measured i know prices continue to be a major concern for people out there this is

1:52.9

the the challenge of spending trillions of dollars with the covid madness that we should not

1:59.8

have spent because we should not have shut down

...

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