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The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

It's a Numbers Game Podcast: The Rise of Trump's Multiracial Coalition

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

iHeartPodcasts

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

4.511.4K Ratings

🗓️ 20 January 2025

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, Ryan and Patrick Ruffini discuss the evolving dynamics of American politics, particularly focusing on the rise of Donald Trump's multiracial coalition and the shifting voting patterns among minority groups.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to It's a Numbers game with Ryan Grudusky.

0:09.7

I want to thank you guys again for being here this week.

0:12.7

And once again, if you want to read along and see the data I'm going to provide you,

0:17.2

please subscribe to my National Poppest newsletter, natpopnewsletter.com.

0:22.3

Any of my listeners can get a 30-day free trial. So if you were to tell someone in November of

0:28.4

2016, right after Donald Trump won his first time winning the presidency, that he was going to

0:34.1

build a, the first time he won the presidency, by the way, on what the mainstream

0:39.2

media deemed as a grievance culture, a white grievance culture, that he was going to

0:43.6

assemble a multicultural, multiracial, working class coalition that would deliver the White

0:48.6

House, the Senate, the House of Representatives, and the popular vote.

0:52.0

They would not believe you.

0:53.8

Perhaps it's why the mainstream

0:55.2

media seems so defeated in the light of Trump's most recent victory. His coalition was

1:00.4

supposed to be Jim Bob's and Mary Bells, not Julio's and Tyrone's. But that's what it's become.

1:07.2

While the best exit polling information is not yet available, Pew Research Center tends to be considered like the gold standard for presidential exit polling, but they take like six to eight months to assemble all their research.

1:18.3

We have some information and we certainly have some precinct information for how certain groups voted.

1:23.7

According to the AP Votecast, which is the associated presses exit polling, and they're decent, they're pretty good.

1:30.1

Trump won 25% of black men and 48% of Latino men.

1:35.5

Those are the two numbers I want listeners to remember, especially when he was men, 25% of black men, 48% of Latino men.

1:42.6

Obviously, that's not enough to win a presidency, those two numbers.

1:46.2

I mean, Trump won because he received the overwhelming majority of white voters,

1:49.5

especially white voters without a college degree.

...

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