
America Civic Renewal is the deeper story behind this conversation. Peter Vazquez welcomes Project 21 Ambassador Jacqueline “Jackee” Andrews to discuss America 250, patriotism, lawful immigration, faith, self-government, and the Great Local Reset.
What begins as a reflection on America’s 250th birthday becomes a challenge to citizens who have forgotten the power of local responsibility.
The discussion moves from gratitude and national identity to voter rolls, election trust, media narratives, and the Vanbōōlzalness Crisis. At its heart, this episode asks whether America can still be stewarded by citizens willing to lead from the ground up.
America Civic Renewal. There are moments when a country does not simply celebrate a birthday. It stands in front of the mirror and tries to recognize itself.
America is nearing 250 years since the Declaration of Independence, and the question beneath the flags, fireworks, ballots, voter rolls, and political noise is painfully simple: do we still know what we inherited?
Peter Vazquez opens the hour with that burden on his shoulders. Not as a man giving a civics lecture from a distance, but as a son of Rochester, a veteran, a host, and a citizen who remembers when the Bicentennial felt like a shared inheritance.
A moment when children in city schools, families in neighborhoods, and people from different backgrounds could still understand that America belonged to all of them. Not because she was perfect, but because she was worth preserving.
Into that conversation comes Project 21 Ambassador Jacqueline “Jackee” Andrews, a woman born and raised in Kenya who speaks of America with the clarity of someone who did not receive it casually.
She chose it. She studied it. She entered it legally. She served it through public policy, grassroots work, faith, and civic engagement. Her phrase, “You seek the welfare of this nation,” becomes more than a quote. It becomes the spine of the hour.
That is where the conversation begins: with gratitude that does not deny history, and reform that does not despise the country it claims to improve.
Jackee challenges the sickness of national obsession and local neglect. Americans know the names of presidents, senators, cable-news figures, and national villains, yet many do not know who sits on their school board, county board, election board, or town council. We rage upward while abandoning the ground beneath our own feet.
That is the wound she calls the Great Local Reset: the return to informed citizenship, local responsibility, neighbor-to-neighbor persuasion, and the hard work of self-government.
Then the discussion turns toward election integrity, not as a slogan, but as a civic pressure point. Gary Stout and Bob Savage join Peter in pressing the question of voter rolls, machines, audits, local election boards, media trust, and whether citizens still have confidence that the system is accountable to them. The tension is real. One side fears fraud, hidden systems, dirty rolls, and unaccountable counting rooms. Another fears false claims, threats to election workers, and the erosion of public trust. Both fears carry consequences.
The republic suffers when lawful voters are blocked. It also suffers when citizens believe the count is beyond scrutiny.
That is the Vanbōōlzalness Crisis in its rawest form: truth distorted until every institution is either worshiped or despised, every concern is either dismissed or weaponized, and every citizen is forced to choose between silence and suspicion.
The hour becomes a collision between the local and the national. Rochester’s own civic life becomes the stage. The conversation moves from patriotism to election reform, from flag displays to voter rolls, from America’s 250th anniversary to the machinery of modern democracy.
A caller named Lorraine breaks through with frustration that too many valid concerns are mentioned once, buried quickly, and never heard by enough people to spark action. John the Optimist calls in with the same ache: why do officials not listen when citizens raise concerns?
That is the human center of the episode. Not data alone. Not party alone. Not theory alone. It is the ordinary citizen asking whether anyone in power is still willing to hear the people who pay the bills, raise the children, serve the communities, and live under the consequences.
A nation cannot survive on ceremonies while its people distrust the count. It cannot survive on flags if the flag becomes partisan property. It cannot survive on voting rights if voters believe election systems are hidden from them. It cannot survive on outrage if outrage never becomes local action.
America’s next 250 years will not be saved by slogans from Washington. They will be shaped by citizens who know their district, know their officials, know their neighbors, know their rights, and know the difference between noise and duty.
The hour closes not with comfort, but with a charge: be a leader. Not someday. Not somewhere. Here. Locally. In the place where votes are cast, counted, challenged, certified, and trusted. In the place where families live, where flags fly, where churches gather, where policy becomes life.
Because America does not merely need defenders of the past. She needs stewards of the inheritance. And stewardship begins when citizens stop waiting for permission to care.
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Peter Vazquez: Welcome to The Next Steps Show with Peter Vazquez on the Voice of Liberty.
Bob Savage: So, a motel story. I must have missed it.
Gary Stout: Yes, the Town of Greece just shut down the Studio 6 Motel because of assorted naughtiness going on there.
Bob Savage: A few code violations?
Gary Stout: A dozen or two. Code violations at Studio 6.
Peter Vazquez: You know what those places are good for? Homelessness and drug use.
Bob Savage: Careful.
Peter Vazquez: I am just saying. DSS sends people who are homeless to those places all the time. Sometimes $500 a night.
Let me change subjects before we all get in trouble.
Elections matter, guys.
Reuters/Ipsos polling conducted June 12 through June 15 found that 64% of Republicans plan to display the American flag or patriotic bunting for July 4. Twenty-seven percent of Democrats said no.
Bob Savage: Of course flying the flag is going to be controversial to leftists.
Peter Vazquez: We have a guest for this next half hour, and she is phenomenal.
America’s great tragedy is not that strangers fail to understand her. It is that too many of her own children have forgotten what they inherited from our fathers and mothers.
We are approaching July 4 very quickly, celebrating 250 years since the Declaration of Independence that made us free. God, country, and regardless of skin color, regardless of where you came from, we are going to have a discussion today with a guest who brings that kind of clarity.
Born and raised in Kenya, educated at Kenyatta University, formed by faith, public policy, grassroots work, and constitutional liberty. Can you say God, country, and family?
She did not inherit America casually. She chose it. She studied it. She worked it. And today she serves it.
In her own words, she said, “That was God’s challenge to me when I came to America. You seek the welfare of this nation.”
Let those words sink in for a minute while I introduce Project 21 Ambassador Jacqueline “Jackee” Andrews.
Miss Andrews, bienvenida to The Next Steps Show.
We also have the Voice of Liberty himself, Robert Savage, and Señor Gary Stout, host and producer of The Second Amendment Show right here on the Voice of Liberty.
Jackee Andrews: Thank you. How are you?
Peter Vazquez: I am doing great. How are you?
Jackee Andrews: I am doing very well. Thank you for that introduction. I feel small.
Peter Vazquez: Do not feel small. We are all giants in our own minds around here.
Jackee Andrews: Compared to that introduction, I was wondering who they were talking about. But here I am, and it is such a privilege to join you and your listeners today.
Peter Vazquez: Absolutely. Thanks for joining us in America. God bless you.
Jackee Andrews: I love this nation. Can you tell?
Peter Vazquez: I am picking up on it. In everything I read in preparation for today, you definitely love this nation.
Let me quote you one more time, if I may. You said, “I am super engaged and passionate about the issues that affect us because they also affect the rest of the world.”
You are speaking like somebody born and raised in America, because if we listen to people on the left, Democrats almost, they would have us convinced, especially as Blacks and Hispanics, that this nation does not like us.
Jackee Andrews: Far from it. Far from it, Peter.
If the past few weeks are any indication, you have seen on social media how all these foreigners, all these visitors from all nations, are having an awakening about America because our media have sold a lie. Our media has undersold America.
And not just who America is, but what America is.
America is not like a lot of other nations. We are not just a geographical place and then the people found in that geographical place. America is actually a cultural system. It is a system. It is a mindset.
America is very unique because it is a set of ideals carried out as a culture of self-governance.
So when people come here and see what those ideals have produced, the vast amount of resources, and they look at Walmart and see people from the United Kingdom getting enthused and saying, “This is so huge. Look at this grocery store,” what is that abundance?
There is something to be said about that. But I am more interested in figuring out what the root is so that I can know how to preserve that for the next generation of Americans, those born here and those who immigrate here legally.
Peter Vazquez: That is Project 21 Ambassador Jackee Andrews.
You are from Kenya, and I am going to ask what may be a weird question. There is another individual from Kenya who has impacted this nation, unfortunately not in the same way you are speaking. Many people may think that if someone comes from Kenya or Africa, then there is no way they can be pro-American, because the example they have is a former president who was very anti-American and anti-Christian.
Are you from the same village or area?
Jackee Andrews: From what I can tell, if all of the stories are true, no.
But that is not the issue. The issue is that our values are diametrically opposed, because I recognize God as the author of life and the One from whom all our rights come.
God is the author of liberty. I do not have the right to impose my idea or what I want on other people.
Case in point: the Affordable Care Act. That is just one example that everyone has had a chance to talk about and experience.
The idea that I can impose what I want upon people who were created by God in His own image is completely opposite of what the Founders saw and wanted to create.
They wanted to create a nation where people can freely worship God as He has prescribed in the Scriptures without any hindrance, without anybody stepping into a role of government where they tell you what you can and cannot do.
From that foundation, everything else flows. We see the fruit of the opposite beliefs.
If someone does not acknowledge God, he can evolve on what God actually said is the fundamental core of society, which is the family: a father, a mother, and children.
He evolved on it, and now we are a nation celebrating the idea of intentionally bringing children into the world and intentionally denying them a mother or a father, or even the concept of what is a woman and what is a man that defines a mom and a dad.
That is the great story arc. That is the book of Romans that Paul talked about in Romans chapter one.
Because you do not acknowledge God or give thanks to Him, that is what you create. And when somebody has so much power, and you put them in a place of authority where that flows into policy, then what can the nation do?
What I would love to get more into is what I want people to take away from our conversation today: we have a way out, because that was already stamped out in our core DNA as a nation.
It is what I like to call the Great Local Reset.
People are looking around at our nation, hearing the news, the fake news, the narratives, everything, and they get overwhelmed. Then they feel like, “What does it matter? I am just not going to get involved. I am going to focus on my job and trying to survive.”
I want to say that as we approach America’s 250th birthday, we have an opportunity to change that narrative and become locally involved.
Think about local involvement, because our nation was formed from the ground up. It was small localities. It was thirteen colonies that came together and formed a nation.
Peter Vazquez: Jackee, I have to grab a quick break.
Ladies and gentlemen, Project 21 Ambassador Jacqueline “Jackee” Andrews will be right back here on the Voice of Liberty.
Commercial Break
Bob Savage: Peter Vazquez and The Next Steps Show on the Voice of Liberty. We are finding out about the Great Local Reset. Very intriguing concept.
Peter Vazquez: We have Jackee Andrews with us, along with Gary Stout and Bob Savage.
When we talk about local reset, all politics are local. And when we talk about election integrity, election reform, or the dignity of a lawful vote, things have become so partisan.
The pride flag in Webster, the pride flag in Henrietta. These things move right down party lines.
Ladies and gentlemen, Project 21 Ambassador Jackee Andrews, thank you for your time.
Let us talk about election integrity. Project 21 wrote a piece called “What Election Reform Means for Black America.” The gentlemen here with me today live and breathe election reform and election integrity because we know elections are not as honest as they were, and that impacts something Black America, women, and really almost everybody fought for in this nation.
The right to vote was central to the civil rights movement.
Jackee Andrews: Absolutely.
Here is the challenge. Most people are thinking, “How can we solve this problem from a national level?” We have become nationally obsessed, and that has made us locally disconnected.
Right now, we are having this conversation about the SAVE America Act. I one hundred percent support the SAVE America Act. It is great.
But we are so far gone as far as election integrity goes, and we have lost it in the localities.
Votes are always counted locally. A great philosopher said it is not so much who casts the votes, but who counts the votes. That is where our problems are when it comes to election integrity and transparency.
I am fully convinced. Not just Project 21, but the organization I work for, Citizens Defending Freedom, sees this as a core issue. It is one of the pillars we work on, and we have plenty of resources to help citizens locally impact elections.
At the end I will share the website so people can download those tools and educate themselves.
But here is the thing: if we are not engaged locally, it will not matter what is happening at the national level.
Everybody knows the name of the president. Most people know the name of their U.S. senator or people at the national level. People know the names of people on the news, the talking heads.
But a lot of people do not know the names of their local officials, their local board of supervisors, or their local school board members. They do not even know what district they live in. They do not even know there are districts in the local community.
They are voting down party line, and many people, especially in Black and Brown communities, are falling susceptible to that trend.
Peter Vazquez: Jackee, you said it is about policies. Before I get you to expound on that, I want to bring Gary into this because Gary has been fighting locally for this local reason, with things like verifying voter rolls.
Gary, she said it is about policies. You have been fighting these policies as long as I have known you.
Bob Savage: And I have been following in Gary’s footsteps on this because he is the lead.
Gary Stout: My involvement came when I met some people from New York Citizens Audit about five years ago at another event. We got talking. I looked into it, and then I interviewed Marly Hornik, their director, on the air here.
From there, it was a natural progression to keep looking further.
The first thing we found was the voter rolls. They downloaded them, FOILed them, got the voter rolls from as many counties as would give them and then from the state.
We started finding errors, anomalies, things that did not add up if it was a legitimate system to keep track of eligible voters and registered voters.
One thing led to another, and then they discovered algorithms that had bad numbers hidden. They were randomly distributed, but they were accessible through these algorithms.
From there it went across the country. We coordinated with other voter-integrity groups and found the same thing.
What is coincidental, I guess, is that the voter rolls and the Dominion machines or Smartmatic machines initially showed up from Venezuela around the same time period, 2007, 2008, and 2009, when the algorithms showed up.
Bob Savage: This dovetails with what Ms. Andrews is saying about being locally involved. The electronic voting machine issue is national, if not international, but the local impact is massive.
Gary Stout: We cannot go into all the details of what we found and how it works. Just know that it was a deliberately built system. The source code has been transferred to the different manufacturers now. There are multiple ways to affect the vote, and that is all being released very shortly.
Peter Vazquez: The impact to our guest is vital on the local level, which is what you are talking about: the Great Local Reset and your statement that it is about policy.
Jackee Andrews: Correct. And you are not alone in your community. That is across the country.
The problem with where we are today in America, and the reason I got to this idea of the Great Local Reset, is that we have to have informed citizens.
It was the Founders’ idea that citizens would exercise discernment, engage thoughtfully, and participate in civic life.
Here is where we are in America: we are not doing those things.
You may be as passionate as you are. I may be as passionate as I am. But our system demands that we talk to our neighbors, make them aware, and if they are discerning, they will turn their eyes toward what we are pointing at and begin to say, “Wait a minute, something is wrong,” because they know what it ought to look like.
Right now, our challenge is that many of our fellow citizens have been brainwashed. Some believe they cannot do anything about it. Some are overwhelmed. Some are distracted.
My call, and the work we are doing at Project 21 and Citizens Defending Freedom, is to bring information, tools, and resources to empower citizens. First, educate them, and then empower them to take action locally.
Can you imagine if you gather a group of citizens in your local community who understand what you understand about the machines? Then they begin to talk to each other, and then they talk to the elected officials currently serving at the local level.
Solutions can begin to spiral upward toward the state, because this is a state issue. Every state has a secretary of elections and an election system. Those decisions are made at the state level, whether to use those machines or not.
So when you start locally, you can effect change through your local representative at the state level to bring forward legislation to change things in your own state.
Peter Vazquez: Jackee, we are at the end of this interview, unfortunately. I just sent Wendy a text and said I want you back for the whole hour if I can.
How can someone learn more about you in the meantime?
Jackee Andrews: Absolutely. My name is Jackee Andrews. I am based in Virginia, and I work for Citizens Defending Freedom.
If you would like to review some of what I was saying, we have a great tool called Clean Up the Mess. It is all about elections.
If you go to citizensdefendingfreedom.com, you will find our resources there. You can find that election resource and what you can do at the local level.
My Citizens Defending Freedom email is jandrews@ccdfusa.com.
Peter Vazquez: Project 21 Ambassador Jacqueline “Jackee” Andrews. That is why I love that organization.
Jackee, may God bless you and the work that you continue to do.
Ladies and gentlemen, we will be right back here on The Next Steps Show on the Voice of Liberty with lines open.
Commercial Break / Station Update
Peter Vazquez: Peter Vazquez and The Next Steps Show on the Voice of Liberty. Thanks for joining us for lunch.
The number is 585-346-3000 or 866-552-1009.
We have Gary Stout here with us.
Ladies and gentlemen, pick up the phone and give us a call. Give us your opinion.
America’s 250th birthday is coming. I was around when we celebrated our 200th birthday, and that was exciting. It was a different feel.
Gary Stout: There has been a lot of propaganda in our public schools since then.
Peter Vazquez: I want to do something, especially when I look at these polls, where 64% of Republicans plan to display the flag but only 27% of Democrats are going to.
Then we have actors like Robert De Niro and Jane Fonda with First Amendment organization stuff.
Gary, this is why I dubbed this whole thing Vanbōōlzalness.
I have a challenge. How about we do this as leaders in our nation? That Great Local Reset. I think it is time to pull out all the stops and take this young lady’s concept and bring it to fruition.
The candidates running for Congress, Assembly, and local offices should become part of the solution.
The leader of the Republican Party in our county is also a leader in the Board of Elections. You would think he would want to be part of a local reset.
Gary Stout: You would think so.
What we found, not just locally here but across the country, is that when we exposed problems with voter rolls, automatic registrations, mail-in ballots, and other issues, instead of being concerned and curious about what we brought to the Board of Elections, they opened a criminal investigation against our organization and tried to shut us up.
You cannot write this stuff.
Everybody across the country, including Gary Berntsen and Martin Rodil, who did the investigation of voter manipulation in Venezuela, were threatened, ignored, or shut down one way or another.
Bob Savage: We will have to change a lot of these representatives in both parties. They have developed a system where they are loyal to the party, not the people they are supposed to be representing.
They have completely lost sight of the fact that they are our elected employees. They are there to represent the best wishes of the country.
When you have people being put in office who were not voted in by a majority vote, you get people who act like they cannot be replaced.
That is why they do not change things.
Gary Stout: Why does nothing ever change? Why is it always the same no matter who is in power?
Bob Savage: Four hundred years ago, the monarchs of Europe ruled through divine right. They believed they were anointed by God to lead the rest of humanity.
We have something similar now with people who are supposed to be elected to lead our society. The cards have been stacked in their favor over and over again. It is almost impossible for them to be removed from positions of power.
Peter Vazquez: The Brennan Center survey may counter that a bit and say that maybe we are the problem.
Let us go to Lorraine.
Lorraine: I want to say something that to me is of extreme importance. Bob, Peter, and your lovely lady guest all had significant points. They get lost when not enough people hear them in the first place.
Everybody in the United States needs to know what has gone on. The auditing is impossible with the Dominion system. The Venezuelans mentioned by Bob in one sentence will get lost.
There are too many good points that never get heard. If they had been heard months ago, maybe people would start to act.
What really has to happen is that people in the Board of Elections, the police, and especially Attorney General Letitia James should have done their jobs correctly. They are getting paid for it.
They are avoiding the truth that the machines are corrupt. The ones from Venezuela are still being bought and still being used. Who knows this?
Peter Vazquez: You have to start somewhere, Lorraine. That is what we are doing. Gary, respond to that.
Gary Stout: There has been a tremendous amount of work done, and there has been progress. There are lawsuits now. Marly Hornik filed a deprivation of civil rights lawsuit against Letitia James.
Tina Peters was released from prison in Colorado. She was key to unlocking the release of other information. As long as they had her in custody and were threatening her with additional years, they could not pull the trigger on releasing the rest of the information.
That will be coming out, I hope, before July 4.
Tulsi Gabbard, on her way out the door, is releasing all kinds of information, from election integrity to the funding of gain-of-function research with Anthony Fauci and hundreds of research facilities in totalitarian regimes, over which we have no control.
They lied about it all. They lied to our face. They lied to Congress. They lied to everybody.
That is one of the lies that the Mockingbird media has perpetrated upon all of us.
Peter Vazquez: Mockingbird media?
Gary Stout: They take what they are told and run with it, whether it is true or not.
I also want to point Lorraine to a resource from the past couple of days. There was a Fraud Fighters Summit. It is on YouTube. You can watch the whole thing or skip around through it. It includes many people in this truth movement who have been releasing information for years and have been ignored.
Peter Vazquez: Thank you for the call.
I do want to mention the Brennan Center. We will be right back here on The Next Steps Show. Pick up the phone and give us a call. 585-346-3000.
Commercial Break
Peter Vazquez: Peter Vazquez and The Next Steps Show on the Voice of Liberty. We are back.
If you are living somewhere outside these urban centers, I want to hear from you too. We are on social media. You can text me.
Gary and Bob, check this out. The Brennan Center’s core warning is not that America is too cautious, but that false claims of fraud have become a weapon against the independent, nonpartisan counting of votes and certification of results.
The thing that gets me is the response you have gotten from election officials: “We certified the results, everything was fine.”
Let me share some numbers.
In this 2026 Brennan survey, 75% say no added state or local resources have arrived to offset federal election security cuts. Eighty percent say their annual budget needs to grow over the next five years. Thirty-two percent of election officials say they have been threatened, harassed, or abused. One in four say they are concerned about being assaulted at home or at work. Fifty percent say they are worried about political interference in how they do their jobs. And 74% say false information online makes their work more difficult or dangerous.
According to this, you are the problem. I am the problem. Bob is the problem. Being the Voice of Liberty is the problem.
Gary Stout: Think about the things they have told you were not true over the last ten years.
They told you the Hunter Biden laptop was fake Russian information. They got 51 former intelligence officers to sign a letter saying that, while the FBI had it for a year and knew it was true.
They bring these people out, and whether they pay them or intimidate them, they lie to us.
When I mentioned the Mockingbird media before, that is their tool for propaganda. They say the same thing over and over on multiple channels. Then they wonder why you cannot convince people they have been fooled.
Bob Savage: Before we go to our caller, it is the William Brennan Center for Justice, not John Brennan.
Peter Vazquez: John the Optimist, thank you for coming to The Next Steps Show.
John: Great to hear from you. I listen to you a lot. My schedule has been screwed up, so I have not been able to call in as much.
Gary has done an unbelievable job trying to get the word out, but I am frustrated. Gary has to be frustrated when officials will not listen to what is going on with voter irregularities and election fraud.
Josh Jensen is my assemblyman. I am going to try to approach him and talk about this election fraud.
Gary, are you hitting walls with elected officials? What about Claudia Tenney and Nick Langworthy?
Gary Stout: I mentioned it to Claudia Tenney during an interview on The Second Amendment Show, and she got very defensive.
It does not matter which side of the aisle they are on. They all get paid the same. They get the same perks. They are happy with the status quo.
There was one congressman out of all the senators and House members who tried to help Gary Berntsen get his message about Smartmatic software and source code to the DOJ.
We had our information given to the FBI and CISA. Many of those people have been fired now because they were all in on it.
They have so much money through these cartels, which is actually who owns the source code. It is owned by the same people.
John: Was Maduro in Venezuela involved? Was that where one of the dry runs for election fraud was run?
Gary Stout: It was originally developed by Hugo Chavez with the help of Cuban engineers and Venezuelan engineers because Chavez was going to lose a recall election.
John: Did it come from Serbia originally?
Gary Stout: Serbia is where they moved one of the server farms. John Brennan, the former CIA director, owns half the building where they put the server farm. They use Huawei servers from China.
Our machines are made of components, many of which are made in China, shipped to Taiwan, and then given different labels.
John: So it is international.
Gary Stout: China has our voter rolls. That is how they came up with fake driver’s licenses shipped in from China, which were intercepted at customs.
People say, “It is not working.” No, it is working exactly the way it was designed.
John: In my opinion, the media has helped cover this up, starting locally with WXXI, Democrat and Chronicle, the Buffalo News, Associated Press, and others.
I know Gary has tried to make contact with media outlets and has been turned away.
What ticks me off is that in Georgia, the 2020 election had hundreds of thousands of ballots that were invalid, and I have not heard anything about it in the media.
Bob Savage: It is very deep and goes very far.
Back in the 1990s, WISL was an all-news radio station. We were affiliated with Associated Press All News Radio. They did a fantastic job on 9/11 with continuous coverage.
There was no commercial content on the network except for one recurring spot that would show up from time to time, and it was from the SPLC.
So stick that in your pipe.
John: Associated Press is very corrupt. I have had a lot of email communication with different reporters, and I can name them. They are corrupt and they lie, or they are uneducated.
I have noticed recently that the Buffalo News and even the Democrat and Chronicle are going away from the Associated Press and New York Times and going to Reuters. In my opinion, Reuters is just as bad. What are your thoughts?
Bob Savage: They are all very similar. Reuters, Associated Press, Al Jazeera. A lot of people turn to Al Jazeera these days.
Peter Vazquez: Al Jazeera shows up as a top news source in the United States when I do show prep.
Bob Savage: They have a lot of American correspondents and bureaus. They are a full-fledged news organization, but they have that same political bent.
John, we have a lot of work ahead of us. Pray that we have a good midterm because we have a lot of work to do in the final two years of Trump’s second term.
John: It is going to be tough, no doubt. But we have Donald J. Trump. I once called the Bob Lonsberry show and said Donald Trump is a cross between George Washington and Jesus Christ, and Bob had no response.
Bob Savage: Bob Lonsberry works for a big publicly traded company, and therein lies the problem.
I had friends from Ithaca College who worked at the Associated Press. One ran the Washington Bureau. I would have conversations with him, and he said, “It is all wrong, but I need the paycheck and the retirement.”
That is how they get away with it.
John: You were a roommate of Alan Colmes, were you not?
Bob Savage: I went to school with him. He was a couple years ahead of me. He did not graduate from Ithaca, but we stayed in touch over the years. Very funny guy, politically 180 degrees removed from me, but we respected each other and had a lot of fun over the years.
John: I got into a debate on national radio with Colmes when Obama had that huge rally in Denver, Colorado. He took my call, and we debated Obama. He was a great guy. It is too bad he is no longer with us.
Peter Vazquez: We have to go, John. God bless.
Gary, real quick, I got an email that said, “If you are willing to listen to us, we are willing to talk to you too.” Are you willing to listen?
Gary Stout: Absolutely.
Peter Vazquez: Ladies and gentlemen, be a leader. Be a leader. Be a leader.
God bless the United States of America, and do not let a second go by where you do not exalt the Voice of Liberty in your life.

Project 21 Ambassador, Political Strategist, and Grassroots Mobilizer
Jacqueline “Jackee” Andrews is a political strategist, grassroots mobilizer, communications expert, and Project 21 Ambassador with more than a decade of experience in nonprofit leadership, public relations, government affairs, and civic engagement.
Born and raised in Africa, Jackee brings a distinct intercontinental perspective to American public policy, shaped by firsthand experience with global governance and a deep appreciation for the freedoms protected by the U.S. Constitution.
She played a pivotal role in the first Trump administration at the U.S. Department of Education, where she helped launch the White House Hispanic Prosperity Initiative and the President’s Advisory 1776 Commission. Her work included recruiting high-level presidential appointments and advancing policies rooted in educational opportunity, civic responsibility, and American values.
Jackee also served as Deputy Campaign Manager for Winsome Sears’ successful campaign for Virginia Lieutenant Governor, leading statewide grassroots mobilization and strategic outreach that helped secure a historic victory. She currently serves as a regional manager for TPUSA Faith, equipping pastors and churches across five states to engage faithfully and effectively in the public square.
Jackee holds a bachelor’s degree from Kenyatta University and a master’s degree in Public Administration from Regent University. She lives with her family in Northern Virginia.


















