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Why Do People Keep Insisting That California Republicans Should Move?

We all kind of knew in the back of our minds that George Soros and Co. would start riot season in America again. It just took the Democrat Party longer to get started during President Trump’s second term after the administration cut off all the corrupt funding to NGOs. So, here we are!

If you live in western Arizona, you might even be able to smell the mostly peaceful riots in Los Angeles right now. Mainly from the clouds of impossible-to-extinguish electric car fires. Once again, prominent conservative influencers are insisting that Republican Trump supporters should abandon California once and for all.

I don’t understand where this sentiment comes from.

“Run away!” they bravely shouted.

That’s not an American sentiment. If there’s anything we’ve learned in the Trump era, it’s that we shouldn’t back down and surrender to the Democrats. No matter how big their fire-starting temper tantrums are.

Even after the exodus that Governor Gavin Newsom (D-obviously) has caused, California still has more Republicans than any other state. We have more Republican voters than Texas or Florida. And as Kurt Schlichter of Town Hall has pointed out, California Republicans tend to be more based than GOP voters in reliably red states. We live behind enemy lines, after all.

Consider the fact that as recently as 1988, California and Connecticut were red states, and West Virginia was a blue state. Things gradually change within the electorate. Lee Zeldin almost got elected Governor of New York in 2022. He came within 250,000 votes. Nobody saw that coming. But it happened there, and it will eventually happen again in California—so long as we don’t give up on the state.

If just 10% of Trump voters in California were to follow the advice of the “Run Away” crowd, we might lose control of the House of Representatives for the next few decades. I don’t know about you, but the idea of House Speaker Hakeem Jeffries doesn’t thrill me. We all have our doubts about Mike Johnson, but at least he’s not calling for the doxxing of ICE officers so the drug cartels can murder their families.

Do you know someone who hasn’t given up on California yet, even though he doesn’t live in the state? Scott Presler.

Presler did more singlehandedly to deliver Pennsylvania’s electoral votes to President Trump last year than any other individual. He certainly did more to carry Trump to victory than the endorsement of that Tesla guy. (What was his name again?)

Presler has made multiple trips to California this year, mobilizing Republicans to pass a Voter ID law and retake our state. He understands the problems with the elections here in California.

Arnold Schwarzenegger was the Republican governor of California as recently as 2011. This was back before he turned into a global warming kook and a COVID vaccine worshiper. GOP voters across the country liked him so much back then that they were pushing a constitutional amendment so he could run for president.

After Schwarzenegger left office, Governor Moonbeam (Jerry Brown) and the Democrats in the state Assembly passed a motor voter law. Everyone could automatically register to vote when they get their driver’s license. Then they passed another law allowing illegal aliens to get driver’s licenses. Everything went to hell in a handbasket after that.

Illegal immigration is the problem. In fact, illegal immigration is upstream from every major problem we have in this country, from overcrowded schools to skyrocketing housing costs to hospitals going bankrupt.

It’s annoying to see so many conservative social media “influencers” claiming that it’s a good thing that Los Angeles is burning.

“You guys voted for that so you deserve it!”

No, we didn’t, dummies! Instead of suggesting that we courageously run away, why don’t you guys pick up the phone and call your Member of Congress? When was the last time you called them to voice support for Voter ID, or a congressional ban on mail-in ballots and state motor-voter laws? Have you even called your US Senators this month to tell them to vote for the Big, Beautiful Bill—which would provide the necessary funding to ramp up deportations?

Or are you sitting around admiring Rand Paul and Thomas Massie for their bold and principled support for open borders and unlimited mass illegal immigration?

If you don’t want to help, then stay out of our way. We’ve got a state and a country to save here.

I don’t know about you, but I’d take the average California Trump voter like the lady below over Lindsay Graham any day.

Extreme language warning:


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