Chris and Sean discuss the presidential election, the impact of Cornell West, the Koch network’s endorsement Nikki Haley, and whether someone will actually hit Trump. Then they dive into a discussion of how to reform the U.S. House of Representatives to be more responsive to the American people – Sean proposes doubling the number of House members to 870 and paying them $1 million per year. Finally, a quick tribute to the great Henry Kissinger who passed away this week at 100 years old.
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Ep. 331 John Trobough on AI, Big Tech, and the Fight for Arizona’s 1st Congressional District
John Trobough, Republican candidate for Congress in Arizona’s 1st Congressional District, joins Chris and Sean for a wide-ranging conversation about one of the most competitive House seats in the country — and
Ep. 330 New Episode Alert: Camille Kayyem and the Faith Generation
What does it mean to be young, faithful, and unafraid to lead in today’s culture? New Notre Dame Prep graduate Camille Kayyem — daughter of frequent LBDM guest Luke Kayyem — joins
Ep. 329 Trump’s GOP Purge Rolls On as the DNC’s 2024 Autopsy Implodes
Trump’s grip on the Republican Party is no longer theoretical—it’s playing out in primaries across the country. Chris and Sean break down a wild week in 2026 politics, from Rep. Thomas Massie’s
Ep. 328 Marco Rubio’s America, Redistricting Chaos, and the End of Schweikert’s Governor Dream
Sean Noble and Chris Clements are back with a classic rant episode that jumps from Arizona governor polling to congressional staffing, redistricting warfare, Kamala Harris fantasy-land reforms, and a closing reflection on
Ep. 327 Trump’s Iran Gamble, Xi’s China Play, and the Midterm Fallout
President Trump just handed Democrats a made-for-TV attack line — but did he also show the kind of political courage presidents are supposed to have? Chris and Sean kick off this episode
Ep. 326 L.A. Collapse, Tucker’s Meltdown, AOC Economics, and Rubio 2028
Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down a packed rant episode that starts with a rough family road-trip disaster and quickly turns into a broader conversation about collapse, credibility, and the political






