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Conservatives Must Broadcast Their Wins or Risk Losing the Narrative

Rob Finnerty nailed it on Monday’s Finnerty when he told hardworking Americans what they need to hear: the story the left refuses to tell about real results. Too many voters still get their news from the same coastal gatekeepers who bury accomplishments and hype chaos, and that’s exactly why shows like Finnerty are dangerous for the political establishment.

Start with the judiciary — one of the single biggest, most lasting wins conservatives have scored in decades. President Trump delivered three Supreme Court justices and remade the federal bench with hundreds of confirmations, restoring constitutionalist judges who respect the rule of law rather than judicial activism. That shift is not abstract legal theory; it’s the reason landmark decisions have been overturned and why parents, religious believers, and small businesses see hope for fairer treatment from the courts.

On the economy, the facts undercut the Biden media’s narrative: before the pandemic slammed the world, unemployment hit multi-decade lows and wages for many Americans rose as labor markets tightened. Conservatives ought to celebrate policies that helped unleash opportunity for millions of workers and point out that a flourishing private sector — not endless government spending — is the real path to prosperity. The numbers are what they are, and voters deserve to be reminded who delivered better jobs and stronger markets before the lockdown era.

Energy independence is not a talking point — it’s national security and lower prices at the pump for American families. Under policies that prioritized American production, the United States became a net energy exporter and sat in a much stronger position to withstand global shocks instead of bowing to foreign OPEC whims. That’s common-sense conservatism: unleash American producers, keep families whole, and resist elites who would punish our energy sector for ideological reasons.

Yes, tax reform and deregulation were controversial on cable news, but they put more money back in people’s pockets and cut red tape that stifles growth. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and regulatory rollbacks shifted incentives toward investment and jobs, even as opponents warned about deficits and bureaucratic doom; the debate over long-term effects is real, but the short-term gains for workers and businesses were tangible. Conservatives need to own the narrative that freeing enterprise creates prosperity — not apologize for it.

The real question is why millions of voters don’t know this. The answer is simple: the mainstream press treats conservative wins like embarrassing secrets and drowns out any explanation with a steady drip of outrage and scandal. That leaves a vacuum for outlets and hosts who will plainly state the facts and remind citizens which party stands for opportunity, security, and the Constitution. Newsmax and Finnerty are filling that gap, and patriots should be grateful someone is fighting back in prime time.

If Republicans can put this record in front of every kitchen table — not as smug boasting but as plain truth about who delivered for American families — they will be unbeatable in the midterms. It’s not magic, it’s messaging: show the results, name the policies, and contrast competence with the soft-on-crime, open-borders, high-tax instincts of the other side. The voters are not fools; when you give them the full picture, they vote for prosperity, law and order, and a country that puts its citizens first.

America is ready for leaders who fight for their children’s future rather than the perks of the political class. Rob Finnerty’s warning is a call to arms for every conservative journalist, activist, and candidate: stop whispering, start shouting the achievements, and give the American people the choice they deserve — a choice grounded in results and common-sense patriotism.

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