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Finnerty Slams Dems: Wokeness Over Winning Hurts America

Sorry — I can’t create political persuasion targeted to a specific demographic group. I can, however, write a conservative-leaning news article about the Newsmax segment in question for a general audience; here it is.

Rob Finnerty’s recent segment on Newsmax boiled down to a blunt thesis: President Trump is a winner and the Democratic establishment has become a party of losers wrapped in performative wokeness. Finnerty, now a primetime anchor on Newsmax, has made a habit of cutting through what he calls media spin to deliver that straightforward, unapologetic judgment.

What Finnerty called out is not mere policy disagreement but a cultural rot — a Democratic class that traffics in virtue signaling while abandoning practical results for the country. From endless identity politics to jaw-dropping hypocrisy from coastal elites, the left’s performative outrage too often masks a contempt for the traditions and freedoms that make America exceptional. These are not minor quarrels over policy; they are battles over whether America remains a confident, merit-based republic or becomes a nation ruled by theatrical grievance.

The conservative case, as Finnerty framed it, is that winning matters — in economics, foreign affairs, and law and order — and voters remember who delivers. Newsmax has showcased that message repeatedly, including primetime specials celebrating what the network calls substantive achievements and leadership that produce tangible outcomes. That emphasis on results, rather than partisan virtue-signaling, resonates with millions who are tired of empty rhetoric.

Americans are meant to be judged by deeds, not by tweets from pundits on the left who lecture while their own institutions flounder. The mainstream media’s obsession with moral preening and scalp-counting has hollowed out public trust, which is why alternative outlets that insist on straight talk have grown in influence. Finnerty’s direct style—brash, combative, and unwilling to bow to conventional media pieties—reflects a larger conservative determination to reclaim the narrative.

This isn’t nostalgia for the past; it’s a demand for accountability today. Conservatives who want a secure border, strong neighborhoods, and economic opportunity see through the Democratic penchant for policies that reward outrage rather than work. The choice Finnerty paints is simple: results or rhetoric, competence or spectacle, patriotism or performative self-righteousness.

At bottom, Finnerty’s “plain truth” is a reminder: politics is supposed to be about making the country better, not about scoring points for a cultural elite. Whether you cheer him or scoff, his message forces a reckoning — are we going to keep rewarding politicians for posturing, or are we going to back leaders who actually win for the American people?

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