• Chuck And Julie Show, May 20, 2026
    2026/05/20
    Grasroot warrior and GOP gubernatorial candidate Scott Bottoms joins the show.
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    50 分
  • Chuck and Julie Show, May 18, 2026
    2026/05/19
    Chuck And Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Colorado GOP Turmoil, the Rivera Arrest, and Tina Peters’ Clemency Fight Guests, Cody LeBlanc and Ashe Epp from Ashe In America Free at last! Gov. Jared Polis announces he is granting clemency to persecuted former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters with a release dat of June 1st. Ashe Epp met with Tina over the weekend and joins the show. Plus Weld County GOP Chair… RINO Hunter Rivera busted and accused of soliciting a child prostitute in a police sting. Cody LebBlanc notes this did not come out of nowhere. Opening with Colorado Republican Controversy In this episode of The Chuck and Julie Show, Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden open on a rainy Monday in Colorado with a discussion of Republican Party turmoil, especially in Weld County. They focus on the arrest of Weld County Republican Party chairman Hunter Rivera, who is accused in connection with an alleged child predator sting involving the attempted solicitation of a child prostitute. Chuck and Julie frame the story as part of a larger conflict between grassroots conservatives and establishment “RINO” Republicans, arguing that Rivera had been promoted and protected by party insiders despite past warning signs. Cody LeBlanc on Weld County and Party Vetting Grassroots activist Cody LeBlanc joins the program to discuss his concerns about how Rivera rose within Weld County Republican politics. Cody says Rivera was pushed on local Republicans by establishment figures and notes that Rivera had been connected to several campaigns and political organizations, including work with Barb Kirkmeyer, Lori Garcia Sander, Yasmin Navarro, Gay Bevin, Lauren Boebert, and young Republican circles. He stresses that he is not arguing guilt by association, but says party leaders have a responsibility to vet people better, especially when they are placing them in leadership roles and asking grassroots members to trust them. Warning Signs, Grassroots Concerns, and RINO Power The discussion broadens into criticism of Weld County Republican leadership and Colorado GOP power structures. Cody, Chuck, and Julie argue that grassroots conservatives have repeatedly been dismissed, mocked, or accused of being divisive when they ask questions about candidates, leadership, or party processes. They connect the Rivera arrest to previous warnings from Scott Bottoms about child predator concerns, and they criticize Barb Kirkmeyer and others for mocking or minimizing those warnings before the arrest became public. The conversation also touches on broader frustrations over open primaries, jungle primaries, assembly problems, and what they describe as establishment efforts to control candidate selection. Party Culture, Accountability, and Bigger Questions Cody argues that the Rivera arrest should become a turning point for the Weld County GOP and the Colorado Republican Party more broadly. He says the issue is not merely one person’s alleged misconduct, but a political culture in which loyalty, money, and insider connections can override principle, accountability, and proper scrutiny. Chuck and Julie agree that establishment figures should be asking how the situation happened, whether anything was missed, and how to prevent similar problems in the future, rather than focusing mainly on defending themselves from grassroots criticism. Cody closes by asking listeners to keep his grandmother in prayer as she nears the end of her life. Ash Epp on Tina Peters’ Clemency The show then shifts to Ash Epp, who joins to discuss Governor Jared Polis granting clemency to Tina Peters. Ash explains that Polis cut Peters’ sentence in half, making her eligible for parole on June 1, though the parole board will still determine the conditions of her release. She emphasizes that Peters’ legal team is still appealing the underlying criminal conviction and the handling of the presidential pardon issue, so the clemency does not end the legal fight. Ash says Peters’ immediate priorities are seeing her 97-year-old mother, rebuilding her health after prison, eating real food, and eventually reuniting with her dog, Minka, once she knows she will not be taken away again. Polis, Democrats, Election Integrity, and Prison Reform The final segment looks at the political meaning of Polis’ clemency decision and the reaction from Democrats. Ash argues that Polis may be positioning himself for national office and using the clemency to present himself as more moderate or liberty-minded, even as some progressive Democrats and DSA-aligned voices react angrily. The discussion also covers Peters’ likely future advocacy on election integrity and prison reform, including concerns about prison conditions, elderly inmates, food quality, and health. Ash and the hosts also discuss how the phrase “election denier” has changed politically, with Ash saying she embraces the label as protected speech and continues to challenge the reliability of current election ...
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    49 分
  • Chuck And Julie Show, May 13, 2026
    2026/05/13
    VIDEOS: 1. CIA Whistleblower 2. Rand Paul 3. Sen. Ron Johnson 4. Spencer Pratt Ad PROMO: A CIA whistleblower reveals the COVID coverup and Fauci’s role in it. We were right all along.
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    43 分
  • Chuck and Julie Show, May 11, 2026
    2026/05/12
    Chuck And Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Ron Hanks's Lawsuit challenging the State’s semi open primary, proposal to suspend the federal gasoline tax CD3 candidate Ron Hanks files lawsuit challenging the State’s semi open primary with alarming data on unaffiliated voters. Plus Trump puts Dems in a bind with his proposal to suspend the federal gasoline tax. This episode of The Chuck and Julie Show features CD3 candidate Ron Hanks discussing his primary challenge against Jeff Hurd and a landmark lawsuit targeting Colorado's semi-open primary system. The hosts also examine allegations of campaign finance fraud ("smurfing") and the severe financial instability currently facing the Colorado Republican Party. The CD3 Primary and the Challenge to Incumbency Ron Hanks details his recent performance at the CD3 assembly, where he successfully campaigned despite what he described as rule-bending by the committee to favor incumbent Jeff Hurd. Hanks notes that while Hurd was allowed to speak for 11 minutes despite a 3-minute limit, he was ultimately booed by the assembly and left through a side door. Hanks characterizes Hurd as "timid" and alleges that Hurd and Speaker Johnson pressured the Trump administration to rescind endorsements of other conservative candidates by threatening to "scuttle the America First agenda." Hanks maintains that CD3 must not be a "sacrificial lamb" for establishment Republicans who vote against Trump’s tariffs or for protecting congressional misconduct. Legal Challenges to Colorado's Primary System A central theme of the discussion is the lawsuit filed by Hanks and other candidates to exclude unaffiliated voters from Republican primaries. Hanks argues that the current system violates the 14th Amendment and the right of private association by allowing non-members to decide party nominees. He presents data using "regressive methodology" showing that in Mesa County’s 2024 primary, 10,000 of the 27,000 votes cast were from unaffiliated voters, significantly diluting the Republican base. The hosts express concern that the system is being "weaponized" to ensure establishment candidates win over grassroots conservatives. Financial Crisis and "Smurfing" Allegations The Colorado Republican Party is reportedly in a state of financial collapse, with approximately 400,000 in debt and only 12.55 in cash on hand. The hosts blame former leadership for "failure by design," citing excessive travel reimbursements and a lack of organized opposition to "jungle primaries." Additionally, the program highlights "smurfing" allegations against candidate Victor Marks. These claims suggest that Marks' campaign reported thousands of small donations from individuals who, when contacted, denied ever contributing to his campaign. Infrastructure and National Policy The episode concludes with a critique of Denver’s Regional Transportation District (RTD). Chuck Boniwell notes that ridership has decreased by over 20%, yet the city continues to fund "bus rapid transit" projects that he argues are bankrupting the system. On a national level, the hosts praise Donald Trump’s proposal to suspend the federal gas tax, viewing it as a strategic move to force Democrats into a difficult political position regarding inflation and taxpayer relief. The discussion underscores a deep divide between the Colorado Republican grassroots and the party establishment. With a critical court date approaching and the state party facing near-total insolvency, the outcome of the CD3 primary and the pending election lawsuit will likely determine the future trajectory of conservative politics in the state.
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    48 分
  • Chuck And Julie Show, May 6, 2026
    2026/05/06
    Guests, Seth Barron and Mark Cook PROMO: NY Post write Seth Barron on his new book - Weaponization - The Left’s Capture and Destruction of America’s Sacred Institutions. And election integrity expert Mark Cook asks is CO GOP gubernatorial candidate Victor Marx “smurfing” donations?
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    48 分
  • Chuck and Julie Show, May 4, 2026
    2026/05/05
    Chuck And Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden Colorado GOP at a Crossroads, the Fight for Grassroots Control Guest, Jermey Goodall Former CO GOP Chair Horn’s personal attorney makes his move to plunder the Party bank accounts. Plus Chair candidate Jeremy Goodall joins the show. The Chair Race and the Fight Over Open Primaries In this episode of The Chuck & Julie Show, Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden focus on the Colorado Republican Party’s internal fight over leadership, money, and control of the primary process. Their main guest is Jeremy Goodall, a candidate for Colorado Republican Party chair, ahead of the May 30 election in Buena Vista. The discussion begins with the party’s push to opt out of Colorado’s open primary system, which the hosts and Goodall argue allows unaffiliated voters and Democrats to influence Republican candidate selection. Goodall says his position is that the chair must serve the will of the Republican Party’s rank-and-file members, and he states that if elected, he would continue pushing to remove the party from the open primary system. Jeremy Goodall’s Vision for Party Leadership Goodall presents himself as a grassroots-aligned candidate who believes the party needs to rebuild from the bottom up rather than through top-down control or donor-driven politics. He argues that the Colorado GOP’s financial problems are not the root problem but a symptom of dysfunction, mistrust, and internal antagonism. His proposed solution is to empower county chairs, encourage difficult but necessary conversations, and create enough trust that ordinary Republicans will be willing to contribute time, effort, and small donations. He points to the Protect Kids Colorado initiative as an example of what can happen when volunteers are given a clear goal and a strong vision, noting that thousands of volunteers helped gather more signatures than expected. Money, Trust, and Grassroots Fundraising The hosts press Goodall on the reality that the Colorado GOP is deeply broke and may need hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars. Goodall acknowledges that fundraising is difficult, especially under Colorado’s strict campaign finance limits, and says the party cannot rely only on a few wealthy donors. Instead, he argues that the party must restore confidence and build a broad base of smaller donors. The conversation frames money as tied directly to trust: if members believe the party has a purpose, direction, and integrity, they will be more likely to give. Goodall also stresses creativity, vision, and focusing on what the party can do rather than becoming paralyzed by what it cannot afford. Brita Horn, Steve Klenda, and the Legal Crisis A major portion of the episode centers on the hosts’ account of the legal and financial crisis involving former chair Brita Horne and attorney Steve Klenda. Julie explains that, according to their understanding, Klenda has a $231,000 judgment against the party plus 18% interest, and that this does not simply mean the party owes him money, but that he may be able to garnish Colorado Republican Party bank accounts. The hosts say party attorneys are working to stop or delay the process, but they describe the situation as dire because any stay appears to depend on a $289,000 bond that the party cannot realistically post. They argue that whoever becomes the next chair will immediately inherit this crisis and that the party must unite around survival before other disputes can matter. The Deeper Divide Inside the Republican Party The episode also explores the larger philosophical divide between grassroots Republicans and what the hosts describe as establishment or “RINO” Republicans. Chuck argues that the divide is not merely personal but rooted in real disagreements over how candidates should be selected and what kind of party Colorado Republicans should have. The hosts and Goodall criticize petitioning, open primaries, and donor influence, saying these systems produce candidates who are too liberal or insufficiently accountable to the Republican platform. Goodall says unity cannot mean forcing the overwhelming majority of grassroots members to submit to a small minority, arguing that true unity comes from standing with the majority rather than demanding capitulation. A Call to Make the Colorado GOP Republican Again Goodall closes by asking state central committee members to support him because he says he has been involved in the party’s battles since 2010 and understands the history firsthand. He frames his campaign as an effort to make the Colorado Republican Party “Republican again,” restore brand integrity, and move away from politics controlled by donor dollars. After Goodall leaves, the hosts continue discussing the Klenda judgment, the limits of appealing to the national Republican Party, and the difficulty of creating a new party or moving assets. The overall episode portrays the Colorado GOP as facing an existential test ...
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    48 分
  • Chuck And Julie Show, April 29, 2026
    2026/04/29
    Colorado Republican Party Chair candidate Joe Oltmann joins the show.
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    53 分
  • Chuck and Julie Show, August 4, 2021
    2021/08/09
    Guests, Eric Felton and Vickie Tonkins Eric Felton, with RealClearInvestigations talks about his latest column exposing the crucial history behind CRT. Plus El Paso County GOP Chair on this weekend’s event featuring Marjorie Taylor Greene. And why it’s making liberal heads explode.
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    51 分