Guy Benson Rips The New WH Talking Point That Claims Republicans Are The ‘Defund The Police’ Party

Policemen surround a NYPD vehicle after it was vandalized by protestors over the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in police custody in Minneapolis, on Saturday, May 30, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

Listen To The Full Monologue Below:

On today’s Guy Benson Show, Guy gave a fiery opening monologue ripping and debunking the new White House talking point that claims that Republicans are the ‘defund the police’ party.

Guy sounded off by saying,

“So the geniuses, the marketers over at Team Biden have decided, let’s try to make this a Republican problem and say that Republicans are the truly defund the police. Advocates there really the defund on the police party because they voted against this giant. Bill with tons of wasteful provisions. And part of me feels like it’s kind of a waste of time almost. Not even worth the energy to go through and debunk something that is so. Preposterous on its face, so insulting to your intelligence, but I think what the left often gets away with is. Gaslighting, I know that term was used a lot and applied to President Trump and some of his supporters, and I think sometimes that was applicable, sometimes not. But the Democrat media complex, they are masters of gaslighting, we’re seeing it on critical race theory right now, for example, and out of control wokeness. Oh, you’re just imagining that that’s not true. Critical race theory. This isn’t really happening in schools. Look at all these weirdos showing up at, you know, school board meetings. They have no of this. Ignorant people have no idea what’s actually happening. Like they don’t want us to even notice what’s happening in front of our faces. And so the gaslighting in this case is to say, well, we were not for defund the police. It’s a lie that Democrats were defunding the police or calling for that or debating it and figuring out what defunding would look like. That was really the discussion, not whether to defund the police, but how and to what extent that was the debate on the left. The debate on the right was kind of non-existent here. We were all saying, no, let’s not defund the police at all. Let’s reform the police. We’ll have that conversation. And some people were in favor of more reforms than others. I’m on the reform end of that spectrum. But defund, reduce funding now. And we know that voters hate this idea.”