taking on all of the established conventional wisdom of what politics is. i got in the race and i was doled you do not have the polling numbers and you cannot race the money to win but we live in a republic where people decide who the representatives are, not pollsters or fundraisers or party bosses. i am proud to be a republican, the home of conservatives but there are big gapes and republicans should not think this is an embrace of the republican party but a second chance for the republican party to do what it claims to be, home of the limited government conservative movement in america, the center right coalition that believes in free enterprise and freedom and liberty and what made america great and i low pressure i can be part i hope i can be part of that. neil: if they do not take up your challenge, then what? guest: if the republican party is not about ideas and principles that speak to people
guest: well, tomorrow he has to containing. and he has to change and admit that maybe he promised too much. i pledge, however, to spend the rest of my time working for americans, uniting, to bring forth republicans, independents and woman ever i and whoever i can come into contact with. republicans were shocked when i said i want you to ten me because we have a 2.3 to . neil: and they thought you were nuts and you were negotiable nut. guest: i had to fight my own party. i had to fight my own party. neil: i remember well. guest: and on our ballot the question as to whether they should allow more money to be put in the reserve fund i put in virginia. so, president has to understand that the young people did not just start being disenchanted they needed to have been spoken
me? guest: i can hear you. neil: this could be a rough night, and it could change, why do you think that is? guest: i think that we will have a tremendous night, an amazing night for watching television, first of all. this is probably going to be unprecedented what is going to happen. some of the crow s c.e.o. s could have a hard time, whitman and fiorino could be in trouble both. neil: are you concerned, in whit map s case, she spent so much money on the case, it could be close to $180 million and she is a billionaire, it is her money, and when the business person is unknown to the public, you have to spend for name recognition, and bloomburg tried it but he was elected and is well regarded and whitman may not get the chance.
break. bring the money in at 10 percent but everything left of the 90 percent has to go to capital investment, job creation will follow capital investment. neil: so a carry rot so a carrot and stick approach. and just lower corporate taxes, period. guest: the problem with lowering taxes, for me or people like me, it sounds like we are self-ish. we re in it for our gain. i like the idea better of saying, you have that money. it s yours. in some cases it will be a sacrifice. one of our companies has a substantial sum of money in brazil. we are making 8 percent on that money in brazil.
doing, and i think don t bother him with the facts. what i would do is say to the republic leaders we have control of the house of representatives get all the newly elected people, invite all the democrats to come, get 150 or 200 of the smartest most successful businessmen in america and get them in a room and say, guys, you government guys, have the business people tell you what needs to be done. one example: a company in north carolina spins 60 percent of the cotton yarn used in america, a private company. the government passed a regulation allowing four cents a pound if you would spend that money on capital spending. that company has created more than 1,000 jobs in the last two years and we have trillions of dollars of american company money overseas, give them a