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Minute With: Sean Hannity on 'disconcerting' election,
matchmaking
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[October 30, 2014]
By Eric Kelsey
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Sean Hannity, the longtime Fox News Channel anchor and
strong voice for American conservatives, is used to
taking criticism from all comers, but it was his own
unhappiness with his flabby self last year that pushed
him to take up a new fight - that of "street" martial
artist.
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"It's a tough, tough workout," the 52-year-old said of his
regimen of jiu-jitsu, blade and firearm training. "It's also
really great self-defense ... I'm building muscles that I've
never had before."
Hannity, whose eponymous weeknight show averages 1.7 million
viewers and ranks in the top five of cable news programs, spoke
to Reuters about the upcoming U.S. midterm elections, problems
the Republican party faces and playing matchmaker to staffers.
Q: You notably started as a small-market radio host. What
first turned you on to politics and news?
A: I've absorbed it since I was a kid and delivered
newspapers, reading the newspaper. My parents were screaming at
me to put the paper down and get out and go deliver them.
I still get the hard papers every day. I have on my lap right
now the New York Daily News, the New York Post, USA Today, the
Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, although I won't
admit that publicly.
Q: Actors fear being type-cast, but you've made your
career working a brand of conservative ...
A: I think that ship has sailed. I am a conservative.
That's who I am. It's in my DNA. I believe that if we would
govern conservatively, meaning limited government, balanced
budgets, greater freedom, that people took greater
responsibility for their lives, etc. I think society would be
better off if we were energy independent, if we secure our
borders, free market capitalism in the healthcare system, not a
top-down heavy system.
Q: Why have conservatives been unable to make strong
gains despite public disapproval of President Barack Obama?
A: I think Republicans have fallen way short. I'm not a
registered Republican. I'm a registered conservative. There has
been a lack of vision. ... Why when we have more energy, more
natural gas than Saudi Arabia, why are we importing those things
from countries that hate us? With Ebola and ISIS, why are we not
securing our southern border and all of our borders?
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My biggest criticism of Republicans is they have the power of the
purse and they have been unwilling to use it - some Republicans, I
think there are some real good conservatives out there - and
Republicans have also lacked a vision in terms of showing people
there's another way to do things.
Q: Do you believe they will be able to take control of the
Senate in midterm elections?
A: It's actually a hard year to read. My gut is the
Republicans will get the six seats.
The thing that's a little bit disconcerting to me is you have states
like Georgia, where both the Senate and gubernatorial races are so
close. I wouldn't have expected that. ... I don't know if it's an
anti-incumbent year, an anti-Obama year, anti-establishment year.
Q: You're also known as an amateur matchmaker. How did it
come about setting up staffers on dates?
A: I have an outgoing personality, and I notice that
everybody else does not. You can almost tell sometimes that people
really like each other but are both afraid to make the first move or
say anything. I'm like, "Why don't you guys go out on a date, and
I'll send you guys to Ruth's Chris (restaurant). But it has to be a
date and you have to hold hands and you have to give her a kiss at
the end of the night." I'll do stuff like that to mess around with
people.
Q: Do you keep track of your batting average, so to speak?
A: I'm up in the .800 range.
(Editing by Mary Milliken and Cynthia Osterman)
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