Speaker touts market gains and falling crime, urges voter ID as questioner asks if deportations cut rents
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In brief remarks, Speaker 1 credited his tenure with record stock-market gains, a large drop in crime and lower energy and rent costs, urged restrictions on mail-in voting and proof of citizenship, and faced a question about whether deportations or regulation caused falling rents.
Speaker 1 told listeners that the nation’s economy is performing strongly and cited large stock-market gains, saying, "the Dow just hit 50003" and later referencing a 50,000 milestone achieved "years ahead of schedule." He also said murder rates and overall crime have "dropped" to levels he described as the lowest in 125 years compared with 1900.
After inviting questions, Speaker 1 addressed voting procedures, saying, "no mail in voting, and you have to have proof of citizenship," and asserting polling support for those measures. "Everybody wants to depose even with Democrats, it's polling at 82 with Republican opposed at Republicans at 99%," he said, adding, "So we're gonna be trying very hard to get that."
A questioner, identified in the transcript as Speaker 2 and who addressed Speaker 1 as "Mister president," asked why rent prices had fallen under Speaker 1’s watch and whether the causes were regulation or "the mass deportations." Speaker 1 replied that the country had seen "massive price reductions," blamed Democrats for earlier affordability problems and pointed to lower energy prices as a factor. He cited gasoline prices, saying, "$1.99 a gallon" and noting a report of $1.85 per gallon in Iowa as examples of recent declines.
The exchange was brief. Speaker 1 reiterated that the economy might be the best it has been, returned to the Dow milestone, and closed the remarks with a short thanks.
Claims in the remarks were stated by speakers in the transcript; the meeting did not include supporting data or third-party verification of the figures cited. Where numbers in the transcript are inconsistent (the speaker said both "50003" and "50,000" when describing the Dow), this article reports them as presented rather than validating them.
