The Stack: Why Indiana Should Redraw Its Congressional Districts

Indiana’s redistricting battle isn’t about cartography — it’s about protecting Hoosiers from the increasingly extreme agenda being pushed out of Washington. In today’s episode, Todd cuts through the noise to explain why redistricting is not only constitutional, but necessary. While critics claim new maps “take away representation,” Todd clarifies that every Hoosier will continue to have a representative — what changes is whether Indiana keeps unintentionally empowering national Democrat leaders who advance policies far outside Hoosier values.

From border chaos to inflation, cultural radicalism to federal overreach, Todd outlines how decisions in D.C. directly harm Indiana families. And when blue states have aggressively maximized their congressional advantage for decades, Indiana refusing to act amounts to unilateral political disarmament. Todd also previews his remarks at tomorrow’s Turning Point Action event at the Statehouse, where he’ll urge lawmakers to fulfill their duty and defend Hoosiers’ interests. This fight will shape 2026 and beyond.

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📝 Transcript: Why Indiana Should Redraw Its Congressional Districts

The Todd Huff Show – December 4, 2025

Host: Todd Huff

Todd Huff: All right, my friends, we are in the thick of it here in Indiana. I know that this right now is the political center of the.

Todd Huff: Country, maybe the universe right now, with what's going on, with redistricting and I. Know. We've talked about it a lot. I know. I've shared with you. If you're not in Indiana, understand that this battle. Absolutely affects. You. Your state. Your state may be going or have recently gone through this as well, or maybe soon to be going through this. That's a potential as well, but this will help shape. What happens in the 2026 midterm election, and that is one election of.

Todd Huff: Incredibly important. It's incredibly critical, so. That's why this matters so much. I've always stayed away from talking. In fact, many of you who are in Indiana may have sometimes thought that you wish that we would talk more about. Who's your policies or local issues? We don't do that. This is a program. That talks about. National issues. American issues from a Hoosier. Common sense conservative, not bitter perspective. And so we're not deviating from that. This is just something that.

Todd Huff: Is critically important, and I want to get to it today. In fact, I want to respond. There was. A question that I got. I think on social media. By the way, you can email your thoughts and questions to todd@toddhuffshow.com. I read those. That helps me know what we need to talk about as well. But I got a question I believe on Facebook. That said or that. Asked. Why does Indiana need to redistrict? A very straightforward question, and of course, it's. From someone who can't listen every day. So I understand you might think, wow, we talked about that to some degree for the past several days, maybe the past several weeks.

Todd Huff: I want to go through that today. I want to give you. I guess a summary, a final argument presentation here. For this, I'll also tell you. That we'll be speaking. I'll be speaking tomorrow at the Indiana State House. I don't have the exact schedule. There's lots of speakers, including Governor Braun, Lieutenant Governor Micah Beckwith, who was on this program a couple of weeks ago.

Todd Huff: Other voices. I'll be up there as well. Just have a few minutes, but if you can make it, I encourage you to come. The event will start. I believe it starts at noon. I'll put all the information. In the stack of stuff, and I've been posting some stuff on social media as well. If you follow us there and I'll talk about it in the newsletter, which is free. And you can sign up for that as well.

Todd Huff: That's the way that you'll get it. These events are very fluid. I'm still waiting. They're creating a graphic. That includes me on it that we can share with the times and I don't know. The lineup or whatever is going to be on there. I just don't have all that stuff yet. This is just the nature. The nature of. How these things are done, especially when they're changing and evolving, and I didn't. Even know that. I could be a speaker until yesterday. So anyway, that's what we're going to do today. My friends, I welcome you to today's program.

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Todd Huff: And secure your future. All right, let me go through this systematically today. As I've prepared my remarks for what I want to say at the state house tomorrow. And I've dealt with some of the questions. I've gotten some, of course, by trolls, which I don't take seriously, who often entertain me.

Todd Huff: Some are serious questions from people who really want to understand. This isn't in their wheelhouse, and they're really trying to come to grips. With their position on this issue. I respect that. I do. I respect that. And let me say this too. Let me say this too. I think it's critically important that Indiana goes through. That Republicans put their big boy and big girl pants on here and vote for this new map.

Todd Huff: Vote to redistrict the state of Indiana. I believe that. I'll tell you. Why? That's what the whole show is going to be about today. But let me also say this. You've heard me say in recent years. I've done this program for ten years. Now.

Todd Huff: Which. Just saying that it just hits differently in my brain. It's hard to believe, really. Time goes so fast. But. There are many issues today where I have said on this program or I've thought to myself. And you've probably had the same thought. A lot of what we call political today. Is not even really political. It's a fight between. Good and evil. I mean, not everything. Hear me out. But when you're talking about, say. The issue of abortion.

Todd Huff: It is a fight between good and evil. When you're talking about some of the cultural depravity we see thrust upon us. Like the trans agenda. Men competing in women's sports. This is, my friends, just. An evil, God-forsaken ideology and.

Todd Huff: There's a lot, a lot of issues that are like that. But not everything is. There is still politics. This issue is politics. If you disagree with me on this. I don't think that. You're enabling. Or enabling wicked.
Todd Huff: Beliefs or whatever. I don't think that. I want you to know that we can disagree on these things. I will tell you, I think if you disagree with me on this, forget about disagreeing with me. I think if you're on the side of not changing the maps, it enables more of this evil to be forced upon America because of what I'll lay out here, but I don't believe that defending the current maps is some.

Todd Huff: Moral. Defect that someone has. I think that. It is maybe holding on to tradition, I think that. It may be misunderstanding or not fully grasping the weight of what this fight is about. I think. It might be misunderstanding what fairness is. I think it might be. Not just thinking through. Very smart people can disagree with me on this, but if you really think it through and that's what I want to do today and talk about districts. I mean, what makes one preferable over another. Why?

Todd Huff: Is it considered? The. Necessary and good. And fair and just for Democrats to have two seats in Indiana or Republicans to have seven. Why is it not five, four? Why not 9–0? When you wrestle with these questions and think logically about it, you'll see that. They all have political answers. There's not at its core. Some absolute guiding principle of right or wrong here. Again. I think the outcome of this vote will allow us to fight for the side that's. Right. Better. Not that I'm here to say Republicans hold all the answers because they don't.

Todd Huff: But they hold a whole lot more answers than the Democrat Party does. The Democrat Party? Under the leadership of the radical, godless left have taken us, I mean, into places that our founders would be mortified to find us meandering through at the moment. So why. Let's talk about this. Issue. Let's break it down. First, let me say this. It is perfectly legitimate. And I said this in the Todd Talk today. Now, I usually make sure the Todd Talk and. This show. The content of this show is different today.

Todd Huff: I didn't do that. Because the Todd Talk reaches people that maybe this program doesn't. I've had some people that have asked questions who may listen to a 60-second Todd Talk, but not to a 40 or whatever it is some odd minutes podcast. So this might be repeating itself, but the purpose of the Todd Talk today, I started with this. Very point. It is perfectly legitimate and legal for Indiana to do this. So first redistricting. Is explicitly constitutional. And what do I mean by that? I mean that the Constitution.

Todd Huff: Gives state legislatures the power to do this. So it's not the government stepping out of bounds. It's not the government trying to acquire too much power. This is the job of the state legislature. Now, some state legislatures have tried to, because this is a political… it's interesting to me, this is a political process. And you have some states who have said, well, we don't. Want it to be political, so we want it to be fair. And they bring in these people who.

Todd Huff: Are supposedly nonpartisan, and they put them on a panel on some commission and they say, go. Out there and tell us what the fair map is. And I think that actually, that sort of thinking. Has maybe insulated people from reality. Drawing maps is absolutely a political activity. Because. How do you decide? How do you decide? Where the lines should be drawn. I mean. It is. An arbitrary. At some point, an arbitrary decision. I mean, for example, I hear people say to me, Indianapolis being split into four districts.

Todd Huff: Denies people representation. No, it doesn’t. What the world are you talking about? I got that. Comment yesterday. When this country was founded. When it was long before Indiana was a state, there were the 13 original colonies. And the colonists were upset because they were being taxed by the British government, but they did not have a voice. In the British government, and the phrase “no taxation without representation” became a catchphrase amongst the colonists. And why did it become a catchphrase? Because it was true.

Todd Huff: See Parliament. The British government did not. Have a representative from the colonies, not from each individual. Colony. Not from the colonies. One representative from the colonies. There wasn't a seat at the table. For the colonies politically, and so they were being taxed without having someone there to make their case, to try to argue, to try to protect their interests by casting votes and so forth. They literally had no person there just because.

Todd Huff: Your district lines have been changed. Just because they've been changed doesn't mean you suddenly don't have a representative. Every single person in the state of Indiana and every state in the United States for that matter? Has a representative. They have a rep. In fact, the way that we do the census, you could make the case that illegal aliens have representatives, which that's absolutely bonkers. But you have a representative. You have representation. People conflate their preferred representative with their actual representative—maybe they don't like that.

Todd Huff: Representative, maybe they politically disagree with him or her or whatever. But the truth is, they have a representative, they have representation. There's not a person. In this country. Who's living in a U.S. state that does not have congressional representation, that is not the way that it works. And again, I don't know if it's ignorance. I don't know if it's just. Trying to. Make their argument sound stronger. So they say these things that the low-information voter crowd. Will just simply say, wow, that sounds right. There's no guarantee that the person you vote for—this might be a surprise to some. I know. Not to you—but this might be a surprise to the left to find out that. The person you vote for may not win. May not win the election. That doesn't suddenly mean that you don't have representation.

Todd Huff: It's quite foolish to say. Such a thing. You know what? It's in vogue. I know it's in vogue. In fact. One thing I don't think. I've ever said it. When, let's say, Obama or Biden was president. I never said. I don't believe I did. He's not my president because he was my president. I might not have liked him. Actually, I didn't like him. I forget about personally, just. I didn't like his policies. They were dangerous, open borders, all the things, all the reasons that we should be making sure we have the most Republican representation we can to go fight this nonsense on the federal level. The federal overreach, the disastrous policies. That crush Hoosier families and Hoosiers.

Todd Huff: Who are trying to work. And live their lives with liberty. All those things are under threat because of people like Biden. And people in his political party. But I never said he wasn't my president. He was my president. I didn't. Agree with him. But he was still my president. People say that about Trump, “not my president.” Well, first of all, yes, he is. And secondly, just because you don't agree with him doesn't change that fact. This is entirely constitutional. This process.

Todd Huff: And it's entirely the responsibility of the state legislature. States draw the congressional districts. The rules are pretty simple. They need to be contiguous. Areas that can't be split up, basically. And they need to have roughly equal population. That's it. Now. You could say the Voting Rights Act, as currently interpreted by the Supreme Court, might say that there's additional burdens regarding.

Todd Huff: Politics and race—that's being questioned here through the court system now—but in general: contiguous area that has an equal population to the other districts. That's all that these have to be. There's no sacred, there's no morally superior shape of a district.

Todd Huff: Are circles better than squares? Are rectangles superior to triangles? Look. It's much more complicated than that. You have to go where the people go, and you can draw the lines however you see fit. Breaking Indianapolis into four districts. Is not immoral. You might say people don't politically like it. Okay, then hold the people who draw the map politically responsible. Get off your moral high horse is my point here. You don't have. The moral high ground because you think Indianapolis should have two representatives instead of four. That's ridiculous. You can make the argument. That's perfectly legitimate for you to make the argument, but. To say that.

Todd Huff: That's morally superior to someone who wants to split Indianapolis up. Tell me why. Tell me. Why? All these answers are political. The people that want to keep Indianapolis having one main district and part of another is because it gives them a political advantage. The people that want to split it up. Into four districts is because it gives them a political. Advantage. There's no other rationale here. There's none. People try to find it. Well. These people don't have. The same shared interest as it. Why? What are you talking about? Besides which, there's the city of Indianapolis that's managing. Should be managing local issues.

Todd Huff: We're just wanting to send people to Washington, D.C., to fight government overreach, to actually not micromanage. Our cities and put a heavy burden on them and let them be overrun with illegal aliens and drugs, things that are coming across the southern border in other ways. That's all we're wanting. We're not wanting to have our people run. The federal government so that they all become. Lose their ability to self-govern. None of this makes any sense when you just continue to dig down. This is a political fight.

Todd Huff: There is nothing illegal. Nothing immoral. Nothing unprecedented about a political party drawing maps. Every state does it. Blue states have aggressively done it for years. In fact, that's—again—gerrymandering actually takes place in some of these blue states. Gerrymandering may have happened in a lot of states, but this map here, that Indianapolis. Has drawn is not gerrymandering. Gerrymandering is. Extremely odd. And unnatural shapes that are clearly designed to include certain part of a district and not of another. This map is not that. It does split Indianapolis up, but the term gerrymander. Actually came from Massachusetts in 1812. I believe the governor's name.

Todd Huff: The name Gerry was in his name. I don't know if it's his first name or last name, but G-E-R-R-Y. Apparently, one of the districts drawn resembled a salamander in the state of Massachusetts. And so the term “Gerry-mander” was formed. That's where that came from. Just drawing lines that give you a political advantage. I understand that in the common use of the phrase, it comes to mean that today, but. It's an extremely odd shape to accomplish a political lens. That's where the term gerrymandering comes from. So these aren't extremely gerrymandered districts. Yes, they split Indianapolis up, but they don't go out of their way to be ridiculously out-of-control shapes that look like things like salamanders.

Todd Huff: Indiana refusing to exercise its authority to draw its maps and have control over this, while other states do this. Unilaterally. Is political disarmament. I should say it is unilateral political disarmament. The left plays to win. The left plays by a different set of rules. My position is we shouldn't be doing anything illegal. Immoral. We should be using the tools at our disposal to do everything that is legal, that we can do. Republicans should not pretend. They're obligated to lose a political fight politely. That's not what this should be about, and it's not what it's about for me. Legislators are not only allowed to draw maps.

Todd Huff: They're expected to do that. That's part of their job. And they're expected to do it responsibly. It's their constitutional duty. It is not some sort of political sin to exercise. Their constitutional duty to draw these maps. So we can 100%—for those who think that we can't—we absolutely can do this. There is nothing in the Constitution. You'll hear. People say it's unconstitutional because. The Constitution specifies that this is done every ten years. Of course it does, because. There's a census taken every ten years, so it's saying every time there's. A census. We've got to do this. It does not prohibit it from being done.

Todd Huff: At other points in the timeline. That's not the way that. This is done. It's not prohibited. It is absolutely under their authority. This is their prerogative, and they can do it now. I want to talk more. After this break. I got to stop here. About the reasons why we should do this, why we should do that. Friends, there's a lot of confusion out there about Kratom. You've probably heard some of the headlines. Read some of the headlines. Most of those headlines, my friends, are based in synthetic junk kratom. That isn't real kratom. At all. Real kratom is natural. It's tested, it's handled with care. And that's what you get from Christopher's Organic Botanicals. Family-run company. They partner directly with farmers.

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Todd Huff: Welcome back, my friends. Let me remind you, before I tell you here why Indiana should do this, succinctly list the bullet points and all that. We're talking about redistricting. Here drawing new congressional maps. Let me remind you, for those of you who are tired of spending your hard-earned money at businesses that turn around and support leftist causes, that turn around and support Democrats.

Todd Huff: Who are pushing radical nonsense down the throats of Americans by taking your profits. If you go to a business that takes a profit, supports a candidate that's out there telling you lies. About what redistricting is. You're sick of it. That's why we have Freedom Marketplace. It's a searchable directory of businesses that share your conservative values, businesses that have vowed not to support leftist candidates. Leftist causes. It's free for you to use, no strings attached. Just good, patriotic businesses pushing in the same direction that you are pushing. Check it out today.

Todd Huff: FreedomMarketplace.net. That's FreedomMarketplace.net. Liberty and business, my friends, for all. This is one of the things that we provide here to our listeners at the Todd Huff Show. This is something we operate. And if you'd like to list your business. Just reach out to us and we'll help you do that. Listings are very affordable. Starting at under even $10 a month. So. FreedomMarketplace.net. Okay. Here's why. Talking about redistricting, why Indiana should. Draw new maps. So this is for the people. For the individual. Her name was Evelyn.

Todd Huff: On social media who said. Why does Indiana need to do this? Okay. I'm glad that you asked that. I think it's a sincere question. And I'm going to do this. So. National Democrat leadership pushes policies that are dramatically out of step with Hoosier values. So what happens is. When we elect someone in Indiana as a Democrat or as a Republican. And they caucus nationally. They go to Washington, D.C., and they get together in their caucus, in the group of.

Todd Huff: People that are part of that party who they actually strategize with and so forth, and they vote for leadership. And they end up voting for people that are pushing some radical and dangerous agenda items on the American people. This is where. Economic policy comes from, along with Democratic leadership in the executive branch, for example. But this is where ideas come that create economic policies that have crushed Hoosiers, that have added massive amounts to the cost of living. Massive, out-of-control.

Todd Huff: Inflation. I mean, go back and look at Biden's numbers. It's remarkable to watch Democrats complain about the cost of things now. The cost of things now are the result of what happened. Inflation was put into hyperdrive during the Biden years. That's why we're dealing with this. And prices won't come down. Again, economics is much more complicated than that. But inflation is not. If it's not negative, which I'm not arguing that it should be. The prices are not going to come down. They'll slow in growth is what's going to happen. And so we had policies that someone might have voted for a representative here.

Todd Huff: To challenge Trump because they're afraid he's a king. But that doesn't mean that they voted. For policies and things that lead to high inflation, but they did. Sometimes unwittingly. And this is dramatically out of step. I got no problems with people saying, hey, vote for me. Because. I'm going to hold the president in check. Okay, fine. Whatever his party. But don't. Use that as a green light to institute other policies because. You've caused blind rage amongst the constituents in your district to where they just want to stop the guy in the White House, and they don't stop.

Todd Huff: To think about all the other things. That are happening out there as well. That's number one. Hoosiers end up represented. By Democrats who vote for radical leadership once they're in Washington. So the ideology that exists in Washington, D.C., that's embraced by the Democrat Party is not held by Hoosiers. In general and even. Specifically? I would say not the majority of even Hoosier Democrats vote for what's happening in Washington, D.C. I believe that that is true, but they end up getting there and they vote these jokers and clowns into office.

Todd Huff: They're also put under extreme pressure to tow the party line or else they lose. Positions on committees and so forth, they lose. Other voices within the party. They're basically muted until they go along with the leadership. This is what happens. So national Democrat policies on things like spending, on things like the border, on things like culture, they hurt. And I would say hurt is maybe even an understatement. Sometimes they dramatically hurt. Sometimes.

Todd Huff: My friends. In the case, say we're open borders allows people to be in this country illegally sometimes. It literally costs people their lives because of policies. I'm not saying all the time, but. That certainly can be the case. In some tragic circumstances. Inflation. Federal money printing. That's, of course, the source of inflation. It's not anything else. In spite of what they want you to believe, the federal government is responsible solely for inflation.

Todd Huff: Cultural radicalism, remaking this country into something that it was never intended to be. These are things that happen. In Washington, D.C., that directly affect Indiana households. Think about how you lived your life under COVID, the people that were running the show. Running the show politically at various levels of our government. Well, they were elected, and most of the time they were Democrats or they were bureaucrats that vote for and support the ideas of the radical left. I mean, there's lots of examples as to how this has directly hurt Hoosier businesses, Hoosier families, Hoosier lives. The modern Democrat Party, by the way, is nothing like the old Hoosier.

Todd Huff: Democrat Party. Listen, I was raised. In a union Democrat home. I've shared that on here before. My parents. My dad was a union Democrat for UAW Local 933. It was. What was it? Allison Engine Company. Turbit, I think, is where he started. It had a couple of names. When he retired, it was bought by Rolls-Royce. That's what it was before he retired, he was there for.

Todd Huff: 30 or 31 years. Was a union representative, a committeeman, I believe, for several years. I remember that when I was in high school. And. He's not a leftist. He's not even liberal. He's a traditional. Blue dog Democrat. Primarily Democrat because. He believes Democrats look out for workers more than Republicans, and Republicans favor big business. That's his perspective.

Todd Huff: But. That political party is long gone. The party of John F. Kennedy is nowhere to be found, and if you have a Democrat running here for Congress. He is, by definition, going to be a part of a party that. Is radical. Radical, my friends, and electing radical leadership. They don't reflect the values of Hoosiers and they definitely—well, Hoosiers overall—and they don't even reflect the values of Hoosier Democrats. Indiana has a duty to protect itself from what happens. Here from this recipe. You have other.

Todd Huff: States, other blue states that are maximizing their vote count. The number of seats, say California, for example. Other states have done the same thing to try to squeeze as many blue districts out as possible. By the way, you've never heard me complain. About that. I am remarkably consistent on this. I don't like it. I think maybe people should try to challenge.

Todd Huff: To find ways to win in those states. Which I know that they do, but they got to get better at it. They got to get the ideas of conservatism out there, and they've got to find better candidates. There's a lot going on there, but states can draw these districts. As they see fit. And we now have a duty in Indiana to protect Hoosiers from the overreach that happens in this scenario and the destructive national agendas, because what happens if the federal government gets too big, which it has, and you have a group of people that.

Todd Huff: Are put into Washington, D.C., that believe it is their job to solve every problem in the world. Then they're going to start. Manipulating. And messing with all sorts of things, passing laws for everything. And they'll say, well, this is the prerogative of the federal government. Indiana and other states suddenly. We're still part of a republic. There’s still federalism here, but if you're appealing to people who are favorable to big government and who are willing to overreach their bounds and not care about the Constitution, which is what we have.

Todd Huff: When the left is in charge, you’ve got a recipe for disaster. And you've got things being forced upon. Your community, your state. That is absolutely. There's nothing that can be done at that point. We have a duty. To protect ourselves from that. Inaction today means. Conceding future congressional power to the radical left. Make no mistake about it, for those Republicans who act like it's something else because of comments Trump made or whatever it is.

Todd Huff: This is a very easy political issue to see: If you want to empower the left, vote. Against these maps. If you want to fight against the left, if you want to fight against governmental overreach. If you want to stand in favor of liberty and against the tyrants that are put into place in Washington, D.C., through the system I just explained to. You. If you want to oppose that, then you will be in favor of these maps. That is. How I see it. I've got to take a break, my friends. Sit tight. Back here.

Todd Huff: In just a minute. Welcome back, my friends. Third and final segment of today's program, going through the reasons or the rationale for being in favor of these maps. I've been asked some of these. Questions. I'm responding. To some of. The comments. And I don't know—allegations. And the emotions that are out there. That's what we're doing here today. And I will be speaking tomorrow at the Turning Point Action event at the Statehouse. I'll get you more information on that. I invite you to come down to the Statehouse at noon tomorrow. There's been plenty of people on the left screaming and chanting and stomping their feet and so forth, throwing temper tantrums.

Todd Huff: In our rotunda. We're going to be there tomorrow, my friends, and I would love to see you there. If you can't be there, which I know you're. Busy, right? I mean, you're working. You’ve got a job, you've got responsibilities, you own a business, whatever. Lots of things going. On. You’ve got kids and everything else. You can still be a part of this. In fact, the next best thing to do is to call or email. Your state senators. If you agree with me, if you agree with me, then let them know that. You expect them? To pass these maps. They're going to vote. This is all going to end supposedly on Monday.

Todd Huff: And some of these folks, including my representative, my state senator Rod Bray, who's leading the Senate. Listen. I don't give up. That's just not in my makeup. But I am one who accepts reality. Rod Bray is not going to respond to me. I'm a constituent. He doesn't care. He doesn't care. To even answer my questions, to answer constituents of his in this audience, of which I know there are many. He doesn't care to answer your questions. And that's wherever he votes on this.

Todd Huff: It's absolutely despicable in my mind. That a public servant. A quote-unquote public servant. I'm using the Seinfeld air quotes here behind the microphone—"public servant." Public servants don't behave like this. This is incredibly disappointing to me. Incredibly disappointing. If he thinks that this is going away. He doesn't know. On top of that, we've got Scott Pressler, who I've talked to. I don't know if you know Scott Pressler.

Todd Huff: He's very influential. He's got a grassroots organization where he helps get Republicans elected. Scott Pressler is on the record of saying any Republican who votes against. These maps he's going to try to primary. And so I've talked to him about coming on the program. Of course, with everything going on. Between his schedule and mine, it's been tough, but I do hope to get him. On this program to talk about that very thing, because.

Todd Huff: We're not going to let this go away. Scott is going to do what Scott's going to do. We're going to support him. I'm going to give him an opportunity to speak with you and to share. With you, what he's doing. And there will be accountability for this. There will be accountability. For this. And we're not going to forget. So. Friends, really quickly here before I wrap up. Let me remind you—I know, I know you know this—but one of the biggest challenges that we have as conservatives.

Todd Huff: Not like we need another one, right? With everything going on here. But one. Of the biggest challenges we face is finding ways to ensure our values align. With the things that we do in everyday life. And that includes a lot of things. I mean, it's nice to work for a conservative. Or a company that loves America. It's nice to work for a company. That has biblical values and that sort of thing. It's nice to send our kids to school with teachers that share those values, all these different things.
Todd Huff: It’s good to work with businesses—we talked about Freedom Marketplace—that push in the same direction we are politically. But it's also good to be able to find places to invest that share our values. That's what I love about what Four Eight Financial is doing. They specialize in biblically responsible investing. They screen out companies that don't align with your faith and your values so that you're not funding things that go completely.

Todd Huff: Against what you believe in. In fact, a lot of these problems that we're seeing today kind of start. Because. This sort of money laundering—I don't mean that in a legal sense—but. This operation where companies are taking their profits and then sending it to causes that you would be mortified. That they're sending it to. And I'm not saying it's illegal. I don't mean money laundering illegally. I just mean that they're putting on the front.

Todd Huff: Of, hey, we're providing this for you. And, hey, at the back door, we're promoting things that if you knew we were doing it, you would be highly upset about. That's what happens in some places, my friends. And that's what Four Eight Financial is trying to prevent. So if you go to FourEightFinancial.com/Todd, you can complete an assessment and they will help you determine what degree your current investments are aligned with your values. FourEightFinancial.com/Todd. That’s FourEightFinancial.com/Todd because your money should work.

Todd Huff: For your values. All right, let me see if there's any other questions. Any other questions that I need to address or I mentioned. The argument that this takes away representation. It clearly doesn't. Everybody still has a representative. They may just not have their preferred representative, which, by the way, the way that it works, that's always going to happen for somebody, especially.

Todd Huff: When this country is split the way that it is. For those who say redistricting is cheating again. I guess the simple answer would be the Democrats have been doing that for decades then. But I would say it's not cheating. It's legal. It's constitutional. And it's being used aggressively, I might add.

Todd Huff: Nationwide. In Indiana, if they don't vote for. This could be refusing to be the only. State to be playing by imaginary rules. Indianapolis does not deserve its own districts. That's something else that people say—splitting Indianapolis is. That some sort of unforgivable sin? Republicans are being extreme. No, protecting Hoosiers is not extreme. Failing to do so is absolutely irresponsible. I got to go. SDG.

Todd Huff

Todd Huff is a popular talk show host and podcaster known for his intelligent and entertaining conservative discussions on The Todd Huff Show, which attracts 200,000 weekly listeners. He covers a variety of topics, including politics and culture, with a focus on authentic and meaningful dialogue. Outside of work, he enjoys traveling with his family, spending time outdoors, and coaching his kids' soccer team.

https://toddhuffshow.com
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