In segments one and two, Pete plays excerpts of President Bidens speech banning Russian oil imports and covers some of the left’s comments. In segments three and four the Monday night Charlotte city council meeting is reviewed.

Segment one is Transformation Tuesday, while segments two and three are devoted to President Biden’s speech about banning oil imports from Russia.

WBT afternoon host Brett Winterble joins Bo Thompson talking about the record setting crowd and enthusiasm for Charlotte FC's first home game at Bank of America stadium, the possibility that President Joe Biden could travel to Saudi Arabia to ask for increased oil production, and the everchanging Charlotte schedule of elections.

In hour 2 Senate Candidate Pat McCrory discusses his take on Ukraine, what we should do, and the upcoming debate for the senate race in Segment 1. Brett Winterble joins Segment 2 to give his take on the Russian Invasion. In Segment 4 Pete goes to President’s Biden’s speech on the Ukranian situation.

"If you build a bridge, right now, in Charlotte, there's a good possibility that in 50 years your grandkids can go across that same bridge. That's infrastructure."

A battle between Democrats and Republicans continues with the $1 trillion infrastructure overhaul hanging in the balance. Former White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney breaks down why President Biden's leadership is crumbling and how we'll be talking about him as a one-term president soon. 

The Vince Coakley Podcast

The way President Biden is pushing the value of the dollar further and further down will have lasting consequences. Vince Coakley breaks down why more people should be concerned about the impending inflation crisis.

The Vince Coakley Podcast

Vince Coakley examines how long President Biden might be in office after facing the Afghanistan turmoil. 

The Vince Coakley Podcast

In Hour 1 of Monday's show, Vince talks about West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin - a Democrat - crossing party lines to lead the fight against Joe Biden's massive 3.5 trillion economic spending bill. A step rarely seen in Washington, but deserves mainstream support from both parties.