SEAN HANNITY (HOST): Considering, if you look at the exit polls and the different primaries and caucuses that we have gone through, the now finished as of Tuesday, 60 some odd percent of the Republicans feel betrayed by the Republican Party. They feel they're timid, they’re weak, they’re ineffective, that the Obama agenda got passed. And I understand Paul Ryan didn't like the comments about Donald Trump and Trump and the Trump University judge case etcetera, but again he's going out in harsher terms than I have ever heard him. On Face the Nation this weekend, going back to the “r” word, when did he ever say about Barack Obama, I have a typical white grandmother, white folks greed runs the world in need. Black liberation theology.

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HANNITY: Why is he harder on Trump than he's ever been on Obama? Why are a lot of them doing that?

LAURA INGRAHAM: Well because they see Trump as an existential threat to their agendas. On the critical issues that we've hammered on this show, trade and immigration. I mean Paul Ryan is a guy who thinks most of these trade deals are good deals and I know he's kind of reexamining TPP but that's only because of the rise of Donald Trump. Trump's victory in November, if Trump wins, that's the re-orientation of the Republican Party away from Bushism and toward a more populist view of policy. That is what threatens these guys. And so right now many of these Republicans, I'm not saying Ryan, a lot of Republicans have more in common with Hillary than they do with Trump. And I think that’s OK because now we know where everybody stands.

HANNITY: Isn’t this open sabotage at this point?

INGRAHAM: Yes, it is.