All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E145: Presidential Candidate Chris Christie in conversation with the Besties
Episode Date: September 8, 2023(0:00) Besties welcome former NJ Governor and Republican Presidential Candidate Chris Christie! (2:14) US debt crisis, cutting entitlements (14:03) Level-setting on foreign policy (25:28) Ukraine / Ru...ssia: culpability, where to go from here (36:47) US defense budget, optimizing spend, zero-based budgeting, influence peddling (50:01) Immigration policy, how each party co-opts the issue (1:02:24) Fentanyl crisis in SF, LA, and NYC, incarceration and criminal justice reform, political activism in law enforcement (1:15:57) Why Chris Christie is running for president (1:17:41) Thoughts on prosecuting Trump, January 6th, and more (1:23:16) Chris Christie addresses his past controversies (1:48:34) Post-interview debrief Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow Chris Christie: https://twitter.com/GovChristie Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GFDEBTN https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/SMPOPNETMUSA https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/southwest-land-border-encounters https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigration/2023/08/31/border-families-record-crossings-biden
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody. Welcome back to the all in podcasts. We're very excited today to do our
third deep dive long form discussion with presidential candidates for the 2024 election started with
RFK. And he got a huge boost in the ratings after it was on the pod. We had Vivek. And now
Governor Chris Christie is with us. Governor, thanks for coming. My pleasure. Thanks for having
me guys. All right. So it's a little bit different here
than I think some of the other news hits that you do.
This is not short form, it's long form.
We like to have a thoughtful discussion
with the candidates, not with talking points
and I know that you're a straight shooter,
so I think you'll fit right in here with the other boys.
I think you're very unique amongst candidates
that you've actually brought up the deficit.
As we know, just two facts here
and then I'll hand it over to Freiburg for his question.
Last two administrations have run up the deficit massively.
Here's a chart of our debt, Trump added,
almost 8 trillion, Biden's added 4 trillion.
And this is obviously an unpopular issue to bring up.
As you've mentioned, bringing this up is unpopular.
It doesn't get you votes necessarily to say we have to cut spending.
And Freeberg and I are very much, I'll speak for myself, but this is my number one issue
in terms of picking a candidate.
Freeberg, I think you said it's your number one issue.
So Freeberg, I'll hand it over to you in terms of a question
for Governor Christie.
Yeah, Governor Christie, nice to see you.
You and I sang on a karaoke stage together in Idaho
a few years ago, but it's a...
I think remember that.
Yeah.
Is that a sly way of saying...
Idaho, I had to put that two and two together there.
Everyone nice, FreeBreg.
It was a small bar in Idaho.
Oh, wow. It was a small bar and I don't know.
Oh, wow.
It was a small bar and I don't know.
Small bar and I don't know.
Small, the other.
The establishment class has failed.
Okay, the wrong one.
There were a few folks who happened to be in a bar together.
At the B conference, that you've all been doomed.
That's what you're going to do.
For what your winners tried.
For Rainman, David, Simon, Simon.
And it said we open source it to the fans and it just got really easy with her. We watched the Republican primary debate a few weeks ago, and I think what struck me at
least with how little focus and attention is given on the fiscal situation, the US government
deficit in excess of $2 trillion this year debt to GDP in excess of 130%, 30 plus percent of US
debt is coming to you in the next year, which means it's going to get refinanced at the higher rates,
it's probably 5.5 plus percent plus. And then when you look at the demands on social security,
rates, it's probably 5.5% plus. And then when you look at the demands on social security, Medicare, forecasts are that both
of those systems necessarily go bankrupt unless there's some extraordinary measures taken.
And that seems to be a very kind of hot topic, golden goose that can't be touched or debated.
All of this seems to be largely ignored and so much of the conversation is around social
issues in the United States, military issues, war, etc.
When fundamentally there's no gas in the tank.
I guess the point of view I'd love to hear from you is how do you think about that?
Does that matter to you right now?
Or do we think that this is a can that we kick down the road and we'll solve this problem
later, we'll grow our way out of it.
If we cut some spending, it'll fix itself. It seems so core to me that the future of the United States is
going to be dependent on how we're going to manage this fiscal emergency that we're facing.
Well, look, David, it's core to me too. And I'm, you know, if you've seen any of the excerpts
from any of the town hall meetings I've done so far. You know, I've been talking about both the issues you just raised.
First off, I think on the deficit and debt side, I learned about this after becoming a
prosecutor and having to come to New Jersey and inherit two problems immediately.
We have a $2 billion short-term deficit for the last five months of the fiscal year that I inherited.
And then we had an $11 billion deficit on a $29 billion budget for the fiscal year starting July 1 of 2010.
And I had to deal with both those things.
And as you know, unlike the chart that was just shown, you don't get to run it up.
You have to square it.
And so, I learned how hard it is and how ugly it's going
to be for your popularity to do these things.
So, on the first piece, on the 2 billion,
we sat down, I refused to raise taxes,
and we sat down, and we eliminated 683 individual programs completely and then swept every
surplus from a school board in the state and the way we did that was we reduced their state
aid by the amount they have in surplus to get the 2 billion in balance.
And then extended that into the next budget cycle, kept all those
cuts in place, which did some structural, you know, refiguring of the deficit. And then
made additional cuts after that. You know, I got elected with 48 and a half percent of
vote. And after I did that, my approval ratings went down below 40
in my first six months. But what I knew was, it was absolutely necessary
because in our state, we were already overtaxed.
And the idea of raising taxes again was not an option.
That was to me viable.
So when you learn and you go through that process,
and then you look at what we're dealing with federally,
I think you realize three things right off the bat.
One, it is an imperative that we need to reduce spending.
What it's doing to inflation
and the long-term ability of the country to grow,
it makes it absolutely necessary.
Two, to me kicking the can down the road
is not an option because
that the problem is only going to get worse.
And it's going to begin to impact our ability to be able to do
some of the core things that government is supposed to do.
And then third, that you've got to be willing to sacrifice
popularity for results.
And you know, I'm not going to sit here and say it'll be fun to do.
It won't be. But I went through it once already on a smaller scale.
And quite frankly, you have a much longer runway to do it
at the federal level than I did at the state level.
And I had, you know, hard deadlines of, you know, June 30,
2010 and July 1, 2010 to accomplish both.
On the entitlement side, I think I'm the only person who's been talking about this and
saying out loud, we've got to consider raising retirement age and we've got to consider
means testing and eligibility for social security.
And those too, also, you know,
I remember watching Biden's State of Union address,
and to me, the most disgusting part of it
was when he said, can we all agree?
We're not gonna touch social security.
And both sides stood up and cheered.
Yeah, I agree.
That was the worst moment for me as well.
Gires and hypocrites, like they all know,
it's going broken 11 years,
and that's an automatic 24% benefit cut
on the social security side,
an automatic 25% Medicare benefit cut on that side.
So you're not gonna be able to let that happen.
And so you gotta deal with those issues,
and I think you can deal with them
through both eligibility issues regarding means testing. And you can deal
with it by also dealing with retirement age. Retirement age I would do it over the longer
term, not for people in their 50s and 60s currently, but for people in their 40s and below.
And let me just say one follow up because to your point, I think the recent polling show
is something like 83% plus of
Americans support the benefit they get from these two programs, social security and Medicare,
that it should not be touched.
That is the popular opinion.
That is what the voters are saying.
Do you not think that you put yourself at risk in your campaign by making these statements
and how do you get elected and instigate change?
I put myself a risk by running. Yeah, let alone put myself a risk right. I just think you have to be honest with people
It's 11 years it's not 20 years. It's 11 now and and it means that if the next president doesn't deal with it
Then it is going to be an absolute crisis mode when it has to be dealt with. We'll
be inside three years. And at that point, the options will be even fewer. So yeah, of
course, it's, and I know someone will run a commercial.
By the way, is that the part, is that the behind closed door conversation? Is that what's
going on? Is the folks that you know that you talk with everyone behind the closed door
when they're not in front of the camera are saying we are going to have to deal with
this in the next presidential administration? Yeah, but but they all say I can't
believe you're saying it out loud. Right. But you know, to me, we are in such a bad place in politics
in this country. If we don't start telling the people the truth about the problems we have,
we're never going to have an opportunity to solve them.
And that's risky, but my entire candidacy is risky.
So you know, you might as well just go for it and tell people what you really think.
And I do think there are a number of people out there who are thinking people.
I think most people who answer that 83% number, you know, David, are people who don't even know that we're 11 years away
from insolvency. Because nobody talks about that part. And if you don't talk about that
part, why would any of them want Social Security touched? But I'm finding in my town hall
meetings, when I tell people, it's 11 years from insolvency, how would you deal with a 25% cut, 24% cut in your social security benefit?
people older folks in particular look horrified and
So you know, I think it's an educational process and I've always tried to treat politics at least in part that way that
you know
You know something I say New Jersey all the time when
press would ask me about a poll that didn't like a position I was taking on issue.
I'd say, you know, a leader's job is not to follow polls is to change them.
And my job is to change them.
And to persuade and convince through facts and argument that this is the right way to go.
And sometimes you'll win and sometimes you won't.
But if you don't tackle the problems, what the hell are you doing there?
You know, the housing behind you is nice, but frankly, it's not worth it to me.
If I'm going to go there and just be another one to kick this can down the road as Obama, Trump, Obama, Trump and Biden have all done. Bush tried
to do something about it, and the Congress rejected it. But Obama, you know, Trump and Biden
have done nothing. What are your top two areas where you would cut in order to save entitlements?
What are the other areas where you would go to find savings? Well, look, I think we have to look at social spending in general.
That's really drastically increased post-COVID.
And those increases have not been taken back.
So I think you have to look at all the programs that were ramped up during COVID
and say, okay, what's it going to be to bring it back to pre-COVID spending to start?
And then, after you do that, a further evaluation of those programs to see if they're effective.
And I think that would get you a good part of the way there, given how much spending increased
during COVID. I think, secondly, we need to look at the way we fund education in this country as well.
And whether or not when we're spending 800 billion,
what do we do with the 80 billion, the federal government spends?
Another place that is interesting, a place to look.
Small in comparison to a two trillion dollar debt I understand
But that's another place I would look and
The only place I really wouldn't look is on the military side at this point because I think you've got to increase efficiency
And effectiveness at the Pentagon, but on the other hand, I don't think
That this is the time to be cutting back there when our
Navy and Air Force are both in the conditions they're in.
This is a good segue with the military.
Obviously, one of the major differences in thinking on this pod and a big debate inside
the Republican Party is around, should we defend Ukraine and then eventually will we defend Taiwan? And so maybe
I'll hand it off to David. I'm stunned that this is coming up on your pod.
Yeah. It's a point of contention. I won't speak for sacks, but I'm a porn
before governor. Yes, sir. As does my oldest son listen to it. So in times when I miss, my son Andrew is,
and he wanted to give me a full briefing
before I was gonna go on the pot today.
And his evaluation of all of you,
I told him I was gonna refrain from that
because I didn't wanna bring his biases
into the interview.
But, can you at least tell us what his evaluations were?
Well, afterwards I will. Absolutely, absolutely? Well, after afterwards, I will.
Absolutely. Well, okay, by the way, our path to presidential candidates is through the sons,
it seems. It's kind of a common. Yeah, actually RFK sons, very big into the pod. David, of course,
is a pacifist. He's a longtime GOP member, but doesn't believe we should be fighting, never
ending wars. Let me go back. Yeah, let me level said here on foreign policy first before we get into Ukraine.
I want to go back to the Bush era for ever wars, the Iraq war.
One of the reasons why Trump, I think, really took off in 2016 is he was the first Republican
to really come out and say that the Iraq war and all these no-least or forever wars we
got into as a big mistake. And even though he was, even though he was for it when we did it. Okay, well fair enough
But he said on the Canadian trail and hold on let me just finish the question in 2016
He said that bush lied us into the war and he said no more bushes putting aside Trump for a second
We can get to Trump
What is your view on it? Do you fundamentally agree with that that we were lied into the Iraq war? Do you defend it? No, I think that I think that most people would admit that we were misled. I wouldn't
use the word lied. I would say misled into the Iraq war because of the WMD issue. I mean, I
supported the Iraq war because of WMD. And I thought of Saddam Hussein at WMD that that was something that we had to deal with
in the context of the post 9-11 world.
When it turned out that he didn't have WMD,
I don't think there would have been many people
who would have been supportive of the Iraq war,
absent WMD.
So I thought Trump's statements in 2016
were typical for him.
He changed his opinion.
And instead of giving a rational reason for it,
he gave a soft moroc one.
And so I don't give him a whole lot of credit for that.
But you did at the time in a sense,
I mean, when Bush said, sorry,
Trump said that Bush lightest into Iraq war
at the South Carolina debate that was on February 13th
You endorsed him on February 26th. Yeah, so what's that mean?
Well, I mean if you thought his answer was soft moroc, why'd you endorse some two weeks later?
I endorse them because I was convinced he was gonna be the Republican nominee for president
And I didn't want Hillary Clinton to be the president. And so having been in that race, competed with him
after he won South Carolina, convinced he was gonna be
the nominee and having at that time
had a 15 year relationship with him.
My view was I could go in there
and try to make him a better candidate
and if you won a better president
and that's why I endorse him.
It's absolutely nothing to do with his sophomore
of cancer on that.
I didn't like his answer. On the wall, either
saying Mexico is going to pay for it. I thought that was sophomore as well. But you know what?
In American politics, you don't get to all for the vote for the candidate you want to vote for.
You get to vote for the ones who are left. And if I had my first choice in 16, it would have been me.
But that didn't work out. So I defaulted into
Trump because I thought he was a better choice than Hillary Clinton. And by the way, still
do think he was a better choice than Hillary Clinton.
Okay.
But you probably agree with that, right, Sacks? You thought Trump would be a better choice
than Hillary Clinton?
I mean, honestly, back in 2016, I wasn't sure what to make a Trump because he was such
a outsider and sort of a wrecking ball.
I agree with him about the Iraq war, but I can accept the governor's answer that we were
misled on that war.
And if we had known the truth about it, we never would have gotten into it.
So I think we can all agree on that.
Yep.
I want to get to Ukraine, but just quickly, 2012, do you regret not running in 2012?
There's a lot of commentators who say that you
kind of were the Trump before Trump, you had this combative style, this kind of take-no-presenter
sort of attitude, and you kind of had a moment in 2012 where it looked like maybe you could
have been the front runner of the candidate. I guess why didn't you go for it in 2012?
And do you regret that at all?
I don't regret it, and I wasn't ready to be president, and that's why I didn't you go for it in 2012 and do you regret that at all? I don't regret it and I wasn't ready to be president and that's why I didn't run.
I know it seems quaint now after Barack Obama and Donald Trump have been president.
But back in 2012, I really felt like it was necessary to feel in your heart and your
mind you were ready.
When people started talking about me running for president,
I hadn't even been governor for a year. And before that, I've been a prosecutor.
And in my heart, I just, David, you know, it just didn't feel like I was ready to be president.
And if I don't feel something in here, I'm not going to be very effective at making the argument politically, nor am I gonna be able to convince people to give me their money, which you need to do as well.
And so no, I don't regret it.
And by the way, all those commentators who say that never ran for God damn thing in their
lives.
And they all can think, oh, you would have won, you would have beaten Romney, and you
would have beaten Obama.
Maybe I would have, maybe I wouldn't have,
but that's kind of like the dog catching the garbage truck.
If you don't think you're ready, and you catch it,
the worst moment wouldn't have been losing that election.
The worst moment might have been winning it,
and getting into the old full office
for the first time and saying, oh my God,
am I really ready to do this?
So, I don't have any regrets.
I really don't, this? So I don't have any regrets. I really don't. And
I'm everybody who usually, you know, commentates in that way. Are people who have never put
their name on a ballot for anything? And until you do that, you don't know what it feels
like and what it means to have to offer yourself up to people for anything, let alone for president. Yeah, okay, fair enough.
Going chronologically here, 2014, Biden is now Obama's vice president.
He requests the Ukraine portfolio to run it for Obama.
There is a famous phone call that gets leaked where our deputy, Secretary of State,
Victorian Newland, is on tape picking the new government of Ukraine, which takes
effect a few weeks later after the violent overthrow of the democratically elected Ukrainian
government, the Yanukovych government.
Three months after that, Hunter Biden is appointed to the board of barisma.
Do you believe that that appointment was made for any other reason than Joe Biden was the day facto ruler of Ukraine.
I don't know about him being the de facto ruler of Ukraine.
I mean, he was the one.
I don't think Joe Biden could be the de facto ruler of anything.
But let me clarify what I mean by that.
On the victory of a new, on the victory of Newland phone call, she says she needs to get approval
from Biden and Jake Sullivan as National Security
Advisor for this new Ukrainian government that she's picking. So she basically is saying that
Biden is the boss, he's going to sign off on this. They apparently get the approval from Biden
and that government does go into effect after what appears to be a US backed coup. So Biden clearly has
enormous influence over that country. Not okay. It's for Jake or Jake Sullivan or Jake
Sullivan. So look, it's too glib to say he's the ruler of the country. So I don't mean
that. I just mean he's the ultimate authority. It seems like in approving or picking this
new government three months after he does that,
Hunter Biden's appointed the Board of Barista.
So my point to you is,
what reason could there be for Hunter Biden's appointment
other than Joe Biden's influence over that country?
None.
There you have it.
What else do you want me to say?
So a year later, so 2015,
I don't know why sax became a venture capital.
It's he should have been a prosecutor.
Absolutely.
It's just incredible.
I'm overwhelmed at the moment.
I don't know.
I'm surprised.
Oh my God.
You're on the ropes.
I'm just trying to get a great person.
Sex flip to page 13.
Yeah.
Come on.
I want to get.
I want to get this.
It's just a four hour podcast.
Yeah. It feels like we're going to go day by day over the last decade. Yeah, come on. So let's, no, no, no, I wanna get, I wanna get, this is a four hour podcast.
Yeah, it feels like we're gonna go day by day
over the last decade and then,
underbite school.
I wanna establish common ground.
I wanna establish.
You were 14 years old on the middle school playground
and you pushed that kid Bobby.
What were you thinking?
No, I'm actually establishing common ground
with the governor before I get into areas
you might disagree, okay.
Okay, here we go.
Okay.
So, 2015, you have this prosecutor named Shokin, this Ukrainian prosecutor who is investigating
Berisma.
Joe Biden, according to his own acknowledgement on a videotape to, I think he was speaking
to the council of four relations, says it against Shokin fired.
And then magically the investigation into Burisma stops. Do you think that was in furtherance of stopping corruption in
Ukraine or was that an effort by Joe Biden to protect himself or his son from
this investigation? I think we're gonna find out as continued congressional
oversight occurs and the special counsel I hope investigation broadens. So I'm not ready
to say I know that for sure, but I'll tell you this much. There's enough smoke there
that we got to see where the fire is. And I'd also say about Biden, I would never discount
not as a substitute motivation, but perhaps as an additional one, the fact that he likes to pretend he's in charge of things.
But instead his staff is really in charge and that's how you get trained in the United States Senate.
Your staff really runs everything
at least with many of the senators and that's why it's such a bad
training ground for the presidency in my view. But I I
digress myself. I'd say it is a likely motivation. It may not be the only one.
And it's something I'm certainly intrigued to find out about as oversight moves forward.
And I hope the special counsel's investigation broadens into the specifics of
then vice president Biden's involvement with his son's business
dealings. Let's talk about that for a second. I guess the most recent revelation is that Joe Biden
was communicating with his son under a pseudonym or a burner account. Was it Robert Peters?
In your experience as a prosecutor, is there any legitimate reason why somebody would want to
prosecutor? Is there any legitimate reason why somebody would want to use a pseudonym for communicating with their son? Look, Burner accounts always raised
my eyebrows, has a former prosecutor. But what I will say is that I would
understand someone in a public life if they're communicating with family, wanting
to do that in a way where it wouldn't be detected by folks
who are prying in one way or the other,
whether that might be media, but more particularly hackers
and other folks who are able to do things
that I really don't have much understanding of,
except to be fearful of them.
So, I don't wanna say that as a de facto proof point, David.
But again, going back to my seven years as a US attorney, when I saw someone having a
burner phone or other types of burner accounts, definitely made me say, let's take a look
a little more closely at that and see what we can find.
So at a minimum, at a minimum, it's suspicious for sure and deserves inquiry.
Yeah, especially after buying a city I no involvement with the Sun's business deal.
And so we found out from Devon Archer's sworn testimony who was Hunter Biden's partner
that Biden participated in 20 phone calls with clients to be the brand.
So we're going too far down the Biden and Trump, well, which will give us tons of, I think, material.
Maybe we can get to Ukraine.
We're to Ukraine war, and who do you think is ultimately responsible for the invasion
of Ukraine?
I think the United States.
Obviously, the governor has study supports Ukraine, and he believes that.
I'm like you're responsible.
I'm like you're responsible.
I'm like you're responsible.
Yeah, so maybe just in terms of governor, do you think the United States is responsible
for the invasion of Ukraine because we didn't do enough in terms of taking NATO off the
table, like some people think, or do you think Putin is responsible for invading Ukraine
because he invaded Ukraine.
I don't want to leave the witness.
You're already dead.
But the, the, the, my answer is that the Putin is responsible.
Now I do think though that United States in action um and and bad signal sending to Putin
going all the way back to George W. Bush who said I looked into his eyes and saw his soul.
Then to Barack Obama, who was completely uninterested in anything, and when Putin made moves on
Ukraine under the Obama administration, he did nothing. To Donald Trump, who saw it as an opportunity to extort Vladimir Zelensky,
to get dirt on Joe Biden in return for military aid, to Joe Biden who I think has been a
hand-ranger on this issue. And when he said, well, maybe a small invasion wouldn't be so
bad. It reminds me of something I said to folks when I was US attorney, everybody's definition
of the word small is different and you can't assume what they mean is the same thing you
mean. So I do think there were American actions and inactions which contributed to sending
signals to Putin that maybe we wouldn't care if he did it. But that's a small sliver in my view of the
responsibility, the lion's share of the responsibility is in my view on Putin.
Fair enough. Would you admit you crane in tornado?
Well, I think that in the situation we're in now, David, it's almost a de facto point at this
point. I think that given that
we permitted Russia to do what they did, given that were that that they have now executed
what they've executed in terms of their aggression against Ukraine and the NATO support from a military
hardware and other persp and intelligence perspective for Ukraine, I think it is now a foregone conclusion
that Ukraine will be admitted to NATO. And frankly, it's got to be now, I think, one of the
penalties and one of the prices that Putin pays for his aggression.
But when would you do that? I mean, so Yen Stoltenberg at the Vilnius Summit made it
explicit that Ukraine's future isn't NATO, but it could not happen unless
and until they win this war.
Would you admit them sooner than that?
No.
Okay.
No, I would not.
Because that would lead to a war three, obviously.
That's what I'm attempting to avoid.
Yeah.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Would you have been willing to take NATO expansion off the table in 2021 in order to avoid a war?
No, I think that was too late.
If you were going to take NATO expansion off of the, off of the table,
if you were going to do it, it would have been done much earlier.
Because if you did it then, that would essentially be giving into Putin's threat.
And I think that would have sent an even worse signal than some of the signals that I that I mentioned before
So no, I wouldn't have been willing to do it in 21 in order to avoid it because quite frankly
I don't believe that it would have avoided it. It just would have forced all that do you believe that we made the correct decision
I mean, I know I'm going way back here, but in 2008 at the Bucharest summit we declared our intention
To bring Ukraine and Georgia for that matter
in to NATO, but we didn't have a plan to do it. Do you believe that was a mistake?
I think it was a mistake not to if you're gonna do it you should have a plan that lays out exactly how and when and why and I think just
expressing aspirational goals in that regard is dangerous in foreign policy in that regard.
And so I think the mistake was made not necessarily by ever having Ukraine and NATO, but by doing
it the way it was done again, was in my view an unnecessary or at least a not well thought
out provocation.
Is there anything about Joe Biden's policy in Ukraine that you would change?
Yeah, it would have been much more aggressive in providing military hardware much sooner
than what he did. And I think he's been a hand-bringer on it. Every step has been preceded
has been preceded by fretting and burrowing frowling brows and and and hammering and I think if you're gonna be in this you have to give them the tools
they need to win when I met with Silensky a month ago he made it very clear to
me he had no interest in American or allied troops in Ukraine now or ever
He felt this as Ukraine's war to win or lose
but that they needed the the military hardware
Necessary to to compete in this war against Russia and that
You know my view of what their biggest concerns were, which I, the ones
that I agree with, are the pace and amount of armaments that have been given, not only
by the US, but by the rest of NATO allies as well.
I mean, for a lot of us, let me just ask a couple of quick follow-ups here, and then we
can move on.
I mean, for a lot of us, Biden has not been how far it had about this.
He saw it $113 billion appropriation.
That seems like a ton of money
that could have been spent domestically.
What little hand-ringing there was was on the giving
of F-16s and Abrams tanks.
And the reason for that, Biden said,
was that it could lead to war three.
I mean, are you not concerned about those kinds of escalations?
I mean, isn't that a good thing to be concerned about?
Not too specific about. It's always important to be concerned about those kinds of escalations. I mean, isn't that a good thing to be concerned about, not to specific about? It's always important to be concerned about it, but you have to be thoughtful about it
and look at what the alternatives are. And to me, the alternative of allowing the combination
of China and Russia to route Ukraine is something that's not in the US vital interest and will lead to other
problems as well with China going forward.
And so, none of these are easy decisions, Dave, but what they are are the ones that you
want someone who is thoughtful and has some experience making them as president. And I don't think Biden checks either of those boxes sufficiently, and I think his
conduct has shown that.
And by the way, the same applies to Trump.
What do you think the resolution is here, and if in, I don't know, 16 months, you're
president, or when you're president?
How would you deal with this if the war still
Raging here. Well, I think it depends on what disposition the war is in at that point. Yeah, I'm Jason I think you have to evaluate how successful has Ukraine been in pushing back?
They've made some success in the past couple of weeks in terms of breaking through some of the Soviet initial defensive lines
I think we have to see exactly
how successful they've been. But what I would say is that there's no question that this is a conflict
that we need to support and send a clear message, messages that have not been, as I said earlier,
since it all clearly had put in that. You know, this is a guy who has openly discussed the reassembling of the
Soviet Union. And I have no, no illusions about the fact that this former KGB or things that
the Soviet Union for the good old days. And if he thought he could get away with assembling
as much of it as he possibly could, he would.
And I think that we have to send a very clear message
on that to him and a very clear message on that
to China regarding authoritarian expansionism.
And this is where I think the Trump,
DeSantis, Ramaswami foreign policies are so hopelessly ill-informed and naive.
The idea that we're going to go to Putin, who yesterday was sitting with Kim Jong-un,
and persuaded the better places to be with us. Go away from your communist brothers in China
in North Korea and come with us because it'll be a much better deal for you.
And that Donald Trump is going to do that in 24 hours or if a fake Ramaswami is going
to do it by virtue of his winning personality.
I mean, to me, he looks like the guy you wanted to stuff in the locker in the 11th grade.
But I don't think that's the guy who's going to post a Vladimir Putin to leave the communist
Chinese and to come to America
side.
But governor, you have to admit the war is not going well for the Ukrainians.
I mean, this counteroffensive, here's what we are promised.
Remember, just several months ago, before the counteroffensive, you had people like
the Treas, Ben Hodges saying that the counteroffensive would be like a blitz.
They would rapidly penetrate the sort of beacon lines.
They would march across the country to the sea of Azazov.
They cut off the land bridge to Crimea.
All this would happen within weeks, and it would be a significant Ukrainian victory.
It has been almost a total failure.
The Ukrainians have taken even the Washington Post and Politico publications like that have
said their losses have been staggering.
The battlefield reports have been sobering.
These are our top blob publications saying this.
So we have been unsuccessful.
Moreover, you say we should give them more weapons, but we've run out.
We've run out of the key type of ammunition in this war, which is artillery shells.
That's why we're giving them cluster bombs.
We got the cupboard as bare.
So I'm just wondering
How exactly would you turn this around given that the Ukrainians are losing this war very badly?
Well first off
There was a lot in there. All right, let's go back to the predictions from portrayas and others
You didn't hear me making those predictions because I think anybody who was briefed on the on the
deficiency of armaments for Ukraine would not have said something like that unless it was wishful thinking.
Secondly, I understand the reports regarding our own deficiencies in providing them with with more armaments. We have, I think, work to do with the rest of our allies in NATO in terms of their providing more more of the artillery and other armaments that are needed by the UK.
The Europeans have even less than we do. I mean, you know, well, but they, but look, this is going to have to be something that we're going to have to cobble together together to get it done.
And it also shows what I was saying earlier in regards to the budget question,
that this massive military built up the Donald Trump says he did was baloney.
I think you have an interesting point there, actually, which is to me, one of the biggest surprise of this war is that we spend eight or and 77 billion on the Pentagon and that we could run out of ammo.
So I mean, without blaming Trump per se or Biden, I just think we're getting ripped off.
I mean, the military industrial complex is royally screwing the American taxpayer.
How can we spend eight or 77 billion dollars and not have ammo?
Can you explain that to me?
Or have food insecurity for a lot of members of the military not have paid leave not have
Healthcare the idea that you don't want to look at that budget is an enormous said that is what it is not
What did you say? I said I know no I did not say that what I said was that
The Pentagon has to be made more efficient and more effective
with what it spends, but not reduce what it spends. And that goes right to the point that
David just made, which is you have to get answers as president to the questions of what
are you spending $877 billion on if we're running out of ammo and there's food insecurity and there's
not paid leave.
So what I was saying through the answer I gave you on the budget was, I did not see that
as a place to cut, but I did say very clearly that it's a place where we have to make the
Pentagon more efficient and effective.
And we need a secretary of defense and a president
who wanna demand answers to those questions first.
Are you not sympathetic to the idea
that efficiency sometimes means spending less
to get the same or more?
If that's the conclusion we come to
after examining it, then I'm very sympathetic to that.
So then you are opening to cutting the defense budget.
I'm open.
It is a secondary
issue, the primary issue on defense. No, I understand. I just want to clear answers so I understand
where you're coming from. You want to look at the defense budget. You have an intuition
that there's potentially extreme levels of waste. Right. And so if you find that waste,
will you just cut it? No, you just reallocate it? Reallocate.
Why?
For the very reasons that David's just talking about,
if we're running out of ammo,
if our submarine capacity is not where it should be,
which I believe it is not,
if our ship capacity is not where I believe it should be,
and it is not in my view,
and if our modernization of our air forces air forces, not where it should be,
which I believe it is not, then you reallocate that money.
Okay, so there's a principle in capitalism called zero-based budgeting, which I actually
like what you're saying, but just to kind of double click on what that is, zero-based
budgeting starts with the principle that you just started, which is what are our priorities,
what do we want to accomplish? And then you go and systematically build up
where the budget actually starts at $0.
Hey, Pentagon, you get zero, not $800 billion.
What do we need to accomplish?
Oh, we need bullets.
Okay, we need armaments.
Okay, we need to have food security
for all of our armed servicemen and women.
Absolutely.
And then what happens if that number gets the $350 billion?
Do you just
cut half a billion or do you find ways to spend the other half a trillion dollars?
Well, I'm glad you brought that up because that's what I did is governor. I was the first
governor who did zero based budgeting and I did it. First governor in Jersey to do it.
And I did it because of the the the dire straits that we were in. I didn't think we could assume any longer
anything in terms of our spending.
So I absolutely would want to take that approach.
Now, I don't think you're going to go from 877 billion
to 350 billion and say that we've met all of our defense needs
and the needs of our fighting men and women
with that number. But
let's just leave the number blank for a minute. If I concluded that we could do everything we needed
to do through the reengineering of what we how we were spending the Pentagon and that ultimately it
would check the boxes I want to check in terms of some
of the issues I just talked about. And it turned out to be less than 877 billion. Of course,
I would look not to spend 877 billion. But that assumes a lot of things in there as you
know. But the principle of zero-based budgeting from my perspective worked when I was governor.
Not only in terms of keeping our spending at an increase of 2% a year annually for eight
years, but it also educated me much more on the intricacies of the budget as the ultimate
decision maker.
And I think that was useful.
You were a very effective prosecutor
and part of that is having a good intuition.
So I'm just gonna ask you, your intuition,
how much waste do you think is in the military
industrial complex and that 877 billion?
Do you think there's 30 cents of waste?
Do you think there's 40 cents of waste?
Do you think there's five cents of waste?
Or do you think there's like 70 cents of waste?
My intuition tells me that it is significant.
I can't put a number on it.
It'd be irresponsible for me to put a number on it.
But there's no doubt that when you see us spend the $877 billion and we don't have 155
millimeter artillery shells, that there's waste.
Let's talk about governance and just like civil society and government for a second.
But let's just finish on this military and industrial complex.
Why is it, how does it come to be that so much corruption and graft gets introduced into
the military budget?
Explain just how it happens.
How does all of this waste end up happening?
Where on the one hand, you ask
people, men and women, oftentimes for oftentimes minorities to come and serve and put their
lives on the front lines, you don't even give them enough food. Somebody's clearly making
money out of the $877 billion. Just explain how that waste comes to be. And the influence
peddling and the revolving door just so that the average person
can understand it. Well, first off, and I'll answer your question specifically. But let
me say, by answering it this way, I don't want to imply in any way that this waste and
corruption happens just in the military budget, because it happens, it's been my experience, it happens across budgets, across disciplines. With that being said, I would say it happens in
number of points. First of all, not doing zero-based budgeting contributes to
that because people no longer have to rationalize or justify the existence of
a program. They just need to hire enough lobbyists to keep it getting put in
there. So that's one way that it happens.
Secondly, incompetence and administration.
So people who are either purely incompetent in the job or alternative two is are corrupt
in the job.
And so they look the other way on waste because they want to get a job through the revolving
door you talked about on the other way on waste because they want to get a job through the revolving door you talked about on the other side.
Third way that I think it happens is extraordinary events
that cause political overreaction.
So you'll have an extraordinary event that occurs
from a national security perspective.
And then politicians want to look like we're responding to it, and the way we're responding
to it is we're going to spend X-10s, hundreds of billions more on this broad category of initiatives
without really digging into whether that can be
spent effectively that way or not. And then once it gets in there for the reasons
I gave to you in the two examples before, it doesn't get out. So you layer it over
and layer it over and layer it over and layer it over. And then that's the way
that stuff happens. So I think it's a bit of a nutshell presentation on that for you, but I think those are the
three most important elements that I've observed personally, in governing a state with 60,000
employees and a $ billion dollar budget.
You think the antidote to that is to start with zero-based
budgeting or there are other more radical changes you would
want to make, whether it's the CIA or the NSA.
How do you think about getting to the root cause of or root
answer of the truth?
Look, I think that there's two ways to do it initially.
And zero-based budgeting is one of them.
Secondly, is to try to select competent people for those positions who understand clearly
from the leader what their mission is.
Would you, for example, be willing to do an EO that said, if you've served in these roles,
you're banned from serving any of these folks for 20 years or something like that.
Something that just makes it clear that there's no financial motivation for somebody to
walk out the door and then go and work for Lockheed Martin or...
Just augment that.
Let's talk about these former generals, like the ones we are quoting who predicted counter-offensively
this wonderful success.
They're all now on the boards of weapons manufacturers. So the people in the Pentagon,
who make a lot of these procurement decisions about weapons systems, when they retire,
they go off to serve on these boards. I mean, the big weapons companies are basically their
retirement program. I mean, that seems like a horrible set of incentives. I mean, would you do
something like ban the revolving door between people working
in the Pentagon and then working for a weapons company?
Well, I certainly would be willing to consider
if they worked with a particular contractor,
they had supervised rear decision making authority
over a program run by a particular contractor,
not being able to go back out and
work for that contractor.
But the problem is when they go back in, the problem is they know in advance that there
are a time of programs going to be working on one of these boards.
So they're not as tough as they should be when they're actually in the government job.
Tough problem.
You talk about the revolving door on the way in or the way out on the way out.
Like basically you work your way up to general and then you retire and then you join the
boards of these Raytheon and Lockheed and all these guys. Well I think that there are appropriate
restrictions that can be put on in terms of number of years to make it go past
the period when that person could have direct political influence on the
administration that's in play but I also think we need to be careful about the
fact that we don't we don't wind up
throwing out the baby with the bathwater in the sense that there are some people who are
legitimate people who are not looking to do it in a way that is corrupt or unethical
But who develop great expertise in certain areas and that expertise can be very helpful. We're only looking at the negative side of it
So I think there are ways to do what we need to do with the political influence and that it would be to ban it for the rest of that administration
So if you serve in a particular administration for the rest of that administration you can't go back out and
work
On the issues that you were working on when you were
there. That to me, it seems to be reasonable. I mean, I, I, I don't know whether 20 years make sense or not.
But, you know, we've identified the problem. Now, let's figure out how to fix it.
My, I'm willing and open to do that. But I want to make sure I do it in a way that is not creating a whole different set of
problems that we'll then be talking about. And the analogy I make in part on this is the wall
between CIA and FBI and the problems that that I think precipitated regarding 9-11. So,
for a sip of tea. Regarding 9-11.
So, you know, there are fixes to these things.
And I'm telling you guys is, I'm willing to be open about how to do it.
I favor the concept.
I think we're negotiating over length of years and how it applies.
Should that be the case for all government administrative jobs, governor?
Sure.
So FDA into healthcare, healthcare into FDA. It's the same principle, USDA, like, should that be the case everywhere?
It's the same principle. Yeah. How should that then be applied to Congress people?
Well, since the EO won't cover members of Congress, in the same way that that's why they don't
have term limits, which I believe they should have, and why none of the stuff will ever apply to Congress.
term limits, which I believe they should have, and why none of the stuff will ever apply to Congress. So let's tell the truth. It'll never apply to Congress because they'd have
to pass it for it to apply, and it will never happen. But President could do what he could
do about his branch of government and should, and I would.
Let's pivot to one of the most controversial topics between the two parties, which is immigration.
And I'll pull up two charts here to queue up the discussion.
Here's the first chart.
Just since 2000, we've been a net migration in the United States, just on a steady stream
down at around 5 million.
The second chart is a border crossings.
That orange line there that you're seeing, that's COVID.
And then the blue line
obviously is the return from COVID. But the border agency seems to think not much has changed over
the last couple of years at the border. However, we have, and that's across obviously multiple
administrations. Other countries have point-based systems. They have very logical discussions over
immigration. Is this person going to add and be a creative discussions over immigration, is this person going to add
and be accretive to the society?
Is this person gonna be a drain on society?
Yeah, they just, UK, Australia, New Zealand,
countless countries now use this point-based system.
It's incredibly polarized here,
and we have the lowest unemployment of our lifetime.
Plenty of jobs, we still have 1.6 jobs per American
who are looking for jobs.
I'm curious why you think this immigration discussion
is so polarized and not factual
and how you as president would resolve this issue
and maybe make it make more sense to the American public.
Well, look, I think the first thing, the first part of the question is, how has it gotten
so polarized? And I think it's because people in political life have used this as a weapon
on both sides of the aisle to try to promote their own political agendas. Democrats have wanted this perception
on their positive side from their perspective that they'll let anybody in because they
think ultimately those folks who come in will be their voters, ultimately, over the long
haul. And they also want to raise restrictions,
they want to raise the issue of restrictions that are placed
by Republicans on this to make us seem to be heartless,
uncaring, unfeeling people.
On our side,
we want to make the entire system seem completely lawless because that plays into our view of
ourselves as the law and order party and the Democrats as the party who could give a damn
about law and order.
And we want to play into the populace side of it, which says that any person who comes
over the border is likely to take your job, not just a job, your job.
And then when you present it to people that way,
they are course are gonna be anti-immigration
because they'd like to keep their job
and support their family and have a life that they wanna look
forward to and for their kids as well.
So that's my explanation on the first part as to how we got you.
Seems logical, yeah. And fair, by the way, your assessment of both parties, by the way,
on these topics, I think is excellent. And by the way, completely unfair way to have conducted
this stuff. The problem has been that we haven't had presidential leadership on this issue since Reagan.
So we haven't had presidential leadership on this issue since Reagan. Reagan ultimately, and I think he learned this as a conservative governor in a blue state
where he had to deal with Jesse Unra running his legislature.
And Reagan, let's all front of mind because I just finished writing a book on Reagan.
So it's fresh in mind to me. Reagan learned that it was only he, the governor, who could force
people into a room to get issues resolved. In the same way when he was president, he didn't love
the deal. He made unimmigration. Same way he didn't love the deal he made on immigration.
Same way he didn't love the deal,
he made on Social Security,
but he liked it more than he liked the alternative
of doing nothing.
I think the only way we're gonna resolve the immigration
issue, Jason, is to have a president,
as I said, in response to Davidid freeberg's earlier question on debt
are present is willing to sacrifice
some popularity to try to force
a resolution
and i do think
that most americans
would support
a merit-based immigration system why does it never come up i mean it's if these
other countries have had such great success with it why won won't any politician say it? I haven't heard you say it in the debates. I don't
know if you have. I haven't heard everything you've said, but they didn't even ask us about
immigration and debates. They didn't ask us that immigration in tidalments or the debt.
Three things we've already talked about here today, but they had time to ask me about UFOs.
Yeah, that was pretty bizarre. They're like, hey, let's give you the most meaningless question
of anybody in the governor.
That's what the base wants to hear.
Come on.
Yeah, wrap it up for us, governor.
Let's talk about UFOs.
I mean, what did you think of the ending of succession, governor?
Yeah, I mean, you know, it's like, I mean, so,
so I have talked about my town hall meetings
about Republicans should be advocating for a merit-based immigration system. I mean, so I have talked about my town hall meetings about
Republicans should be advocating for a merit-based
immigration system.
But we need to also recognize
while I think both parties should be in favor
of a secure Southern border.
If for no other reason, then the fentanyl and drug-related issues that are involved.
Why is there such a debate over the numbers? Because, you know, I just pulled up those numbers,
and that's the border patrol, and that's across multiple administrations. And then people are saying-
You're living in some kind of simulation, Jason. Do you see the Washington Post just last week?
The headline is, families crossing US border illegally reached all time
high in August.
This is the Washington Post.
Oh, you trust the Washington Post, huh?
I'm saying that if a liberal Democrat publication that serves the DC blob is admitting this problem,
why can't you admit it?
Oh, I'm not saying that it's not at all time highs, but it doesn't seem to have gotten much different
Then over the last two administrations. I don't want to act like it's not a serious problem. No, no, I don't
I promise you I'm not worried about my job. I brought it up a
I'm worried about the fact that the United States the United States can't absorb a million migrants a year
My question obviously I care about it. So don't tell me I don't care about it. I'm just fact checking that.
It's fine to fact check, but even though it's at all time highs
if you look at that chart, it seems like there's a big debate
on the numbers that, hey, maybe at all time highs,
but it's been relatively the same.
And so that's what I'm trying to get at, governor,
why can't we get good numbers on this?
Well, we do get good numbers on it,
but everybody slices the numbers differently.
You know, I used to work in a deli when I was in high school for a period of time.
And, you know, everybody had the same big chunk of baloney, but depending on how you sliced it,
it looked different. And so, I agree with David that it is a very serious problem right
now. And it's because of Biden's policies and his rhetoric. He said they very clear signal
during the 2020 campaign. If I win, the borders open, let's go. Everybody come on in.
And it has caused a crisis in a number of levels.
Also, Democratic politicians saying
that they were willing to be sexually,
cities and sexually states.
Well, now I see the front page in New York post every day.
And here's Eric Adams complaining.
They need help. They need help. And he's help. Well, you should
have shut up and not said you were a sanctuary city. And then you wouldn't need to help. But
it's easy. Did you see the video yesterday? He said it all his time in New York. He's
always seen an end to every problem. There's always a solution. He says, I have not seen, I cannot see an end to this problem.
I don't see a solution.
Yeah.
Go over there.
You just broke Jason's heart.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
he didn't.
I'm in favor of the point, the system have been very consistent about that.
I think we should actually have a thoughtful discussion of how many people we can actually
bring in and sustain, you know, that's the obvious discussion.
We all agree on merit-based immigration.
The thing that I have an issue with Jason is that you pretend like the borders not in crisis.
It is in crisis.
Oh, I think it's not, it hasn't been resolved for decades, right?
I mean, we have not had a solution there, but when's the last time the border was function?
Well, Trump at least had to remain inxico policy and then bite and revoked it and
now they're thinking about bringing it back as they have no way to control the huge
number of people who are streaming across i'm just trying to advocate for a point based
system by the way on the numbers yeah that's what should be part of a negotiation between
republicans democrats in congress in the White House, based upon the current circumstances.
We can't deal with all the stuff that's happened before.
But what we know now is we have current circumstances now, guys,
which are not only impacting quality of life in terms of crime
and quality of life in terms of education because you see what's going
to happen in the New York school system and you know you are going to have thousands of
immigrant children who now are going to show up with the New York City public schools
to be educated.
That's why the uncontrolled part of what David Sax is talking about is so vital right now.
And thirdly, but most importantly to me, is the fentanyl issue because when you have
110,000 people dying of overdoses last year in this country, and you have overdosed being
the number one killer of men between 18 and 34. It is a crisis. And it is a crisis, which is not created entirely by the border,
but is contributed to mightily by what's going on at the border.
Would you send, there's been talk of this, I think, from certain candidates. Would you send
troops into Mexico to take out the cartels? Or is that...
No, I would not. I would put National Guard at the border to work with customs and border patrol
to stop the fentanyl cartels from getting in to our country. And I would use our intelligence
community to do what we always do with enemies of that nature,
which is to target them and to make sure that if they're going to do what they're going to do,
that they're dealt with. But in terms of a Rhonda Santos full scale invasion of Mexico,
yeah, I think I'd probably demeure on that one. So you'd whack these people bring in the Fentionally and you wouldn't do it on the soil in Mexico. Correct. And I'd whack them within the laws of the United States.
Sure.
It would not be a vigilante system where everybody goes down there and just starts popping
somebody they think is a fentanyl dealer if they come over the border.
But what I would also say to you is we've got to, we've got to also make sure we deal with this
diplomatically with the Mexicans and by diplomatically, I mean not like being nice
through very hard negotiations with them to say to the Mexican president like you have
You are importing precursor chemicals from China
into your country to make fentanyl
With the sole purpose of profiting from and killing Americans
That's not something we're gonna tolerate. So you wouldn't send furio. We got it
You do it. I mean we do it the smart way. Yeah, not the way that lets you pound your chest and pretend you're you know
Television tough guy. Let me double click on on that since you brought up fentanyl.
We have this crisis here in San Francisco,
open air drug market, cheap as fentanyl you can get.
Plus we give subsidies if you come here
and you're a fentanyl addict.
We pay for you to come here.
Essentially, it's absolute chaos.
We keep getting promises in San Francisco
that we're gonna turn around
and we're gonna take it seriously and never happens.
Given that, is there not a case for the feds coming in and cracking down on the
fentanyl trade here? And if you were president, would you come in and you start the local authorities
and just take out all these crazy open air drug markets in some cities like Los Angeles and
San Francisco? I actually said that in the debate. What I would do would be to instruct
the attorney general to instruct the US attorneys in the cities with these kind of problems
that we are taking over the prosecution of violent and drug crime in those cities. If the
prosecutors on the state level are unwilling to do it, the US attorneys have the laws
under the federal books to do it.
We have the rooms of the federal prisons
and we will police these cities
until they get their act together.
I think you just got a couple million votes
and get off the phone,
because people here are fed up with the locals.
Governor, can I just push back on that?
I recently started reading the federalist papers again,
SACs, I don't know when you last reviewed them.
And I'm just struck by how so much of our modern political rhetoric is driven by what the
federal government will do for you on a national basis, a state basis, and now even a local
basis.
Is that really the role of the federal government?
No.
Or should each state and each city ultimately decide what the hell kind of city they want
to build, what they want to live in, and then deal with the consequences, and let the federal government become responsible for the things
that were defined in our constitution, and that the constitutional republic was meant to
set out to do for the federal government, rather than use the federal government as a hammer
to smash all nails everywhere.
At some point, the hammer is going to break.
So let me answer the question, which is no, it's not the world federal government to do it.
Unless the discord and the inability of the states to deal with an issue begins to affect
the entire country.
And I believe that these, this failure, and by the way, it's a planned failure, David.
This is the Soros group going around and electing these completely liberal prosecutors
who say, I'm not going to prosecute these crimes anymore.
It begins to affect the very nature of the entire country.
If we don't have functional cities, David, we can't have a functional country. And so, no, I would do this only because I think by the time I get
there in January of 25, we are going to be at last resort world. Now, if in the interim
between now and January of 25, the discord in places like San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, and others.
Got so bad that the citizens there rose up and demanded something different, and the states
and cities started to respond to it.
I'm no interest in doing this unless we are the law enforcers of last resort.
And so philosophically, I completely agree with you,
but we're now in a situation where,
when I was in New York City all day yesterday,
it is the worst I've seen New York City since the late 70s.
Not great, yeah.
And I was old enough then to go in,
I was a high school student in the late 70s
and go into the city and my parents used to
be petrified.
If I insisted on going into New York, go to a basketball game or a hockey game, the walk
from the Port Authority bus terminal on 41st and 8th to Madison Square Garden on 33rd
and 8th was a absolute youthful education on drugs and porn and violent crime.
But so I agree with you philosophically on that, but I think in the instance we're in
right now, this is what we'd have to do in order to get it back under control.
And so I'm not thrilled about it, but I think it's absolutely necessary.
In the United States, we have somewhere between two and three million Americans incarcerated.
One of the highest per capita incarceration rates of any country in the world.
And a lot of this justice reform movement arose from what are considered to be very deep
inequities in the imprisonment of American citizens for various petty crimes, misdemeanors,
that turn into felonies, that turn into three strikes, that turn into spending your life
in prison, and that obviously there's a big racial divide in how this affects the population.
And from that movement arose this effort to try and address the social inequities and
how the prison system has become to some, an extension or the follow-on to America's toward history with slavery.
What is your point of view then?
Do we have inequities in the prison system in how we address crime in this country?
And if so, what would the right path have been?
Looking back now at the efforts and the dollars that have gone into trying to solve this problem
through decriminalization that has obviously led
to massive problems in inner cities,
is it a problem?
The criminalization in this country,
the incarceration in this country,
and if so, what's the right path to addressing it?
And obviously, you have an intimate history here,
so you would know this better than most that we would talk to.
Look, I think it is a problem,
and let me tell you what I did as governor.
We did criminal justice reform in New Jersey,
and we did it in a bipartisan way.
And this is what we did.
I thought that the biggest problem we had in New Jersey was
our state constitution required.
It was a shall issue state on bail.
Everyone was entitled to bail under our Constitution and
The only factor that could be taken into account
Constitutionally, David was risk of flight
So if you had a rap sheet as long as my arm and your arm put together
That could not be considered by a judge and whether or not to grant bail or not,
nor could the nature of the violence you committed in those acts. I saw that as the
enormous problem. I agreed with Democrats that on a lot of these minor drug crimes, and
I mean dealing crimes on me, possession crimes, with addicts being arrested for small amounts of possession that we had
become a debtor's prison in New Jersey.
Then if somebody couldn't afford the 500 bucks for the minimum, which was usually $5,000,
they spent more time in county and state prison than they ever would have spent if they had just pled guilty
and been allowed to plead guilty and get sentenced.
So the deal we made was this, on certain defined nonviolent crimes, I would agree to the
state law allowing release on people's own reconnaissance. In return, the Democrats would amend our Constitution to make it a may issue state on bail, and
to add dangerousness to the community as a factor to be considered in granting bail or
not.
What's happened since then? crime in New Jersey is down since we did this. We closed two state prisons and we have not
had any spike in violent crime like you've seen in New York since then because we did it smartly
in a way that was balanced. And what you've also seen is 98% of the people released on the road for cognizance have shown back up for the court hearings.
So we're not having some people running around and jumping the ROR released that they've gotten.
And I took one of the two state prisons we closed and turned it into a drug treatment prison so that folks who had documented drug and alcohol addictions
while in prison were able to go for the concluding parts
of their term to this secondary prison,
to get, which was fully secure, and they were detained,
but they also got drug and alcohol treatment
while they were in there.
And what we've seen with that is we've seen recidivism drop among those people who have
gone through that program by nearly 40%.
There are ways we can do this without having the results New Yorkers had through their
ridiculous criminal justice reform.
We can do it the right way across the whole country.
Have you seen other states follow New Jersey's leader or New Jersey's model?
I have seen a couple of other states that have done it. I don't think anybody's
done it as well as we did it. And imagine this, you know, a Republican governor got support from the PBA and the FOP for that reform. So from law enforcement
professionals and got an A plus from the ACLU. Now, when you can get both of those, it's
kind of hard to get that done. And I think we've gotten it done and we just had a at my policy institute. We just had a seminar in this from people from the public defenders
to criminal private criminal defense lawyers, prosecutors and cops on a panel
and not one of them had an objection to criminal justice reform in New Jersey.
And this is now nearly 10 years after we did it So I think there are ways to do this
Unfortunately a lot of people don't want to have an a long-form conversation on criminal justice reform
They want to have
Either the Joe Biden approach from when he was in the Senate
Manitory minimums for everybody for everybody in the can three strikes you're out all that stuff
or they want to have the george sorrows conversation
you know where
uh... nobody who commits a crime really meant to do it
and all jayla's unfair
both of those who did wrong
government in the fb
briefly before
one of the revelations that came out during the Twitter files is that we
had 80 FBI agents monitoring Americans, social media accounts and submitting take down requests
to Twitter. This is a pre-eal on Twitter and presumably many other big tech companies.
I'm sure they weren't just doing this with Twitter. What business is it of the FBI to be monitoring and censoring
Americans?
Do you think there's any justification for that?
What is your view of that?
I think the only reason to monitor those kind of things would be for terrorist information.
And I think that would be reasonable to do.
But I don't think for any other reason, other than terrorist activity, domestic or foreign,
I think the FBI has a right to do that, and I think it's the right thing to do.
But I don't think under any circumstances that David, they should be doing that.
Are you willing to say to Chris Reyes?
I understand that you recommended Chris Re for the position a few years ago and and you're I think you're a fan of his or you
want to say to him knock this off you should not be you know involved in censoring American social media accounts.
I'm willing to say to Chris exactly what I just said to you and and by the way I've known Chris long enough.
I mean we were in the push Justice Department together starting back at night,
you know, right in the media post 9-11 period. So I'm known Chris now for 22 years. I will say exactly
what I think to Chris and will instruct him appropriately with the Attorney General. And let me just
make a point, David, since you brought that up. I don't think presidents should be involved in the criminal investigatory activity of
the Department of Justice in any way.
And so you should set policies that say like that, you know, your work should be restricted
on monitoring to just domestic or international terrorism.
But you shouldn't be commenting in any way
on what they're doing
from a criminal investigatory perspective.
I think that started in the Obama years
with Eric Holder when you appoint your wingman attorney general.
I guess that's what happens.
And the fact is that it's continued through the Trump years
and now through the Biden years.
And my instruction to my attorney general will be the same as it was because in New Jersey,
we don't elect the attorney general, we appoint them like you do in the federal system.
And what I said to each of my attorneys general was, I know I was the US attorney for seven
years.
I got to expertise and opinions on criminal prosecution.
I'm never going to call you ever.
And I never did. Because once you decide
to be a political figure and not a law enforcement figure, you should stay out of criminal investigations.
So I know you didn't ask it, but it struck me when you were talking about that.
Let me ask you one last question from my end, which is, why are you running for president?
Recent polling data show the 52% unfavorable rating, 23% favorable, and you're 3.5% in the average
of the national polls.
What's the goal here?
Help us understand how you think about the campaign
and how you think about your future as a political operator
and what your goal is with the campaign.
My goal is to be president of the United States.
And since I've been doing this for a while, I don't pay attention to national polls
Because we don't have a national primary and in fact we don't have a national general election
What we have is 50 individual state elections. That's the way we nominate candidates
And if you look the most recent Poland New Hampshire, I'm in second place in New Hampshire at 14 percent
I head of Ron to Sanchez ahead I head of Vivek, I head of Nikki, I head of Pence,
and behind only Trump. And now I'm behind by 20 points. I'll give you that.
But I'm behind a guy who's only at 34% in that poll.
And so I absolutely believe I can win New Hampshire.
And I believe if I win New Hampshire, David, then the whole race changes.
You have a line there, yeah, yeah.
Right, so let's start off with,
I'm running because I want to be president of the United States.
Yep.
And that's the only reason to run.
I think I don't need to run to become famous,
I'm famous enough.
I don't need to run, I don't need to run to get a book deal because you know what? I've already written
two books and my third one's getting ready to come out. I don't need it to get a job on
TV. I gave that up to run for president. So I'm running for president to be president, David.
And and that's why I'm doing it and for no other reason.
Should Donald Trump be in jail? We'll find out when these trials happen. What do you
think? I'm willing to give everybody the presumption of innocence because that's what the Constitution
demands that I do. Do I think that the prosecutorial intuition? I would have indicted both federal cases.
I would not have indicted the New York case or the Atlanta case as the Donald Trump. I think on
the New York case, I'm going to have to the new york case them in a hat and d a
as much more important work to be doing
then bringing a case
on a seven year old payment
to a porn star that he was having a fair with
to keep it from the american people
after the american people already know everything they need to know about it
so i think that was useless and purely political
in the Atlanta case
once jack smith indicted trump on election interference federally that was useless and purely political. In the Atlanta case, once Jack Smith
entided Trump
on election interference federally.
I know that Fannie Willis was probably very upset
that she had been investigating it for two and a half years
and he beat her to the punch,
but he beat her to the punch.
And there's no reason to indict somebody
for the same acts twice.
And so I wouldn't have entided him in Atlanta. I would have ent invited him for sure on the documents case,
but I will tell you since you asked,
I wouldn't have invited him on the documents.
I would have just indicted him on the obstruction of justice
and the lying.
I think by indicted on the documents,
you just made it a much more complicated case
that may not get the trial for a year and a half or two
because of the classified documents involved. the line. I think by intiting on the documents you just made it a much more complicated case
that may not get the trial for a year and a half or two because of the classified documents involved.
And I would have been dited them on the January 6 case because I believe his activity
from election night forward is worthy of the probable cause standard. Now we'll see
of the probable cause standard. Now, we'll see if the government could prove
it beyond a reasonable doubt on both those cases.
I will tell you,
but on those cases that you would bring,
that you would indict as a prosecutor,
what sentence would you seek?
Because these Democrat prosecutors
are seeking over 500 years of jail time for Trump.
I mean,
that's just the statutory. David, that's just the statutes to take us.
David, that's just the statutory number. It's not whatever is done. People do that all the
time. They look at the statutory maximum. They add up each count and the statutory maximum
and they come to fire. It never happens. And it's never asked for.
That's never asked for. And it's never asked for. What do you do? If you were the prosecutor,
what punishment would you be seeking? I don't think that it makes any sense
For Donald Trump to go to jail and it's not just because he's Donald Trump
It has more to do quite frankly with the fact that he'd probably be 79 years old
Before he'd be ready to go to jail and when I was prosecuting cases
I really felt like when you get to that age
and you send someone into the atmosphere that federal prison is
even the minimum security federal prison that you're essentially giving them a
death sentence
and unless they've done something with like birdie made off for instance
which is worthy of a death sentence
then i i would not think that sending him to jail
would be appropriate.
Now, a judge may feel differently,
and in the end, all the prosecutor does
is make a recommendation.
The judge makes a decision.
If I were president of the United States,
why would not consider pardoning Donald Trump?
If he were convicted,
unless the trial for some reason showed itself to have
You know unconstitutionally unfair elements that were not corrected by the courts
Other than that I wouldn't pardon him, but if you were sentenced to jail
I certainly would consider commuting the sentence for the reasons I just said Let's talk about what happened on January 6, where a lot of folks in the Republican Party are framing it as like, you know, a day
out at the park.
And we just saw Trump appointed judges, give the oath keepers and the proud boys sentences,
multi-decade sentences for seditious conspiracy.
Do you think these sentences that have been handed down
by Trump-A-Winney judges are part of a deep state conspiracy
against the Republicans,
or do you think these people are domestic terrorists
and that they got appropriate sentences?
You know, I don't wanna,
Jason, give an answer on each one of the cases
because I quite frankly,
could tell you that I haven't followed the cases
each one of them closely enough.
You just did on the other four.
That's given opinion, pardon me.
You just did on the other four though.
I don't know.
There were no, you're asking me about, that was the Trump cases.
Yeah, yeah.
And I'm talking about, and I said that because it was age.
Okay.
All right.
And so none of these folks on the Proud Boys,
I think we're in their 70s.
Okay.
So that's the difference between the two.
But I'm gonna try to answer your question.
Great.
I just don't wanna say I'm giving an opinion
as to each and every sentence.
Okay.
What I wanna say about it though is that what they did
on January 6th was unlawful.
It was extremely serious and it requires imprisonment.
Okay. And so each of these individual cases have nuances and individual facts to them
that I'm not, I will tell you, I'm not completely conversant in. Okay.
So the difference between a 15-year sentence and an 18-year sentence or a 22-year sentence,
difference between a 15 year sentence and an 18 year sentence or a 22 year sentence. If I sat down and I delved into what was presented a trial and what was presented in the sentencing memoranda,
I'd give you an opinion, but I haven't done that. I have to be honest with you. Can I ask one final
question from my perspective, one of the reasons that the polling can sometimes veer this way is that
The polling can sometimes veer this way is that in the Republican polls, a lot of the attacks against you, Governor, focus on obviously bridge gate and beach gate and then this
kind of like theoretical corruption allegations directed at you and your staff.
Now, your staff was convicted of wire fraud, but then the Supreme Court overturned it nine to zero.
Right.
And now what they said though, was that there was corruption,
but there wasn't corruption to try to get money,
which is why the wire fraud, I think that's what Atlantic
Hagan said in the ruling, the majority ruling.
And it was, and I know, so it was very, very clear that
the DOJ just kind of took, again, to your case,
talking about Trump the wrong charges almost
Okay, and what they did was not illegal even if what they did may have been illegal under a different statute in any event
It would be great for you to set the record on bridge gate and beach gate. We're really calling
beach gate
Well, I'm just calling about the press like really well
I think why people got upset was and I'm just gonna repeat this
I don't have an issue with this,
is there was a state beach that was closed
and there was pictures of you and your family on that beach
when everybody else was told to stay at home.
That's, I guess that's what people point to.
I'm just giving you, just say, just address it,
however you want, so you can be definitive in your own language.
All right, so let's deal with the beach situation.
language. Alright, so let's deal with the beach situation. Every beach in New Jersey that day was open except for one. Every beach in New Jersey. So the idea that people across
the state of New Jersey were kept off the beach that day and me and my family were the
only people on the beach is completely wrong. So everybody who wanted
to go to the beach that day could go to the beach somewhere in New Jersey except for the
state park. And the reason the state park was closed was because the legislature did not
send me a budget in time. If they had sent me a budget, I would have signed it and the
beach would have been open. They refused to send me a budget. Now, having said that factually, contextually,
it was a mistake for me to go on the beach. Now, I told everybody when the budget standoff
was going on, that my family was going to be at that house, and they were going to go
on the beach, but we were
not going to use any services, lifeguards or garbage service or anything else because
it wouldn't be open. So I told everybody that upfront, I shouldn't have gone out there
myself because I was the governor. It was a mistake. I went out there and spent an hour
with my family. It was a mistake. I hardly think it merits a gate.
Yeah, I wouldn't give it a gate.
A crucian maybe.
And I would hardly call it corruption, okay?
Yeah, no, it's not corruption.
Unproved.
Unbridge gate.
Let's remember, this has been investigated by a Democratic state legislature with subpoena power, by a democratic
U.S. attorney with an axe to grind for me with subpoena power. And in both of those investigations,
and also an investigation that we authorized internally, all three of the investigations
agreed on one thing. I had no knowledge of what happened.
No one told me what was going on. And I didn't find out about it until well after the fact.
And nobody's ever disputed that who's done an investigation. And if they thought I'd done
something wrong, given the reticulous indictments they brought, I'm sure they would have thrown me in there too, if they had anything they could have gone with. These were three employees
who did something extraordinarily stupid, and they should have been fired and they were.
As soon as I found out about it, they were all fired. They should never work in public office again.
But what they did was stupid, not criminal.
And if we start criminalizing every time someone does
something stupid, we won't have enough shells.
And when you get Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Clarence Thomas
to agree on an overreach by the Department of Justice,
it was a politically motivated prosecution
Because I just been reelected with 61% of the vote in a blue state and was ahead of Hillary Clinton by eight points in national polls
That's why they did it. They thought they were gonna get me
They cooperated the guy who admits he was the mastermind of the situation.
They cooperated him to try to get me.
And once they realized they couldn't get me, they had to entide somebody.
So they entided the two other people.
I believe you.
I think that the, I think the DOJ engages in a lot of political prosecutions.
Why is it Jack Smith's prosecution politically minded?
And the point I'll come back to is that Mara Garland did this analysis when he first came
in on whether Trump was guilty of incitement on January 6th, and they had like a memo come
back saying, sorry, we can't get him for that.
There was then a leak in the Washington Post from Biden himself saying that he thought
Mara Garland was being kind of wimpy and that they should go after Trump.
And then lo and behold, Mara Garland appoints Jack Smith to go get Trump.
And Jack Smith's case depends on knowing the inner workings of Trump's mind.
This like fraud on the American people idea that he not only made up this stolen election narrative
but he knew his false, which I don't see how they're ever going to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
So why isn't that a political prosecution?
I mean, Biden clearly wanted it.
He instigated it through a leak to the Washington Post, or at least that seems to be the chronology,
whether it was deliberate or not.
And it requires Jax Smith to prove this impossible theory because it requires knowing what Trump
was really thinking when he was saying all this stuff.
So how is that not an equally political prosecution?
All right. So let is that not an equally political prosecution?
All right. So let me separate the two. So you're talking just about Jan 6th,
not about the classified documents.
Correct. I'm just talking about the Jack Smith theory that Trump perpetrated a fraud because he knew his stolen election narrative was false.
Well, look, I think that there is going to be a lot of interesting testimony
that will be given in that case regarding what Donald Trump really knew and what he really thought,
what he was telling people at the time.
And I don't think it says clear cut as you're making it out to be.
Now what I said at the time when he brought the JAN 6 case is it is aggressive.
There's no question.
It's an aggressive prosecution. Do I believe it's
political? I don't know, but I will say it's aggressive. It's much more aggressive than
the classified documents case because you're exactly right that state of mind, which is
a part of every criminal case, will be a part of this one and trying to get inside Donald Trump's mind is a dangerous thing because he says so many contradictory things, right?
So he was saying to me during debate prep in 2020 that he was absolutely convinced that
he could lose this election.
Not that it would be stolen that he could lose it because of COVID and COVID ruins
his great economy and now he's going to lose. So he's set a lot of different things to
a lot of different people over time. And all I'd say David is that it is going to be an
aggressive case to prove. And by the way, if they don't prove it, it will be a stain on the Department of Justice
for bringing the case at all.
I have to support it.
I mean, look, so let me finish that.
I know what you're going to say.
So I'll finish it.
I believe, given what I know, that Donald Trump does not believe that the election was
stolen. That's what I believe from knowing him for 22 years
and from being with him in much of the pre-election period
and him expressing his very genuine concerns
about the fact that he was losing to Biden
and that he could lose to Biden
not because of mail-in ballots, because of COVID.
That I don't believe he really believes the election was stolen. But can you prove that beyond a reasonable
doubt? Well, that's the part that's aggressive, David, and I don't know all the evidence
they have. I suspect they've got a number of people who are going to tell the jury that
Trump told them that he thought he lost. But we're gonna see, but we're gonna see.
And that's why I call it aggressive.
By the way, let me just get on the record here
that I agree with you that a lot of the underlying behavior
was really bad.
And I've said so on the pod before,
I'm not defending the underlying behavior.
What I question is the wisdom of one president,
basically Biden, his Justice Department going after
the former president,
who is currently the leading candidate in the election against him, and doing it within
a year before the election as opposed to three years ago, how is that wise?
David, let me ask you a question.
First off, if they had indy-dy-dondled Trump six months after January 6th, you know whatever you would have said?
Rush to judgment, no good investigation, they had this pre-determined, you can't win as a prosecutor on that one.
Either you went too quick or you waited too long. So I don't buy that at all, I think it's a bull. Now, on the question of whether or not a president should allow his justice department to charge
someone who is his predecessor and potentially a deponent again, well, what's the alternative?
Let's take it away from the January 6th one and look at the documents one.
If he obstructed justice, if he lied and obstructed the grand jury's subpoena, if he kept
classified documents, he was not entitled to keep and then hit them from his own lawyers
when they were trying to respond to that, if he instructed people to delete surveillance
camera video, which would have shown him having people move those documents
Then all you have to do is declare for president and you don't get prosecuted. I mean, I understand it's a lousy situation
But there are a number of people who believe that the only reason Donald Trump is running for president again
Is to be able to make that argument and so I understand it's an office
No, no, I think he wants retribution from the seat of power
For everybody
No, no, no, no, I want to ask why you did 400. I'll do one so governor Christie. Let me ask you a question because you know Trump
one. So, Governor Christie, let me ask you a question, because you know Trump. Do you think he tried to overturn the election? And do you think given the chance to overturn the election
and steal the election, Donald Trump, based on your knowledge of his character for multiple
decades and working with him, do you think he would have done it? Do you think he's that
criminal minded? I don't think he would have any, he would have had any problem with the election being overturned.
Okay.
And I think if it, if it, if it was, he would have been more than happy to have his rear
end sleeping in the White House tonight.
Um, now, I think he evolved to that position in this respect.
I've had the opportunity to meet a number of
different presidents, every president going back to Bush 41. Every one of them,
regardless of my disagreements with them on policy, were matured and humbled by the office except for him
Okay, well, so the office made him worse
It made him a worse person. I've known him for 22 years
The guy I met in 2001
would not have done
What 2020 Donald Trump did and I think he is a perfect example of power, having corrupted
someone to the point where he was willing to not only engage in that conduct, but to essentially
threaten his own vice president to try to get him to do something.
Do you think Roshage played a role in that? I mean, meaning Donald Trump, you know, he's
the ultimate outsider, maybe as a chip on a shoulder
about not being accepted in
you know by certain elements of society
he wins the white house is this huge shock
and rather accepting it the entire democratic party said his election was
illogic at a met
and they claim that basically somehow put in mastermind it
and then they subjected him to two years
of this new law investigation which turned up nothing but they claimed that he was based in a agent
It you still believe in the detail. You still believe in the steel dossier, okay?
But a lot of people went to jail and he did
The last election for help steal dossier was completely made up. I didn't talk about the steel dossier
I'm talking about their relationship with Russia. I was the basis for the whole
I'm talking about I'm talking about him asking for help from Russia.
You're the last person to live in that simulation.
That's not correct.
I'm asking the governor a question.
Do you think that two years of this Russia gate hopes basically drove Trump to this
behavior or played a role in it?
I'll go with your with your last piece, not the first one.
I note out that it contributed to his feeling
that people were after him.
No doubt.
And I said from the beginning, I thought the Russia thing
was complete crap.
And the reason I thought it was, was because I was there
in 2016.
That campaign was so bad and so disorganized,
they couldn't have arranged a two-car funeral,
let alone
Conspired with the Russian government to interfere with the election. I was there
It was amateurish and it won because they ran against the worst presidential candidate in my lifetime in
Hillary Clinton
So I said from the beginning. I thought the Russia investigation was illegitimate
and was wrong. So I think it contributed to his attitude. I think it did. But I don't think
David, it would be fair to say that that's what made him that way. It contributed to
enough. I think it's a lot more than contributed to it than that. But yeah, I would certainly can see that because I objected to the Russia investigation at the time in real time.
But publicly, could those to you for that? Because I think you've been vindicated by what's
happened in the last few years. I do. Last question for me on documents.
Okay. Do you think that there's a selective prosecution issue here? Because Sandy Berger
stuffed documents in his pants from a clean room never prosecuted
Patreus had a huge classified documents problem slap on the wrist
I mean it seems like and by the way Biden had documents by his beloved Corvette and in offices all over the place going back many years
So I mean isn't this documents case? It seems like no one really wanted to prosecute this law
until Trump did it.
And now it's like, get Trump.
Now, look, I think Trump did this one to himself, David.
If he had turned over the documents, he illegally had.
At any point when he was being requested to,
from February of 2021,
through to when the search occurred,
there would be no prosecution.
Why, I agree with that.
And the proof of that was to get these other guys.
Because they gave the documents back.
Because look, Biden gave the documents back.
I mean, Pence gave the documents back.
When I asked what this guy did was obstructed it
in every way he could.
I don't want people looking through my boxes, my boxes.
And this guy is like a freak at about these boxes.
I'm telling you, I used to campaign with him.
He would have a box of documents.
Now back then it was 2016.
It was a box of documents from Trump Tower.
No one could touch them.
No one could look at them.
He'd go through them a little bit, but
that he literally had a seat for his box of documents next to him on his plane. No one could
sit next to him. The box of documents went next to him. So there's a psychosis here on the
document, David, that's deep. All right. Okay, but maybe, maybe that he did this to himself.
He did to himself. I did it to himself into it
I agree he totally walked into this he sprinted into it with his arms wide open and he screwed himself
But in the process he screwed the country
But what you're just wrong is an idiosyncratic issue. He liked his boxes. He had mementos in them
This was not a national security issue. Oh sure was how sure was how you cannot permit the president of the United States
to be flashing around in a ran war plan on the on the deck and moral ago. Sorry. Not allowed.
Especially not after your president. And you know what? He could have declassified any
documents he wanted to when he was president. He he didn't and now he's trying to say he might not have them
to be declassified
come on david this stuff is such bullshit
it's it's it's it's laughable but you agree the president the president has an
unlimited authority to declassify documents right so he
so he didn't do it through the process you wanted
but who's to say that he didn't do it no
his attorney general city didn't do it his white house council city is you as he did it so who's to say that he didn't do it? No. His attorney general said he didn't do it.
His White House counsel said he didn't do it.
But his view is he did it.
So who's to say that?
His view, he declassified other documents,
the appropriate way.
These, he just thought about declassifying.
Therefore they were declassified.
Come on.
I agree it's a bad argument.
I agree it's a bad argument.
But I guess it's not a bad argument.
But David will make it anyway.
David, it's not a bad argument.
It's not an argument. Come back anytime you make it anyway. It's not a bad argument. It's not an argument.
Come back anytime you want, Chris.
It's not an argument.
You gotta sit in.
I think you gotta sit in.
I mean, look, I, you know, I will tell you guys, like, I am very sympathetic to executive
authority.
I've been a governor of the state that has the strongest constitutional governorship in
America.
But you gotta follow the law.
When the law empowers you to the extent
that the United States president is empowered,
that should be enough.
You shouldn't have to act outside the law.
And here's why he did it.
He didn't do it to sell the documents.
He didn't do them to give them to some foreign power.
He did them to show off.
Look what I have.
Look, I'm still really the president.
This is the real core problem with him, David.
But doesn't this pale in comparison to the crimes of the Biden family?
I mean, let's see.
Robert Peter is so.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Do we have time to talk about the $2 billion
that Jared Kushner has gotten from the Saudis?
And why he got that money?
Is it because he's such an expert investor,
the guy who bought 666 Fifth Avenue,
and nearly bank ruptured his entire company?
I mean,
He's actually a pretty smart guy.
Oh, yeah, oh, no, he's a genius.
He's an absolute genius. David. And
that's why the Saudis gave him two billion dollars out of office. We're talking about. We're
talking about. We're talking about. We're talking about. We're talking about. We're talking
about. We're talking about. We're talking about. We're talking about. We're talking about.
The president's family Biden is vice president and his son is running around the world collecting
money. David, what? Why would a president of the United States, when he asked somebody like Mike Pompeo
as his secretary of state, who's been a congressman, a West Point graduate, member of the military,
CIA director, secretary of state. Why is he sending Jared Kushner over?
Grift to Niko's young son. He got the Abraham Accord stock. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no Accords. No, no, no, no. And by the way, if he gets, wait, no, no, he gets the,
oh, so now we're not giving Pompeo the credit
for the Abraham Accords.
It's Jared Kushner.
Look, in the end, Pompeo closed that deal.
You see the Abraham Accords were a good idea or a bad idea.
Great idea.
Great idea.
I want you to give Kushner credit.
He was definitely involved.
No, no, no.
He's involved.
Congratulations.
Why would he have an opinion?
No, no, no, no. Why would he sit in the first place? Because of his extensive, his extensive
foreign policy experience managing, managing, managing, managing, managing, managing
apartment buildings in New Jersey. That's what he was doing. So look, I absolutely believe
that as I answered your question very directly before that the only
reason Hunter Biden was hired for these things was to get influence with his father.
Absolutely.
And I think he should go to jail.
But we can't look at the Jared and Ivanka making 40 plus million dollars a year while
they were in the White House, getting two billion from the Saudis to invest
after they leave the White House,
and say that's not aggrieved as well,
not to mention the fact that he's spending campaign money
to pay his legal fees when he's supposed
to be a billionaire.
How about sell the Trump Tower apartments
since you don't live there anymore,
and pay your legal fees with that?
Or how about sell one of your frigging golf courses to pay your legal fees with that. Or how about someone of your frigging golf courses
to pay your legal fees with that,
but instead, at $100 average donation
from Americans who donated to something called
Save America, which was supposed to fight
the steal of the election,
is now being spent to pay his legal fees
because he took a classified documents illegally
out of the white house.
And by the way, that same organization paid Kimberly Gildfoyle 60 grand to give a three
minute speech on January 6th and paid $208,000 to Melania's stylist as political strategy.
It looks great.
There's plenty of grift to go around.
And I'll tell you this.
The grift is deep.
The Christie administration, no member of my family will make money off of the fact that
I'm president.
You can't say that about Trump or Biden.
Okay.
This has been an amazing two hours killing me.
That was governor Chris Christie's well done.
So on.
Great.
God, I had these lozages.
All right.
I have no voice.
Final question.
When you did this,
Kate, okay, with David Freiburg.
Yes.
Did you do?
Thunder Road living on a prayer, Rosalita.
What was the song?
What did you guys do?
I got to admit, I don't remember.
I don't remember which song, David and I did together, but I did do Thunder Road,
karaoke, and in that small bar,
in that little town in Idaho.
Be a prevent.
Yeah. I think I do also remember there being
a karaoke on a Backstreet Boys song.
Oh, that's definitely Freeberg.
Yeah. Freeberg.
And I don't think Freeberg was in that one.
I don't think. Do you remember David, which song we free, Burke was in that one. I don't think.
Do you remember David, which song we did?
Yeah.
And listen up.
I don't remember.
No, definitely wasn't that.
There was a group.
There was a group thing on the...
Go on breaking my heart, KTD up and John.
Yeah.
There's got to be one in there.
Listen, Governor, we really appreciate you coming on.
We wish you great success.
Congratulations on New Hampshire.
And really, really thank you. Did a great job today. Thank you for being so forthright.
No, well, thank you guys for giving me the look. I love the opportunity to be able to go
into more depth about this in anything other than UFOs. So that's really really good.
Oh, wait, we have another hour of UFO questions. I would really encourage you to to spread this gospel
of the most thoughtful way to beat back corruption is something like zero-based budgeting across
the entire federal government. I like that too. That was a great one. Nobody says it. People are,
I think RFK and Vivek scratch it, but I think you could nail it if you take it and want to run
with it. And there's
just a lot of money that's probably sloshing on the sidelines that needs to get reallocated.
And you probably, I'm sure you saw how viral John Seawitt's interview with the Undersecretary
of Defense for Budget went. That was an incredible interview. And obviously it hits a nerve
with a lot of people. So it's a really important point. It speaks a lot to the broader issue. Well, I'm glad to be here. I'm happy that I did not take my son's briefing,
but I can guarantee you that he's going to be listening. He's very stressed. He's actually,
he works for the New York Mets. He's down in Dominican Republic today. And he called me from the DR
and he said, is today the all-in day? And I said, yes, today's the day.
He goes, call me right afterwards.
He's going to tell him.
What are you going to tell him?
I'm going to tell him it was great.
We had a great two hours and he's going to enjoy listening to it.
And now, and he's also going to come back.
Come back.
Fix the nets.
Thank you.
And I'm on the board there too.
Yeah.
I think that's a bit of a problem.
That may be worse than zero-based budgeting.
I don't know.
At least the nicks look like they build a nice foundation here. I like work. We're going to go
Don't give up on the meds yet. Wait till next year. Oh, I'm not giving up. Yeah, we'll get there
All right
Two hours with the governor going around the horn hair freedberg your thoughts after two hours with governor Christy
Where was he strong? Where do you disagree with him? What do you think of his presidency after two hours of intimate discussion here on all in Pakistan?
I don't know if I've got a huge shift in opinion. He's a very personable guy. He has a good command of the subject. He's got good experience running a state.
So those are good qualifying criteria. Obviously, this is a very challenging race for him.
I'm not sure if he hits any zingers
that really helps accelerate him past the momentum
that Vivek has and obviously the lead that Trump has
with the conservative party support with DeSantis.
So it seems like it's gonna be a tough campaign
and a tough race for him.
I'm not sure he brings anything today
that shows how he's gonna kind of get ahead of this problem.
So that's the campaign.
Let's talk about for you, if you were to contrast him to other Republican candidates,
DeSantis, Halle, Vivek.
Where did he fall for you personally?
Yeah, I remain of the concern that there's a giant meteor hitting a fiscal meteor, hitting
the United States, and everyone's talking about a lot
of other stuff.
And it's the don't look up documentary to me.
Okay, and he's the most attuned to that in your mind or in a good point of view.
I think his alignment around keeping military spending and this discussion around corruption,
it's such a micro problem relative to the macro condition. Again, 31%
of US debt coming up for refinancing this year. It's going to be, and we're already seeing,
by the way, this year interest expense on the debt is greater than the military spending.
If you had to pick two candidates on the Republican Party that were most intriguing to you
for your vote, which two would they be?
I'm going to skip that question for now.
Okay.
Chimath, I'll go to you.
Post this to our discussion.
I thought he was great.
Curious how you thought were the strong points in this discussion.
And then, I guess we can talk about his campaign as Freeberg just did.
But then we could also talk about how he resonates with you and in terms of getting your vote, maybe where he sits. I don't think my opinion has changed much
before or after. I mean, I think that he's a very personable charming guy, but I'm not sure
that he says anything that's different from the establishment wing of the Republican Party,
and I think that the winning candidate,
whether I agree with it or not,
does it relevant at this point?
But the formula has been laid bare for everybody to see,
and I think that you have to have radical ideas.
And so when you think about the people
that are getting the most attention,
on both the Democratic and the Republican side,
what they're essentially pushing back on
as all of this orthodoxy.
And if he really wants to win,
he has to embrace being unorthodox and heterodox.
And he doesn't have enough heterodoxical policies
to cut through, so he just cannot win as a practical matter.
So if he embraces those heterodoxies because he believes in them he's he has a chance but if he doesn't it's going to be
trump versus v vape so if uh it winds up being biden
v vape trump christy
niki in this sort of like final
you know race towards finish line which two candidates you find most appealing right now?
Not not saying your vote for them, but which two are resonating with Chimoff, Polyhapatia most.
I'm still pretty open-minded. I haven't decided. I know who doesn't resonate with me. Tell me is DeSantis.
Okay, so DeSantis is off the table. Everybody else is still.
Okay, so DeSantis is off the table. Everybody else is still.
Yeah, I mean, I, and I was very clear early on that his campaign was DOA, and I think
that that's probably just going to, he's going to have a, a withering kind of embarrassing
end to the campaign, unfortunately for him, but I think the, the, the heterodoxical rhetoric
is going to get ramped up both by RFK and by the Vic, and I think it's going to put a lot of pressure and by Trump,
and I think it's going to put a lot of pressure on Biden, and it's going to put a lot of
pressure on the other Republican nominees to come to the noise here.
It's an interesting point, Chimoff, because if the chorus becomes this heterodox point
of view, it looks really bad.
Biden is almost in this truly defensive mode, because then
you have multiple parties speaking similarly about the establishment.
I think there's a very good chance that Biden's son, he's indicted this week, is in jail
by the time the election comes around, which I think also speaks very poorly to the risk
that there is some clear links of corruption that come out.
And I think that that's going to put the election under severe pressure.
And I think you can bet that every single Republican mega-donor is going to come out of the woodwork to fund the Super PAC.
That's going to blast the airwaves all across the country with that content. So that's, I think, a foregone conclusion if
it looks like there is fire where there looks right now is smoke. And if David Weiss acts
this decisively and it moves the trial quickly, which I suspect it will, this is all bad news
for Biden. And so, you know, you have that on that side.
The Republicans have the red meat that they need.
The heterodoxy on both sides is what's getting all the attention.
So, you know, I think what Donald Trump did in hindsight
was really break the glass on being able to say
the things you couldn't say.
And that will now be the formula for candidates to win.
Yeah, just for folks who haven't been watching the news, just department is believed to indict Hunter on the gun charges this month.
I think they're still investing in getting the potential corruption where
they're smoked. Maybe there's fire. And if it leads to Biden. And so this
whole race could be totally flipped upside down at any moment, same with Trump and his indictment.
The gun charges are nothing charge.
Just so everyone understands what that is, when he applied to get a firearm, you have to take, you have to check off these check boxes on the form.
And one of them is I apparently that you don't have a drug problem.
And so he lied on that form, I guess, but that's the kind of charge that I personally
don't believe they should be going after him for because I don't think they had prosecuted
an ordinary person for that.
Yeah, and in his defense, Hunter said, I have no problem scoring drugs.
So I don't have a drug problem.
I can get them anytime.
I need them.
It's one of these weird kind of, almost like a paperwork charge.
And remember that what the DOJ tried to do was a settlement with Hunter Biden, where he would
plead guilty on that same gun charge because it's a nothing charge.
But then, buried deep in that settlement was a broad immunity on all the foreign lobbying
he was doing, the Farah Act violations.
Then it came out and the judge said, wait a second, like, that's too much.
Like, what are you doing? And they reject the judge reject to the settlement. So, frankly,
I view the charges by the DOJ on the gun charge as a misdirection of what the real issue is with
Hunter Biden. He was running around the world collecting money with being an unregistered foreign
agent, foreign lobbyist. That's the crux of the issue is, that's the corruption.
A legend.
But the point is, that's what the DOJ should be looking at.
Not these like.
That's what they are looking at.
Did Hunter use drugs in a way?
That's the one, David.
I think looking at the tax evasion, tax fraud charges,
that is their way of looking at that.
So I think it's going to come out.
I think at this point, they're looking at both.
Everybody will have the truth.
If the Biden's are truly not guilty,
that will be clearly established now in this process.
But if he was acting as an unregistered agent
of these foreign governments,
that is also gonna come out.
And if there were links between him and his father
and communications, that's also gonna come out.
I think that-
But he hasn't even been entitled on that yet.
Right?
Yeah.
I think it takes time.
I think they will thoughtfully put it together.
But I'm not confident about it.
Given that they wanted to give him broad immunity on those charges, I think that I think
David Weiss is under such a microscope right now.
The idea that he doesn't act conclusively here, I think would be a huge problem.
And then the next president, if it's Republican, will reopen it.
So whatever happens here will need to be definitive.
And I think the special prosecutor probably understands that at this.
Yeah.
So let's go back to your impressions before we go down the Biden,
Biden, Biden, and rabbit hole here.
What are your thoughts after two hours with Chris Christie?
Anything change in your outlook on him?
And then I'm curious.
Are you still team to Santas all the way? Okay, so on Christie, I like talking to him more than I thought I was going to.
I think he was easy to talk to. I think the two hours went by pretty quickly. I think he brought
his energy level down to the right place for a podcast. I mean, it was a little different than when he's very pugnacious on the debate stage
and can kind of grandstand.
And he engaged in a discussion with us.
So I thought that was positive.
The only time his energy really changed
was basically in the last five minutes
when he went on to a full on like Trump diatribe.
And it was almost like a little bit of TDS kicked in.
That being said, his position on Trump was a little bit more nuanced than I was expecting.
First of all, he admitted the whole Roshigate thing was total baloney.
Second, he said that with respect to the state charges, the Alvin Bragg in New York and
the Fanny Willis in Atlanta, those charges should not have been brought.
Yeah, that was pretty good.
I can kind of agree with him on those.
I agree with his, I thought that was intellectually honest.
Did you feel intellectual honesty from him?
Yeah, I think he really believes this.
Yeah.
Third, I took a couple of tries by Jamoth and then me
to get him to say this,
but he said he would not put Trump in jail.
He's too old for that.
And I thought that was,
I wasn't sure where he was gonna come out on that.
I didn't know if he was gonna say say Trump deserves a life sentence or not.
Yeah, we should have asked him if he would pardon him.
And if he was present, he said he didn't pardon him, but I commute his sentence.
I commute his sentence.
So he didn't have to spend time in jail.
So I thought that was new information.
And again, a more nuanced view than I was expecting.
On the documents case, he said that Trump ran into the charges which frankly I agree with I think yeah
could avoid that easily however Christy said he did it for a year's sake of pratic reasons he loves his
Box of mementos. Yes, he didn't really address
I'm very you and I have yeah, yeah, and you know who else loves their mementos
I have I have a handful of kids under the age of five who love blankets and yes
Tecifiers Teddy ten full of kids under the age of five who have blankets and yes, the blanket, tennisifiers,
Teddy.
Yeah, I would just go a little further and just say, listen,
if he did this for idiosyncratic reasons rather than nefarious reasons,
like selling state secrets,
then I think you apply the same standard of prosecution
as they did to portray us or to Biden himself.
The thing you keep missing is that those people gave those back.
You keep missing that sex.
I don't know why you have that blind spot because he basically said that Trump has an anxiety
complex and he's so he sells soothes with that box of documents.
That's what he said.
Google Gaga.
Google Gaga.
But that's what he said.
That's what he said.
I would treat Trump the same way as Sandy Berger.
I mean, come on.
Those guys all.
Let's just moving on.
No, just it's just moving. Are you still doing the same way as Sandy Berger. I mean, come on. Those guys, let's us moving on. Justice.
But what's going on? Are you still teasing us?
He's the same.
The last point was on the Jack Smith charges where he admitted that Jack Smith has to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that Trump knew that his election denial argument was false.
And I think he pretty much admitted that that would be a very,
very hard thing to prove, but he said he wanted to wait to see what evidence they had. To me,
that kind of begs the question of why you bring that case in the first place. Any event. So that's
on Trump. I think what I saw there was a little bit of TDS, but a more nuanced overall perspective
when you got into the details. On foreign policy policy i think we had a lot of interesting conversation there about
the mismanagement
of the military industrial complex and i think jamaat had
some really interesting questions there that that i followed up on
and really you couldn't get him to say anything other than
he wouldn't necessarily increased the size of the defense budget
until you did the efficiency survey
but he kind of had to be pushed to even get there. And what I would just say is that on that question,
on military spending combined with the question of Ukraine, he pretty much has the standard
establishment Republican position, which is the only thing Biden has done wrong is not move aggressively
enough on Ukraine that giving
mixed messages, not being hawkish enough.
I'm sorry, but Biden has had the most hawkish policy on Ukraine that any presence ever had.
The only reason there's been hand-ranging about giving them F-16s is because it could
start World War III.
I personally want Biden thinking about that you know so again i think this neocon republican position that
involves christristian
hailey and pennson mitch McConnell you know
based the whole republican establishment
they basically believe that by the new says we need to support
you crane for as long as it takes as much as it takes he's still not doing
enough i just don't fundamentally by that argument you still teams the santa's
here's my view on it so So look, I would support the
Santas. I also would support Vivek for me. Oh, whoa, whoa, whoa, this is new information.
So you're saying you are now equally open minded to Vivek and Santas.
It's not equally minded, but look, for me, what percent?
Here's the way I divide it. I divide Kenneth's at this point into
acceptable versus
unacceptable. Okay. And for me, the number one issue is whether the president, the next
president will seek to deescalate or end the Ukraine war or they will seek to escalate
it. Because Christy, along with all these others, by saying that Biden has been too dovish
on Ukraine, is effectively saying he wants to do even more on Ukraine.
So I'm not willing to take, I'm not willing to live for the next four years on the knife's
edge of war three. I don't want to put, well, I don't want the sort of war three.
So that had to invovedex camp? Well, no, I think that the candidates who said that they would either end or de-escalate
Ukraine are Vivek, DeSantis, and Trump has set it.
They're the only three, oh, and sorry, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Okay, but you're not going to vote for him.
So that puts you in Vivek.
Well, I don't know.
I mean, he might be my favorite, to be honest.
Would you pick him over Trump?
I would certainly take Kennedy over Trump.
You would.
Wow, this is incredibly breaking news, folks.
This is all incredible. Wow. This is incredibly breaking news folks. This is this is all incredible.
Wow. Look, for me, this is the limit test issue is, are you going to escalate or de-escalate
the Ukraine war? And I think that these hawkish Republican candidates pose an unacceptable
risk or three. What do you think, Jason? Yeah, Jason, what do you think? I thought he broke
your heart there in a couple of places. No, actually, I don't expect all candidates to line up
with my belief system perfectly.
Obviously he's well spoken.
Obviously he's qualified.
I'm looking for a moderate life freeberg.
I think the existential crisis of the balance sheet
is my top issue.
I voted Republican about 25% and Democrats 75%
I'm literally a moderate and independent and right now I really don't
think Biden can be president or Trump so that leaves me with RFK on one side and it leaves me with
Nikki Halley and Christie on the other side and Nikki Halley and Christie are really into balancing
the budget and so I'm leaning towards voting Republican, if those are the two candidates.
Now, the thing that I think handicapping this election is not being talked about all that
much because we have the Trump Biden rematch taking while they are at the room is, I don't
know that Biden makes it to the starting line, nor do I think Trump makes it to the starting
line. And so that changes everything. And who knows what percentage chance that is. I don't
think any of us can give it a perfect
Handicap, but let's say that is the case
Then I think it's you know, there's a lot of lanes open here
And I think the election will be once again determined by moderates and I think women who are still very much upset about
The ravi weight issue and I think those two things are gonna play a significant role
And that's where I think Nikki Haley and Chris Christie
believe it's a state's issue. And they're not into the national ban for abortion. I think moderates are not into Biden. I think
they or I don't think they're going to be in tariff. Okay. I think they're going to be
into Nikki Haley. And I think Nikki Haley could happen. And I think Chris Christie would
happen. So I hope we get Nikki Haley on here because I don't know her enough. But I would
like to have that to our discussion. So I'm leaning towards Haley, Christie, if they make, all right.
This has been an amazing episode of the All in Podcast.
We went for over two hours and enjoy the one and a half times episode everybody because
next week is the All in Summit.
And we're not going to tape next week to get a week off from the pod while we bank, I
think like 20 amazing,
amazing guests from Ray Dalio to Elon Musk to Mr. Beast.
I mean, the list of people,
what about the Poulcho that Freeberg has put together
is a extraordinary congratulations to Freeberg
on a program even better than last year's program.
Is it unprecedented success here.
So great, great job, Freeberg and the team over at the production board.
The parties might be fun too.
I got my tux on ready to go.
We will see you all in Los Angeles or some portion of you, about 1% of you in Los Angeles
next week.
Sorry for the phone, everybody, but Freeberg will be releasing the episodes on Twitter, X,
and YouTube are the exclusive location.
So you're not gonna get in your podcast feeds,
flooded with the 20 talks.
You gotta go to X, follow all in podcast on X,
free, pharmacy, and on Twitter,
and search for all in podcast on YouTube.
You can subscribe, and then there's a bell there.
You put on the alert.
I think you're gonna drop them every day or every every two days freeberg, something in that sort of
pace. So you got 20 days of content coming at you. Coming at you for the dictator himself,
Jamal Pauly-Hopatia, the Sultan of Science, David Freeberg, chair, person of heel in the
summit 2023. Great job and rainman, the architect himself, with that incredible Gordon Gekko hair.
Wow, looking great, Zach.
I am the undisputed world's greatest moderator, according to the YouTube comments.
We'll see you next week.
Bye-bye. and David's actions. I'm going on a ride with you. And instead, we open source it to the fans
and they've just gone crazy with it.
I'm the queen of kinwa!
I'm going on a ride with you!
What? What? What? What?
What? What? What?
Besties are gone.
I'm going thrifty.
That's my dog. Can you give it a wish?
You're driving away.
Oh man, my ham is the actual meat
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug or two because they're all
It's just like this like sexual tension that we just need to release that out
What your, the beef, what your, your beer, beef
Beef, what?
We need to get mercy
I'm doing all of it We need to get mercy.