Pod Save America - 12 Angry Hopefuls
Episode Date: June 6, 2023The Republican field grows to twelve as the RNC sets new criteria for the first debate. Donald Trump prepares to be indicted again. Ron DeSantis tests out new attack lines in Iowa. Nikki Haley does a ...CNN Townhall that no one noticed. And Joe Biden takes a debt ceiling victory lap with an Oval Office address, while his anti-vax Democratic challenger RFK Jr. does a Twitter Spaces event with Elon Musk. Then Washington Post writer Ben Terris stops by to talk about his new book The Big Break.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Pride Demon Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor. On today's show, the Republican field grows to 12 as the RNC sets new criteria for the first debate.
Donald Trump prepares to be indicted again.
Ron DeSantis tests out new lines of attack in Iowa.
Nikki Haley does a CNN town hall that no one noticed.
And Joe Biden takes a debt ceiling victory lap with an Oval Office address while his anti-vax Democratic
challenger RFK Jr. does a Twitter spaces event with Elon Musk. How's that for a sentence?
You know, all those words together. It's so hard. They all mean something. And you know what?
Or nothing. They mean nothing. Our children use that paragraph to explain to our children what
happened, why the waters rose and the internet stopped working.
Then later,
the Washington Post's Ben Terrace talks to Tommy
about his new book,
The Big Break,
which is a riveting account
of D.C. in the post-Trump era.
But first, if you can,
please donate to Vote Save America's
Fuck Bans,
Leave Queer Kids Alone funds,
which are supporting organizations
on the
ground in states that are banning care and targeting trans youth. Our original goal is $50,000,
but you guys already crushed that in just a few days. So we're going to try to make it $100,000.
Nice. I think we can do that, right? Double it. You can donate to either political impact
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slash fuckbans to learn more and donate today. Also, Cricket's go-to legal podcast,
Strict Scrutiny, will be recording live at Howard University, and you can now join via live stream
on June 9th at 1 p.m. Eastern. Join hosts Leah Littman, Kate Shaw, and Melissa Murray,
with President and Director-Counsel
of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, Janai Nelson,
and Crooked's own Shaniqua McClendon
as they talk all things Supreme Court.
Get your live stream tickets today
by heading to crooked.com slash strict live
and get a 25% discount
if you're a Friend of the Pod subscriber.
Exciting stuff.
All right, let's get to the news.
The Republican presidential field will expand to a full dozen this week
with official announcements from Mike Pence, Chris Christie,
and someone named Doug Burgum, who is apparently the governor of North Dakota.
For two terms.
Two terms?
I had to Google him.
I did not know that.
He got reelected.
New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu has decided against running, which is a blow to the tens of Sununu for president fans out there.
The Republican National Committee is trying to put a tent on this circus.
They just announced that in order for candidates to qualify for the first debate, which we now know will be hosted by Fox and held in Milwaukee on August 23rd, candidates have to meet the following criteria.
and held in Milwaukee on August 23rd.
Candidates have to meet the following criteria.
They have to poll consistently above 1% in a combination of state and national polls.
They have to have at least 40,000 donors across 20 states.
And they have to pledge to support the eventual Republican nominee.
All right, let's start with the debate criteria.
Who's already in?
Who do you think's worried?
And how might this whole thing affect the debates and the race?
Tommy?
So, I mean, I think Trump's in, DeSantis is in, you know, Pence is probably in, Haley.
They're all in.
Also, Vivek Ramaswamy has already qualified.
He says, right?
The groundswell.
Correct.
But based on polling or donors?
All the polling has shown that he would qualify if nothing changes. And then they said that they've reached the donor. People who've reached the donor threshold, at least what they've said, is DeSantis Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy.
to be on that stage. But I think they have the impact of nationalizing these campaigns and incentivizing these candidates to do a ton of appearances on Fox News or the Ben Shapiro show
or other right-wing outlets, rather than grinding it out in early states and talking to real voters.
They also force candidates who don't have a big donor list to spend tons of money acquiring
donors. I was talking to a friend who you both know well, who worked on the democratic race in 2020 about these thresholds because the Republicans basically stole the
democratic version of the debate thresholds. And he said, polling and donor thresholds make me want
to throw myself off a bridge and text because the thresholds ratchet up and up and up over time.
Yeah. And so that these candidates would learn about some new donor threshold and have to tear up their entire plan to focus only on getting more small dollar donors and not talking to voters,
spending 500 grand on Facebook ads so that you can get up to like 65,000 donors or whatever
the threshold is. So now I know who you're talking to. So there's perverse incentives
that are not really good. I mean, they don't like, you know, they're not educating voters.
You're just kind of meeting the RNC or DNC thresholds.
Well, the idea is that,
oh, you have enough support out there in the country
that you deserve a place on the stage.
But in practice for a lot of them,
it's they spend a ton of money per donor
to acquire the donors to reach the threshold
because the threshold exists.
Yeah.
I'm not sure.
I think it might be,
it doesn't seem like a great set of criteria,
but I wonder if it's the best of a bunch of bad
options. Like if you want to set some criteria, you don't want to just do polling because polls
are polls and they're not always accurate, especially national polls in a primary.
So then where do you go after that? Donors, I guess, make sense, especially since there's a
lot of grassroots donors these days. I don't know. It's very imperfect. So we know that Trump,
these days i don't know it's very imperfect so we know that trump desantis haley and vivek ramaswamy are in as of now um tim scott is is fine on polling he's built a big fundraising base so
he's probable my boy tim's gonna make it your boy tim's gonna make it my guy tim's in it on the fence
maybes are pence who is fine on polling but very iffy on fundraising and hasn't committed to supporting Trump.
And you have to commit to not participating in non-RNC debates.
That's also true.
Well, it's funny because has Trump taken the loyalty pledge?
No.
And this was a giant fight last time.
Trump's going to take it and lie like he did last time.
Right.
So that's fine for him.
I think it's tougher for both Pence and Christie.
Christie's also going to have the same problem on both the supporting Trump thing and the fundraising.
It's tough on Pence and Christie because part of their whole argument, especially Christie, is Trump is unfit to be president.
So if they say they're going to commit to supporting the nominee to get on the debate stage, but then they lie, I wonder if it's harder for them than Trump.
It's also like it's a very fuzzy, like what it, it depends on what the language is, right?
Of course I'm going to support the nominee.
I'm going to be the nominee.
Right.
And then I got this thing.
Right, yeah.
And then Asa Hutchinson also on the bubble.
Larry Elder also on the bubble,
though Larry Elder has a big fundraising base
because he ran in California.
And then definitely in trouble,
Doug Burgum.
Doug, Dougie B.
Although it's your first day.
Burgumentum is not what it is yet.
It hasn't formed yet.
We are speaking to you on the first day of the Doug Burgum campaign.
You know when before a tsunami, the water rushes out?
Is that where we are right now?
That's where we are in the Burgum wave.
The water is leaving.
There are boats sitting on fucking rocks as the bergam wave comes to hit us the other famous
doug in politics he got emhoff and bergam did you guys watch his little three and a half minute bio
video you bet i did uh missed it it's kind of an interesting story i read about his story but i
didn't see the video uh as one donor here we go i'm not giving five bucks to get on that stage
he was born in north dakota he got really rich because he literally sold a family farm to invest in some software company
and made hundreds of millions of dollars.
This is word for word from the fucking video.
Yeah.
Elected twice.
I mean, I don't think he made up his bio.
We are here to give people information.
It's called prep.
You should try it.
I watched the fucking video.
I know everything you're saying.
I know everything you're saying right now.
I know.
Did you wiki him?
Because I did that too.
Okay, good for you.
When I first heard about him and his whole pitch is like, he's running, he's a conservative
in North Dakota who's running against polarization and partisanship.
That's bullshit.
He's a software exec.
He wants to do a business first message focused on the economy and energy.
But then like I looked
into it a little bit and it's like, oh, he also signed a six week abortion ban and made gender
affirming cares for minor a crime. Yeah. So it's like and the teaching of critical race theory.
He in 2020, he seemed to push back on the party for some of the more outrageous anti LGBT things
they were saying within the North Dakota GOP. But and then later on, he signed all these horrible bills.
Yeah, I was thinking about that,
just like looking at this wonderful field
coming into view for us.
And a big difference from 2016 to now
is 2016, there really was,
underneath all the kind of aesthetic nonsense and bullshit,
there was actual policy shifts happening
as the Republican Party moved
from Paul Ryan conservatism to the kind of right wing, anti-immigrant, kind of making that more
central, anti-trans, anti-gay, the kind of more fascistic version that Trump is doing.
And all these people have fully embraced that platform. They're just campaigning on aesthetics, right?
They're just going to do it with a nicer touch,
which is obviously not enough.
Did you see Trump's quote on the race, the field expanding?
What did he say?
He said, people coming into the race, you know,
they're pulling at 1%, 2%.
I don't know what they're doing.
They must know something, but I know actually
some of them are pretty stupid.
They're running for VP and cabinet.
Maybe they are, but some of them won't happen.
I can tell you.
That's so funny.
It's pretty spot on.
I asked Dan this on Thursday, but Pence and Christie,
do you think it's possible that Vivek Ramaswamy finishes ahead of them?
I think it's, well, it's just like,
is it possible that Vivek gets more than 3%?
Yes.
It's like they're so mismatched.
Here's what I can't figure out either.
We haven't talked about the fact that, although we've mentioned it before,
that Trump might skip the debates, skip the primary debates.
You're Chris Christie.
You get into this race because you're like,
I just need to get on that debate stage and I'm going to kick the shit out of Trump.
I don't care if Republican voters don't like me.
I'm just on a kamikaze mission to fuck up Trump.
And then Trump doesn't appear in the debates.
Then what's Chris Christie doing?
And then he doesn't appear in the debates.
He's got two problems here.
Yeah.
Chris Christie is doing this kind of debate pugilist New Hampshire strategy, which I don't have a lot of faith in that.
Pence, at least, you know, Pence, I think the last poll had him at 5% in Iowa.
at least, you know, Pence, I think the last poll had him at 5% in Iowa, and he's going to go after the kind of white Christian evangelical nationalists that make up a lot of the caucus
goers in Iowa. So I think, look, I don't have a lot of money on Pence, but I think he has a better
theory of the case than Chris Quincy. I also feel like I'm in outer space. We've seen Chris
Christie debate. He debated throughout the campaign and then he lost profound, like he
just lost completely. Like it doesn't, it didn't, we've seen him do this. He debated Trump several times. The only time he ever got
traction is when he stopped debating Trump and debated Marco Rubio for five seconds. And that
was his big moment. And then he was gone. I just think that, yeah, I agree with all that. I think
Pence's constituency is like non-existent, right? He does the right thing at the last possible moment that makes the whole Trump base so angry at him that some of them wanted to literally kill him.
But for people who don't like Trump, Pence also stood by for four years and applauded everything that Trump did.
So where is the Pence supporter?
I don't know. i don't know i don't know the i
guess the pence supporter is someone who loved everything donald trump did up until he tried to
overturn the election and then they then they got off the bus he's just banking on the sort of far
right evangelicals and chris christie is just as full of shit i mean he nearly died because trump
gave him covid during debate prep for donald trump so, you know, Trump almost killed both of them.
They're both now.
Now they're back.
Yeah, it was also it's like it's a deeper like none of them are willing to make a real
case against Trump because they don't want to alienate the voters they know they need,
which is the problem at the core of all this.
I think Christie may.
I think Christie may make a real legitimate case against Donald Trump.
I just don't know that it will do anything or that he'll make the stage.
But he can't.
But the thing is, he can't.
You know, he started the case is predicated on a lie right because he says this thing like if i knew then what i knew now i would never have gone so far along with it he was there
the whole fucking time he'd have to say like i he'd have to say i fucked up right but he won't
say he won't do that like so it's like it's not like he was in debate prep in 2016 he's in debate
prep in 2020 so he's fully on board till the bitter fucking end. Then Trump almost kills
him. He's still on board. Then he decides
to run for president, and that's when he discovers
that Trump is unfit.
That's the problem. I think it was the
ABC Green Room
that pushed him after
the overturn in the election. Suddenly, he's
on panels. He's criticizing Trump. He's like,
getting a little, oh, people like this.
A little shot of relevance in the Acela corridor.
I put a couple granola bars
in my pocket on my way home,
huh?
People are liking me again
from Boston to Washington.
Grabbing an apple
from this bowl.
All right,
so all the other
major Republican candidates
were in Iowa this weekend
at Senator Joni Ernst's
annual roast and ride.
Didn't realize the roast and ride
was an annual event.
Oh, yeah.
I'd never heard about it before.
It's a blast.
With the exception
of Donald Trump,
he wasn't there. He was very busy posting. He congratulated his friend Kim Jong-un
for getting North Korea elected to the executive board of the World Health Organization.
It's the weirdest thing. Too many questions there. He also complained that he's about to
get indicted again, this time for hoarding, possibly disseminating and refusing to return
classified information. And he also accused, he was in Iowa a week before,
accusing too many people of overusing the term woke without defining it.
Just hours before, he overused the term woke without defining it.
Let's listen.
It's gone sick.
And I don't like the term woke because I hear woke, woke, woke.
You know, it's like just a term that use half the people can't even define it.
They don't know what it is.
A lot of things going on with our military, with the woke and all this nonsense.
And they're not learning to fight and protect us from some very bad people.
They want to go woke.
They want to go woke.
That was 10 hours after the first comment.
Very coherent.
Before we get to the woke-a-thon, let's start with the biggest Trump news.
The grand jury in the classified documents investigation is set to reconvene this week.
Trump's lawyers just had a two-hour meeting today with special counsel Jack Smith and his team, which is often the last step before an indictment. So far, it doesn't seem like the hush money indictment has affected the race at all. Do you guys think that being charged with hoarding classified information could be different. I mean, I think that I would be worried about this one because it seems to go,
have gone beyond just hoarding classified information into a deep into obstruction
of justice land because you have all these leaks about obstruction of justice charges,
lying to the FBI. There's allegations that Trump essentially told his staff to hide documents from the FBI
before they serve the subpoena and that there might be videotape of these staffers doing it.
There's a-
Remember they had the fire drill too.
There's a dress rehearsal.
A dress rehearsal, right, yeah.
A dress rehearsal, crime dress rehearsal.
Everyone back to one.
DOJ pierced attorney-client privilege between Trump and one lawyer
because Trump might've lied to his lawyer in furtherance of a crime.
There's apparently a tape.
There's audio of Trump talking about a classified war plan with how to attack Iran with some guys doing a book about Mark Meadows, as one does.
And that would be that's like a separate chart, like disseminating classified information is like a separate charge than just keeping it and obstructing the investigation.
Yeah. I mean, there's just a lot of threads here. There's the special counsels
looking at the Trump's dealings with seven foreign countries, including the Saudis and the UAE,
which makes it seems like a suggestion that he's getting paid for this information. So there's just
a lot of smoke here. And then CNN reports today that sadly, there happened to have been a pool
leak at Mar-a-Lago. And wouldn't you know where the water from the pool went?
To the server room. No. With all
of the video. Yeah, that's awesome.
Isn't that a shame? Don't you hate
it when your pool... Drain the swamp.
When your pool accidentally... When your pool
drains into your server room?
God, what are the odds? That stinks,
because all the proof that he's innocent is on
those tapes. That's worse
than Hillary with the hammer and the bleach bit.
Yeah.
With the wiping.
It's like a brain dead Nixon move.
Well, it's, it's, yeah.
Well, I'm curious what happens with that one.
I'm excited to hear more about that one.
I like that.
I realize it's tempting to believe that nothing matters with regards to Trump.
There was a Navigator poll from a few weeks ago.
65% of all Americans now think Trump has committed a crime that is up a net 12 points from just the month before. And that is just about the Alvin Bragg hush money case.
It's a lot of people.
The greatest shifts came from independents and Republicans, particularly Republicans who do not identify as very conservative. I also say, you know, look, we've been talking about Trump's various and
sundry crimes for the better part of seven years now. Something does change when he does the walk
into the courtroom and they see the photo of him behind a desk. There's certain things that just
look pretty bad. And one of them is a courtroom photo. Like we can talk all we want about like
how we think, you know, whether or not this is different for people than the hush money payments. I don't know. But what will be different is all these different cases
starting to lead to procedures and trials and Trump having to show up places and that being
what the footage is like. Nobody likes that. I also think the story is easier to understand
as a crime and just that, like, you know, it's not just biden pence oh they had classified
documents doesn't everyone have classmate now this is like if we're getting into security camera
footage oh no one looks good on security camera footage stealing war plans sharing them obstructing
justice like this is it's easier to understand i will also say that you got to take care of the
mark meadows biographers so everyone knows i also the, like also like the war plans. It's like, Oh my God, they're going to bomb us.
The,
um,
uh,
also in that navigator poll,
you guys remember the CNN town hall.
Have you heard about that lately?
It's been in the news recently.
66% in that poll said that Trump's claim during the CNN town hall that he was
allowed to take classified docs raises doubts about him being the Republican
nominee,
including 72% of independents
and 40% of Republicans. And that is about the same number who had doubts about his proposal
to pardon January 6th rioters, doubts about that making him the GOP nominee as well. They were like,
it was those two plus him bringing back child separation, family separation,
that were the three biggest concerns for voters from the CNNnn town hall and we're up to like 66 say that gives them some concerns about donald trump so
that you know the whole cnn town hall oh no there's a travesty of democracy well it had a
bunch of people think you know what this guy maybe shouldn't be president yeah we're going to talk
about the nikki haley version of this but just you know it is amazing just how self-fulfilling
all this is right because this there was like we've had a fucking national debate, not about the horrible things
Trump said in that town hall, but about whether or not the town hall should have taken place.
You watch five fucking paragraphs from Nikki Haley at her town hall, which none of us knew
happened until after it was over.
And it's just as much misinformation.
It's just as much hate-filled bile about trans people and immigrants and lies about crime and all the rest no not a not a peep from anybody nobody minds the same it's a
path it's a path there is a pathology around trump down to just well also we're really getting down
to just like uh media stories about the media yeah that's all yeah that's that's all the breaks
through these days everybody upset about the media break into the media media media look up
from your stomachs everybody Everybody, look up.
Bunch of candidates just telling you what they'd do
if they were elected to lead the country.
Cover that a bit.
But also, the classified information story,
I mean, you can tell that story in one photo
of all these documents lying on the floor
at his country club slash house.
It's not a complicated one.
And again, just keep an eye on this foreign money,
foreign business dealings part of this investigation.
Jared Kushner got $2 billion from the Saudis for his his investment company even though he's never invested before in his life
the saudi-owned live golf tour is dumping money into trump properties like there's something weird
going on i have a question for you if i might have an answer if it turns out that jared kushner
and the saudi deal is involved how many bonus episodes of potty of the world are we getting
bonus episode on the table right now that's you got him going my case rests let my counsel speak for me
here comes a roads rant um all right so uh speaking of speaking of worldos uh multiple
republican candidates hit trump for congratulating North Korea's murderous dictator.
Barely made the news.
I only saw a few stories about it.
Why not?
Do reporters and Republican voters not care?
Do we just expect this kind of behavior from Trump now?
Or could it become an issue?
It is such a weird story.
A horrible dictator was elected to the board of the World Health Organization.
Yeah, that was my first question.
Why the fuck did that happen?
I just want to tell everybody.
I'm going to look into this for tomorrow's episode of Ponce for tomorrow's episode so i'll get back to you guys cool i think that yeah i think look the the trump love affair with kim jong-un is kind of priced in i'm glad
all these republicans uh criticized him for it i do think look jake tapper to his credit asked
nikki hilly about this at the town hall so i think where there was an opportunity to advance the
story they tried but it is weird it's just like Trump is obsessed with his love letters with Kim Jong-un,
the summit he had with him, the meeting they had at the DMZ, even though literally nothing
got accomplished. North Korea's nuclear weapons program is far further along today than when
those meetings happened, but he doesn't care. It's all about the optics.
I also think that they're not,ans aren't quite making the best case
against him on this like because what trump likes to say about this is yeah i am friends with kim
jong-un and i'm friendly with putin and that keeps us safe because they know me and they don't want
to fuck with me and i'm friends with them i have good relationships and what the republican
candidates what his opponent should be saying is like this murderous dictator who regularly
threatens the united states of america with nuclear weapons has Donald Trump wrapped around his finger.
You know, make it about, you always talk about it,
make it about like strength and weakness and turn it into a weakness for him.
And instead they're just like, that's bad.
He shouldn't do that.
Yeah, it's all very subtle.
I had the same reaction.
Like they're, like even DeSantis is like, I'm surprised that Trump would say something like that.
And then Trump's spokesperson is like, Ron De Rhonda. Santa is a tiny Italian fad.
You can eat dicks like that.
Like they're just,
they're so subtle with this fucking guy.
That's what they do.
It's unbelievable.
There's just,
no one is bringing anything to this fight.
Unbelievable.
Okay.
Well,
I've checked off one of my notes for this episode.
Speaking of,
speaking of anti woke crusaders,
why do you guys think Trump hit other
Republicans for overusing the term woke, which is a term he uses all the time? Is there anything to
that or is that just him? My sincere pet theory is that Trump saw some of the coverage after the
DeSantis-Elon debacle that talked about DeSantis being too online and that's how his brain
translated it. That's really what I think it is. i think that could be some of it there's also there were i forget who's
been asked to define woke before just there were some other candidates who were asked or some other
republicans with jake topper yeah and hayley did but then even like republicans in congress have
been asked before none of them can and they none of them can and they're sort of like embarrassing
clips about it and i wonder if he saw those like viral clips and he's like oh that seems bad was it megan mccardle or someone like
that that got asked by oh oh um no it's like megan mccardle it's bethany mandel oh bethany mandel
right sorry sorry i was asked about it had a trouble defining it well she had in her defense
she had written an entire book about it yeah so that's why would she be able to uh divide it i i
think that trump probably saw that desantis is getting some traction just yelling about these things.
It's like his whole identity is defined as being making Florida the place where woke goes to die to the point where Ron DeSantis, his wife, was wearing a black leather jacket.
Yeah.
It had a photo of a picture of Florida on the back of it.
And it said where woke goes to die, despite the fact that it was 85 degrees at this this roast and ride or whatever.
By the way, Mike Pence was wearing
like a Sons of Anarchy Halloween costume.
Did you see him?
It was really embarrassing.
On the bike.
It was very awful.
It was something.
So I suspect Trump saw DeSantis having some success
in this lane and decided to whine about it
and just be like,
I don't even care about that term anymore.
I mean, DeSantis is also like
sounding like a fucking parody of himself
when he's doing that.
He has that riff that everyone noticed again this weekend, though he's been doing it for a couple weeks now which
is like we will fight the woke in the streets we will fight the rope woke in the classrooms
we will fight the woke at the amusement parks so fucking embarrassing uh a a a like a reprise
of a speech about fighting the literal third Reich. Yeah. About, you know,
I don't know, kids wearing T-shirts he doesn't like. Well, fortunately, in response to this
Trump riff about people saying woke too much, DeSantis was asked to try to define woke himself.
And he also tested out a new line about how Republicans need a president who can serve
two terms in order to get done what they want to get done. Let's listen to both moments.
Look, we know what woke is.
It's a form of cultural Marxism.
It's about putting merit and achievement behind identity politics.
And it's basically a war on the truth.
And as that is an infected institutions, it has corrupted a lot of institutions.
So you've got to be willing to fight the woke.
We've done it in Florida.
And we proudly consider ourselves the state where woke goes to
die you really need to ensure that we have a two-term president to be able to see this to a
conclusion i mean you do one term and they reverse it when they come in you can't have it be reversed
so trump's response of course is i only need six months to fix everything why does he need two
terms and then desantis comes back then why didn't he do it his first term?
Yeah.
Yeah, they're mixing it up.
Do you think any of these,
either of these DeSantis attacks
has any potential to draw blood?
No.
The two-term thing is stupid to me.
I don't understand that.
What a waste of time.
It's also like,
I was on the fence about it actually
because my first reaction was Tommy's,
which is to say,
so your point is Trump would be amazing, but he can only do it for four years.
You need somebody else.
It's kind of back to like part of the case that a lot of the Republicans have been making, which is Trump is great, but we need to do something different.
Yeah.
And like, oh, so if it was if he was eligible for it.
So that's the problem.
And the problem is just that he can't do it as long as you just you want someone that great to be there for longer, which is a little bit embarrassing, though.
There is something about DeSantis calling him a lame duck that I think could catch on.
Like, we don't want to elect a lame duck. We don't want to elect a lame duck.
There was a way in which he was saying it. If you actually look at the longer DeSantis quote about wanting to have somebody new, it's like we need somebody who's going to hit the ground running on day one, who's going to be focused and disciplined in attacking the bureaucratic state.
That's a multi-year process. We can't. And so he kind of put it into a larger argument around Trump's weaknesses that I thought could be
something. Yeah. I think that the whole, all of his arguments seem too cerebral for me and too
cerebral for, I would argue much of the Republican base. First of all, defining woke, always tricky
when you define a word by using the word multiple times. He's like, you know, woke is we got to fight woke.
Woke is a war on the truth.
And then, you know, how many people know cultural Marxism?
Regular people are always talking about cultural Marxism.
Yeah, it's interesting.
Like, at least he's clearly ready with that answer.
It's not an answer for it's not an answer for normals.
It's not an answer for us.
But it is a graffiti.
A conservative pollster pointed out that, like many of the top answers when we talk to Republican primary voters but
things they're concerned about involve the word woken some days they're all channeling this same
fear of people that are different times changing Etc it's just like it's like it's not new politics
it is cerebral and it is too sophisticated but I will say the way he described it is probably the closest thing to like,
like I think a sincere explanation for how they would define it to each other.
You know what I mean?
Like that, that's how I took that.
I don't know what cultural Marxism is.
Yeah.
I mean, like-
Wink.
Sure you don't.
Right.
Like, but it is like a wing towards,
this is a kind of far left collegiate academic ideology that is infecting our institutions that makes identity more important than these other qualities.
Right. Like that's even said or other. Like, I don't know what putting merit and achievement behind identity politics.
I was like, what the fuck does that mean? Yeah, but I think it means something to them. Right.
But I mean, because it's a real dog whistle. Well, yeah. I mean, I think part of it's a dog whistle about gay issues is a dog whistle about affirmative action.
It's a dog whistle around DEI. Like but but like that makes sense. That's like it's coherent in there.
I just think for a lot of these voters, it's like much simpler. They're like Trump.
Trump doesn't sound Trump. Trump seems like he's an honest liar. Doesn't sound like a typical politician.
Ron DeSantis sounds like a typical politician.
I think that the cultural Marxism is an attempt to reach the voters who think that Christian values are being removed from schools and academia and everything else.
And I think Trump doesn't know how to blow that dog whistle or play that note because he's not religious at all and doesn't understand those people.
And that was Pence's job.
I also think to the two terms thing i'm trying to figure out the trump supporter who's having second thoughts because trump can
only serve four years because i think what they'll look at both trump and desantis they'll look at
both of them and think i like trump better than desantis so i'll vote for trump for the next four
years and then i'll vote for desantis for the four years after that well there was he's young
there was uh right this is whySantis has such a high approval rating
in many polls higher than Donald Trump.
They like DeSantis just fine.
They just like Donald Trump better.
There was a line in one of the stories
about the one-term argument
that I thought gave away the game a little bit,
which is for people who,
I think it was actually Mick Mulvaney who said this,
it was for people that want to move on from Trump
but want to be able to say
it to their pro-Trump friends in a way that doesn't get them in trouble. They can say they're
worried about the terms, which tells you, yeah, which just tells you how weak this anti-Trump
coalition really is. So there's also an open question as to whether DeSantis's electability
argument is getting a bit tripped up by his culture war extremism. We talked about the six
week abortion ban a couple of weeks ago.
He recently signed a ban
on gender-affirming care for young people
that is also affecting trans adults
because it prohibits you from getting care
from physician's assistants,
which at least in Florida,
approximately 80% of trans people do.
So now Florida has the most extreme
trans ban in the country.
Missouri was going to do something like this. I think you brought that up a couple of weeks ago and that fell apart. So now Florida is the most extreme trans ban in the country. Missouri was going to do something like this.
I think you brought that up a couple weeks ago, and that fell apart.
So now Florida's is the most extreme.
Do you think that that helps DeSantis with Republican primary voters?
Or is this like the six-week abortion ban, which he is avoiding talking about?
Well, so first of all, these things are like each other more than just politically.
like each other more than just politically. These laws around restricting care, even for adults,
take a page from the anti-abortion laws, right? Because they don't put in place an outright ban,
but they put in place onerous, scientifically unjustifiable restrictions on care. So you need to have a doctor sign off. You have to do it in person. All these things are just supposed to make
it more difficult, including raising the stakes for doctors by making it easier to sue doctors, like a lot of steps like that that have
been used in the anti-abortion movement they're applying here. The Times, I believe, talked to a
bunch of voters at this Iowa Roast and Ride event. And it was interesting, even there, you start to
see people saying, hey, I'm like frustrated. No one said health care. Like they're only talking
about these issues. You have Nikki Haley saying that trans athletes in sports is the most pressing women's issue of
our time. And the fact that even amongst these far right loons that are showing up for this
fucking event where Mike Pence wears a costume and gets on a motorcycle, even for them, they're
like, can we talk about something else besides fucking trans people for five seconds? I think
tells you that these people are a bit out of touch.
And because the campaign is so about aesthetics and they can't make actual policy distinctions and they're afraid to go after Trump on the merits, they all end up trying to outdo one another on these fucking issues and pushing themselves further and further away.
Forget the median voter, even the median Republican vote.
Well, that's because they're in this echo chamber of like the most partisan online voices.
You know, to an extent, it can happen.
It happened in 2020 on the Democratic side and certain issues.
Right.
And certain time.
And but it's really bad on the Republican side now where all these Republican candidates, all they're listening to is like what's happening on The Daily Wire.
What's happening in Steve Bannon's podcast. What's happening on Fox News? What's happening in primetime? Right. And they think that the people who are talking about these issues
there represent all the voters. And by the way, it does represent some of the most committed
activists, some of the most committed grassroots donors. But like you said, it's not even the median Republican voters.
Even Republican voters that are consuming a lot of this content and are maybe angry about woke
stuff or have been made fearful of the cities because of reports on crime, they still have
car payments. They still have credit cards. They still have health care issues. Those issues
continue to exist because those issues continue to exist. I think this is a trend for DeSantis now because initially they said critics of the don't say gay
law were being hysterical. This is focused on third graders and to kindergartners, right?
And then they expanded that law and now they are restricting reproductive health education for six
through 12 year olds. They claim that the Florida book bans were about these extreme examples that
no young kid should ever be reading.
And then we read about Amanda Gorman's book
being banned, like a poem she read at the inauguration.
There are these restrictions on transgender kids
are making it impossible for adults to get treatment.
I mean, the six week abortion ban,
the fight with Disney,
like it is painting a picture
of an incredibly extreme governor in Ron DeSantis and like deep, big government overreach into people's lives in ways that I think will sound bizarre to most people, even most Republicans.
And I think that the way Trump is handling it and probably will handle it is not necessarily by saying what Democrats would, which is like, this is extreme and dangerous, these positions. But he's going to try to be like, this guy's a weirdo. You all thought before I came
along that the Republican Party at its worst was a little weird, a little extreme, a little too
religious. Then I came along, divorced all the time, probably paid for a bunch of abortions
myself. Don't give a shit about any of this culture stuff, right? Don't like immigrants,
for sure. But on the culture stuff, Trump was sort of
like, you know, governed horribly, governed horribly, but at least his rhetoric, right,
wasn't as extreme as some of these. And I think he's going to do that with DeSantis. I think he's
going to try to paint him as an extreme weirdo. Actually, weirdo, and also just there is a pretty
strong libertarian streak in the Republican Party. And all of a sudden, the Florida government is
reaching into all these different parts of people's lives, whether you're a child or an adult. And it's just weird. It's totally unnecessary.
And I don't think this helps DeSantis with the anti-Trump or beyond Trump Republicans that he
absolutely needs. That also includes a lot of donors. These people think about electability a
lot. And they hear this stuff about DeSantis, just like they heard about the abortion ban.
They're not going to like that. And then the question is, does it peel away any of the MAGA
diehards from Trump, which remains to be seen? Maybe it does on the margins. But for DeSantis
to pull this off, he needs like all the or at least most of the anti-Trump people, most of the
people concerned about electability. And he's a big chunk of the MAGA vote. Right. He needs everything
to go well. And this is just like pissing too many people off. Yeah. Right. You have to start like forget the MAGA diehard.
Let's say Trump takes the MAGA diehard. They're just with him. Right. Let's say that's a third of these primary voters.
He needs to build a coalition that brings together all the people that have never liked Trump and never wanted Trump to be in with.
And then a bunch of people that have liked Trump all along continue to like Trump, don't agree with a lot
of the criticisms of him, think it's all overblown, just want basically Trump without a lot of the
chaos. And I don't know. I think the hardest coalition to assemble, which someone needs to
if they're going to be Trump, is the evangelical Christians who have never been too high on Trump,
but went along, you know, voted for him. And the anti-Trump college educated crew,
like getting both of those groups of voters, I think is hard for a Republican politician.
I also do think too, a lot of the polling around evangelicals has gotten pretty muddled because
as that's become basically an identity or a brand, like more people have chosen it.
And it kind of expands it to mean kind of, I'm a good Republican
in a lot of different ways. And so you end up with like, so it's a very, very like a curious
group of people. First of all, like why wouldn't they stick with Trump? The most successful anti
choice president. Uh, yeah, I read this great book. It's called the flag on the cross and it's
about white Christian nationalism and the, the strains of religion and, uh, anti-democratic
movements in this country and the way they
come together to tell people how to live their lives. And I think that's like a powerful chunk
of the Republican base that Trump has captured, but that Pence and DeSantis are both competing
for now. Yeah. And another sign that DeSantis is having some trouble is his issues with
grassroots enthusiasm. So he had 40,000 donors last quarter
who gave an average of more than $200 per donor.
That's pretty high.
For comparison, Bernie Sanders' average donation
was around $26.
How much do you think this matters for DeSantis?
I mean, I think it's an indication
of potentially less broad-based enthusiasm
for his candidacy.
The other thing we don't know is you can give
$3,300 in the primary and then $3,300 in the general election. DeSantis' team is accepting
money for both the primary and the general. So we don't know how much of that $8.2 million
is actually locked up for the general election, and he'll have to return it, literally,
if he doesn't win the nomination. So $8.2 million, it's a good chunk of change.
But you would much rather have many, many more donors the way Bernie Sanders had
who gave you a lower amount of money so you can go back to them again
because that is the lowest hanging fruit for fundraising
is hitting up someone who already wanted to give you money.
Yeah. I mean, it is early and it's the first quarter for him.
But usually, challengers to frontrun runners who are going to have a shot tend to have a lot of grassroots energy behind them.
Obama versus Hillary, Sanders versus Clinton, Sanders and even Warren in 2020.
And most of those folks still didn't win.
Right.
Obama was the only one in that group that did so it's if you don't have the grass at least the grassroots support and you're a challenger who's a long shot against a and like
the establishment favorite which trump is um i think it's even harder now we'll see what happens
next quarter but not great it just in terms of raw like cash though like this is gonna have
200 million dollars sitting in a super pack they say they say they're budgeting to a 200 million
dollar spend super pack spends are less efficient
when you're talking about media buys
for boring reasons
that we don't have to get into.
So, you know, look at Jeb Bush
and the way it all sort of worked out for him.
He had most of his money in his super PAC
and his campaign did a lot less spending.
So DeSantis will have a lot of money.
But yeah, the enthusiasm piece
is sort of notable.
Yeah, I just think it doesn't matter.
It's the enthusiasm issue.
Yeah, because by the way, what, 8.2 million? Like that's a massive amount to get right out of the gate. I just think it doesn't matter. It's the enthusiasm. Because by the way, what, 8.2 million?
Like that's a massive amount to get right out of the gate.
I do think it's just will there be enthusiasm behind it over time or does it represent like a fatal flaw of his campaign?
As for the rest of the GOP field, again, apparently Nikki Haley participated in a CNN town hall moderated by Jake Tapper on Sunday night.
They should have televised it.
So stupid.
Here are some of the highlights.
If a six week ban theoretically came to your desk, would you sign it?
Why? Why? I will answer that when you answer when you ask Kamala and Biden if they would agree to 37 weeks, 38 weeks, 39 weeks.
Then I'll answer your question.
And I know that Trump and DeSantis have both said
we're not gonna deal with entitlement reform.
Well, all you're doing is leaving it for the next president
and that's leaving a lot of Americans in trouble.
I think it's important to be honest
with the American people.
We are in this situation.
Don't lie to them and say, oh, we don't have to deal with
entitlement reform.
Yes, we do.
Yes, we do.
It's the reality.
I'm always going to tell the truth.
Is it going to hurt?
Yes, but for our kids, they know they're not
going to get it anyway.
I mean, the idea that we have biological boys playing in
girls' sports, it is the women's issue of our time how are we supposed to
get our girls used to the fact that biological boys are in their locker rooms and then we wonder
why a third of our teenage girls seriously contemplated suicide last year so it seems like
Nikki Haley is trying to uh combine pre-2016 conservatism with a pretty lame MAGA impression.
You guys think that's a winning strategy?
I found that one of the most sort of pathetic displays
I've seen from a major candidate.
It's unbelievable.
Being fucking, refusing to have an answer on abortion,
but having an answer on cutting Social Security and Medicare.
Then having the fucking audacity to claim,
which is, by the way,
like the mental health crisis for teens and teen girls is a huge and important and like serious fucking issue. And the idea that you're going to lay that at the feet of like trans fucking teens
is so disgusting. It is disgusting. It's disgusting. It's also just silly and nonsensical.
The idea that like teenagers are committing suicide because they are seeing trans women in a locker room. She also tried to straddle this tone of being compassionate and trying to listen to the other side while
having her own position. Abortion was like the number one example. Like she said, she refused
to answer whether she should support a six week abortion ban. She refused to comment on a 15 week
abortion ban. But she also said, I don't want to demonize people who are pro-choice.
I want to come together and agree on stuff.
So it was a weird effort to try to straddle these issues.
She gave a speech about abortion a couple of weeks ago.
And the whole point of the speech was,
I think simply to say like,
to highlight the fact that she is the lone woman in the field.
And that is sort of the,
like she's trying to have a brand around being pro-life,
about being anti-abortion without actually taking a position on the field. And that is sort of like she's trying to have a brand around being pro-life, about being anti-abortion without actually taking a position on the issue. She gives a whole speech
on the subject, does not come out in favor of any particular policy, continues to avoid having a
position on any particular policy. It's just like, to what end? I wanted to pick those clips because
I really think she hit the trifecta there. On abortion, she sounds like a typical politician
by dodging the question. She doesn't answer the question, which voters don't like.
She manages to take the Paul Ryan position on entitlements that is not only unpopular with the general electorate, but now unpopular with the Republican base.
And then her trans answer is guaranteed to push away the anti-Trump Republicans that she absolutely needs if she has any prayer of
competing in this so she's just like three things just just fucked it all up well the good news for
her is this was on opposite an nba finals game so i saw that i heard that i will say look i'm not
i'm not gonna tim scott this shit but i do say i watched i watched i watched with very low expectations. And I did think by the end of it, like the last questioner complimented her for taking a more positive tone.
And she went with a couple of contrasts that I don't think were like maybe electorally beneficial, but were interesting.
She criticized Trump on the Kim Jong-un comments.
She was pretty critical.
She was strongly in support of giving Ukraine weapons, which is a strong contrast from Trump
and DeSantis.
And she sort of overtly hit DeSantis.
And then the Social Security Medicare part was weird.
She came out for raising the retirement age for future Social Security recipients, which
I don't know.
What is the polling on that?
Terrible?
She talked about like raising their, she talked about like her own kids should know now that they're not going to get
social security at 65 that should be what 67 68 it didn't know it's the it's the it's the it's the
pre-2016 tea party version of the world because you can't raise the cap and and tax rich people
more right and so that's and she's a hawk right and so she's she's basically the like
the paul ryan george w bush party right like she's still got that that's who she is and yet she knows
that to compete she needs to do a mega impersonation so that's where the trans thing comes from and
that's where the non-answer on the abortion ban comes from well what is so like so silly about
the whole thing is even kevin mccarthy one of those cynical fucking people
has figured out not to talk about social security and medicare like like dumber politicians than
nicki haley have cracked this fucking code and the idea that like she's going to be like mendacious
on all these subjects but for whatever reason she feels like she needs to speak to tell her on
truth teller on medicare but i won't tell you what i think on abortion it's not actually abortion
ban in my state of course it's not true none of it's actually not
true right we don't need to make these draconian cuts we can obviously afford to keep paying people
social security and medicare so it's like i'm gonna like every piece of it is is misinformation
she's pretty critical of the santas on the disney fight too she said oh he took 50 grand from them
and appointed a bunch of disney people to board positions now he's using the state to go after
them like we shouldn't do that.
I thought it was sort of interesting.
She also told the full story
about taking down the Confederate flag
after the AME church shooting,
which I just thought was an interesting choice
because most Republicans like to pretend
that racial divisions don't exist in this country anymore.
And then you're not allowed to talk about it,
but she kind of led with it.
Did she do the whole,
like I remember in
her bio video in her announcement video she sort of like glided over it like she mentioned the flag
but that she didn't she didn't want to say racism no she got into it pretty deep and she led her
whole thing with like a rant about earmark so back to your pre-2016 yeah this is what i'm saying this
is who she is yeah she talked about being an accountant i was like what she took out the uh
de santos hit on disney shook that out for a spin a couple weeks ago.
I always just like when they're too afraid to do a similar hit on Trump directly,
so they just kind of go after each other, kind of try to seem tough with each other.
Best way to make him the nominee.
The thing that I think connected her with the audience is they talked about how her husband is about to deploy for a year overseas to Africa.
He's in the military, and there's a military family's message and a veteran's message.
It seemed to endear her with the people listening, as did some of the nastier. for a year overseas to Africa. He's in the military and there's a military family's message and a veteran's message that I just,
it seemed to endear her
with the people listening
as did some of the nastier.
So you got one for Tim Scott,
one for Nikki Haley.
And I'm a Doug Burnham guy.
You're a Burgum.
Burgum.
Burgum.
I'm a Doug Burgum guy.
Can we do a version of Haley Train?
Could that work?
Haley Train, yeah.
Let's talk about Joe Biden
who took a victory lap after...
Just carefully.
Yeah.
Joe Biden, who took a victory lap after... Just carefully.
Who took a victory lap after signing the bipartisan budget deal that saved us from default.
The president delivered an Oval Office address on Friday night.
One of his super PACs is running a new ad about the deal. advisors told reporters at the Associated Press and the Washington Post that the way Biden handled the debt ceiling negotiations affirms their reelection strategy of marginalizing MAGA
Republicans while cutting bipartisan deals with non-MAGA Republicans. Here's a clip from Biden's
Oval Office speech. My fellow Americans, when I ran for president, I was told the days of
bipartisanship were over and that Democrats and Republicans could no longer work together.
But I refused to believe that because America can never give in to that way of thinking.
Passing this budget agreement was critical.
The stakes could not have been higher.
If we had failed to reach an agreement on the budget,
there were extreme voices threatening to take America for the first first time in our 247 year history into default so it was critical to reach an agreement and it's very
good news for the american people no one got everything they wanted but the american people
got what they needed why do you guys think the white house wanted to do an oval on this address
knowing that they are few and far between and you don't get an oval anytime you want? And what do you guys think of the speech?
country who just want Republicans and Democrats to work together. They hate what they usually hear out of Washington. So you're sort of speaking to them. And I think that's why the speech led with
infrastructure, the CHIPS Act. He sort of did like a greatest hits of all the bipartisan work I've
done, which I think is effective. 350 laws he signed, bipartisan laws. He mentioned that at
the beginning. The fundamental challenge to a speech like this is it's hard to take a victory lap on a bill that you passed and made it less bad in the process. You know what I mean? Like they talked about all the things he protected from Republican cuts in the process. He talked about all the things he's going to keep fighting for, like, you know, taxing billionaires more, talked about unity at the end. But I do think like they put so much time and work into this. There are a lot of people who are legitimately scared, myself included, that we
could default. So I mean, I think it makes sense to go out and take a victory lap. It sucks that
it was on Friday night, but I'm glad the networks took it. Yeah. Yeah. First of all, I just think
it seems like Joe Biden is just genuinely proud to have made this deal and the way that the deal
was made. I think if he feels it seems like
he personally views it as a success for him and his sort of theory of politics. I think he's proud
of the relationship he has with Kevin McCarthy. And look, we talked about this, like, look, like,
you know, you can you can you can argue like, oh, giving into having a negotiation or or not having
dealt with this in the past. There's 100 paths that could have been taken to maybe avoid this altogether. But once we were in this mess,
it's hard to imagine coming out of it with something much better than what we did. And
I think that's another place where he seems to be genuinely sort of proud and then has an
opportunity to walk through all the ways in which his sort of theory of how to govern has been
pretty well fucking vindicated given the number of things he's been able to pass i think that the presidential bully pulpit is uh not as powerful
it's never been as powerful as people think it is it's certainly not as powerful now in an age of
very fractured media but he still has a bigger megaphone than kevin mccarthy um if he wants to
use it and i think they wanted to use it to make sure that McCarthy didn't get all the credit,
which a lot of Hill reporters were.
Oh, God.
I don't know if you guys saw.
Lavishing praise on it.
Dan Pfeiffer's a little upset about this.
What's doing that?
I feel like there was some business,
like Kevin McCarthy went into that room with no leverage.
No, no, the debt, the debt.
Remember the fucking ticking clock with the bomb on it
attached to all of our chests?
That was the leverage. You know what's interesting tommy to your point it's hard to like sell people on
something bad that didn't happen and just like what he protected like all our financial crisis
speeches yeah and so there was a lot of there was a lot of that in the speech then there was one
section that i thought was a little different and i really hope he sort of uses that going forward
in in the reelect. He said,
Republicans may not like it, but I'm going to make sure the wealthy pay their fair share.
I proposed closing special interest tax loopholes for big oil, crypto, hedge fund billionaires as
part of these negotiations. Republicans defended every single one of those loopholes,
but I'm going to be coming back. And with your help, I'm going to win.
I think that's a great way to frame it. So, because then you're out of the,
here's what I accomplished.
Here's what I prevented from happening.
It's, I'm in a fight with these guys.
It's not over yet.
I'm going to come back
and I'm going to go after those loopholes.
They don't, they want to protect them, right?
And I think you do that.
They're going to go after Medicare.
I want to protect it.
They're going to do this.
I'm going to protect it.
And you make it an ongoing battle
that you're engaged in.
And it's on behalf of the American people. And that's why you need the other next four years. non-starter. It was really frustrating. And so, you know, it became a conversation about what the
percentage of cut would be as opposed to how we could raise funds, especially on some of the most
ridiculous fucking loopholes, carried interest, real estate, whatever. What's your take on the
reelection strategy that Biden's team was laying out to reporters? Basically that he is distinguishing
once again between MAGA Republicans, who he is warning are extreme,
and regular Republicans, who he keeps saying he can work with and is proving it with a lot of these deals and bipartisan legislation.
My feeling on it is that I feel like it describes maybe a theory of governing,
but doesn't actually describe the way Joe Biden talks about Republicans on the campaign trail.
Because for the most part, he doesn't say, oh, well, there are some good ones. But oh,
but we've got to stop these ones. He makes the case that this is not your father's Republican Party says that all the time. We got to stop these MAGA Republicans, these MAGA extremisms.
I suppose there are like, oh, but then he talks about how he likes McConnell and everyone flips
the fuck out. Right. He does definitely say, well, you know, he comes. But I'm just saying
the larger case is about we are fighting republican
extremism i agree that he does make his sort of pay-ons to the republicans that he can work with
but for the most part it's a case that's trying to make the republican party the maga republic
the whole fucking news cycle about trick what was it uh mega mega mega mega mega mega mega
millions mega mega trickle down right mega mega trickle down yeah i've had a similar
reaction i mean i don't think you can argue that the mega portion of the republican party is
isolated or marginalized uh please refer back to our primary conversation we had 30 minutes ago but
i do think big picture this isn't a novel argument that biden is making he's saying
look how extreme they are i'm someone who's reasonable i can work with them look what i
did with kevin mccarthy like i you know that good. You're trying to find a sliver of Republicans
or independents or moderate Republicans to vote for you or stay home. I think that's a smart
strategy. I think that's what it's all about. I mean, it's partisan news junkies like us don't
necessarily see the difference between MAGA Republicans and the rest of the party. And I think we have a point. Most Republican politicians supported Donald Trump, supported
him after he tried to overturn an election and cite an insurrection, right? But I think Biden
wants to give Republicans, Republican-leaning independents a place to go. And you give them
a place to go by saying, hey, there's some Republicans that I'll still work
with. If they want to work with me, I can do it. Look, I have this record of bipartisan
accomplishment, but I'm going to fight like hell to beat the extreme Republicans. And here's what
they're planning on doing. So I do think it's a very fine line to walk, because I think as we saw
in 2020, one of the reasons I think the Republicans did so well in the House races, even as Donald Trump
lost, is because Biden in that campaign really said Trump is very different than the Republican
Party. And he made Trump very different. I think in 22, he was more adept at saying that it's
actually MAGA Republicans. It's not just Donald Trump. It's a lot of the party and tried to
separate MAGA Republicans from regular Republicans. Now, there is a risk that if you're a Republican who voted for the budget deal, you can go say,
well, I'm not one of the extreme ones he's talking about, and it might help them, right? So there's
a risk in that. But I do think giving Republicans and Republican-leaning independents a place to go
is why he won in 20 and why Democrats did well in 2022.
There's another sort of, I think, risk on the nuance of it, which is
similar to what he had to do in 2020, but it's slightly different now, which is he has to
basically say, these Republicans are dangerous, they are extreme, and together, we got a lot done,
you know, and there is that, like, he has to be able to, I think part of his appeal was
that he was going to bring the country back together that he was someone stable and reliable
and not a partisan bomb thrower. But he has to also make this case against against the far right without losing access to those
voters. And I think ultimately he's going to be I'm the only thing standing between extreme
Republicans and them taking over the whole country and having their agenda forced on the whole
country. So you want me in there and some competition for the Democratic nomination,
You want me in there?
And some competition for the Democratic nomination, anti-vax conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who just did a Twitter Spaces event hosted by Elon Musk where he said COVID wasn't a real disease,
proposed completely sealing the U.S. border with Mexico, called mainstream media organizations propaganda vessels,
and said that Elon Musk is, quote, a key instrument for rescuing American democracy.
Kennedy was also endorsed by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey over the weekend.
And in a recent CNN poll, received support from 20 percent of Democratic primary voters with an additional 44 percent saying they would consider supporting him.
So what the hell's going on with this guy?
And how big of a problem do you think RFK Jr.'s candidacy is for Biden
and by extension, America?
First of all, man, that Kennedy name.
What a fucking shadow on, like, Jesus Christ.
It's just a name.
It's just the name Kennedy.
Why do people like it so much?
I don't get it.
I don't get you fucking Northeasterners.
You never see a Kennedy you won't vote for.
It's called people who don't get it i don't get you fucking northeasterners you never see a kennedy won't vote for it's called it's called midlantic it's called people who don't consume a lot of news
name id name id and it's it's most american voters and they what do they know about politics
they know about trump they know what biden they know about obama they know what bush who knows
i know what the kennedys the kennedys i mean i'm in on a kennedy i just don't know about the
kennedys old and a kenn Kennedy I've never heard of.
If you ask people to name five presidents,
I bet 90% of them would put John F. Kennedy in there.
Yeah, so that's a bad reason to vote for somebody.
It's my fault.
Welcome to America.
It's my fault we're talking about this.
Yeah, this is your fault.
This sucks.
If it makes you feel any better,
I listened to most of this Twitter space.
It also included that schmuck David Sachs.
That guy, you love David Sachs.
Tulsi Gabbard was on for a while.
It was just like a who's who of annoying people. And so what I'm worried about with Robert Kennedy
Jr. is not that he's going to beat Biden in a primary, is that he might run as a third party
candidate and maybe be able to get on the ballot in places. I don't know what the path would be
there, but he could siphon away votes from Biden if he does. And it seems like that's why people like
Steve Bannon are propping him up. It might not just be to have him attack Biden in the primary,
although that is helpful too. And obviously he gets an audience because he is named Kennedy.
But if you listen to him speak, he sprinkles in comments about like what his dad or his father
did or said with sort of these interesting bits of history, along with totally
made up lies, conspiracy theories, anti-vax sentiment. He says that the CIA killed JFK
and his father. He compared COVID lockdowns to Hitler's Germany. And it sounds authoritative
enough and anti-establishment enough that I think it works and plays well with the kind of Bernier busts,
like Bitcoin to take down the banks, Joe Rogan, Tulsi Gabbard crowd that love to think that
there's a grand conspiracy that's making their life worse. And some of the things he says,
you're like, yes, he's like, he criticizes Washington. It's overrun by lobbyists,
right? Like there's some things you're like, okay, this guy's got a point here.
But then he talks about how he says Zelensky is responsible
for the Russian invasion. COVID was a bioweapon. So I don't know. It's not, it's worrisome. It's
worrisome that he's polling at 20%. I don't know what to do with these bad feelings I have,
but I feel like we have to take this guy seriously because I don't know. I don't want to be a spoiler
in some way. Well, I will say there's, there's people that I know, people that we know,
who I'm afraid to ask about RFK Jr. because I think they might say, oh, he has a point.
So if you're listening and you have people like this in your life,
we should give people what he said. It's not just anti-vax.
He thinks that a pandemic preparation plan from 2019 was part of a secret CIA plan to enrich drug companies.
That tabletop exercise
is on YouTube, by the way.
That's right.
It has been for years.
Secret plan on YouTube.
He thinks COVID vaccines
killed more people than they saved.
He has thought long before COVID
that vaccines cause autism.
He called Tucker Carlson
breathtakingly courageous,
was friends with Roger Ailes.
How about this one?
Thinks John Kerry actually won
the 2004 race.
Yeah, that's a real twist let's
hear about and again like jack dorsey is uh an idiot uh he's part of the you know the two-headed
hydra that kind of i guess he's sort of helping run twitter now but he's a billionaire so he could
cut a big check to a super pack that helps rfk jr and causes a bunch of trouble so just it's
and scary and there is one uh super pack has already raised $5.7 million for him,
so anyone can contribute to that.
20% of the 44% who are considering voting for him
said that it was because of his name and his family.
So you hope the more information that gets out there, the better.
Did you guys know he tried to run in Alabama in 2017 for the Doug Jones seat?
I remember that. I remember that popping up.
And he lost by 38 points.
That's Alabama.
And then here's the,
I think it's Bannon and all those people.
I think what they really want is just him embarrassing Biden.
Right.
That's probably right.
And Kennedy is,
he's making his big play in New Hampshire,
where of course his family is even more well-known and has done well in the
past.
Of course, his family is even more well-known and has done well in the past.
And New Hampshire is dead set on still going first, even though the DNC and Biden have decided that South Carolina is going to go first.
So they're going to penalize, the DNC will penalize candidates who run in New Hampshire.
They won't give them the delegates.
So there's a chance that Biden doesn't file to run in New Hampshire primary because it's against the DNC rules. But if New Hampshire holds the contest anyway, and RFK competes and Biden's not competing, and you could have a whole bunch
of headlines about RFK Jr. winning the New Hampshire primary. Yeah. And I just think you
to remember, we're talking about Arizona. Joe Biden wins by about 10,000 votes. Georgia,
he won by about 12,000 votes. We could go down a long list here of how close this race will be
in key swing states.
And if RFK Jr. is able to get a lot of press attention attacking Joe Biden in all these different ways or somehow siphon votes away from him in the general, it's a real problem.
And Republicans love that.
I really don't know about the ballot access questions for the general because he is going to have to contend with no labels candidate Joe Manchin.
My guy. the general uh because he is going to have to contend with uh no labels candidate joe mansion the my guy who by the way was asked over the weekend uh if he was going to run as a third party and just once again all he said was no labels is trying to uh make sure that they have
a bipartisan ticket and that's important and like this debt ceiling deal showed that uh it's not
about the extremes it's about the center which by the way might have been another reason that the
biden people wanted to really stake out that ground in the Oval Address because Manchin's hanging out out there.
But in the RFK thing, it's also just like there've always been fucking kooks.
There've always been rich.
Lyndon LaRouche types.
Rich, out of touch, wackadoo people for whom politics is a joke and a game.
And they've always been around but man that we
have these people like jack dorsey and elon who have just so much power just over the conversation
and are so fucking cavalier about politics just so uh um glib about the consequences for actual
people that like jack dorsey can say that he actually thinks this is a good idea just for, I suppose, the fun of it, just for the outrage of it.
RFK Jr. and the conspiratorial mindset towards government and politics does align with the
fucking tech bro view of the universe. You talk to these fucking people and they have such disdain
for government and politics and they think that we should innovate our way out of every problem and the government is out to get everyone
like it does fit that jack dorsey and elon musk genuinely believe this shit yeah it does but also
you know robert kennedy jr uh spoke at a bitcoin conference in miami and name checked jack's
company so you know like that but know, like, there is a
conspiratorial worldview
that is very
closely tied
to, like,
the Joe Rogan,
Tulsa Gabbard world
that I think this guy
speaks right to
and I think he'll get on
all those shows
and get a big audience.
It just goes to the,
for so many of these people,
you know,
Rogan types,
the Dorseys,
like,
politics isn't
a means of coming together to figure out how we use our
limited resources to solve problems. It isn't about budget numbers and Medicare outlays and
who gets relief and who doesn't and how much people pay in taxes. It's an aesthetic fucking
game show that they watch from home and they buzz in and they get to play and they like certain
competitors and they don't like others. It's a game show to them.
Yeah. And by the way, Jack, the tipping point for him seems to be Joe Biden tripping over a sandbag on stage.
Therefore, he comes out and endorses this crazy anti-vax conspiracy theorist.
And I also think a big point of contention here is going to be that the Democratic National Committee is not holding Democratic primary debates because RFK Jr.
and Marianne Williamson aren't serious candidates. then you're gonna have a bunch of people saying
just hold the debates why are you so afraid to be which is you know a fucking james vanderbeek
what dawson's creek frame fame was out there with a viral video that went all over uh fox that was
played all over fox news like yelling at the dnc for not holding debates yes and in the point he
doesn't want to wait for his life to be over.
And again, it's like
we hear James Van Der Beek
and we think,
I don't want to wait.
But there's a whole
conservative infrastructure.
He was working on his sentence.
There's a whole conservative
infrastructure out there
to lift up those comments
and mainline them
to people who might
want to hear them.
Anyway, we got all the way
from Donald Trump
to Joe Biden
to James Van Der Beek.
My guy.
When we come back.
Team Pacey.
Tommy.
John.
Before we go.
Yes.
Can we do a quickie?
Can you phrase it differently?
You're disgusting.
Can we phrase it any other way than that?
The segment is called Quickie.
Can we do,
can we have a quickie?
I don't even know what the right phrase is.
No, we're in a workshop.
Get to your point.
All right. Well, I just want to first thank the subscribers who sent me this wonderful piece of
content on our community discord go subscribe at crooked.com slash friends please say crooked.com
slash friends crooked.com slash friends thank you last week republican congresswoman I'm doing this
because it's a dead-setting thing it's one more piece of news republican congresswoman Lauren
Bober did not show up for the vote on the budget bill.
Nice.
I want to play you two quick clips.
So good.
It's a shot and a chaser.
Here's the shot.
It's Lauren Boebert explaining that she did not show up because she was protesting the bill.
They served us up a crap sandwich.
Call it a no-show protest.
But I certainly let every one of my colleagues and the country
know i was against this garbage of a bill all right and here is the chaser what you're about
to see is lauren bobert sprinting up the steps of the capitol trying to get the vote in on the
night that it happened and i'm telling her that they closed the vote they just closed it they closed it yeah hey yeah what we're watching for everyone at home is
her sprinting literally sprinting up the steps of the capitol trying to make the vote that she said
that she was protesting well but it's funny to say it's a no-show protest vote the way you protest
you vote no it's not you get to vote on it you know she she tried to be technically accurate there by saying
call it a no protest vote it wasn't yeah but you can call it that if you want to call it a no
protest vote i'm fine with that she said um this garbage of a bill which means like that was at
their best take i i love it i love just not getting your homework in in time and then saying
it's because of climate change yeah i love it oh brutal what do you guys make of uh marjorie
taylor green and lauren bober both you know dropping at the same time and they kind of
different well you know trajectories that they've taken marge is uh is kevin's bud mtg they're going
separate ways she's she's now she's now establishment serious marge but did you see
that steve bannon is trying to lead an effort to get a
primary candidate against her against marjorie chile green that's so yeah and she was like
texting matt gates about it yeah she texted matt gates a rejoinder and somehow that ended up in
the news like tell tell steve if he picks this fight i'll take the house and the kids but for
a while you can send this text to him marjorie was like she was basically a co-host on the war
room podcast with steve bannon for a long time i hate to see it big break it's
too bad anyway i don't know how we get to marjorie taylor green but you know lauren bobert well this
is they're going in there they're just there they don't like it they don't like each other it's the
narcissism of small differences yeah they got a fight in the bathroom that everyone wrote that's
right yeah they did they fought each other those are the days i don't know just like arguments
or with their words anyway thank you elijah thank you for that quickie
anytime when we come back horrible tommy talks to washington post reporter ben terris about his new
book the big break
ben terris is a reporter for The Washington Post.
He is the author of the new book, The Big Break, which is available today.
I've already read it. Spoiler alert, it's great.
Ben, welcome to the show.
Thanks so much for having me.
Thanks so much for doing this, and thanks for sending me a PDF of the book,
although I also paid for one, so it will be arriving in my Kindle shortly.
It's a great book. It's a very fun, page-turning, quick read. So I highly recommend folks read it if you want to
learn about some of the more interesting characters in Washington. Is that a fair
sort of summary of who you like to focus on? Yeah, I'd say so. I tried to find the most
interesting people who actually were also either important or influential or, you know, said something more about kind of the current state of politics.
Yeah, I mean, I think that sort of characterizes a lot of your reporting in the post, too.
It's like coverage of these entertaining characters in politics and then using them to tell a bigger story about the city, the industry around politics, which I think is a great way to do it.
So I was hoping we could start with one of the folks in the book that really interested me, a guy named Robert Strick. Can you tell us who he is and what
his job was? Sure. Robert Strick is definitely one of the more interesting people in this book,
which I have to say is full of interesting people. I honestly believe that, but he is
truly a unique character. He's a longtime lobbyist who was never really successful
until Donald Trump came around and then was just one of the most wildly successful financially,
one of the most wildly successful lobbyists in all of Washington. This kind of cowboy,
swaggery, libertarian, Trump-loving but also Trump skeptical in some ways guy who lived out
on a farm in Middleburg, Virginia that he called Alibi Farm. And he was this guy who just really
could not make it work until Donald Trump came around. And he just found a way to take advantage
of the chaos and become a power player in Washington. And I was interested in him, not just because he made
it work in Washington. When Trump was around, I wanted to know what happened to this guy
after Trump was gone, right? It's one thing for a guy to come in when the door is open to him
to take advantage of this really chaotic moment. But what happens when Washington
reverts a little bit back to normal? Once Joe Biden comes in, once the kind of usual suspects
return, what happens to a chaotic character like him? And he seemed sort of seemed like the ultimate
example of fake it till you make it, right? I mean, he didn't seem like an individual who was
particularly that well connected within the Trump orbit, but basically he bluffed his way into some
of the biggest lobbying contracts you could imagine with foreign basically, he bluffed his way into some of the biggest
lobbying contracts you could imagine with foreign countries, right?
So his story, his origin story in the Trump years is fascinating. He was a very low level kind of
guy out in Oregon helping out for Donald Trump, got connected to some people who ended up being
big players in the Trump world. But he got big, he had his big break, which is the name of the book.
The book is called The Big Break because the country went through a big break, but also because
all these new people have the opportunity to kind of seek out big breaks of their own.
And his came in a really, you know, strange fashion. He came to Washington right after Trump
won. Well, he's around for the election night. He was there and continued to be there after he won,
kind of partied for, you know, four nights drinking an endless election night. He was there and continued to be there after he won, kind of partied for four nights, drinking
an endless amount of whiskey with his friends and smoking cigars.
And one night he was out at the Four Seasons in Georgetown outside on the patio smoking
cigars and drinking when a dog came and sniffed his crotch.
And he kind of pushes this dog away.
He's like, what the heck's going on here?
And a woman comes and she apologizes. And he notices that she has an accent, but can't quite place it. Turns out
she works for the New Zealand embassy and she's having a tough time connecting her country with
Donald Trump. I mean, when Trump became president, all of these countries had to scramble to figure
out what to do. They were all kind of expecting it would be Hillary Clinton. He's sitting there
and he says, oh, you want to get connected to Donald Trump? I can do that. He did not know
in that moment if he could really do it or not, but he had enough of a chance and decided he was
going to take a gamble on this. And he was able to do it. He helped connect New Zealand to Donald
Trump and uses that as a jumping off point to just work for all these countries, many of which were kind of controversial countries looking for, you know, a leg up in Trump's
Washington. And so, yeah, I mean, and these are like massive contracts, right? And you're talking
like $100,000 a month as sort of a starter if you're lobbying for, I don't know, name some of
these unsavory characters that were in the book. Well, one place that he got a huge contract for
was for like $5 million for
Saudi Arabia. And he didn't even end up doing anything for them. They saw an opportunity.
There were not a lot of people who could say, look, we're connected to Donald Trump. He was
saying it. They gave him this huge contract and ultimately didn't even ask anything from him.
I mean, there's so much money out there in foreign contracts because to a country, $5 million is nothing, right? But if you can use it
to, I don't know, get yourself off of potential sanctions lists, or if you can use it to
bend the ear of someone in the State Department, just the chance of that is worth so much more
than a few million dollars. It could be worth billions of dollars. And so, you know, people could throw around money and he could collect five million
dollars to do nothing. Must be nice. Another person you spend a lot of time with in the book
is a guy named Matt Schlapp. I find him to be one of the more craven, disgusting,
phony people in Washington. Just a quick summary for listeners who don't know Mr. Schlapp. He's a
lobbyist who is the chairman of the American Conservative Union, which organizes the CPAC
conference. CPAC used to be this kind of fringe political circus. It is now basically kind of
like the heart of the MAGA movement, and it's spreading that brand of politics to other right
wing populist countries and leaders. Matt was also accused of sexual assaulting someone on Herschel Walker's campaign.
Can you talk about why you wanted to include Nat in the book and like a little bit about his
evolution from sort of a Bush guy who, you know, worked in the Bush White House and was kind of a
standard Republican to, I don't know, the leader of the MAGA movement? Yeah, I mean, so I set out
to write this book because a lot of people, pretty much
everyone can tell that Washington is broken, right? But it's hard to know exactly how it got
that way. I have this kind of great job, sometimes a terrible job, but a great job in that I can
spend my days trying to figure out answers to that question. I can talk to people. I can get
inside rooms that most people can't get into. I
can spend tons of time researching them and talking to everyone who knows them. And I wanted
to know kind of how the Republican Party became what it is today, how it went from the GOP of
20 years ago or even 10 years ago, and how it turned into a party that just cares about Donald Trump and loyalty to him.
And I felt like it's hard to write about an entire party, but as a profile writer,
I could spend time with Matt Schlapp, who is a very good example of this. Maybe the best example
of a Washington Republican who went from the establishment to Donald Trump. And I felt like
if I could kind of get to know him, his motivations, the way that he spun his story,
the way that he explained how he could be
a compassionate conservative one day under George Bush
and be a fighter, a loyalist for Donald Trump,
talking about stolen elections
and going to bat for Trump from everything,
from defending him when he was accused of sexual assault
to,
you know, you name the thing that Donald Trump has done, Matt Schlapp has defended it.
And spending time with him was a very, it was difficult to do, right? To spend time with any
political person for that much time and to be writing about them and thinking about them.
But it did give me kind of a good insight to how the party could move from one place to another. Did you ever get a sense of why he would agree to talk with you? Did he just think
that getting more coverage would help his business? I mean, this is obviously someone who had a lot to
hide, we've come to learn. Yeah. I don't know exactly why people talk to me sometimes. I'm glad they do.
I think the reason is because I am fair.
I spend a lot of time trying to get to know people and understand their motivations and
give their worldview at least some time to breathe, right?
But I'm also fair in that I'm going to write what's true.
And so if Matt Schlapp comes across as somebody who
gave up a lot of his values for Donald Trump, if I write about the fact that he has been
accused of groping a male staffer and did that while also kind of disparaging gay people and
making jokes about gay people to me, like I will put that in the book because I'm trying to tell the full picture of somebody. And so he might not like
the way that he's portrayed in the book, but at the beginning of it, I told him I would be fair.
And at the end of it, I do think I'm fair. It just doesn't necessarily mean that everybody I write
about loves the story at the end of the process. Yeah. So I lived on and off in DC from
2002 to about 2015. I think that I'm fairly cynical. I'm pretty hard on the city when I
talk about it. I came away from reading your book with an even darker, more cynical take on
Washington. And I'm wondering if that takeaway is accurate, if you really do have an incredibly dark and cynical view of Washington, and if you think DC was always that way, or if you think it has gotten worse over the last few years. And I should mention that, like, you didn't just profile Republicans in the Trump era. There are a bunch of Democrats in here, too.
You know, I think, you know, you started off by talking about how you thought this book was, you know, a fun read. And I thank you for that. And I agree. I hope that's true. And so I think when people read this book, like it can be a romp, it can be funny, it can be an adventure. But yeah, there is a real darkness to it, right? There are, these are dark times. The country is not in a great place. And Washington is not necessarily up for the challenge in a lot of ways. And so, there are characters throughout this book and there's lots of different
characters who are all trying to make this kind of new frontier work, sometimes just for them,
sometimes just for their own benefit, sometimes though to try to make the world a better place.
And so, while I do not have like the most positive view of Washington as a whole, there are lots of parts of it that do give me a lot of hope.
And I think that's in the book as well.
And sometimes you find that in dark places, right?
I spend a lot of time in this book with Hill staffers, some underappreciated, underpaid, undercovered staffers who are often voiceless in Washington, the people who kind of
really make the city work. Some of them are going through terrible times. I spent time with a
former Dianne Feinstein staffer who makes a splash in this book by taking a bunch of mushrooms after
he's fired, breaking into his boss's office, smoking a joint at her desk and filming a protest
video to try to get attention for the things that he's seen, right? Like that's not a happy story. It's interesting, but it's not
happy. Definitely interesting. But underneath that, it helped me kind of get to know a whole
world of people who are desperately trying to do good work. People talk about Washington as just
filled with cynics and people who are desperate for power. And there are a lot of those, but more people come to Washington to try to do good stuff.
And that hasn't changed even after Trump.
In some ways, I feel like more and more people are coming because it feels more important than ever.
And so I think even if you read this book and see a lot of darkness, there are glimmers of hope in there too.
Yeah, I mean, look, I worked on Capitol Hill for a while.
I don't want to dissuade anyone from working in government or working in politics generally, but they can be really tough jobs.
You are underpaid.
You are overworked.
The work itself doesn't always feel all that gratifying, especially when you're younger at a lower level.
at a lower level. But like my overall take on Washington having worked in the White House,
or sort of the duration of my time there was most of the city was kind of really well meaning,
earnest people that are a little nerdy in a good way and focused on making the world a better place. Do you think the Trump era changed that makeup to include more people like Robert Strick, the first guy we talked about,
who sort of used his little bit of access into administration to make a ton of money by lobbying
for unsavory people? I mean, I do think more people come to Washington because they're
idealistic than come to make money. I just think, look, if you really want to be rich,
you go to Wall Street. If you really want to be famous, you can go to Hollywood.
I don't think it's the number one place to come for that. I do think more people than usual
have come to Washington since Donald Trump and during the Trump era is because of that,
because all of a sudden the door is open to more people. The way I think about this is I've always
liked to write about kind of sideshow characters
because I find them interesting.
I often think sideshow characters do a very good job of kind of explaining the world.
You can read a profile of somebody who seems kind of strange and weird.
And at the end of it, you understand the world better.
But now these sideshow characters realize they can be on the center stage.
I mean, that's what happens in the Donald Trump years.
Like you can all of a sudden become a power player,
even if in any other era you could not.
But I still think there are more people that come here to just do good work.
And it can be, you know,
that doesn't mean that everybody stays in Washington as an idealist.
Washington can change people. You can come here idealistic and leave cynical. You can come to try to change the
world and then realize it's actually easier to just make money. So, you know, again, there's a
lot of cynicism in Washington and I'm as jaded as the next guy. But, you know, I do think that
when people saw what Donald Trump was doing to politics, a lot of idealistic people said,
well, I'm needed more than ever to go and, you know, fight the good fight.
Yeah. I mean, I do think that maybe the differences between when I started and with the Trump era
is there, like there's obviously been lots of people that went to Washington and did
brand building and left. I mean, I'm, I am one of them. Let's just be clear about that. But it was
more like George Stephanopoulos worked at the White House. He was the communications director.
And then he left and got a job at ABC News or whatever.
Now there is like a brand building on steroids with social media.
And you have a guy like Boris Epstein, who is, you know, some like tier D surrogate in
the Trump campaign.
I think he did like surrogate scheduling in the White House,
got pushed out. And now he's like Trump's legal consigliere, seemingly running point on all the
cases defending him against the very special counsel investigation. So maybe that's the thing
that has changed over time. It's this ability to like have your star turn, do it very quickly on
your own terms on social media, and then leverage that into something financially.
very quickly on your own terms on social media, and then leverage that into something financially.
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, you know, institutions in Washington have changed, and a lot of them have crumbled. It used to be you could, you'd have to work your way up
through institutions, but now people are making their own.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Maybe Brookings isn't the shortcut it used to be. One thing you didn't
talk about a lot in the book is the mainstream media, and how mainstream media institutions
and organizations are doing at this time. You do talk about the role in the book is the mainstream media and how mainstream media institutions and
organizations are doing at this time. You do talk about the role of social media, especially on
Capitol Hill, and some sort of new media outlets that are trying to tell the stories of communities
that have been marginalized in those jobs or on Capitol Hill generally. But how do you feel like
the mainstream media is doing to kind of, I don't know, keep tabs on some of the self-dealing
that we were just talking about at the top. Look, I mean, I think some of the best journalism
in the world is still being done today. You know, if you look at, you know, the best work that's
out there, it's amazing. People are just doing incredible work and, you know, they're speaking
truth to power. I'll also admit that it's a struggling industry right now, both financially, but
also with how to do the job as a whole.
Um, and so I think while some places are, are, are knocking it out of the park, it's
just hard to keep up.
And the book is about a Washington that is not fully prepared, um, for the possible return
of Donald Trump, right?
It's not like once Trump was gone,
all these guardrails went up and everybody prepared for the second coming of Trump or
someone like him. And I think the same is true in the media. I think a lot of, um, television media,
a lot of places that are struggling financially are making the same mistakes that they, they made
the first time around and, uh, time around and need to learn some lessons.
Yeah, I agreed with that. So, I mean, speaking of learning lessons, so this is not in the book,
but this is part of your Washington Post profile writing. You wrote this piece a few weeks ago about a guy named Morgan Murphy, who was Senator Tommy Tuberville's military aide. He ended up
resigning or getting pushed out after your story ran. Can you tell us a little bit about Morgan Murphy and what got him into trouble?
Sure.
Morgan is the kind of person that would have fit very well into this book, honestly.
He's a kind of character who in another era would not have been at the center of American
policymaking necessarily, but was up and, you know, up until last week, you know, in that
role. He was Tommy Tuberville's national security advisor, but he had this kind of crazy backstory.
And he worked for Graydon Carter at Vanity Fair. He became an adventure writer for Forbes magazine.
He wrote books about eating his way through the South. If you looked him up on
Wikipedia, it didn't say Morgan Murphy, National Security Advisor. It said Morgan Murphy,
food critic. And this food critic was at the center of a big kerfuffle happening in Washington
right now. Tommy Tuberville was pretty much single-handedly holding up nominations for Pentagon positions that are
crucial to American safety. He's doing so because he's trying to fight against a Department of
Defense abortion policy. And Morgan Murphy was a key advisor helping Tuberville kind of figure
this out. I wrote about him because it felt to me like, here's an example of a guy who
wouldn't be in Washington if not for Trump. The only reason he got here was because he's a captain
in the Naval Reserves. And during the Trump years, he ended up working at the Pentagon.
And because there was a void in communication leadership, he rose very quickly to become a
traveling press secretary,
the traveling press secretary for the Pentagon. So all of a sudden, this guy who is a food critic
is now speaking on behalf of the American military, and then ends up working for a former
football coach who's now a senator who is single-handedly blocking Pentagon from doing
its job. That to me is like, oh, things are different in Washington, And here's a character that represents that. Yeah, things are different in Washington. And
just to sort of like double stamp what what Tuberville is doing, he's got a hold on all
US Department of Defense general and flag officer promotions, because the Department of Defense
will give pay time off and travel funding for service members and dependents seeking abortion
services if they live in states where those services are now illegal. So Tuberville is holding up hundreds
of promotions. The Department of Defense says there are about 650 officers covered by this
blanket hold, sort of like a one to four star general. It's so aggressive that Mitch McConnell
opposes this idea. But what do we make of the fact that holding up hundreds of promotions for members of the
military who have no part of this policy that Tuberville says he opposes, that doesn't get
you in trouble.
But Morgan Murphy taking credit for the policy and taking some of that credit away from
Tavi Tuberville, that gets you fired.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, it's one of those things where Washington has changed in a lot of ways
since Donald Trump, but in some ways it remains the same. And, you know, one way that it remains
the same is if you're a principal, if you're a member of Congress, if you are an elected official,
you like to be the person that gets all the credit or all the blame for, you know,
for policies that
come out of your office. And if somebody steps out in front of you and makes it look like they're,
you know, maybe pulling the strings, it's not a good look.
Yeah, don't get in the boss's way. Ben, thank you for doing the show. The book, again,
is The Big Break. It is available now. It's a great read. Buy it, take it to the beach with you.
You'll learn a lot about Washington, but don't let it make you too cynical because there's some good stuff, too, that you can do if you want to work there.
But I really appreciate you doing the show.
Thanks so much for having me.
Thanks to Ben Teres for joining us today.
And we'll talk to you again on Thursday.
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