Pod Save America - “Art of the Steal.”
Episode Date: August 10, 2020Donald Trump announces a few fairly useless executive actions, forges ahead with his plan to steal the election, and dismisses new reports of foreign interference by Russia. Then New York State Attorn...ey General Letitia James talks to Jon Lovett about her lawsuit aimed at shutting down the NRA.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
On today's pod, Lovett talks to New York State Attorney General Letitia James,
who filed a lawsuit last week to shut down the NRA. Exciting.
Before that, we'll talk about Trump's fairly useless executive actions,
his continued attempts to steal the election,
and new reports of more foreign interference by Russia.
Cheery topics all around.
Lovett, how was the show this week? Great topics all around. Love it.
How was the show this week?
Great, love it or leave it.
Naomi Agparigan, one of my favorite guests,
joined for the monologue in OK Stop.
And then I interviewed Senator Ed Markey
and Congressman Joe Kennedy
about the primary taking place in Massachusetts,
which is an unusual one.
And I was glad to talk to them.
And they both had pretty, you know,
political answers about Tom Brady.
That's all I'll say.
Was that an official sanctioned debate that you held?
It was technically a forum
because they did not appear on stage at the same time.
Thank you for asking.
Excellent.
Also, Ben Rhodes' new podcast,
Missing America, premieres tomorrow, Tuesday.
Ben has been all over the world the last few years speaking to leaders and activists about America's absence in the world under Donald Trump.
He's looking into problems like nationalism, authoritarianism, and disinformation.
It's a show that sets the stage for what's at stake all over the world with this election.
So subscribe and listen wherever you get your podcasts.
Exciting stuff.
I can't wait.
Finally, if you get a chance today,
go check out cricket.com.
We got a brand new look,
brand new redesign.
Website looks fantastic.
You can find all the episodes
of our podcasts, articles,
our newsletters,
all kinds of stuff.
Cricket.com.
Go check it out.
Do yourself a favor. Check it out. kinds of stuff. Cricket.com. Go check it out. Do yourself a favor.
Check it out.
Check it out.
All right, let's get to the news.
Three months ago, Democrats in Congress
passed a $3 trillion economic relief plan.
In response, Donald Trump and the Republicans in Congress
did absolutely nothing.
I think Mitch McConnell said,
we're going to hit the pause button.
I think he said at some point he didn't feel a sense of urgency.
Then a few weeks ago, suddenly, the Republicans proposed a plan that cut unemployment benefits,
did nothing to protect people facing eviction, and did nothing to prevent state and local layoffs of teachers, health care workers, first responders, and others.
Democrats late last week were offering to meet them somewhere in the middle.
Republicans said no. Negotiations fell apart.
So on Saturday, Trump himself announced four executive actions of his own on unemployment benefits, evictions, student loans and the payroll tax.
So, Tommy, after a few days of reporters looking at the actual text
of these executive actions, it seems like they don't really do much for people.
You want to walk us through the highlights of these actions?
Happy to. So there's sort of a couple of parts. So let's take the unemployment insurance extension
piece of this first. So Trump claims that his executive order will provide a $400
expanded unemployment insurance benefit. But if you look at the fine print, only $300 of that
benefit comes from the federal government. The EO says that $100 has to come from states.
But as you guys know, states are already hemorrhaging money because of the pandemic.
They're laying off people. They're furloughing people.
They're cutting services.
So there's just no way that states are going to be able to afford to pay that extra cash.
It's also not at all clear where the $300 of federal aid will come from.
He says it will come from reprogramming FEMA money, but it's a little squishy.
When asked about this, Trump said, if they don't, they don't.
That's going to be their problem, meaning the states if they don't, they don't. That's going to be their problem, meaning the
states if they don't pay these individuals. So much like coronavirus testing, he's taking the
responsibility and just pushing it to the states. And he doesn't care if people get screwed in the
process. The second EO is a payroll tax cut for Americans making less than $100,000 per year.
But that obviously does nothing for the 32 million people who are unemployed. If you're not
paying payroll taxes, a payroll tax cut does not help you. That seems obvious to me, but for some
reason we're debating it. It's also not likely to do much for workers who actually get it because
companies will probably just withhold the tax anyway until next year. So there's no real benefit
for you. He claimed one executive order will stop evictions, but that language doesn't actually
reinstate the federal eviction moratorium that had just expired or provide assistance to people who have fallen behind with their rent payment.
It basically tells HHS to consider whether it's necessary to halt evictions.
So even like last week, I think, like Monday of last week, very senior Trump administration officials were saying we can't do what we need to do administratively. This can't be done by executive action. And then Saturday morning, we wake up
and we are supposed to believe that, oh, no, they don't actually need Congress to act.
We magically found a way to help everybody. So there's just like a ton of spin,
nothing. There's not enough of substance here to actually deal with the problem.
Love it. You got anything to add to that? Anything really get your goat about these executive actions?
Well, one thing that was straight.
So I saw that, you know, you two, you know, my pod, my pod boys were tweeting about this
as the president was doing it on Saturday.
And I said, you know what?
This fucking asshole has lied to me on too many Saturdays.
I'm going to take a look at this Sunday night when I'm prepping for the pod.
But I'm just going to like let this one go. I'm going to take a look at this Sunday night when I'm prepping for the pod, but I'm just going to let this one go. I'm going to live my life. And it's actually striking
how inaccurate and how hard to follow the reporting on this actually is.
Trump proposes a payroll tax cut. Well, actually, even if you assume that employers will figure out
a way through this Byzantine system to kind of put the money into employees' paychecks, it's not a cut.
It's a deferral.
They'll owe the taxes.
They're really kind of pushing a problem to the future in a pretty extraordinary way, even if it is possible for companies to do this, which, as Tommy points out, is actually really difficult.
And it's not clear that they'll be able to implement it.
So it's not a cut.
It's a deferral.
It's not an eviction moratorium. It's like an eviction suggestion. It's an eviction insinuation.
There's no moratorium. There is no ban, though it was reported that way. Even in articles,
like in the Times, they were trying to break down what was in this. You look at the UI benefit.
John, you were pointing this out that, wait, it's not actually an extension. It's a cut, right? Because if we actually extend the law at $600, this is $300 to $400. But in fact,
because this is not based on the law, it seems unclear how or if or whether this money will ever
be able to be distributed. Certainly not in the immediate future when people are desperately in
need of help, because it's being sent out to states that are already not just strapped for money,
as Tommy pointed out,
but extremely extended logistically, practically,
in their ability to kind of get payments to people
and figure out what people need.
And then you look at the student loan piece.
That's okay.
Yeah, that's the only one that offers
like maybe some relief.
Right.
No, I think it's like, it's super confusing
because of how bad the actions are
that like people were just poking
so many holes in them.
Like, I think you just need to know,
like if you're one of the people
who was getting unemployment benefits,
you were getting your state
unemployment benefits plus $600 a week.
You're getting a cut no matter what.
Even if states can pony up the dough,
you're getting a cut in the benefits.
And that means that's over
20 million Americans right now
who are already struggling,
who are out of work, who are going to face face a cut even if states can pony up the dough
at best because it's an executive action they had to like move money around from basically a disaster
response from hurricane funding it's only going to last another five weeks at best anyway so this
is only an extension of five weeks because that's all the money they had the poorest americans
aren't eligible for the extension
and unemployment benefits which is also bullshit and now you have as you guys both pointed out this
byzantine system of states trying to scramble to figure out what to do here if you may be getting
evicted if you face the prospect of eviction there is absolute there's no more moratorium like there
was from the cares act there's just a bunch of people at uh government agencies being told you
might think about protecting people if you can and then like and the payroll tax cut is just so ridiculous
like yeah so maybe in the next couple paychecks uh not the next couple paychecks because the
businesses have to figure out how to like run this whole new system maybe they'll withhold your social
security and medicare taxes but you have to pay it back at the end of the year unless by the way
trump says unless he gets reelected,
then he's going to get rid of it for sure, he says, which he'd need Congress for.
And that would basically destroy the Social Security trust fund.
So it's a promise to cut Social Security.
But a lot of the reporting also says, but Trump pledged not to ever cut Social Security. It's like, ah, we can't do all of these things.
Please stop.
I mean, so, Lovett, like how much of this appears to be legal?
And I guess the broader question is how much should we be focusing on the legality?
Because I do think, as you saw us tweeting on Saturday, the initial conversation about this, I think, was mostly about it's unconstitutional.
It's not legal.
He's an authoritarian, blah, blah, blah.
And, you know, Chuck Schumer was on TV and he said, well, I'm going to, I'll leave this to the lawyers. And,
you know, he got some shit for that. But like, what do you think about the legality question?
So I will say that I came to this being worried that Democrats afraid of simply saying Donald
Trump is being too strong on important issues would avoid the legality questions because on him from a message point of
view it's better to focus on the fact that these are inadequate and won't actually help enough people
Totally understood that as I sort of you as you kind of break these things down the student loan
Memo is actually continuing what he did before Congress passed the Care Act
It doesn't go as far as what the CareE Act does, but it seems like it's actually
just something that he's done before. The payroll tax deferral, not a cut. You know, I see people
like Ben Sasse being like, this is constitutional slop. Payroll is, you know, it's appropriated by
Congress, whatever. And it's like, oh, wow, Ben Sasse, you found your balls now that your primary
is over terrific. But great, great. But it's just a deferral, right?
And, you know, we give the president broad emergency powers.
I think the UI benefit is like the most, it's certainly on a philosophical level, like extra constitutional, like the president just creating a basically a new unemployment program.
And the Republicans come in and point out DACA.
And we have that argument again.
and point out DACA and we have that argument again.
I think my general view is that when these legality questions come up,
it is a sign of how many kind of congressional prerogatives
have been surrendered to the executive
that it's actually always becomes this sort of morass
of when your side does it, it's okay.
When their side does it, it's bad and what have you.
I think one of the goals of the Biden administration has to be to work with Congress to limit executive authority,
something that no president ever wants to do, but I actually do think is legitimately important
right now, based on how feckless and silly a lot of these EOs are. And, you know, the fact that
he's using emergency powers and taking money from disaster relief to go towards some of these
actions, I would say focusing on the fact that they won't help enough people is the right thing
to do. That's my long-winded answer. Tommy, what do you think about the politics of all this? I
mean, obviously, the Trump folks think this is all good politics. You know, they get to show the
president breaking through Washington gridlock to get something done for people. Trump basically
dared Democrats to sue him over the
legality of this because he thinks I'm trying to give people money. And if they sue me, that's not
going to be very popular. Are they right on the politics? Do they have a point? Or what do you
think of the political wisdom of these these moves? I mean, in the short term, it's probably
good politics, right? I mean, the press reported on Trump's actions. It made them sound bigger than they were. The media narrative is now debating what Trump did or didn't do per usual, right? It's all focused on him. And sometimes he gets credit for trying. The problem longer term is that the pandemic is not even close to under control. All the efforts to reopen have failed. Cases are skyrocketing. We're at like 164,000 dead.
The PPP program has run out.
So companies are going to start laying off more workers.
States need money from the federal government because they're bringing in less tax revenue.
And so I just think the near-term press hit is going to get caught by the longer-term
economic reality.
And ultimately, I do think he owns that. And I think
the Republican Party, the party in power, will own the majority of the fallout politically from a bad
economy and from people who are really hurting. So, you know, maybe they're just banking on this
EO announcement as a way to get some good stories, win a couple of days coverage as a bridge to a longer negotiation.
But that is a it's a pretty big risk. Yeah, I think this is a fucking disaster for them.
Like a few days coverage. I don't even know if they got a few good hours because like like
Lovett said, by the time you get to Sunday and Monday, everyone's poking holes in all the
executive actions. But look like, you know, short term ism is a problem in politics that like
predates Trump,
right? Like people try to do things to get through the news cycle. It is like debilitating for the
Trump people, right? Like they can't even see past a couple hours past the statement, right? Like
Donald Trump, in order to get reelected, needs a boost to the economy. He needed this package
more than anyone else in Washington, except for the people who are actually fucking struggling right now.
Actually, the American people need it most.
But in terms of the pure politics of it,
he needs the economy to improve in order to win.
If there is no deal, forget about just these four areas
that he had executive actions for, unemployment, eviction, stuff like that.
This means there's no more direct payments to people.
That was supposed to be in the package. That means the PPP program expires, which has kept a lot of people on payroll. This means
there's no state and local aid. Democrats were proposing a trillion dollars. Now there's zero.
No money for schools to help reopen. Think about how much money is going to come out of the economy
because they failed to pass a deal. And what is that going to do to like next month's jobs numbers, the job numbers after that, the Q3 GDP, like this is going to be a
fucking disaster. He needs this deal so badly. And the craziest part about this is Democrats were
willing to give him a good economy. He is running for reelection. Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer
had fucking three trillion dollars on the table.
All Donald Trump had to say was like, yeah, he could have made a few, you know, a few changes here and there, a few compromises.
He could have signed a deal that would have boosted the economy and helped his reelection.
And he said no. It's it's amazing.
It's you stop and you think about it and you have Democrats, the party out of power in terms of the White House, the Senate, begging the president in power to let them help him
boost the economy, right? It's the exact opposite of what happened after the financial crisis.
One other thing I just would add that too is it's the short-termism. Yes, he doesn't just
need a rhetorical win, but it's similar to how in his interviews about the coronavirus, he can't say
we have more work to do. He has to lie about how well he's performing he goes in front of the uh
the fucking golf community of bedminster and says and says this bill will solve this problem
completely right he just oh he just he's like you know what there was this whole mess in congress
maybe people were going to blame congress but you know what i own was this whole mess in Congress. Maybe people were going to blame Congress, but you know what? I own it now. I own everything that happens from here
because this is now my plan.
Solve it completely.
I mean, it's the, you know,
the secretary of housing should consider steps.
That's the EO on evictions
that he says solves it completely.
By the way, even if Congress extended
the eviction moratorium, even if Congress extended the eviction
moratorium, it doesn't actually extend eviction moratoriums to the vast majority of renters who
are not renting from places affected by the congressional moratorium.
Just like, here's the problem I see for Congress though, right? Which is the Democratic message is
we're trying to sound reasonable, basically. Like we have a $3 trillion bill. We Democrats,
Republicans have a $1 trillion bill. Let's meet in the middle of $2 trillion.
But to get to that point, Republicans will need to resolve the intra-GOP fight. And I'm not totally
sure that there's a path there because you have some of the moderate and even traditionally more
conservative lawmakers who are like, we get it. We need to do something. And then you have like
assholes like Ted Cruz and Rand Paul who have this philosophical opposition
to more spending. And then you have like Reagan era, like white collar on a blue shirt, supply
side economists like Arthur Laffer who are in Trump's ear arguing that all unemployment insurance
benefits are bad and every policy should incentivize work. And like what I can't wrap my
head around is how the discussion over the stimulus is so divorced from reality.
160,000 people are dead from COVID.
We probably should be incentivizing people to stay home and not work, but we're not really.
Even the available data so far says that the more generous UI benefit isn't actually doing that.
Trump's out there obsessed with a payroll tax cut, which by definition does nothing for people who are unemployed. So like Pelosi and Schumer in this weird place where like they're dealing with Meadows and
Mnookin and all these guys who won't budge.
They passed a deal months ago.
McConnell refused to engage with them.
And so like they're just getting both sides to death.
And like, I believe strongly that we need to pass a real bill.
It gets people money that helps people from getting kicked out of their houses, funds
the post office, election security, all these things. But it's just caught in this
Republican infighting. And I'm not like it's not clear to me how to fix that.
So I'm so glad you brought that up. It's a very good point, because I do think that
that is the it has not been reported enough that that's maybe the central problem in fixing this,
not been reported enough that that's maybe the central problem in fixing this because and I think the split within the GOP this time is between Republican senators who are vulnerable and up
in 2020 versus the ones who want to run for president maybe in 2024 and 2028. So you got the
asshole who's in charge of the NRSC, the Republican Senate Campaign Committee. And he's on Twitter and he's like, you know what?
Republicans totally would have gone for a four month extension of six hundred dollars a month
unemployment. Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer blocked it and blah, blah, blah. Martha McSally
wanted to propose an extension. And it's all bullshit because like, OK, then have Mitch
McConnell put an extension through the end of the year for six hundred dollars a month
unemployment on the Senate floor tomorrow.
And let's see how many Republicans vote for it.
Go ahead.
Put it on the floor.
Because, like, McSally and Gardner and all these people who might lose their seats in 2020 actually want this to happen.
And then you have fuckers like Ted Cruz tweeting today.
Ed Markey was tweeting about his plan to give people $2 thousand dollars a month in direct payments for the course of the pandemic.
And Ted Cruz is like, what's next? Free soy lattes and, you know, all this.
Because like Ted Cruz doesn't actually want to spend money because he wants to seem like the hardheaded guy who cares about the debt when he runs for fucking president again or whatever.
But it's absurd, you know.
Can we just pause for one second?
Ted Cruz clearly hired a new social media guy.
And the sole goal of that person's, like, job is to wake up in the morning
and be the most annoying, lame troll you can possibly be and then log off.
Like, they're, like, tweeting about, like, Democrats don't like trucks
and you're, like, a soy latte boy.
Like, is that effective?
Is this really what we do now, Ted?
Tommy, I'm worried it's him.
I think he's doing it himself.
Princeton, like Harvard Law, Goldman Sachs wife.
You're the big pickup truck guy, Ted.
Is that who you are?
Okay.
It's always like very frustrating
because soy milk is like four fucking milks ago.
You know, we have so like-
We're on the oat.
Oat milk. I mean, these have so like, like we're on the oat milk.
I mean, these are the milks we're talking about now.
You know, these are coconut milk, right?
Like there's a variety of non-dairy milks.
Yeah.
That Ted could consider in his material.
I think you can see this morning
that Trump has begun to realize
that he probably fucked up
because he's now tweeting,
Schumer and Pelosi call me.
Now they want a deal because I did my executive actions and Schumer and Pelosi called me, now they want a deal
because I did my executive actions.
And Schumer and Pelosi are like, we never called them.
And Democrats are like, we never called them.
And White House staffers are like, no,
there was never any call anywhere from anyone.
But suddenly now Trump knows he wants a bigger deal
because he knows he needs the fucking deal.
I wonder what Schumer and Pelosi do from here.
Like, do they just let him sit around
or do they just hold their leverage and say, come back when you're willing to do X, Y and Z?
I'm just imagining Trump, you know, wandering in his kimono on the top floor of the White House
in like full on colloquy with Nancy Pelosi, who is not there.
You know, it is like the good news. Look, I'm very worried about the state of the country, what's happening to people, etc. Like the good news for those of us who believe that getting Trump out of office is the only way we solve this long term is I do think Biden is in a pretty interesting position here in this long Medium post he did in July. He's talking
about money for testing and contact tracing and relief for states and governors and just like
painting a bigger picture of what it would be like to have a president that's actually responsible,
that doesn't have to get into the weeds about the legality here. And he can say like,
look at New Zealand, look at Europe. Like these people are shopping without masks and hugging
relatives. Like we could have a normal covid response if we just tried.
It doesn't have to be this chaotic. Yeah. I mean, look, I think that what just happened in Congress with this relief plan and what Donald Trump just did with these executive actions has handed Democrats more than enough content for the convention next week.
More than enough content for the convention next week, because, you know, the one thing in all these polls that's been keeping Trump even somewhat within reach of Biden is people gut Social Security and Medicare, repeal the Affordable Care Act, and let thousands and millions of layoffs of teachers,
health care workers, and other first responders in states happen on his watch in the middle of
a pandemic. That's his economic plan. I mean, they just served it right up on the platter for
Democrats next week, if they're willing to go there, which I hope they do.
All right. So we talked last week about the different ways that Trump might try to steal the election.
There's now more evidence he's forging ahead and he's getting plenty of help from the Republican Party.
Politico reported over the weekend that Trump aides are looking into executive actions around mail-in voting, There's now more evidence he's forging ahead, and he's getting plenty of help from the Republican Party.
Politico reported over the weekend that Trump aides are looking into executive actions around mail-in voting,
including, quote, everything from directing the Postal Service not to deliver certain ballots to stopping local officials from counting them after Election Day.
We also found out that after Trump donor-turned-Postmaster General Louis DeJoy met with congressional leaders,
he staged a shakeup at the Postal Service that according to the washington post quote centralizes power around
de joy and de-emphasizes decades of institutional knowledge meanwhile republican operatives in at
least six states more like to sad they were calling him delay get it uh that was so much
better it's so much better. It's so much better.
And it's not good.
Yeah, no, it's not good.
But you managed to make it worse.
Meanwhile, Republican operatives in at least six states.
We're like, this sucks.
Republican operatives in at least six states, including Wisconsin, have been accused of using fake signatures to get Kanye West on the ballot, including names like Mickey Mouse and Bernie Sanders, who now live in Wisconsin.
Who knew?
So let's start with Trump's continued assault on mail-in voting.
One of the consequences of not reaching a deal on another economic relief package is that there won't be money for the post office or election infrastructure.
Love it. What are the next steps on this for Democrats, for Democratic lawyers,
for people? Like, what do we do from here? Yeah, I mean, I think one thing is continuing
to fight for a relief package that not only includes funding for the post office, but actually puts guardrails on that funding to make
sure that the money has to be used to, say, pay the overtime so that mail gets delivered on time,
that there's no interference in the election, that it doesn't get held up, that they don't
try to basically not spend any money that Congress appropriates if we can get a bill
through the Congress. You know, Dan Pfeiffer of the Thursday Pod
had some really good thoughts about this
in his new weekly newsletter
because he needed another activity.
But he sort of walks through a lot of what we can be doing.
And unfortunately, I think we are quite limited,
but it does involve Congress and us as individuals
putting pressure on Republicans
and on the post office itself.
One other thing I'd add is that the post office is incredibly popular.
It's a very, very popular institution, and it is popular outside of politics because
it is how people get their medicine.
It is how people get their Social Security checks.
It is how people send each other gifts.
It is how grandparents stay in contact with their grandchildren.
And interfering with this nonpartisan
Non-political thing that matters to a lot of people I think is a great way to spin up
Calls to congressional offices of Republicans and Democrats alike
There is nothing like not getting the mail to get a bunch of old people to call their members of Congress
So I think that this is a very stupid thing. One other thing I'd also say is
So I think that this is a very stupid thing. One other thing I'd also say is
The one reason Republicans have targeted the post office for a long time is because it was a way to target some of the most powerful and
important unions in the United States and those unions have a lot of power here because they are inside of these institutions and we should
Rely on what they're saying and make sure that we are giving the postal unions the support they need,
because those mail carriers are the people ultimately that will actually do the work of
making sure that mail-in ballots are delivered and mail-in ballots are received on time.
So, Tommy, you know, if we don't get another package out of Congress and, you know, the
post office remains a bit of a mess as it looks right now.
And mail-in voting is sort of all over the place. You know, on one hand, we have our team of
Democratic lawyers and Mark Elias and all of our friends sort of suing people. What can individuals
do? Like if you're voting, you're trying to get other people to vote to sort of navigate this
system. Yeah, I mean, there's some basic things, which include, you know, send your ballot back as early as you can. If you're worried about voting
by mail, a lot of places have drop off cans, basically, where you can put your ballots.
But I also think there's a bit of this that's just an awareness factor, right? Because so far,
Trump's attacks on the post office and vote by mail have been
largely rhetorical, which don't get me wrong, are bad. But this report with them like telling the
post office not to deliver a ballot or prevent it from being counted is a threat to our democracy.
This is not a boring debate about funding of the post office. This is a crisis for democracy. And
they're literally suing states like
Nevada to keep them from sending ballots to voters. So, you know, one thing I remembered was a couple
weeks back, Margaret Sullivan at the Washington Post had this great column about how the media
can learn from mistakes we made in 2016 and not repeat them this cycle. Her first recommendation
was to focus on voting rights and election integrity in coverage. And I do think the
press needs to explain how serious this is and not let the conversation
devolve into like the usual broken back and forth about voter fraud that doesn't exist,
that just ultimately spreads misinformation, right?
Like it's not inspiring if people wait in line for eight hours.
It's outrageous.
It's evidence of a broken system.
And so, you know, thank God for like Mark Elias and all these lawyers fighting to make sure that ballots postmarked by Election Day are counted.
A thing we can do to help them just mail your ballot as soon as you possibly can.
But we also just need to, I think, make a bigger case. And this is a long term project about election integrity and voter access and voter rights.
And like Levitt said, you know, Pelosi and Schumer need to fight
like hell for that funding. Yeah, no, I think it's an excellent point to really sound the alarm. And,
you know, Mark Elias, the Democratic lawyer who's fighting a lot of these fights in court,
he said there's basically like four things that you can do in addition to what Tommy said, which
is, you know, vote early in person, right? 41 states now have early voting. So you're likely to be in a state where you can vote early. And of course, then you avoid the lines of Election Day, which could be dangerous in a pandemic.
Use a ballot drop box, drop off your ballot at an election office or polling station. Almost all states now you can drop off your ballot at your local election office or at the polling location. So you fill it out at home, you bring it there, and then you don't have to worry about the mail. And then there's also
the ability to organize community ballot collection, where groups can actually come
and safely get sealed ballots from voters and then bring them to the local polling location
or the election office. So I do think that's something to think about as we get closer to
an election where we may not be able to rely on the post
office, which is fucking crazy. What was the fourth one? What was the fourth one?
There's vote early in person. Use a ballot drop box. Drop off your ballot at an election office
or polling location. Oh, those were two different ones. Sorry, I went too fast. I went too fast.
Organized community ballot connection. Okay. So Trump is also getting some help once again from
his old friend, Vladimir
Putin. On Friday, the office of the director of national intelligence published a statement by
counter Intel chief William Evanina, who said that Russia wants to see president Trump reelected and
is quote, using a range of measures to primarily denigrate former vice president Biden. He cites
a pro-Russian Ukrainian politician who's been publicizing leaked phone calls to undermine Biden, as well as social media and propaganda campaigns.
Evanina also said that both China and Iran do not want to see President Trump reelected,
but that their efforts appear to be less widespread. Tommy, what did you make of the
statement, particularly the inclusion of China and Iran? So this is total bullshit. Let me just
do the backdrop of the context
here about how Trump has politicized the intelligence community. So a while back,
Trump installed this Twitter troll named Rick Grinnell, who has zero intelligence experience.
This jackass would have reported to me when I was at the white house, right? I was not qualified to
be the director of national intelligence. They said installed him. They had him clean house,
push out serious people and install loyalists. And all of these hacks have pressured the
intelligence community to change intelligence assessments to please Trump. Something that
would have been should still be a massive scandal, right? There was a long New York
Times Magazine piece over the weekend. It detailed how the intelligence community was
pressured to change an NIE about election interference.
An NIE is the most vetted, authoritative consensus assessment of an issue.
They forced these guys to change the NIE and election integrity from saying Russia favored
Trump to this watered down version that said Russian leaders probably assess that chances
to improve relations with the U.S. will diminish under a different president.
A very big, very material difference.
So we know that in 2016, the Russians ran a huge propaganda effort. That effort is ongoing.
We know that they hacked the email accounts of Democratic officials. We know they helped them leak them to WikiLeaks as a carve out. We know that they probed election systems in 50 states.
I think we all should be worried that it will be worse this year. Now, the Chinese, they have sophisticated hacking operations.
They have tons of overt propaganda and disinformation campaigns against the U.S., against policies.
But there is no evidence, there's no reporting that they did anything as focused or as directed as what Russia did to help Trump, Trump their guy.
I'm sure the Chinese now hate Trump because he's freaking out
and he's escalating tensions with them all day, but it's nowhere near the same. Iran has like
cyber operations and hackers and teams. But again, we've seen no evidence that they've done anything
close to what Russia did. So this statement to me was designed to muddy the waters. We are now
both sides in the foreign interference conversation. And we have an intelligence community that is not telling people the truth
that we cannot trust to tell the truth because they have been so thoroughly
politicized by Trump and his team.
Doesn't sound good.
Does it love it?
I,
I read this story and I was just like,
Oh fuck.
Now what do we do?
It's horrifying.
It's so one thing to note too,
that in that, um, when I saw that the DNI had put out that statement saying that there was this interference effort, I was immediately like, oh, wow, are they responding to pressure from Senate Democrats who are saying release this information?
It's so interesting.
And, of course, you're immediately like, well, I see why they added Iran and China.
It was to make sure Trump didn't feel bad and to help themselves politically. And then you read the Robert Draper piece, this long, I think, you know, long is among the many qualities it has. of intelligence. But the final note in the piece is that they put out the statement about
interference after they got the questions from Robert Draper that laid out what Draper had
collected. So they were clearly trying to get ahead of this time story. And then you have
Senator Richard Blumenthal basically saying, what I have seen is chilling. It is worse than 2016. It is an incredibly sophisticated
interference effort being run by Russia. It has absolutely no basis of comparison to what China
and Iran may or may not be doing. And you're left with this sort of pit, this sick feeling of,
we are exactly where we were in the fall of 2016. And we are running out of time
to get this information into the political discussion. So I was going to ask you about
this, Tommy. So I see I see the Blumenthal op ed. That freaked me out even more than the
assessment that I had read the day before. Natasha Bertrand of Politico asked Mark Warner
if he would publicly disclose the intel
on the Senate floor where senators are shielded from repercussions under the Constitution's speech
or debate clause. And Warner said, I'm not going to take anything off the table. I'd never heard
of that. Is that possible that senators can just like declassify intel on the floor like that?
Yeah, I mean, yes. So in 1971, Mike Gravel, who you might remember from several primary debates,
reacted very weird. He entered 4,000 pages of the Pentagon Papers into the congressional record.
That happened just before the Supreme Court lifted an injunction on publishing them. So it was a
slightly different scenario. But yeah, I mean, when I saw Blumenthal tweeting some of these
things, I thought to myself, look, obviously there's concerns about protecting sources and methods and making sure we're not, you know, getting people killed who are helping us out.
But the point of having intelligence is not just to have intelligence, right?
It's to inform policy.
about to interfere in our election in a way that could disrupt the entire democracy, disrupt the entire democratic process, like elections are at the core of that process, then I do think it's
completely appropriate. And in fact, maybe a moral obligation to tell people about this information.
Sound the alarm. Let us know. Now, the challenge for anyone who decides to do this is not
necessarily like the politics around releasing classified information. It's do we live in a time when people will care? Will the media both sides
this? Will people pretend it's not a big deal? Will it just be split in a partisan way again?
I don't know. But like, it sounds, I haven't read this intelligence, but it sounds like people are
pretty freaked out. People in a position to know are pretty freaked out. And it feels like we
should maybe be disclosing more information. Yeah, because, you know, lest we forget in 2016, when members
of the Clinton campaign and Harry Reid and others started talking about Russian interference,
the way the media treated them were like, oh, you're just saying that because you're worried
you're going to lose. You're trying to make excuses, blah, blah, blah. They didn't take
it seriously. Now, that was before we knew that Russia really did interfere in our elections.
And so maybe, maybe people have learned lessons from 2016. But who knows? Who knows? I do think
it's a moral obligation at this point. I mean, also, when you have an administration, as you
were just saying, Tommy, like shading intelligence estimates and assessments, right, like for in
politicizing intelligence. And so like, if we can't trust that the intel we're getting from
the administration is true and hasn't been, you know, changed to help Donald Trump and benefit
him politically, then, you know, other senators who are getting briefings like that, what choice
do they have? There is a look, there is, I think, a legitimate concern, right, that if senators or
members of the House begin to use the speech and debate clause to march down to the Senate floor or the House floor and just reveal intelligence,
which they are completely constitutionally allowed to do, that it sets a dangerous precedent
that basically information is only as protected and secret as one member of Congress decides.
Basically, any member of Congress can break that rule.
That's a risk.
But I do think at the very least, it seems to me that
like Mark Warner and others who are seeing this information could consider going much further,
not just saying this on the table, but legitimately threaten to use their constitutional power to go
to the Senate floor and tell us what they know to elicit more information from the administration.
I think it is very much worth issuing a threat at the very
least on this. Yeah. And look, in the likely Trump administration response will be to threaten to
cut off intelligence briefings for those members. But I think like you're right that that I think
sets in motion an escalatory process that they can then say we had no choice but to disclose
this information.
And I just think, like, Dick Blumenthal and these senators reading these intelligence assessments,
they probably don't know the sources and methods, right? Like, they don't know the person in the bowels of the Kremlin who's giving us this information. And they wouldn't, and of course,
they wouldn't disclose that if they did. You do always have to worry that, like, any leak of
classified information
can be reverse engineered. You don't know what you don't know. You don't know what sources and
methods you could be harming. But again, like if these guys are this freaked out, tell us why.
Yeah. All right. On that cheery note, when we come back, we will have Lovett's conversation
with New York State Attorney General Letitia James, who filed a lawsuit last week to shut down the NRA.
Joining us on the pod, she's the attorney general for the great state of New York, Letitia James.
Welcome back to the show.
Thank you for having me. It's great to be back.
James, welcome back to the show. Thank you for having me. It's great to be back.
So last week, you filed the lawsuit to dissolve the NRA while you and your team were conducting the investigation. Was there a moment or discovery that made you realize you were
onto something big? Or was there anything that surprised you?
So the facts laid bare on the front pages of just about every newspaper throughout this country
that the NRA had diverted millions and millions of dollars away from its charitable mission.
There was a lot of infighting.
It became public.
And it was our responsibility and our duty and our mission to investigate.
And so we launched an investigation in 2019, and we uncovered and confirmed certain facts.
an investigation in 2019, and we uncovered and confirmed certain facts. And that is,
is that they were looting the NRA, and that they were doing it for financial gain for themselves, their family, and their close friends. And because they wanted to favor, they wanted to
get, seek favor with individuals who had the responsibility of investigating complaints
by complaints of whistleblowers. And so they attempted to carry favor with no bid contracts
and side deals. And unfortunately, you know, we've confirmed all of that. And we've got a
responsibility and a duty to make sure that individuals comply with the law and particularly
not-for-profits that are incorporated in the state of New York. This has nothing to do with
the Second Amendment and nothing to do with my personal opinion or views on gun violence, but all to do with
compliance with the law and ensuring that individuals adhere to our rules and regulations.
So I understand going after the individuals, people like Wayne LaPierre, who found it impossible
to fight for the Second Amendment without like a very lavish lifestyle.
to fight for the Second Amendment without like a very lavish lifestyle. You know, you can't you can't protect gun rights without at least a beach house and a private jet. It's not possible.
So so you're going after him. I get that. Why also seek the dissolution of the organization itself?
So let me just say, you can't listen. What does going on a safari in Africa on multiple occasions have to do with the Second Amendment?
And tell me, what does the Second Amendment have to do with going to the Bahamas at least eight times?
You want to be relaxed.
You want to make sure you're well-rested for the fight.
At a cost of more than $500,000.
And tell me, what does the Second Amendment have to do with this post-employment contract for $17 million?
Or for private security?
Okay, maybe private security.
Okay, I'll give you that one.
Well, what about the lucrative consulting contract for ex-employees and board members worth millions of dollars?
And what about the $1.2 million in gifts to vendors at golf clubs and at hotels? Akraben McQueen advertising firm, which is basically used as a pass-through company for these non-contractual, out-of-pocket expenses worth millions and millions of dollars.
And I think it's $70 million.
Can someone, I know you've got a very, very smart audience.
I remember seeing them in Brooklyn.
got a very, very smart audience. I remember seeing them in Brooklyn. Maybe one of them can tell me what that has to do with the Second Amendment. But we are seeking the dissolution of the NRA.
Why? Because the rot runs deep. It's pervasive. It's throughout the entire organization. And
it's important to know that this litigation is not against not just against these four individual defendants, but against the NRA as a corporation itself, because it's not just these four individual corporations.
We're talking about a 76 board member, which oftentimes refuse to look into whistleblower complaints. In fact, they evaded them. It has to do with a
audit committee that unfortunately hid whistleblower complaints from outside auditors.
It has to do with a compensation board, which paid these individuals excessive amounts of compensation.
And the list of committees goes on and on and on.
Everyone turned a blind eye and a deaf ear to the fact that these individuals and others were it's left the NRA in a very difficult and strained financial position.
So this is really nothing to do with the Second Amendment, nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with my personal views, and all the more to do with the not-for-profit law in
the state of New York under which the NRA was incorporated back in the late 1800s.
So, you know, I've seen people, you know, there have been, and I hear you pushing back against this idea that, you know, you're doing this because you're against the NRA, you're against the Second Amendment.
you've basically, you know, said to all of the NRA's donors, hey, this organization that does something you seem to care about that you want to advocate on behalf of the Second Amendment
has actually been wasting all your money. They've actually done a terrible job of advocating for
your cause because they've spent all the money on yourself. If this was a climate change organization
or a health care organization and we found out that they were bilking their donors, you'd expect people to say, hey, thanks for figuring this out to make sure
that we have a more effective version of the organization. Has anyone, any conservative,
any gun rights advocate anywhere suggested to you that actually it was a good thing to root out
corruption in this organization that they ostensibly view as being
very important? Well, yeah, it's been all over, you know, the political spectrum. There are some
conservatives who have said, thank you. There are others who have said it's political in nature.
This is nothing more than a political attack. There are others who, again, bring up some
rhetoric that I mentioned during the campaign about the NRA being a
terrorist organization. But the reality is, is that we have a responsibility as the
Attorney General's Office, which has supervisory powers and authorities over not-for-profits
incorporated in the state of New York, to ensure that the mission is actually carried out,
and that donor dollars are dedicated towards that purpose. And in this particular case, again,
I mentioned what the safaris and trips to the Bahamas and multiple, you know, side deals and
no-bid contracts, what do they have to do with their mission, with their charitable cause?
And the issue is nothing.
This was nothing more than self-enrichment, nothing more than self-dealing, nothing more
than individuals violating their fiduciary duty to this organization.
And so in addition to dissolving the NRA in its entirety, we are requiring that these individuals pay full restitution. And, you know, if in fact this had anything to do with the Second Amendment, the bottom line is that the law requires that the restitution be used for their charitable mission. And so I am required to take the restitution.
And if, in fact, the NRA is dissolved,
I am required to distribute those funds
to organizations that are consistent with their mission.
We also seek to remove them from the leadership
and to never, ever allow these individuals to serve on the board of a charity in New York State again. It's basically about accounting and about accountability.
Pierre saying something like you can get this money from my cold, very soft, very well manicured hands. One other. So just beautiful hands. Absolutely. Like an incredible, just well,
well taken care of hands. So how does this this effort against the NRA compare to some of the
other sensitive cases you've taken on, like going after the president's tax returns? So I can't talk about any pending case that we have or any pending
investigation. But if people want to know what's the precedent for dissolving a not-for-profit,
please remind them that it was this office that dissolved the Trump Foundation as well.
that dissolved the Trump foundation as well.
So, you know, we continue to, again,
make sure that corporations and individuals and directors and officers and trustees of not-for-profits comply with the law.
It's just as simple as that.
And we filed this case for no other reason other than that.
And in terms of the calendar, as far as the calendar is concerned, we concluded the investigation.
The issue is, should I have filed it now or should I have filed it later?
I would have been accused of politics regardless.
But that's okay.
That's why, you know, I put my big pants on every day.
One last question. I know obviously you can't speak to any pending matters that you're dealing with, but, you know, we're three and a half years into this presidency that has challenged the basic
rule of law in ways we've really never seen before. And it's put a lot of onus onto prosecutors at the local level,
prosecutors at the state level.
How do you feel these institutions are faring against, in general,
against the onslaught from a Trump administration
and a Trump Department of Justice
that doesn't believe the president is accountable to the law? Listen, we follow the facts and apply the rules and come to
certain conclusions each and every day. And as you know, Democratic attorney generals across this
nation have been defenders of our Constitution, of freedoms of immigrants, of marginalized and
vulnerable populations.
We've been defending the census against attacks by this administration.
We're in court right now as they seek to not include information from immigrants and try to change the date and shorten the process, which has had a chilling effect on the response
rate of the census.
which has had a chilling effect on the response rate of the census.
We have stood up against this administration on public charge, on trusted traveler.
The issues go on the environment over and over again, on the LGBTQ community, on food stamps for low-income individuals.
We continue to litigate against this administration,
and we've been winning because we recognize the rule of law,
we recognize the Constitution,
and we recognize that at this point in time,
particularly during this point in time,
what we need in this country now more than ever
is someone in the spirit and in the image of FDR,
to provide, who understands and recognizes the importance of having a safety net,
and who recognizes that dividing Americans does not ignore and does not make us great. Dividing Americans just makes us, unfortunately, a country which is
just at odds with itself. And that's just not who America is. And that's why I urge all of
your listeners, all of your listeners, no matter what they throw at us, no matter what they throw at
you, we've got to organize, we've got to vote, we've got to fill out the census, and we've got
to stand up for what's right, even against all odds, and even against powerful, powerful
corporations and individuals who think that they're above the law.
Attorney General Tish James, thank you so much for your time. You know, you were one of our favorite guests.
The audience went crazy.
You were such a great we had such a great time when you joined us at our Brooklyn show.
And so hopefully at some point sooner rather than later, we can do that again in front
of a live crowd in New York.
Yeah, it will be sooner.
And, you know, people keep your heads up high when we come when we get on the other side
of this mountain, we're going to come together once again, and we're going to be stronger and more united than ever before. I thank you so much. I had a great time at that event. It was the highlight of my career, and I truly, truly appreciate all that you're doing in this country.
Well, you as well. Attorney General Tish James, thank you so much.
Thank you.
Well, you as well. Attorney General Tish James, thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thanks to Tish James for joining us today. And we'll talk to you guys later.
And I just want to say that I have second thoughts about my Ben Sasse joke about balls, which felt very masked for me. And I just want you to know that like, if I'm with you on like,
you know, open to alternatives in the future.
Thanks, John.
Welcome.
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