Pod Save America - Could Trump Become Speaker?
Episode Date: October 5, 2023Former Trump White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson joins the show to talk about testifying against her former boss, her new book, "Enough," and the current disarray in the House. Then, Dan and Jon talk ...about the race for a new Speaker. How did we get here, what happens next, and is it somehow all Democrats' fault? At least one Republican is planning to nominate Donald Trump—even as his legal dramas mount. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.  Join the World-Wide Digital Experience "Pod Save America Live from DC" on October 19 at 8 PM ET with Co-host Symone Sanders and Special Guests Senator John Fetterman, Chef Jose Andres, and Jennifer Carroll Foy.Tickets: https://www.moment.co/psa
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, Donald Trump is gagged by the judge in his fraud trial for attacking the judge's staffer.
And former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson stopped by to talk about her decision to testify against her former colleagues in the Trump administration.
But first...
The yeas are 216. The nays are 210 the resolution is adopted without objection the motion to reconsider
is laid on the table the office of speaker of the house of the united states house of
representatives is hereby declared vacant someone said now what um kevin mccarthy is no longer speaker he's no longer trump's kevin
he's no longer anyone's kevin he's just a backbencher from bakersfield who got cucked
by matt gates and seven other house republicans that he helped elect in the first place
they joined every House Democrat
in voting to remove McCarthy
after Gates filed a motion to vacate,
which he was allowed to do
because of a deal McCarthy agreed to back in January
in order to get the job that he has now lost.
Anyway, McCarthy ally Patrick McHenry
is serving as temporary speaker
until House Republicans hold an election next week.
But between now and then, we can all continue to enjoy a whole lot of this.
Those eight people are anarchists and they're chaos caucus members.
They're traitors. All eight of them should, in fact, be primaried.
They should all be driven out of public life because ultimately Matt Gaetz, who hates,
let's be clear, he hates Kevin McCarthy. And I hope they expel him from
the conference. The Republican Party today just can't govern. Democrats have become the party
of discipline and the Republicans have become the party that lacks discipline. Now the House
that has a slim Republican majority looks like they can't govern. They have a strong case when
you go to these swing districts and say, look, you saw the chaos in the House.
You've got to put a Democrat in charge.
Give Hakeem Jeffries the gavel.
That was Fox and Friends, Ari Fleischer, Newt Gingrich.
Oh, it's good.
It's good, Dan.
All right.
So reporters who were on the Hill Tuesday said they saw multiple House Republicans crying and praying over McCarthy's demise.
Which one have you been doing, Dan?
Crying or praying?
Laughing.
Laughing hysterically the whole time.
Do you see any way McCarthy could have saved his job?
Or was this inevitable from the moment he struck a deal with the Freedom Caucus
that would allow a single member to file a motion to vacate, which Matt Gaetz took him up on?
I don't know that it was inevitable, but it was highly likely.
Once he made that decision, which no person should ever have accepted that, and he accepted that to get Matt Gaetz's vote, who also did not vote for Kevin McCarthy.
So it just shows what a brilliant
legislative leader Kevin McCarthy is. The way McCarthy has governed his speaker since agreeing
to the motion to vacate is he was going to operationalize his entire strategy around
appeasing the Matt Gaetz's of the world. And like every other historical example of an appeasement
strategy, that one did not work. What he could have done, which may not
have worked, but would have given him a greater chance of survival, would have been to try to
build a coalition where he did what, and this pains me to say this, what Paul Ryan and John
Boehner did, which was to try to isolate the Freedom Caucus. Two of your mentors.
Two people on my personal Mount Rushmore would be – where he put himself in a position where he maybe cut some deals with Democrats, governed in a slightly more bipartisan fashion, and then maybe could have counted on – you could see a world where Jared Golden, Josh Gottheimer, some of these other more – these Democrats who operate or sort of problem solver caucus or in more Republican districts
might have voted to save McCarthy. But he never did that because he stuck his thumb in the eye
of every Democrat in order to crawl up the butts of all the MAGA Republicans.
Yeah, I hear a lot of people, pundits, Democrats, Republicans saying, you know,
this was inevitable. You know, you give you give Matt Gaetz a loaded gun.
He's going to use it. Right. And it's just it's only inevitable if you think that the only path is to placate the hard right Republicans in your caucus. why McCarthy couldn't have like built a coalition government, you know, a coalition style government
where like you got the Republican problem solvers plus the Biden district Republicans, plus a few
of the Democrats you mentioned. And then if a Gates or someone like that files a motion to
vacate, then maybe you have a couple Democrats willing, or a good chunk of Democrats willing to bail you out.
And all you have is eight to 10 hard right Republicans who are willing to kick you out of the chair.
There is a chance some number of Democrats would have voted for McCarthy if they thought he was better than the alternative.
But he did nothing, not one single time during his tenure to show Democrats that he would be better than the alternative. He just sort of ran as the Freedom Caucus speaker, and the Democrats are
never going to help that person. Well, Republicans are unsurprisingly
criticizing House Democrats for not voting to save McCarthy. Here's a good summary of that
argument from conservative columnist Matt Lewis in the Daily Beast, quote,
Although Dems aren't to blame for this chaos, they have a moral obligation
to strive for the best outcome for America. And based on the likely alternatives, Speaker McCarthy
is probably as good as it gets. Instead of siding with sanity, Democrats have decided to side with
Gates. It's not a good look. No, you made that last part up.
I honestly, it sounds like a take
that Elijah would make up for take appreciators.
First of all, anyone who says it's not a good look,
I'm just, I'm sorry.
I don't care what side of the aisle you're on.
I don't care what your political persuasion is.
It's a, I'm so sick of the phrase.
It's a Twitter phrase.
Doesn't work for me.
Don't put it in your fucking column.
Dan, why did partisan hacks like you want to put politics ahead of the best outcome for America?
You were out there with your message box telling Democrats not to save Kevin McCarthy.
Why do you why do you care so little about the country's well-being?
Many people are saying Democrats were about to save him until I hit send on that Substack app and the tide turned.
The Capitol Hill reporters really like Kevin McCarthy.
He is an affable doofus. He pals around with them. He's probably a big Punchbowl subscriber.
He chit-chats with them off the record. They like him. He gives them access.
And it actually says how bad a job Kevin McCarthy did at his job that he got such bad press coverage
over the course of that time.
But whenever an opportunity comes where they can write nice things about him, they leap at it.
So all of a sudden there's been this transformation that Kevin McCarthy is a martyr when he's actually just a moron.
Think about Kevin McCarthy's tenure.
He pushed the big lie after the election.
he pushed the big lie after the election. He voted to overturn the election hours after a violent mob tried to murder his staff and colleagues. He held the full faith and credit
United States hostage in order to get a budget deal. He walked away from that budget deal to
try to shut down the government to hold aid to Ukraine hostage. He pushed a partisan, unfounded,
ridiculous impeachment of Joe Biden. What
possible reasons would Democrats have to help this person keep his job? It's absurd. Kevin
McCarthy was bad at his job. He was a bad faith actor. He was not someone Democrats could work
with. And you imagine that you would vote. Democrats cannot vote to make someone in the
line of the presidency who voted to overturn the election out of fealty to Donald Trump.
That is an absurd proposition.
I know you don't believe you don't know.
I can't wait to hear this.
No, I just think that you don't even need to get that far with him.
Right. Like because, first of all, I think going through your list of McCarthy grievances, all of which are points very well taken.
Though I will say that he surprised me a little bit on the debt ceiling and this last government funding thing.
Like he risked the full faith and credit of the United States, but he didn't do what the hard right wanted there.
He cut a deal with Joe Biden, which was the beginning of his problems.
And then his problem snowballed to the point where he then lost his speakership when he kept the
government open, which they also did not want him to do. Now, I don't think this is because like
Kevin McCarthy is like a responsible guy or a genius tactician or anything like that.
But I think that if if Democrats like the whole premise that it's actually Democrats fault they should have
worked with McCarthy is based on like okay well Democrats should have just trusted McCarthy one
more time to keep his word even though he hasn't kept his word during the last two deals didn't
keep his word on the deal he made with Joe Biden on spending right didn't keep his word any number
of times but it's not that Democrats would have had to trust Kevin McCarthy because they didn't keep his word any number of times but it's not that democrats would have had to trust
kevin mccarthy because they didn't even get the chance to trust him because he didn't want to
deal with them he said publicly in the last week i don't want to make a deal with democrats i don't
want to work with democrats i don't want to cooperate with democrats so like if you're a
democrat even if you want to punish him for his like odious behavior around January 6th and all the that we don't have a government shutdown in 45 days.
You know, I'd probably keep McCarthy there
if I could be guaranteed those other things.
But like, it's not even that we couldn't trust him
is that he didn't even want to try.
And, but it's also that goes to show
how untrustworthy he is
that he announced he was not going to work with Democrats,
but then at the end reportedly called Hakeem Jeffries to see if he could get a deal. But did he really? I'm just telling you,
it was reported in one of those political newsletters that he had reached out to him.
Even beyond just this specific example, there is no more bad faith, intellectually lazy argument
than Democrats are responsible for Republican behavior.
It is not Barack Obama's fault for beating Mitt Romney that we ended up with Donald Trump.
It's not Democrats' fault for refusing to support Kevin McCarthy as speaker,
that the Republican Party is an absolute chaos. And the problem is, this is not like
MAGA pundits who do this. It's the never Trump faux intellectuals who should know better who
do this because they can't reckon with how terrible their party is.
They have to blame Democrats as a way to explain why their party went down the toilet.
Matt Lewis is an example here.
We see this all the time.
They they should know better.
It's embarrassing.
I will say that a lot of the Hill reporters that you so malign today, the Republicansans tweeted out uh the democrats are the chaos caucus yeah
and then a lot of the whole report is like this is such bullshit like this like people people get
that it's bullshit i think but look i think if you're a democratic lawmaker you're trying to
figure out like yes it's all the republicans fault but like how do we and we're going to talk about
this but like how do we now keep the government open and again that's the most important priority and whichever fucking joker they put in
there as speaker matters less than what the policy outcome here which is keeping the government open
and making sure that support for ukraine goes through all right let's talk about what comes
next uh steve scalise the number two republican in the house who reportedly once
referred to himself as david duke without the baggage says he's running for speaker jim jordan
the trump pal who former speaker john boehner once called a quote political terrorist
says he's running too and there may be one more candidate for the job as well sources telling me
at this hour some house republic Republicans have been in contact with and
have started an effort to draft former President Donald Trump to be the next speaker.
I've now heard from a number of people, I know for a fact Donald Trump has been contacted
about possibly him being an interim speaker.
Is that a reality?
A lot of people have been calling me a bad speaker.
All I can say is we'll do whatever's best for the country and for the Republican Party.
So right before we started recording today, Thursday morning, we apparently now Trump
is expected to go to Capitol Hill on Tuesday, and he is apparently open to pitching himself for the job when he goes to the Capitol for the first time since he incited an insurrection on January 6th.
Now he is thinking about thinking about being speaker.
What do you think you on the Trump for speaker train yet?
As Elijah always says, content trumps the Constitution.
So absolutely.
I mean, are we doomed to repeat the same news cycle over and over?
This is at least the third or fourth time we've done Trump for Speaker, I think, since
we started doing this podcast.
Is it?
I know we did it around
the mccarthy vote the 15 votes i guess we did it probably back in the trump era is it we do yeah i
think so yeah oh i think we did it in 16 maybe before even i don't know it's it's not great
so he he will be nominated as speaker by uh at least one house republican Republican who's already said they're going to nominate him.
Marjorie Taylor Greene said that he's her first
and only choice so far for Speaker.
So he'll probably get some votes on the first ballot.
But two reasons why he's probably unlikely to win.
Number one, any Speaker could only lose four Republicans.
So Trump could only lose four Republicans,
which makes it seem a little tricky that he's going to get every single Republican on board.
But but four. And then there's another problem, something known as Rule 26 in the House that House Republicans are part of the House Republican rules.
A member of the Republican leadership shall step aside if indicted for a felony for which a sentence of two or more years imprisonment may be imposed. So that's tough. But of course, of course,
Republicans made that rule. I'm sure they would change it for Donald Trump.
Yes. Also, I would like to know the legislative history of how they chose the two-year minimum.
Like, are there a series of crimes they thought someone in line for the leadership
could get that had a maximum sentence
below two years in prison?
That are felonies, by the way.
That are felonies, yes.
So it's not like a misdemeanor.
It's like it's a felony, but it's an under two-year.
Yeah, okay.
All right, Jordan and Scalise,
how do you think this race plays out?
And is there any chance we get someone
who's not worse than McCarthy in every way?
I would say that Jim Jordan and Steve Scalise are both worse than Kevin McCarthy, but I don't know. How do you
think this plays out? We should assume whether it's Steve Scalise or Jim Jordan or anyone else,
including Donald Trump, that whoever is the elected speaker by these House Republicans
is a deeply dangerous, malicious, dishonest, conspiracy theory propagating MAGA asshole.
Like that is a job requirement to be Speaker of this Republican House.
Like that is going to happen.
Now, how this plays out, I think, is interesting.
Jake Sherman of Punchbowl tweeted yesterday, Wednesday, that every person he had talked
to in the Republican caucus, staffers, members, thought there was no way this could be over
by Wednesday.
It just would seem impossible.
Now,
while we're preparing today,
Lauren Bobert tweeted that she,
do you even know what I'm gonna say?
No,
I'm just laughing at you pronouncing her name.
Look,
when I think theater goer,
I think she's really French.
Now look,
she's a theater fan.
Lauren Bobert, Bobertbert lauren beetlejuice bobert tweeted that she would abandon the motion to vacate role if
jim jordan became the speaker which was interesting but if this goes long i think the the odds that it
ends up being someone other than jordan and scalise goes up because it's hard to get.
You never want to be the first couple candidates in a speaker's race.
Well, it's hard to if you if it's highly polarized and you end up with a whole bunch of people who are voting for Scalise and against Jordan and vice versa, it gets harder.
It's easier to get these people to vote for a third person than to vote for the person they've been opposing this whole time.
people to vote for a third person than to vote for the person they've been opposing this whole time.
And Jim Banks, who is the head of the Republican Study Committee and sort of a prominent-ish conservative, tweeted that he was supporting Elise Stefanik as speaker. I know, but as I said,
this only ends one way, and it's not good.
Yeah, I've been watching today as we were about to record,
sort of a slew of House republicans came out saying that they
were going to endorse jordan the trick here is uh you would expect like you know scalise is
mccarthy's number two so you'd expect like mccarthy's leadership allies and all the people
who are mccarthy folks and some of the more like main i won't call them moderate but mainstream
republicans um who like mccarthy to just go with Scalise in this scenario.
But because McCarthy and Scalise never got along or haven't gotten along for a couple of years and there's always been bad blood between them.
There was reporting this morning that McCarthy's staffers have been like quietly reaching out to lawmakers on behalf of Jim Jordan because Jim Jordan became really tight
with McCarthy by the end.
So if you've got like the Freedom Caucus nuts
plus some McCarthy allies going with Jordan,
I think it becomes a closer race.
I think Scalise, you know,
the advantages he has is,
you know, he is number two.
He has a whipping operation
because he was the house whip.
So he knows a lot of these members.
Famously good at counting votes, Steve Scalise, and delivering.
Someone just lost like nine consecutive votes on the floor last week.
But it doesn't seem like he doesn't have anyone who's like really pissed at him.
You know, like he doesn't inspire a lot of hatred.
Which is wild.
That is wild.
I know.
Well, in this Republican republican house it's not
as wild but um and i think jordan probably has made um more enemies over the years specifically
among the more moderate members of the republican caucus which are now few in number um whoever
republicans pick uh feel like it's more likely now we're headed for a government shutdown
in 45 days and less likely that Ukraine funding will pass. But what do you think?
I think that's exactly right. I think Ukraine funding in particular, once you have opened the
door to short term continuing resolutions, it gets easier to do it, which is one of the reasons why
they try it. The right tried so hard to stop this because once you've done 45 days, we'll do another
30 days to get through Thanksgiving and the holidays. We'll come back and have this fight next year. I'm not saying
that's going to happen, but there's a chance of that. The defining issue in this speaker's race
between Jordan and Scalise and whoever else may get involved at the end is going to be about the
aid to Ukraine. That will be the thing that they will base their candidacy on, that they will not
allow that to happen without some set of probably
unmeetable criteria. And it's going to cause this is a place where Democrats and moderate Republicans
could work together if there is if the Senate were to pass something where that they could do
a discharge petition on to get to find a way to bring that to the floor, because it's hard to
imagine that someone is going to become speaker if this Republican to get nearly every member of
this Republican caucus to do nearly every member of this Republican
caucus to do it, who can then turn around in the coming weeks and months, which is what the Biden
administration said they need the aid by, to get that done. That seems very, very hard to imagine.
And I think that's all correct. And even if you zoom out from the Ukraine funding and just talk
about keeping the government open in general, the reason, or at least the given reason that those eight republicans
booted mccarthy out of the speakership at the end is because he used democratic votes to keep the
government open the first time which of course he had to do it because you cannot keep the government
open without democratic votes because democrats control the senate republicans have a four seat
majority in the house and a fucking Democrat as president.
So now these guys are going to run for speaker. And Jordan's already saying, I will not put a Ukraine funding vote up if I'm speaker.
So even if Scalise wants to, even if he wants to do the responsible thing or wanted like McCarthy to like maybe figure out Ukraine at some point,
how's Scalise going to win if he doesn't match Jordan's promise on Ukraine?
And I'm sure Jordan's going to say the same thing about keeping the government open in general.
Like these people, they want a shutdown. They wanted a shutdown under McCarthy. He didn't give them one. And now there's going to be a race to see who can get the most Republican votes. And if
you don't think that like shutting the government down is going to be a stipulation for getting
those votes, I don't know what to tell you.
Yeah, I think that's exactly right. Now, it's also, I think, possible and maybe even likely
that the next speaker will have a different threshold for the motion to vacate.
Yeah.
I think there will be enough people who will want to change that, that even some of these
people on the far right, other than Gates, are not going to want to have to go through this again
three weeks from now.
And that could be the case, especially if you end up with a third candidate.
That's how it happened with how Paul Ryan ended up speaker was they couldn't get McCarthy.
They couldn't find anyone else who the caucus supported to do it.
They went to Ryan and he said, as his criteria to do it, they had to change the motion to vacate rule so he could not be at the same risk that Boehner was.
And they were changed for McCarthy.
They could change back.
The other issue that I think will come into play here is the border.
And you're already starting to hear Jim Jordan talk about, you know, we can't be caring so
much about Ukraine and not enough about our own border.
And I'm not going to pass any Ukraine funding unless we do something about the southern
border. And then you're hearing Senate Republicans saying who really want to pass Ukraine
funding, saying, OK, maybe we have to send something over that funds Ukraine, but also
funds more border security, which some Democrats are OK with funding more border security.
But I think what Jordan and some of the House Republicans want to do is not just like more
money for border security, but more immigration restrictions. So like rewriting immigration laws. Yeah, policy
changes, which I think Democrats aren't going to go for as they shouldn't. So then you become then,
you know, then we get into government shutdown territory. This is what McCarthy sort of kind of
tried to do at the end was to make the shutdown about border policy. He just waited too long to
do that. That's a much stronger political hand for Republicans, where you will find some, given the polling on immigration recently and the
trust gap between Republicans and Democrats, you could find some Democrats getting pretty nervous
pretty quickly on that. And you could see the next Republican speaker, whoever they are,
be able to execute that with more competence and coherence than McCarthy did.
Yeah. And I think they're all going
to realize that, you know, negative partisanship rules all. And instead of like Republican chaos,
they all have to unite against the great democratic enemy. You already saw that with
Patrick McHenry, who is this temporary speaker. His first move was to kick Nancy Pelosi and Steny
Hoyer out of their offices in capitol hill um which sort of like
there's a few like freedom caucus people that were like oh i didn't like mccarthy but
if his uh this mchenry guy was uh kicking nancy pelosi and stenny hoyer out i i like him already
it's just so petty and stupid fucking assholes it's so silly all right so democrats are already
pointing to this mess as another example
of why the Republican Party is chaotic and incapable of governing because they are. Do
you think Democrats can make that stick or will most voters have no idea what happened this week?
Most voters will have no idea what happened this week. And even if they did have an idea,
it is memory hold. I mean, it was only nine months ago that Republicans did this huge national embarrassing spectacle to get McCarthy.
And people forgot that pretty quickly.
I think they'll forget that.
I think there is an argument about Republican chaos and incompetence that we can run on.
And this can be a data point, but I don't think it's a particularly salient one by next November.
No, I think what people are going to realize and what people are going to feel is a government shutdown.
I think what people are going to realize and what people are going to feel is a government shutdown.
And I think if Democrats can make a case, and we should be able to, that Republicans have caused the shutdown because they are chaotic and incapable of governing, and that shutdown has real effects
for people and people's lives, then that's an argument. But I think the chaos among Republicans
needs to have a consequence for real people and not just like a fun drama to watch on the news about Kevin McCarthy getting ousted.
All right. Speaking of making Republican chaos stick with voters, Donald Trump is back at Mar-a-Lago after spending three days sitting in a Manhattan courthouse for the civil fraud trial that could spell the end of Trump's business empire.
could spell the end of Trump's business empire.
Judge Arthur N. Gorin slapped a gag order on Trump after he attacked one of the judge's clerks on Truth Social
by suggesting that she is dating Chuck Schumer.
There's a new one, which of course she's not,
and the post was removed.
But that didn't stop Trump from attacking the judge,
the attorney general, and everyone else.
He's a Democrat judge out of the clubhouses.
He's controlled, and it's a shame.
What's going on here is a shame.
Our whole system is corrupt.
This is corrupt.
Atlanta is corrupt.
And what's coming out of D.C. is corrupt.
It's all corrupt.
He's putting the whole system on trial. I'm not out of order. You're out of order. The whole system's out of D.C. is corrupt. It's all corrupt. He's putting the whole system on trial.
I'm not out of order.
You're out of order.
The whole system's out of order.
So lesson learned, I guess, from Trump.
Do you think he doesn't care about this gag order and other potential gag orders?
Judge Chukin is going to rule on this in D.C. for the Jack Smith case there?
Or is Trump just constitutionally incapable
of shutting his mouth?
Both.
He's obviously constitutionally incapable
of shutting his mouth.
I also think every part of his life has taught him
that he never faces consequences for what he does.
Yeah.
I mean, if you can lead,
I mean, he may end up in prison
and that would be a pretty severe consequence,
but up till now.
78 years old, the first consequence, going to prison for Donald Trump. There you go.
I mean, the guy led a violent insurrection in the United States that almost tried to murder
a Republican vice president and the Republican party embraced him three months later. So I think
he probably feels pretty secure that a couple of mean truths about someone are not going to lead
to real consequences. Yeah, because I think that like, I mean, I'm surprised that he actually took the post down
because the judge ordered him to, and he did take it down.
So apparently he was, he's afraid of something happening.
I don't feel like he was in the settings at Truth Social being the one who pulled that down.
You don't think he was doing that?
You don't think he was actually truthing while he was scowling during the trial?
You should take a look at the pictures.
Trump didn't have to be at this trial.
He was not legally obligated to be at this trial.
He was there for three days.
Why do you think he showed up?
There has been some reporting or maybe speculation in the form of reporting that this was part of some strategy where he could help control the message of the trial.
And maybe, I mean, I do think he is drawn to where cameras are and there are going to be cameras there.
I do think that even though he is not afraid of things like these gag orders because he thinks they will never have teeth as it relates to him.
I think this case scares the crap out of him, even maybe more than some of the other ones, because this goes at his identity.
Right. Even before he took a sharp pivot into authoritarian politics, New York businessman was who he was.
Like he all he branded himself was a New York businessman was who he was. All he branded himself was a New
York businessman. Here they're going to say, not as rich as he said he was, complete and total
fraud, and he can't do business in New York anymore. And so I think there is a real level
of insecurity here, and he's trying to be there to, I don't know, maybe he thinks his presence
can shape it, or he can stare at the judge or do something, but I think he's scared by this one.
I don't want to assign strategy to anything Donald Trump does, but maybe it was instinct.
And I think he's finding, um, he's finding a lot of value in always being on camera,
talking about how the system is against him and everything's corrupt. And it's like,
it's served him well in the primary so far and which is a
wild thing to say for donald trump every day is a republican primary that's what that he knows how
to win a republican primary that's like all of his politics are around winning a republican primary
that's that's where he feels most comfortable i saw you see that he uh raised 45.5 million dollars
last quarter apparently three million of that was uh just selling merch
with his mugshot on it three million dollars they made so he he thinks there's some value in this
he thinks there's value in just going in front of the cameras and and and arguing his case to the
only jury he cares about republican voters if either ronda santosantis or Nikki Haley is able to narrow this polling gap, do you think he's going to commit extra crimes?
Possibly.
Yeah, probably.
Yeah.
He'll be demanding cameras in the courtroom in the federal trials, even though cameras aren't supposed to be in the courtroom.
He'll probably fucking take the stand and incriminate himself more.
He's just turning himself in for other crimes we haven't gotten to yet.
He's like, you guys get me for this emoluments thing?
Can we do that?
It was me. I shot tupac um also by the way the fundraising numbers uh desantis raised 15 million dollars to trump's 45.5 but trump has 36 million dollars on hand
to spend in the primary desantis has five million dollars polls are getting worse
for him he's now behind nikki haley in a lot of these polls especially the early state polls
and he's moving his entire staff to iowa seems like uh seems like things aren't doing that
things aren't going that well for uh for our boy ron desantis no the only person who's doing well
in that campaign is jeff rowe is the person who has all of Ron DeSantis' money in his other pocket.
Whenever you're moving your whole staff to Iowa and you're camping out in Iowa, that's a
red flag, red flag. Yeah, there is. I can think of at least two, maybe three campaigns that made
that exact move, and none of them ended up as president. I mean, it's just, I saw also today that RNC insiders
are talking about how to maybe change or forego
the rest of the debates because Trump isn't showing up.
It's a sideshow.
No one's getting close to him.
I mean, he's going to be the fucking nominee.
That's where we are.
Yeah, you think that with his 50-point lead in the polls,
he might be that, in his multi-million dollar financial advantage, he might be the nominee? Yeah, it seems possible. Yeah, I think that's it 50-point lead in the polls, he might be that, in his multi-million dollar financial advantage,
he might be the nominee?
Yeah, it seems possible.
Yeah, I think that's it.
I think that's it.
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Also, there's a high stakes november coming up and
it might not be the november you're thinking of the media hype has turned to 2024 i guess we're
part of the media hype but that won't stop 2023 elections from having massive implications for
abortion access voting rights and more from the virginia legislative elections to the ohio
reproductive rights ballot measure we have got work to do in the next few weeks. Visit votesaveamerica.com
slash nooffyears to see how you can help. Okay, when we come back, I will talk to a former aide
who worked for Donald Trump and Mark Meadows in the White House. Her new book is Enough. She
testified before the January 6th committee. When we come back, Cassidy Hutchinson.
Joining us here in studio, the star witness of the January 6th hearings who served as the top aide to Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.
She's written a new memoir called Enough.
Cassidy Hutchinson, welcome to Pod Save America.
Thank you guys for having me.
So I want to start by saying that like most of America, I first saw you when you testified
before the January 6th committee. It was obviously the right thing to do, but just because something
is obvious doesn't make it easy. And so I have a lot of respect and admiration for what you did,
which came at great risk to your
future and even your personal safety. I know you said you were nervous about returning to the
spotlight like this. What's it been like so far? And has your nervousness been justified?
Yeah, I like to say I operate probably at a constant level, like a level four of anxiety,
which I think it's,
to me, it's a benefit. It keeps me a little sharp. You've gone through, I'd say that's pretty good.
Over the last, it's been like a week and a half since the book release. I had some time to prepare
myself for it just like as I was writing the book in collaboration with my fantastic collaborator,
Mark Salter, who helped me. Fantastic writer. Fantastic writer, fantastic human, perfect person
to help me write this book as he was very never Trump from the beginning. So yeah, got some very
good sparring matches. But all for the benefits, I hope and believe in the book. All that said,
you know, with Mark's counsel too, I don't think I ever really could have prepared myself for
being in the spotlight. Again, this is not something I ever saw myself doing, but I realize and recognize the gravity of this moment. And it's important to
have voices and people like us, hopefully, that we can sit and have a diplomatic and productive
conversation, even though we might not politically agree on everything, because there is a much
bigger issue at stake, and that's our country and our democracy.
So, you know, that said, it's been an adjustment. I don't think it'll ever feel normal, but it's good.
So I've talked to plenty of Trump voters. I'm related to a few.
You are the first Trump voter I've talked to who's actually worked for him.
Really?
Yeah.
Ever urged on this podcast?
I think ever.
I'm pretty sure ever.
Like I said, a lot of never Trumpers.
Yeah.
Trump voters I've sat with in focus groups.
I know some, but like no one has worked in the White House for Donald Trump or in the campaign.
So I'm not interested in shaming you for that.
But I really want to try to understand it just with an eye towards figuring out how we can all make sure he doesn't end up in the White House again, which
I know is a goal you share. So just to start, like, what was it about Trump at that first rally you
went to in April of 2017, I believe, that made you want to work for him? Like you described him in the book as his,
as Matt,
he talked about his magnetism.
You said you were transfixed.
Like what was it in that rally?
You know,
the,
the,
there's a long and a short answer.
The short answer is I,
at that moment at the first rally, I didn't have in my mind my goal is to work for Donald Trump in the White House.
I set off to have a career in public service.
I identified with the Republican Party and I had internships on Capitol Hill that summer.
That said, though, I did vote for him in 2016.
I identified as a Republican, but I grew up in a very apolitical family, but a blue collar
family. So being part of the Republican Party made sense to me. And I agreed with the platform.
I voted for him at that first Trump rally. I remember being in the crowd and looking around.
It's so difficult to describe because I also haven't been to a ton of other politicians' rallies.
But I was standing around and just looking at not just him, but like everybody around me.
And it was people that I felt like I recognized, not because I knew them,
but because I grew up around people like them.
And I saw that they saw something in him.
And then I felt pulled toward them. And then
I felt pulled towards him. And it was almost this sense of like, he is representing people like my
family. He is going to be the politician that changes things. And it wasn't like I just fell
in love with the MAGA movement in that moment but i i felt the
allure and i felt the draw and i think that was the moment where my blinders sort of went off and
i was looking back now this is i'm telling this as in that moment um where i sort of just shut off the what he is saying about immigrants is wrong
that kind of it didn't completely go out of my mind but it went into the back of my mind because
what I saw there and felt there was that there was a politician that was very abnormal in terms
of like what we have seen and experienced as a country but I felt like he was there for the right reasons at the time
and again this is no I know I'm not including my hindsight now but I also tried to write the book
in the present moment because I wanted readers to be able to feel that connection and at least
try because I it's difficult to describe and it was difficult to write about and it's not without
shame but yeah no look I mean, I asked this partly
because I've spent the last since 2016, 2015, like trying to figure out what so many voters
saw in him, if not for, you know, there's many explanations out there, right? You can look at
people, voters with higher levels of racial resentment, you know, are attracted to Trump.
There's all,
but there's this, other people will say there's a working class populist pitch. There's an anti-establishment pitch. There's a, I was on The Apprentice and I'm a businessman, so I can be
successful pitch. And I think people's motivations are complex and voters are complex and they
believe all kinds of different things. But I'm just like, I'm so curious what it was for you.
What part of the message for you was like,
oh, this is...
I think at first it really was...
I mean, this is such a good question.
And it's, I've thought a lot about it.
It's hard to put into words.
I think at first it was really less about
specific policy initiatives.
And it was more about how he spoke to people and how people felt they
could relate to him and you know i would hear my parents or my relatives talk not necessarily in
admiration of the policies but talk in admiration of how they felt represented for the first time
in their life like my my parents had never voted but the first time they voted was for donald trump
and that was sort of a trend throughout. And this is my experience with my family,
but he,
he had that poll and it was,
I felt that I could relate to it in a way,
but I also,
at that point I was halfway through undergrad.
I was,
my boyfriend at the time did not want to be at that Trump rally with me.
And just sitting there with Cassidy,
he probably saw it happening in my mind.
Was he a Republican?
Yes, but not a Trump Republican.
But not a Trump person.
Which is completely fine.
And there were not big disagreements
at that point about it.
But no, and then as I interned,
so I went through two internships
that summer on Capitol Hill,
one for Steve Scalise
and second for Ted Cruz. I applied for the Steve Scalise internship. I wanted to stay on Capitol Hill, so I applied for every Senate office. So it wasn't, you know, Ted Cruz had an opening. I took the internship. also began, though, to be exposed into the actual inner workings of Congress,
and Republicans at the time had the majority.
It seemed normal and natural to me.
That was my first real exposure to politics,
and I saw how House Republicans, at least from my perspective,
how they were working with him to advance the administration's agenda,
and they were passing bills so it wasn't you know there wasn't much thought going into the actual like nuances of the policies again i'm not trying to excuse anything
but i at the time was 20 yeah too so no i was interested because i in the book you you're like
i you know i entered for ted cruz didn't like his politics yeah steve scalise you liked but
you said he's more conservative than you were.
But then you said that Donald Trump was moderate in some ways.
When I say that, and I still believe this to this day,
and we could debate it if you would like to,
although I don't know how debating 2016,
because the platform in 2016 is vastly different.
But he did, in my my opinion have policies that weren't
appealing to let's say freedom caucus members or appealing to the ultra right-wing conservatives
he had some policies that were a lot of them didn't agree with and even in the first six
months eight months throughout his presidency a lot of the hard right-wingers didn't agree with yeah so again from a bird's eye view at that point i you know like look i thought
from a just a political perspective of like a political strategist he tried to move at least
rhetorically to the center on like protecting medicare and medicaid and social security and
like at one point he said he was going to tax hedge fund people. Well, he did what he had to do at points to just get what he needed,
whether it was during an election or in Congress
or when he was in the Oval Office.
He did what he had to do.
Donald Trump doesn't have a firm policy platform.
What I think did serve him well, I was not on the 2016 campaign,
but what I think did serve him well is he had some sound voices around him that understood Washington and understood what voters wanted to hear.
And he sometimes would listen to them, sometimes would not.
But, you know, as he went through, obviously, the presidency,
that sort of tapered off. So I totally understand just being a Republican, right? I worked for Obama in 2008. After the campaign, I made friends with a lot of McCain staffers, still friends with some
of them. We'd argue about politics. It was fine. I am very proud of the race we ran against Mitt
Romney in 2012, though I also have a ton of respect for him, especially of what he's done over the last couple of years, as I know you have respect for him too.
Charlottesville which was like the cause of the first set of resignations and then you know there's all the stories around then that Gary Cohn the economic advisor was thinking about leaving too
like how did you think about that first year as you were deciding to intern there in 2018 and then
later work there in 2019 like did that give you did those give you those incidents give you pause
or policies give you pause?
Yeah, I'm putting myself back in that moment just for clarity. No, I'm dying to understand it.
That's why I asked.
I interned, after I interned on Capitol Hill, I mean, I fell in love with the institution.
And that's why I wanted to stay.
I fell in love with the House.
I interned in the Senate, realized that I fell in love with the house.
I know.
I saw you.
I read the Senate.
Senate feels pretty slow.
And I was like, yeah,
we felt the same thing when we were in there.
Did you ever work in the Senate?
Yeah, I worked for Obama his first couple years in the Senate.
And then he was like, yeah, this place is...
See, the house is fun.
It's, things move fast.
And I like the, you know, things are different now,
but for real,
it's another conversation.
I had,
in my opinion,
great mentors who I still believe are not ultra partisan,
aren't never Trumpers,
but aren't pro Trump necessarily.
Like they're,
they're institutionalists.
They want to seek the institution function.
And, you know, after I spoke with them,
I was thinking about,
do I go to a think tank next summer?
Because again, I did not grow up in a political environment,
but my singular goal with graduating college
was how do I get a job in DC?
They knew that I loved the institution
and they're like, well,
the Office of Legislative Affairs at the White House
would be the best option for you because you are going to see how the two branches work together.
So it was in that moment, I was like, okay, that's my next goal.
So for me, it was just very, I had one thing, I checked the boxes, like, okay, what do I have to do next?
So I didn't really have any qualms about interning in the Office of Legislative Affairs
under Trump. And perhaps I should have. But even looking back now, and I'm not excusing anything
that happened in the first year, but I think, I used to say I was in the right place at the
wrong time. I don't know if I was in the wrong place at the wrong time or the wrong place at the right time. But I think anybody that has the opportunity
to intern or work in government or in the White House, I mean, you've been there. It's an
incredible place. But I also, I learned so much in that internship that wasn't just how to
be the slinger for Trump's policies. It's how does the White House actually work with Congress?
Because at that time, too, my goal was to get a job back in leadership.
I never thought that I would get hired at the White House after I graduated.
But when you were seeing all those,
what was your reaction when you read about all those stories in that first year?
I thought, and I felt it was wrong.
Were you just like, that was crazy?
Yeah, but I, again, putting myself back in 20-year-old, all those stories in that first year i thought and i felt it was wrong crazy or yeah but i again
putting myself back yeah no that 20 year old i wasn't really putting all that much thought into
it and i i wish i had and this kind of gets a little deep philosophically with myself but i
and i've gotten some heat for this i'll try to explain it a little bit better.
But sometimes I do wish I had, really wish I had, because I think that I would have avoided a lot of this.
But at the same time, I don't regret my tenure in the administration because it brought me to this point.
That's why I'm sitting here with you. And I'm not saying that what I did,
by any means, I'm not saying what I did and how I came forward was courageous or brave or anything.
But what I am saying is I hope that there will always be people in the institutions that have
some sense of moral integrity and ethics. And I do worry looking back that if I had put more
thought into it or had that hindsight, I would have ran for
the hills and maybe that would have been better. I don't know. But it helps in a sense having the
blinders up because I was able to just do the job and accept it for what it was and be a person on
the inside that was a moderate Republican. And I believe, I will pat myself on the back,
I believe I have some sense of semblance of integrity
and ethical compass, but that can also be debated.
Look, if you listen to old episodes of this podcast,
you know, in those days, we would yell a lot
about Dina Powell and Gary Cohn
and like the Committee to Save America and all that kind of
stuff because I was like, why? I don't think that they're doing much. And yet, like if they all left
and went in front of a microphone, then maybe something would have happened. You know,
I will say I get that it's more complicated than it seemed at first, because now that we're facing the prospect of a second Trump presidency, clearly the administration is not would not be staffed with people like you or people like Dina or any of any institutionalists.
Forget about moderate Republicans, just like conservative Republicans who care about the institution.
One, because I would hope that people would I would hope that a few people would slip in.
I would hope that people would,
I would hope that a few people would slip in.
But one,
they,
I was there at the end.
Like I,
I know what second term plans were.
I,
I don't want to catastrophize or hypothesize about exactly who would be there because I hope to God that in this next year,
collectively as a country,
people can come together and do,
we can do everything we can to make sure that he is not the republican nominee on that ticket but that being said they would i think that they would vet
people so extensively that people wouldn't have the opportunity to slip in and be ethical voices
that them for like you're 100 loyal to trump yes correct and even like towards the end of the
administration like there this is publicly reported and it's also been publicly reported
since i believe it's schedule f but how the going through and firing the career institutions like
that's undemocratic like it's it's also like why are we even debating this like this is not an
an issue that should even be on anybody's radar. Yeah. But- Yeah, and this is why your book is great to read
because when you read it and some of it is reliving it
and there's a lot of new detail too,
you're like, oh, if it was like,
and I imagine like, you know, Rudy Giuliani is AG
and my pillow guy is the secretary of commerce.
I don't know, like it's fucking wild.
I talk to people, I try to talk to people about, too.
And I think it's that there needs to be voices like ours that will call attention to it.
I'm trying to think of the most effective way to do it.
But Donald Trump would be president, yes, but he is not the end of the problem.
If Donald Trump was to disappear tomorrow, if he were just to drop off the face of the earth or just drop out of the race altogether, the issue is still going to exist.
Now, next term presidency to be debated.
But if there were to be a second Trump term presidency, there's not going to be people, institutions willing for multiple reasons.
people, institutions willing for multiple reasons. I mean, one, I can't think of many people that I respect that would want to put themselves in that line of fire, knowing what happened at the end,
and even just how the administration unraveled in the final few years. But from also a very
practical matter, I was extremely fortunate at a very low and dark place in my life to have people that gave me a second chance.
My legal bills would be insurmountable if I didn't have that opportunity.
And I'm very fortunate, very fortunate for it.
And that's why I also feel this need to talk to people about it.
But there's the point of who would it be? But it's also like,
why? Why would you do that? Because his loyalties are to himself.
Yeah. You write about various turning points for you and how you viewed Trump in the White House.
When was the first time you remember thinking there might be something different and wrong
with this administration and this president?
When did you start getting the real doubts?
There were several times I'm trying to think.
I mean, the first time that I really remember having this jarring feeling of there is something more here was the night that we had a rally in Rome, Georgia.
And I write about this, not extensively, but I write about it in great detail in the book.
But essentially, we had a rally in Rome, Georgia, and a campaign official had asked me to go into the middle of this massive crowd.
There was a little shack and to retrieve this man named Tony Bobulinski,
who was Hunter Biden's former business partner.
Tony Bobulinski had been publicly seen with Trump
at the debate in Nashville a few weeks prior.
And I can't describe it as anything else
other than I just had this really nauseating feeling inside of me and again no real reason but I
pressed and I again write about in detail in the book but I kept pressing like this is not a good
why is Mark doing this I don't want Mark to this is not a good idea if he's been seen publicly
so it was just this like I felt that I knew a lot that was going on and I in some ways did but that was the first time where I
was like okay I had been shoving a lot of the red flags in the back of my mind like a lot of our
COVID policies our COVID messaging how we were handling the Herman Cain story yeah like tell too
and all very should have been very jarring experiences but you know when you're living
and you you've lived that life in the White House,
I hope it wasn't as chaotic as ours,
but it was like one hour was like a week sometimes.
Yeah, that is true.
And that's also, I think,
yeah, I'm not excusing anything,
but sometimes I'd go in with a to-do list for Mark
with seven things
and I would maybe get half of something done.
So like things would,
you're in survival mode. Right would, you're in survival mode.
Right.
And you're in survival mode.
How big of a deal the day's events are.
Because it's also, you're doing a job, right?
Like, so it's, it is, I always tried to keep that perspective and that hindsight, but it is, I was there to do a job and I had a role and I had to fulfill that role.
And if I didn't, then something would happen.
But Tony Bobulinski was really the first, like, okay, there's something very shady.
And whether it was or not, I don't know.
I just had that feeling.
So the election happens and like a week afterwards, there's this like now famous quote that a senior Republican official gives the Washington Post.
So I don't know what this quote's going to be. quote that a senior Republican official gives the Washington Post about Trump. And the quote is,
what is the downside for humoring him for this little bit of time? No one seriously thinks the
results will change. He went golfing this weekend. It's not like he's plotting how to prevent Joe
Biden from taking power on January 20th. And like, we go back to this. Did the committee discover
who said that? No, I've asked and I've asked like ashley parker too which because it was her piece uh but like you know no one reveals who
that is no one reveals who that is but it's like is that is that how you felt at the time is that
how other people i immediately uh i immediately knew that we lost i was like it's over and
because i immediately went into well i also had covid but went into like, you know, what's next? And I had, the president had talked to me about, even before the election, about, you know, if the Democrats steal this election from us, will you move to Florida with me?
What an offer.
To be discussed.
Yeah, right.
to be discussed yeah right but uh so there was a 10-day gap where i mark meadows and i had covet so i was out when i came back there was a it felt different and i couldn't quite place my finger on
it but i i knew it wasn't just going to end i didn't think it was going to end the way it did.
And to be clear about things too,
I think when there is a close election,
whether it's state level, at the congressional level, Senate,
House, Senate, President, no matter what it is,
candidates have the right to file lawsuits.
But it's when you are defying what the courts are saying
and you're defying our rule of law.
And then the administration was pushing it and pushing it and pushing it.
That's when I sort of started to gain a sense of, okay, there's something that's not normal.
Like he's not golfing and ready to leave at 20.
And I never thought that he would give up easily.
But I don't, you know, I can't speak for others.
I didn't see it ever getting to the point that it did at that juncture.
I doubt many people did, but, you know, I think the people that may have, have avoided
subpoenas or pled the fifth.
You write that even though you felt strongly at the time that he should concede,
you said, I didn't blame the president for any of it yet.
I didn't want to blame him.
Why is that?
Because I felt as staff,
and so I felt working for Meadows.
When I took the job with Meadows,
I was clear I work for the chief of staff
who happens to be Mark Meadows,
not Mark Meadows.
And to me, that was a very clear distinction,
not because I, you know, I liked Mark,
but I worked for the office.
Yeah.
Saying that, I felt that as staff,
it was our job to provide him with the information and counsel that he needed to make sound decisions.
And if we were not keeping the floodgates up and letting people in or letting him be privy to conversations, again is my perspective at the time it was our fault and he was not receiving the best advice from the staff that should be
working in his best interests so again it's just so wild to think because even like from we never
had anything like this but like when like i knew if i felt responsible if i wrote a shitty speech
which i did and i was like i didn't spend enough time on that that's my fault but like if barack
obama was like gonna go out to the cameras and say something stupid or make a mistake which you
know he did i was like well dude that's on you that's not our fault like There is a mentality in the Trump administration, though, and around Donald Trump's circles.
And this is, again, I'm speaking as somebody who I was not a never Trumper.
I was not somebody that he would have considered a rhino.
I was very much so on Team Trump.
And this is from my perspective now, too, though.
And I knew this at the time time but much more heightened now there the sense of loyalty and dedication to him
is not normal but it felt normal at the time it's the dedication to him but it's also
everyone's about loyalty and it's like treating him like a child though there's a little mix of
a child and sort of this divine well that's what i'm trying to say on one hand everyone's like treating him like a child though. A mix of a child and sort of this divine being.
Well,
that's what I'm trying to say.
On one hand,
everyone's like worships him.
On the other hand,
it's all like,
Oh,
what are we supposed to do?
We just gotta,
we gotta keep,
I mean,
how much good advice did he get?
Like Bill Barr's telling him there was no fraud.
Like all the people around him are giving him all this advice.
But then it's like,
Oh,
well,
he happened to run into Rudy Giuliani and Sidney powell and so therefore we gotta be like oh shit
like you guys should have kept like you guys should have kept rudy giuliani and sydney powell
away from ever like how would you have done that again questions that i i wish i had better
responses to but i i mean rudy's rudy's a separate, Rudy's been in his life for a very long time.
But I did.
And I would talk to Mark about it.
I was like, we can't be letting these people around him.
And Mark would say, sometimes he would agree, but sometimes he would say, well, the president wants to talk to them.
We're going to have these meetings.
But I felt this responsibility.
And that was a big reason why I wanted to go to Mar-a-Lago with him afterwards.
It was because I, yes, while we were filing lawsuits and all that was fine, there still were the casts of characters coming in.
And I was privy to a lot. I wasn't privy to everything.
But I also could see a very clear picture of Mr. Trump going to Florida in his post-presidential life at the time,
predicting that he would still be a force in Republican politics. And at the time,
wanting there to still be sound and reasonable voices around him.
Yeah. I was going to ask that because there's this heart-wrenching scene at the night of January 6th
where you have a phone call with your mom
and she's like begging you not to go to Florida she never wanted me to go to Florida and it's
like in January 6th has just happened and you're like um I have to go I've already committed the
boss needs good people around him the only reason today happened is because we let bad people crazy
people around him I need to try to fix like I was like what are you trying to fix at that point? He's done. At that point, again, at the time,
it was if there's anything to preserve with his legacy,
we need to try to do that.
But also from the bigger picture,
I knew, I would say with great confidence,
I knew, I would say with great confidence, 98 to 99, 98 to 100 percent of every Republican House and Senate member.
I'd say a greater maybe 65 to 70 percent of Democrats in both chambers.
So I had the connections. I was predicting that he, unfortunately, would still be a force in Republican politics.
was predicting that he unfortunately would still be a force in republican politics and if i could be there i knew that they trusted me because i had built the reputation with them and
i built a trusting relationship with a lot of members in on both sides of the aisle
if i was down there you know at the time i felt I could, I might be able to help. I might be able to bring
some, maybe able to rationalize some of this for them and make sure that things don't go completely
awry. Again, I'm also somebody, I realized this in the last year or so, I put a lot of blame on
myself for things, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, but I but there were no adults in the room.
And I am an adult.
I am very much so an adult.
But I don't ever want to be judged for my gender or my age.
I want to be judged for my competence and what I have or have not achieved.
And I'm very candid also about the mistakes that I've made, I think.
You can call me out if I haven't.
No, look, my reaction reading a lot of the book was you did seem like the adult in the room with a lot of crazies.
And I was wondering, I'm like, well, she certainly seems like the adult in the room.
Like, did this not all raise a bunch of flags like before that?
Or is it just like flags that you were like, yeah, these are some crazy people and like I'll work to fix it.
it just like flags that you were like yeah these are some crazy people and like i'll i'll work to fix it late november through mid to right before christmas to around like probably december 17th
it was red flags but this is going to be over but again i didn't have this like january 6th
electoral college get certified like no concept of this at all no i look i remember reading a lot of pieces about
like he's gonna stay and there could be a coup and blah blah blah and even i at the time was like
look i'm pretty nervous about all this and like we got to get to january 20th but like i i don't
see how this is gonna like i i wasn't you know december 18th was the big bigger turning point for me in, okay, things are starting to get dark. And that was
the night of the meeting that started in the Oval Office with Mike Flynn, Sidney Powell,
Patrick Byrne, who was the former current CEO of Overstock.com, pushing for him to invoke the
Insurrection Act or martial law, which then carried up to the yellow oval
in the residence that night and went past midnight. So that was like, things started to feel
really dark after that. So then I started to tune in a little bit more, but again,
January 6th, and I'm not, not excusing any of it at all, at all. I look back and I wish that I had done more. And I live with that regret every single day of my life.
But again, there are still things going on.
We are working to pass the NDAA.
We are working, it was more than just election stuff.
We are also still trying to keep the gears moving.
There were some people that were trying to start transition process.
Like there were some people that were trying to start transition process.
So there, you know, there, it wasn't like, it was a huge and massive focus of, and took way too much attention and resources from staff who should not have been dealing with all of that.
But there were other things that I also was doing to try to keep myself and my job functioning. So you make the decision to testify and the second set of testimony and
then go to the January 6th committee. And now you've sort of turned on Trump and Trump world.
Now that you look back, because we're talking a lot about what you thought at the time,
now that you're looking back, like you said, it's not like you're renouncing all of your conservative positions that's your political
beliefs right but like when you look at the republican party today and you think about
the republican party that you wish would be the reality like what does that party look like
and who's in that party for this so
hopefully i can explain a little bit and feel free to prod i do still consider myself a republican
in principle i do not identify or associate with any part of the republican party that is what i
consider the trump republican party the mag, whatever you want to call it.
It is technically the same Republican party. I do not personally believe it is.
I am holding on to hope that we can, you know, I strongly believe, and Speaker Pelosi has also spoken on this, we are designed, in theory, to have a two-party system that requires a strong Democratic Party and a strong Republican Party, or whatever you want to call them.
Yeah. Healthy.
Yes, where we can sit and have, like, I look forward to a day where we can sit and not have to talk about the extremism of what the Republican Party has turned to.
I hope that we can get back to a place, you know, it's never, I don't say never, it's not in the next year going to go back to a place where it was in 2000 or like the McCain Republican Party.
That, you know, I don't know we can ever get back to that place, but also the Democratic Party has evolved beyond what it was in 2002 so it's parties change but you know i with that said if trump has a strong if if trump
is the nominee the republican nominee next year and i i haven't decided whether I will turn in my Republican card, but I think there's a much greater chance that I will not associate myself with the Republican Party anymore because that to me will be the turning point maybe and should have been a long time ago or maybe should have been the day I testified but I still hold on to hope that we can have a functioning two-party system and but it's going to take people that
believe in the agenda to get it back to that place you said it was a big if I wish it was a big if
if Donald Trump is the number it's it's again I hate to doomsday hypothesize about it because I
really think that the closest he should ever get to the oval office again is when he goes to the prettyman courthouse in washington dc for his trial yeah he
belongs nowhere near the oval office the white house anywhere but like here's and but i'm he is
innocent until proven guilty right of course but he just does he does not belong and but i don't
want to hype because i we all should be doing everything we can to make sure that's –
Well, look, I've been spending the first part of this being like, why did it take you so long kind of thing.
But now I'm going to ask, what is going on with everyone else?
You've watched these Republican primary debates.
Why aren't more Republican politicians and staffers and strategists breaking with him still now?
And because you worked with these people and you know them,
what do you think is going on in the heads of DeSantis staffers,
Nikki Haley staffers, Pence staffers, right?
I'm largely cut off from Republican circles in some ways.
I also spent the last year largely in isolation for practical and security matters, but also because I was working on only really spent anyway.
But I can't climb into the psyches of those staffers.
psyches of those staffers. But what I will say pertaining to my experience, at least,
I was very candid after January 6th about it being our, meaning the administration's fault,
not Antifa, not Nancy Pelosi. It was our fault. I was not shy about that.
One of my best friends in the administration was Alyssa Farrah Griffin yeah she left in early December because she saw where things were going January 7th Alyssa came out
and sharply denounced what happened on January 6th and part of me was really ticked off at her
about it because in my mind at the time, it was she promised to be loyal.
But there's also this part that was a little bit more subconscious, but I also was able to recognize it where I was sort of envious of her because I saw that she was doing something that felt impossible.
And we're wrapping that into like the year and a half that I spent with this moral tug of war and also just very limited financial resources to retain my own attorney from the onset of being subpoenaed.
I also was afraid because I saw people like Alyssa, who, in my opinion, took a very courageous stand, like Liz Cheney, like Adam Kinzinger, like the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach him.
And I saw what they were dealing with. And it was sort of like, you're damned if you do,
and you're damned if you don't. So it was easier to stay quiet and be complicit in it. And again, I say that with shame, but I accept it and I thank people and they say that I was brave and
courageous, but I wouldn't be in this position had people not set the example before me.
You know, I was there and it was my obligation.
I was subpoenaed and I swore an oath and I was ashamed and disgusted with myself that I ever, ever lost sight of that.
Do you think they were afraid of a second Trump term?
So all that said, you know, i can't climb into their psyches
i can speak from my experience i would anticipate or i would expect some of them might be afraid
of just breaking because the opportunities do seem bleak it doesn't really feel like there's
a home and if you feel like you're going to get beat up by the left and then chastised by the
right like but you still care about the country, where do you really fall? I think some
of the opportunists that don't want to take a stand in Casey is the nominee and they want to
be able to work for him. Or if their candidate might be a VP, I can't climb into all the psyches,
but there is something there that's, it's the selfishness of the trajectory of how a lot of my former colleagues or just people in general that are working on these campaigns aren't willing to at least adhere to democratic principles.
It's not about a man.
It's not about this movement.
It's not even about the base.
Like the base is being fooled.
They're not being represented.
And I would hope that we could get somebody on the ticket.
Yeah.
They're not being represented.
And, you know, I would hope that we could get somebody on the ticket. But the debate a couple of weeks ago, almost all of the candidates on stage raised their hand at base.
When Brett Mayer asked if he was convicted.
Yeah, not just indicted, like convicted felon.
Convicted felon of violating and obstructing the Constitution of the United States.
Like that is disqualifying.
obstructing the constitution of the United States. Like that is disqualifying. And if it were Democrats on that stage that did the same thing, you know, that the right, right wing media
would go after them. I mean, there are two people on that stage who raised their hands. It was Chris
Christie and Asa Hutchinson. Asa Hutchinson wasn't on the second debate stage. I think Chris Christie
is great. I don't think he is presidential material, but I admire that he is willing to take that stand right now.
Yeah.
It's just, it seems like so many of them know better.
But it's a movement from the ground up.
Absolutely.
But when you live in a culture where,
as Republicans that are living in this culture of,
they're getting away with evading subpoenas
or not testifying truthfully and honestly
or pleading false memory or pleading the fifth, they're getting away with evading subpoenas or not testifying truthfully and honestly or
pleading false memory or pleading the fifth when that is normalized and
you're seen as heroic or you're seen as doing the right thing like
there's not really an incentive to do otherwise if you're being lionized by the people that
you're looking up to and that you're relying on for employment. Again, I'm not agreeing with any of it at all. Well, I mean, you've said that, which I think is very admirable,
that you want to spend the next year, year and a couple months making sure that he doesn't get
back to the White House. What are you thinking? What arguments would you make to people your age who might be considering working on his campaign or in the White House?
What arguments are you making to like people that you might still talk to in Republican politics or just, you know, you have a platform and you're speaking out?
Like what do you think can reach people that were like you?
Still trying to figure that out.
No, but in all honesty.
And I hate to plug the book because
you don't even need to buy the book.
You go to your local library.
I'm sorry, she's not going to be happy for saying that.
I say this because
I would appreciate
to listen
to my story.
To listen to what I have to say.
I'm not asking for anyone to believe me.
I hope that by asking people to listen,
it'll at least create a thought process
and make people think about the impact of their actions.
Because there was a time where I felt like,
maybe it isn't my responsibility to speak to all of this.
There should be the quote-unquote adults in the room, the men, many more years my senior,
men like Rudy Giuliani, who was born during World War II, I just would like to add,
who are, in my opinion, not doing the right thing. But again, like I, in any way that I can just try to reach people, whether it's through my book, which I tried to be as honest and as raw and vulnerable in my personal life and also in my political life.
Because, you know, there is a story to be told here.
And I think it required a lot of thoughts you know I I knew what I was
doing was wrong on a subconscious and also conscious level but I also was excusing it
and it took a lot to get me to the point where I am and I also don't want I am here because I had
I mean truly like not to bring religion into it,
but like angels that came
and I did work for a second chance,
but like just really incredible people
that didn't owe me anything
or didn't have to believe in me
or didn't have to grant me this opportunity,
not even to testify, but to tell my story.
Like I didn't feel deserving of that,
but I have that now.
And I think by listening to my story, like I didn't feel deserving of that but i have that now and i think by listening to
my story like i i want to create an environment where either people feel like they can talk to
me or they can relate to or the it provokes them to think about what they're doing and how they
may or may not be complicit or they might have the blinders up and And also there's a place for them.
I don't want to say come back home,
but there's a place that's about decency and it's about standing up for our country and our democracy.
And again, I want to get back to a place where we could sit.
I have an event on Monday at Politics and Prose
talking about all of this.
And Jamie Raskin is the moderator for the event.
We can have conversations
because we don't just need to debate insane Trump policies.
But like, I hope that we can get back to that place.
Yeah, no, I mean, me too.
It's just, oh, we got him in the way right now.
Well, him in the way, but it's also, again,
like I said earlier, if he were to disappear, and we see it with what's happening in the House right now,
if he were to disappear tomorrow or just whatever,
the movement doesn't go with him.
It doesn't, we don't just, normalcy isn't just restored.
We need to elect responsible people to government.
We need to elect people who have integrity and character
and care about our country and constitution. And to do that, we need to educate people and to have
people listen. And I think one thing that was sort of a disadvantage for me, at least the way
I saw it at the time was like, okay, there's the anti-Trump voices in the media and online or
whatnot,
but it doesn't really feel welcoming because you just sort of feel chastised
for believing in what you do.
And it's not, I'm not excusing, it's okay,
but like they're-
Look, it's hard to shame people out of their beliefs.
Yeah.
I think that, I believe that.
It's not productive.
It's not productive.
If it's Trump and Biden, vote for Biden.
I am reserving at this time It's not productive. If it's good and i'm look i'm i've been
wondering too in like the last year it's like george w bush get out there and at some point
say like there's just i think that people are not i think what honestly helps though like
i admire george bush i think it helps having people like general kelly go out or mark milley
or people who were on the inside people who were in his inner circle come out i think so too i mean
like the fact that george bush's voice is valuable but it's not it's not going to it's not like the
trump base loves loves at this point um But no, I'm just saying.
Right, I know George Bush.
Right, yeah, exactly.
But like, you know, a lot of cabinet secretaries that were Trump cabinet people are not with
them this time.
You know, I do think they're like, right, maybe it's not the time for it now.
In this last year of people coming up, it's the loudest voices are the ones that are often
heard and they drown out other voices. And I think part of it's
the media's fault. I'm not going to just take blame away from them. But I also think, yeah,
I never saw myself in a position like this. I am adjusting to it, at least I'm trying to, but
to have voices that people feel like they can trust and have integrity to them. Again, I admit my faults.
I'm not trying to excuse any of it.
I was not forthcoming to the committee in a lot of instances.
And I, again, live with a lot of regret and shame
that not because of legal jeopardy for myself.
I was very candid.
I was like, look, if you're going to send me to jail,
I accept the consequences of my actions.
I just want to do the right thing.
But it's just we need people out there
that see the danger of this moment.
And I hope that people will listen
and sort of start to come around to that
because it's a hard jump to make,
but it's really not that bad once you do it.
I'll end with a,
I guess this qualifies as a lighter question,
even though it's not a much lighter topic
the speakers race
oh gosh
you spent a lot of time
with Kevin McCarthy
worked closely
with a lot of these
unfortunately
a lot of time
with Matt Gaetz
Steve Scalise
you interned for
like what's your take
Jim Jordan
what's your take on
what's going on there
and what like
who should we be
rooting for
here
oh god
in this shit show or does it make a difference should we be rooting for here oh god in this or does it make a difference
should we just be like jordan and scalise will be the same i don't think they'll be the same you know
candidly i haven't been following the nuances of it all that closely but i do know these characters
as individuals and on a professional level. What I'll say about McCarthy
briefly is I did work very closely with him. I had a great professional relationship and friendship
with him. Kevin made his own bed with this. He had so many opportunities not only to do the
quote-unquote right thing, what I define as the right thing, but he came out on January 6th denouncing the president's involvement in what happened.
And then he was at Mar-a-Lago weeks later.
He quite literally won, got the gavel
because he agreed that one member could-
Take it from him.
Yeah, right.
Which he did.
I'm just like, it baffles me because I'm like,
so like there were shreds of me earlier this week where I sort of felt bad.
At times I was like, you know, I could see the point of why would Democrats vote to oust him?
But I think they made the courageous decision in doing so.
He has not been a speaker of integrity and honesty he's not
been a trustworthy player he's done everything to appease the masses just to keep that gavel
even like look at ukraine like whatever your politics are about ukraine and russia
republicans like u.s national security depends largely on European stability. Like Ukraine needs aid.
So, you know, I don't blame them for that.
But that being said, and Matt Gaetz is a whole nother, anybody that takes Matt Gaetz seriously or thinks he did this for the good of the country does not know Matt Gaetz.
Matt Gaetz did this for a soundbite and to make a name for himself.
He is not a serious politician by any means.
And I could go on, but that's all I have to say about him.
Shitposted the speaker out of a job.
I mean, yeah, he chastised Kevin for working with Democrats on the spending negotiation.
And then Matt turned around and did the same thing to oust him.
So he's just a man that has absolutely no principles.
But between Scalise and Jim Jordan, I would hope that there would be a third person.
Jim Jordan, I'm trying to delicately phrase this and be diplomatic about it because I don't want to fear a stroke.
Jim Jordan is a man of principle and I will give him that.
He is, in my experience, he is one person.
I don't agree with his politics, but I do believe that he actually believes in his agenda and he doesn't just go with the masses.
He agrees with the masses in large part but jim jordan was privy to
nearly everything if not everything about and pertaining to january 6
jim jordan can't be trusted with the constitution in my opinion and if he is elected speaker you know yes maybe he
can his voice will resonate with the more extreme conservatives but he's not going to be representative
of the mass in congress which is you know the people who represent america there there are
moderate republicans still in Congress,
as there are still moderate Democrats,
but Jim can't be trusted with the Constitution.
He can't be trusted
to represent those people.
Steve is a different...
I would hope that there would be
a third person that would emerge.
I think Patrick McHenry
has a lot of character and integrity.
I don't think his name is in the hat.
I don't think that he would want the job, frankly.
It's not a job that I would want.
Yeah, I don't know why anyone would at this point.
Yeah, it's also just really an unfortunate place
for the Republican Party to be in
and honestly embarrassing.
But, you know, is that what causes change?
I don't know.
I don't think so.
But it's...
Cassidy Hutchinson, thank you for doing this.
Again, like, just because something's obviously right doesn't mean it's easy.
And I am like, so I have a lot of admiration for everything you've done.
It was not easy to do.
And I really hope that you can come back and we can just argue about policy.
Just yell at each other about just regular old politics stuff and not have to worry about the creeping threat of authoritarianism posed by your former party.
Or your current party, but the one that you're trying to change.
The one I don't identify with is the one I still have hope for.
Well, in saying that, too, I just want to thank you and everyone here, too.
Because my attorneys and everybody who's very warmly
embraced me and offered the kindest words I still don't feel deserving of I to have the opportunity
to sit here with you guys is honestly means a lot to me too god I I'm supposed to be stoic and not
emotional but it's seriously it it means a lot because it's it gives me hope that we can get back to that place and that we don't have to agree politically, but we agree on a human level and that we're Americans and are important conversations to have.
So just thank you guys for welcoming me and being so kind.
You don't have to, but I appreciate it.
You're welcome.
And thank you.
Thank you for stopping by.
Thank you.
thank you for stopping by. Thank you.
Thanks again to Cassidy Hutchinson for joining us today. Everyone have a fantastic weekend,
and we'll talk to you next week. Bye, everyone.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production. Our producers are Olivia Martinez and David Toledo. Our associate producer is Farah Safari, writing support from Hallie Kiefer.
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