Pod Save America - Debating Biden's Gaza Problem (with Mehdi Hasan)
Episode Date: February 21, 2024Tommy and guest host Mehdi Hasan break down the Biden administration's record on Gaza, what should happen next, and how the ongoing violence could hurt Biden in Michigan and beyond. Plus, the latest o...n House Republicans' impeachment trainwreck, Donald Trump co-opting Alexei Navalny's legacy, and Tucker Carlson's softball interview with Vladimir Putin. 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Matty Hassan.
Matty, great to see you guest hosting today. Thank you for joining.
Thanks for having me. It's always fun to do this.
One of my favorite people to talk to and debate, although I'm a little anxious because you did
write a book about how to win every argument that I believe is coming out in paperback soon. So I'm
worried I'm going to get brutalized here in this debate.
When have you and I ever argued about anything, Tommy?
Yes. It's funny. People probably think we're too chummy or cozy now, but you should look at our
conversations about drones in the Obama administration if you want to see it get a
little spicier. On today's show, we're going to talk about what the Biden administration's record
on Gaza means for Biden's support here at home and in the critical state of Michigan. We will
talk about what a smart US approach would look like in Gaza and how Ukraine funding complicates things.
We'll also talk about what's happening with House Republicans' train wreck of impeachment efforts.
And in case you missed it, Donald Trump tells Laura Ingraham that he is America's Alexei Navalny.
Seems like an apt comparison, right? No problems there?
I mean, he's still alive.
He is still alive. He's still alive.
But Mehdi, let's start with Gaza because you have a fantastic
piece out in The Guardian today arguing that President Biden could end the war in Gaza right
now with a phone call. You point to an example of President Reagan in 1982 who stopped Israel's
bombing of Beirut with a phone call. Can you give us sort of that brief history of what happened
back in 82 and how you think it applies to what's happening in Gaza today?
of what happened back in 82 and how you think it applies to what's happening in Gaza today.
So yeah, in 1982, Ronald Reagan was president of the United States, very pro-Israeli, just like Joe Biden. The Israelis were led by a very right-wing prime minister, Menachem Begin,
a former terrorist, just like today you have Benjamin Netanyahu, a very right-wing leader.
And Begin and Ariel Sharon, remember him, was his defense minister. And they go into Lebanon. We
don't have time to get into why they went into lebanon but they're in lebanon and they're bombing
beirut they're trying to defeat the plo who are hiding in tunnels tommy uh sound familiar and
they say we will not leave till we wipe them out and in process of trying to wipe them out they're
killing thousands of civilians in beirut the capital of lebanon and at one point uh the nightly
news is showing an image of a child with limbs missing. Again,
sound familiar. Ronald Reagan apparently sees this. He writes later in his memoir,
these images shocked me. And he calls Begin and he says, you need to stop this now. What we're
watching is a Holocaust. Reagan used the H word, Tommy. And Begin says, I know what a Holocaust is.
Don't, you know, don't try and lecture me, Mr. President, along those lines. And yet, 20 minutes
later, Begin rings back and says to Reagan, it's over. I've told Sharon to stop the bombing.
And the reason I opened the piece with that anecdote is because Reagan apparently put down
the phone and said to his deputy chief of staff, I didn't realize I had that kind of power. Now,
whether he meant it or not, whether it was snark, who knows. But American presidents have a lot of
power, Tommy. You know that. I know that. You know that from working in the White House. I know that from covering presidents for decades.
And the idea that Joe Biden today, and I get it, a lot of listeners of Pod Save America will say,
Joe Biden is trying. He wants to stop the war. We keep hearing leaks that he wants to cease fire.
He doesn't like Netanyahu. He's effing and blinding about Bibi. But what can we do? Israel
is upset after October the 7th,
rightly upset. It wants to take out Hamas. We don't have the leverage. And the purpose of my
piece was to say, not only do we have leverage in the form of arms and finances and diplomatic
protection, but we've always had leverage. Ronald Reagan could do it. George Bush Senior could do
it. And Joe Biden can do it too. He can make that call. And one of the things I
cite in the piece is Israeli officials have said openly, we can't do this without America.
Defense Minister Gallant, early on in the conflict, when he was asked, why are you letting aid in by
his own right-wing backbenchers? He said, the Americans told us to. What are we supposed to
say? No. Yitzhak Brick, a very top Israeli general, told me, he said, if they turn off the tap,
everyone knows we can't carry on fighting.
So the Israeli military officials are saying we need the Americans.
And yet our government is not saying, all right, then do what we tell you to.
And that leads you to the very unfortunate conclusion that the Biden administration doesn't want to stop the fighting.
It's not that it can't, it's that it won't.
So I think, look, I first of all, I share your enormous frustration with how Gaza is being handled by the Biden administration.
We can get into some of the policies we think would make things better in a minute.
But I think the argument's a little bit overstated.
I think it's somewhere between, you know, we can't do anything in one phone call.
And my argument would be I think Israel today is very different than 1982, just because of decades of economic growth, and frankly, decades of US military assistance that has made them increasingly
less reliant on the US. But I think the bigger problem for Biden here would be Bibi Netanyahu,
because for those who don't know, Netanyahu is only in power because he cobbled together a
coalition of some of the most odious, right-wing, racist ministers
in Israeli politics. And some of those ministers, a guy named Itamar Ben-Gavir, could topple his
coalition government at any time. And so what Netanyahu is primarily worried about is if they
withdraw support for the coalition and he has to face an election. Netanyahu's party, the Likud, would get crushed, according to polls.
He'd lose the PM job and he would lose any future hope of using his power as prime minister to get immunity for the many crimes he has committed and is facing prosecution for.
I think you are absolutely right that Biden pressed Netanyahu to stop bombing Gaza back in 2021.
It was reported in books that he said, all right, you're out of runway.
We got to stop this.
And they stopped within days.
And Netanyahu was gone from office within a month.
That's exactly right.
I do think, though, the security situation and the politics are changed after October 7th.
There was a recent poll by the Israel Democracy Institute.
A recent poll by the Israel Democracy Institute found that about half of Israelis would oppose the deal to end the war in Gaza if it included the establishment of a Palestinian state and
peace agreements with other Arab countries.
Another poll found that 72% of respondents agreed with the statement that, quote,
the entry of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip must be stopped until the Israeli prisoners
are released.
I say all of that not because I think it should impact what the US does or what you and
I think is right or wrong, but just to acknowledge that there's a scenario where Biden trying to tell
Netanyahu what to do and then Netanyahu telling him off ends up being good politics for Bibi.
And maybe there's a scenario where Bibi goes around Biden to Congress and get some sort of
veto-proof bill passed of assistance.
So look, I think there's a lot more that Biden can and should be doing. But I think there are
some limits to our leverage. So let me say two things. One is on the specific Israel example.
I think, as I pointed out in the piece, I point out not just Israeli officials, but people like
Bruce Riedel, who worked for four presidents, saying, no, no, we have lots of leverage, and we don't use that leverage, not because it's
complicated, not because Netanyahu can go around us, but because of domestic political reasons.
Absolutely.
That we don't want to use. That's one issue. So, you know, that, and you mentioned 2021,
Biden literally called Netanyahu and said, stop this, and it worked. So that you, at some point,
we have to ask the question, how much this is about Biden and not about Netanyahu? Uncomfortable question, I know, for a lot of the listeners.
And number two, I would say just on a general point, not just about Israel, Tommy, and you
and I have discussed this before, sometimes there's value just in the fight, right? We have
a president right now whose poll numbers aren't so great, who is getting beaten up on all sides by
members of his own party, by members of the media, and by, of course, the Republican Party. And sometimes there is value in the fight. Netanyahu
is not a popular figure. If Biden picks a fight with him and Netanyahu tries to go to Congress,
tries to go to Speaker Johnson or even Chuck Schumer, I don't think that's bad politically
for Biden in an election year where actually cozying up to Netanyahu could cost him states
like Michigan, could cost him a lot of young voters, people of color, Arab American voters. So I think there's a moral reason and a strategic
reason to put pressure on Israel to end this morally unsustainable and strategically disastrous
war. But I also think there's domestic political reasons why picking a fight with Netanyahu is far
from a bad thing to do. Yeah, I'm in violent agreement with you there. So some things I'd love to see. I mean,
to your point about Biden's approach to date, they have had this approach that's called the
hug BB strategy, where basically Biden says he'll disagree with Netanyahu privately,
but they don't want to show any daylight in terms of public messaging. And that included
Biden literally jumping on a plane, flying to Israel, giving Netanyahu a hug on the tarmac.
It's become this sort of iconic image. I think we need to, I thought that approach was a mistake
from the beginning because not because I think poorly of Joe Biden, because I think incredibly
poorly of Bibi Netanyahu. He's a corrupt, racist, bad leader who, you know, a year ago was trying to
shred the Israeli judicial system, right? You had literally millions of protesters on the street
every single weekend protesting him. He alsommy wants a trump presidency like they're not hiding this
stuff like ben they say it out loud a moment ago said if trump was in office we'd be able to do
whatever we want and netanyahu clearly is counting down the days to a trump presidency so the idea
that biden is helping a guy who has always undermined democratic presidents you remember
bill clinton famously emerged for a meeting with netanyahu and said, who the F is the superpower here?
Barack Obama was humiliated by Netanyahu, who turned up and undermined his Iran negotiations in Congress on American soil.
He failed on that front, but you know.
But tried to, you know.
He was a real pain in the ass, that's for sure.
Went to Congress and tried to undermine the US president. So this idea that Biden, Obama, Clinton should try and appease a man who has always tried to undermine them in party political terms seems to me absurd from a domestic political calculation. worst, you know, a former UN official told the BBC this week, Tommy, that the kill rate in Gaza, by his calculation,
the kill rate, the rate of killings is higher than in any episode of violence or conflicts
since Rwanda, right? That is where we are right now, where former UN officials are pointing out
what the death toll looks like right now. 30,000 people, which is a conservative estimate,
killed in just over four months.
So in that moment, you know, put aside all the nonsense
about whatever friendship you had.
Put aside whatever nonsense.
Yes, he's a Zionism in his gut,
and we can have that debate later about Zionism.
But just from a personal standpoint,
as president of the United States,
what is he doing here?
What is he achieving here?
What is he getting here?
Even if I wasn't pro-Palestinian, forget your politics in the Middle East. I just don't get it from a political, domestic political situation. What is going, it's election year. Do we want this really happening in November? Does he think he can win with this happening in November?
The Hamas, the Gaza health ministry's estimates are 30,000 people are dead.
I saw the UN has suggested that it might be as many as 100,000 when you consider people who are missing or unaccounted for or confirmed dead.
And so I agree with you.
There's a moral imperative here.
And I also think there is increasingly a growing domestic strategic imperative to put some
space and pressure on the Israeli government.
Look, I do wonder if early on when this conflict started, if Biden could have said, look, we'll work with you, we'll back you, but you've got to get rid of,
you know, Itamar Ben-Gavir, some of these right-wing ministers. I do think like the U.S.
should be conditioning assistance to Israel at a bare minimum so that, you know, the IDF has to
adhere to international law and limit civilian casualties. Some people have gone further than
that. Bernie Sanders has suggested that we should condition U.S. military assistance to say
Israel must also make progress towards a Palestinian state. I think the U.S. needs to
stop vetoing every call for a ceasefire at the U.N. It happened again this week. I did see,
Mehdi, that Al Jazeera reported that the U.S. has drafted a U.N. resolution calling for a
temporary ceasefire, the release of hostages, and it overtly states that we oppose a ground offensive in Rafah. So I think that's a good step.
And listen, to folks listening who think this is bias against Israel, I just want to say
the reason I support this set of policy guidelines or proposals is because I think it will save
innocent Palestinian lives in Gaza. But I also think a negotiated ceasefire is
the only way to get the remaining hostages back alive. And I think that getting the two parties
into a political process that will solve the underlying tensions that fuel this cycle of
violence year after year after year is the only way to get to a durable peace. You cannot kill
every member of Hamas. You cannot kill an idea. The Israeli military are saying you cannot kill every member of hamas you cannot kill an idea the israeli military are
saying you cannot kill every member of hamas and you cannot defeat hamas in this way these members
of the israeli war cabinet are saying this and let's not forget for listeners in america families
of the hostages are saying please get our family members out alive and this conflict do a deal and
the vast majority of hostages who have been released
were released in that very brief temporary ceasefire that happened, temporary halt of
fighting that happened back in, when was it, November. Something like 99% of the hostages
have been released in that way. How many of the Israelis saved, rescued through military action?
Two, three? How many did they kill? We're now hearing numbers that they may have killed up to
10, 15, 20 in the Israeli press of their own hostages through airstrikes. And we
know about the three they shot dead who were carrying white flags. So it's been a disaster
even for Israeli innocents, this war. Let's be clear about that. Yeah. And listen, I can't even
imagine how hard this is if you are a progressive Israeli who feels like, you know, you were like
months ago, you were on the
streets protesting the Netanyahu government. And now you're stuck with these guys leading this war
effort that is a moral and strategic disaster. Like I have enormous empathy for people in Israel
who feel like October 7th was yesterday. That wound has not come close to healing. I have
enormous empathy for Jews around the world who are scared as incidents of antisemitism rise up. But I do
think that getting a ceasefire, getting to a negotiated settlement that gets the hostages back
is the best way to create a durable peace for everyone involved here.
One quick thing before we go to break, we have some great stuff planned for members of the
Friends of the Pod community here at Crooked. So on Friday, February 23rd, the host of the
excellent new Crooked series, Dissonant at the Doorstep, will host an AMA to answer all of your questions about the series.
If you haven't listened to Dissident at the Doorstep, you are missing out. It is on the
Pod Save the World feed. You can listen to it right now. It's the incredible story of a blind
Chinese human rights activist who escapes house arrest, makes it to the U.S. embassy in China,
and ultimately to the United States after President Obama negotiated his release, and then a few years later winds up at the January 6th insurrection
chanting away. Just an unbelievable story. If you're not a member of the Friends of the Pod
community, you have time. Go to crooked.com slash friends to join and to learn more. I do want to turn to the domestic politics you mentioned, Mehdi.
One place it's clear is in Michigan.
Michigan has a large Arab American and Muslim American population.
The state's primary is on February 27th.
There's a bunch of Democrats in Michigan, including Rashida Tlaib and the mayor of Dearborn,
who are encouraging Michiganders to vote uncommitted, so not vote for Biden, but to write in uncommitted.
We talked with an activist organizer and former Cori Bush staffer named Abbas Alawia about the uncommitted movement.
He was also a part of a meeting that recently happened in Michigan with some senior members of President Biden's national security team.
Here's a clip.
Part of what this movement is coming out of is people have been calling the representatives.
They've been calling the White House.
They've been protesting in the streets.
They've been shutting down highways.
And Biden still doesn't seem to be hearing us. So you know what? If you won't hear us when we are calling our
representatives or when we are protesting in the streets, maybe you'll hear us when we show you
that we've got some votes of people who you can count out. So Biden's 2020 margin of victory
in Michigan was 154,000 votes. According to NPR, Michigan is home to about 200,000 registered
voters who are Muslim and 300,000 people who claim ancestry from the Middle East and North Africa.
If enough of those voters just stay home in November, they don't have to vote for Trump.
They could just stay home.
It could have an enormous impact.
Mehdi, what do you think of this uncommitted movement in Michigan?
And what are you hearing from Arab-American and Muslim-American friends about Gaza and
what it means for their vote in this
upcoming election and what it might take to get them back if they're leaving the Democratic Party
because of the policy. Tommy, I'm so glad you guys have raised this issue today because
it's a huge issue. I've been warning about this issue since October 9th, 10th. I can't remember
when I started tweeting saying, this is going to be bad from a domestic political perspective.
10th. I can't remember when I started tweeting saying, this is going to be bad from a domestic political perspective. Sometimes people get very upset when they hear this. And a lot of folks
online have attacked me for even pointing this out, like shooting the messenger. Like, I think
I came back from Thanksgiving and tweeted, I met a bunch of Muslim family members and friends,
not a single one is voting for Biden. And these are all ex-Biden voters, and people got very upset.
I know a lot of people in Dearborn, including Abdullah Hamoud, the mayor of Dearborn,
and not a single one is going to vote for Biden, they say right now.
Now, the uncommitted strategy that Abbas, who I also know, laid out there is exactly that.
They're not saying we're never going to vote for Biden.
They're saying we're trying to put pressure on Biden to come around with the political tool that we have.
This is a democracy.
And I think that is a
legitimate strategy. No one is saying, go vote Trump. No one is saying they're all the same.
They're saying, President Biden, can you hear us? And my worry is he's not hearing them. I've been
I mentioned to people at the White House a while ago, what are you doing about Georgia? I spoke to
a Democratic Party official just this week who said, well, you know, we're trying our best,
but we also believe we can still win Michigan without that vote. That's a risky strategy, given how close the votes have
been in not just Michigan, by the way, Tommy, big Muslim and Arab American populations in Georgia,
in the Atlanta area, very, very narrow margin of victory there. Wisconsin, less so in Pennsylvania.
So it's a real issue. And the question then then becomes how do you engage the voters and my worry
is a lot of white liberals who i interact with a lot of elected democrats just say but what about
trump what about the muslim ban yeah that doesn't work right and and abdullah hamoud wrote a
wonderful piece for the new york times this week i urge everyone to read it and he says he says look
when people come to me as the mayor of dearborn and say i lost 80 80 members of my family, which people have come and told him, right?
There are people who have lost dozens and dozens of family members in Gaza.
You can't say to them, yeah, but Trump would have got 100 dead.
That just doesn't work.
You cannot insult them and say, well, what about the Muslim ban?
They don't care about the Muslim ban if they've lost 80 members of their family.
So you need to meet people where they are, understand the pain and grief that they're going through.
One of the criticisms of Biden is he's this great empath,
the comforter in chief.
We haven't seen that much empathy for Arab American communities.
We didn't even get a mention of the Palestinian death toll
when he did his 100-day statement about the war in Gaza.
So we need to see a much more empathy,
but also on a policy position,
understand where these people are coming from
and understand why they're doing what they're doing.
Don't just dismiss them as,
oh, this is 2016 lefties again,
or this is people who, you know,
Turkey's voting for Christmas.
They don't know how bad it's going to be with Trump.
They know, but people are hurting right now.
And that has to be the starting point.
A lot of people in Michigan are hurting
from direct connection to loved ones who they've lost.
And therefore the administration has to work out what are they going to offer.
And if they're going to say nothing, then take your chances in November.
I'm super stressed about Michigan.
Yeah, I do want to just re-emphasize the point you just made,
which is if you see someone talking about this issue on social media,
please don't reply to them.
Enjoy the Muslim ban.
You cannot scold someone
out of caring about the death of innocent lives, about their family, of children. I mean, I think
we need to approach this issue and any issue with empathy and try to listen to people. And the
reason, you know, Mehdi, we mentioned at the top, President Biden sent John Feiner, his deputy
national security advisor, Samantha Power, the head of USAID, who's a genocide scholar, to Michigan to meet with Abbas and other members of the community
in Michigan. John Feiner was very clear that they realized they have made mistakes when it comes to
messaging. John said in this meeting, an audio recording of it leaked out to the New York Times
and other places. John said, we have left a very damaging impression based on what has been
a wholly inadequate public accounting for how much the president, the administration, and the country values the lives of Palestinians.
He also said there was no excuse for the release of that White House statement you just mentioned around the 100-day of the war mark that did not address or acknowledge the loss of Palestinian life.
I have noticed in Biden's comments since that meeting that he has put much more emphasis on
the empathy part of it. I do think that there's a lot of work to do still on the policy like we
talked about. So he spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast and he talked about Palestinians who've
lost their homes and lost their lives and the grief that people are going through both here
and abroad. That was important. Obviously, the problem is that we are helping contribute to
that grief. Let's be very clear. We are complicit in Israel's war on Gaza.
They could not do what they do without American weapons.
Biden has gone around Congress, I think, twice now to get those weapons sent faster.
When Trump did it in Yemen, Democrats were up in arms.
I'm glad to see some Democrats trying to be consistent, say, let's not do that with Israel.
But look, yeah, empathy is at the center of this.
If you talk to a lot of Arab Americans and Palestinian Americans, they do feel dehumanized. They do feel like their lives don't
count. They do feel like they're not getting the same attention or concern as American citizens or
as American citizens of Arab and Palestinian descent. And that is a problem. And Joe Biden,
as I say in my Guardian piece, this is a guy who lost two children. This is a guy who lost his wife.
This is a man who's always been famous, rightly so, for showing empathy, being able to help ordinary people with their grief. And yet we haven't seen
that with the Palestinian American community. I know some of the five Muslims who went to the
White House a few months ago to talk to Biden about this, and they said he was very different
than private. He was very apologetic for denying the Palestinian death toll. Tommy, remember he
did that at the beginning of the conference? He meant to say Hamas, and he said, I don't believe
the Palestinians. It's an outrageous thing to say. He, remember he did that at the beginning of the conference? Yes, early on, yes. He meant to say Hamas, and he said, I don't believe the Palestinians. It's an outrageous
thing to say. He's never publicly withdrawn that remark or apologized. Great for John
Finer to say it, but let's be honest, Tommy, nobody knows who John Finer is. Has to come
from the top. Truman, buck stops here, et cetera. It has to be Joe Biden making these
amends and trying to reach out to American citizens who are, as I say, genuinely hurting
because they are witnessing what they believe to be, and are, as I say, genuinely hurting because they are witnessing
what they believe to be and what I believe to be a genocide in the Middle East that the United
States is complicit in. I also think it's worth mentioning that this is not just a challenge
for Biden within Arab American and Muslim American communities. I think you're increasingly seeing
concern with younger voters. My friend Peter Hamby has a great piece out today for Puck, where he looks at
some exclusive polling about voter sentiment about the upcoming election. One very concerning finding
is that among black voters and voters between the age of 18 to 29, they are considerably more likely
to feel like the outcome of a Trump versus Biden election will have no difference for them
personally. They just are like, they're completely apathetic. And obviously, you know, for, for political addicts like you and
me and listeners of the show, that makes you want to pull your hair out. It's maddening,
but I do think it speaks to a broader lack of faith in a political system, uh, that provides
a headwind for Democrats because we're the party that believes in government and believes that
government can do things to help people. And Republicans overtly say things like, no, I want
to drown government in the bathtub. I want to make it that small. I mean, nihilism helps the
Republicans, right? If we can create an atmosphere of nihilism in this country, that helps one party,
the party that doesn't believe in improving people's lives and doesn't believe in using
the government to do so. So of course, the Republicans love cynicism. They love nihilism, they love pessimism, they love all of that stuff. They
love depressing turnout, as we know. And you're right, it's not just young voters, it's black
voters. The New York Times ran a piece recently from a bunch of black pastors in Georgia who said
the lack of a ceasefire is a real problem for us with our congregations. This is a moral issue
for us in Georgia. That wasn't Muslims in mosques, that was Christians in churches. So it is a
problem across the board, and intersectionality is a real thing
Even if the right don't like that word
one member of Congress told me right at the beginning of this conflict that they had a meeting scheduled with a bunch of young climate
Change activists in their office and they when they rang them when they called them say what is it still happening?
They're like we don't give an F about climate change right now. We only care about Gaza, right?
So a lot of these young activist groups, they are all interconnected if you care care about climate change, you will tend to care about Gaza. You tend to care
about police violence. These issues are interconnected. And therefore, you need a kind
of offering across the board that engages with young voters. And you've got to do the right thing.
So my worry is all of these things meld together and just hurt Biden across the board. And the
Democrats need to realize this point. A lot of the people I hear complaining about Biden's Gaza policy, they're now saying
stuff like, and he's really old and he falls over. Because of course, once you go down the TikTok or
Instagram or Twitter rabbit hole of being anti someone, the algorithm serves you up everything
else. So it becomes very easy to lose a voter on one issue, and then they're anti you on everything.
That's very easy in our social media age, sadly. Yeah, it is. What I think I want to talk about,
speaking of the social media age, Mehdi, so there was a report in Semaphore recently about how a
DC-based PR firm with very close ties to the Biden administration has been, you know, policing
press coverage of the war in Gaza, including going as far as researching tweets that journalists sent
back when they were in college,
like back in 2008, 2009, 2011. You are on the front lines, you know, talking about this stuff
every day and have been for a long time, the front lines of social media, of Twitter. Can you talk
about the pressure that you and other journalists feel both internally at news organizations,
but also on social media when it comes to covering the Middle East in particular?
And how do you avoid being intimidated while also trying to listen to feedback and genuinely be
balanced in your coverage? It's such an important question. And right now, I know and you know that
there are many journalists who are very concerned about the pressure that's being applied, about the
sensitivities of this conflict. And let's just be very clear. We have the Israeli government has a lot of supporters in Congress,
has a lot of supporters in the media,
has a lot of supporters in activist groups on K Street.
There is a quote-unquote pro-Israel lobby,
which does apply pressure on media organizing.
If you've worked like I have, both in American media, British media,
you've seen the emails from honestreporting.com and Camera
and some of these groups your listeners may never have heard of.
But I'll tell you what, every newsroom has heard of these groups because they get badgered into why is your headline this and why is your report showing bias?
And as you say, why do they tweet this?
In this recent case, it's Louisa Lovelock, who is a British journalist at The Washington Post.
It's a fantastic Middle East correspondent.
It's covered Syria, covered Iraq, covered Gaza, covered a bunch of things.
It's so absurd, the dossier they've produced against her. Tommy, one of the things they go
after is, she took part in student protests at university in England against tuition fees.
And? A, that's a bad thing. B, that means she can't cover Israel's bombing of Gaza. It's so
absurd, the stuff that they pull out. With me, of course, I've had stuff going back 20, 30 years that they've thrown at me.
And it's a real problem where people get intimidated into not saying, not speaking what they want to speak about.
And, you know, we live in a world where the right is obsessed about cancel culture and free speech.
When, let's be very clear, the greatest victims of quote-unquote cancel culture in this country have always been Palestinian activists, both on campus, in the media, in politics. I mean, let's just be clear,
Tommy, we have a Congress filled with white supremacists. We have a guy, I think Andy Ogles
from Tennessee this week, who was caught on tape saying, kill them all, right? None of these guys
get any attention, no votes of censure. Who is the only member of Congress who's been censured
since October the 7th? The one Palestinian woman.
So let's just be very clear who the victims of quote-unquote cancel culture
and suppression and intimidation are.
It tends to be people who speak out on behalf of Palestinians.
And that's the case with reporters who aren't even taking positions.
They're just reporting what they're seeing.
And what they're seeing, of course, is not favorable to the Israeli narrative.
Because what they're seeing is mass starvation. What they're seeing are mass killings. What they're
seeing are kids being pulled out from the rubble. And of course, that doesn't help the Israeli
narratives. You have firms like, what is it? What's it called? SKD, I can't remember the name
of the firm. Anita Dunn, top advisor to Biden, used to work at a bunch of Biden people used to
work there. Let me ask you this, Tommy, do you believe as someone who's ex-administration,
do you believe it would be helpful for our democracy? We talked about
the system and people being disillusioned with the system. If we could have clearer barriers
between the private sector and the public sector, between people working in government and people
working in PR. Yeah, I mean, it's hard to know how it would apply to PR. I do think that, yes,
some sort of brighter line cooling off period like we have with ethics and lobbying reform could apply. I haven't thought
deeply about how it applied to PR firms in full disclosure. I mean, I left government and started
a speech writing firm with Jon Favreau before we started selling underwear ads for a living. So I'm
probably complicit here. I did read that. Tommy, don't write off the power of the underwear lobby.
Tommy John is a powerful lobby. You don't want to the power of the underwear lobby. Obama's failure to put out a statement about an Egyptian election was deplorable. And I was like, I think that's almost terminally dorky, but I don't really find a ton of bias in this dossier
here. But I do think, look, this issue in particular is one where people think if they
speak out, they'll get slapped down. And I think it leads to caution and inaction and a lack of courage, both in media circles, but also among government staffers, because I know that I could never, ever be confirmed for some sort of State Department job ever again, based on what I've said about Netanyahu alone.
And there's a lot of people that are just not going to make that decision. Tell me, forget state department.
Recently, there was a Muslim judge who was up for a judgeship and went before the
Senate a few weeks ago.
And Tom Cotton,
was it Tom Cotton or Josh Hawley?
I interchange all those freaks.
And one of them,
one of them said,
I think it was con said,
you know,
what do you think of?
Um,
yes,
like a poem,
Zionism,
two States.
I can't remember what it was.
It was something about Israel. And the judge was like, I'm a judge in America. Nobody cares about my views on that
issue. Why are you asking me that? Like, that's the point we've reached now where you have those
kind of theatrics in the Senate. You have Elise Stefanik in the House accusing every college
president of being an anti-Semite. Meanwhile, she pushes great replacement theory. I mean,
the use and abuse of anti-Semitism to shut down critics of Israel is also part of the problem here, which is why a lot of reporters rightly don't want to be called anti-Semitic, don't want to be deemed bigots.
So that also leads to kind of chilling atmosphere around free speech on this issue.
And of course, we should speak out against anti-Semitism wherever we see it.
And there is a lot of it around, sadly, right now, including in the media.
But that doesn't mean you can just not have reporters saying what they need to say about what's happening in the Middle East.
That, for me, is a fundamental problem problem and it's a real free speech industry
we have republicans trying to pass laws banning american businesses from being able to boycott
israel you don't have to support a boycott of israel but the idea that an american business
owner can't make that decision on their own is absurd yeah i mean look anti-semitism is a real
problem anti-semitism is a growing problem especially since october 7th it's something'm quite worried about. I think we all should be calling out and highlighting. I think the thing that people can't let happen is the conflation of anti-Semitism with criticism of Israeli government policies. You are not anti-American if you think that Trump's Muslim ban is bad. You are criticizing a platform or a policy put forward by a leader.
Those are very different things.
And I think when defenders of Israel call criticism of Israel anti-Semitic, they are actually putting Jews at risk because they are conflating the two.
And they're making people feel like you can take out all your anger about the Israeli government and what it's doing in Gaza on some guy who lives down
the street from you who wears a yarmulke. And that is very, very dangerous. Let's not forget also
some of the most eloquent, passionate, and principled opponents in the streets against
the war in the Middle East since October 7th are groups like JVP, Jewish Voice for Peace,
if not now, a young Jewish activist group. These are Jewish Americans. They are not anti-Semites.
not now, a young Jewish activist group. These are Jewish Americans. They are not anti-Semites.
The leading opponent of sending more money to Netanyahu is a Jewish senator named Bernie Sanders. Yep, yep. Mehdi, complicating the policy discussion about what to do about Gaza
is the fact that aid to Israel is part of a broader bill that also includes desperately
needed aid for Ukraine. So the Senate passed this supplemental funding bill with 70 votes, overwhelming bipartisan
support that you don't often see these days.
But Speaker Johnson over on the House side is too scared to bring it to the floor for
a vote because, I don't know, Marjorie Taylor Greene might get him ejected from his job.
He's the coward.
So there's also progressive Democrats who say they won't vote for the supplemental bill
because aid
to Israel doesn't include some of the conditions we talked about earlier. By the way, this is why
being in the House of Representatives sucks. You don't get to vote on clean bills. You have to get,
you know, these things kind of squished together for, you know, political value. What do you think
the right move is here? You're a principled person. You want to support Ukraine. You're
also concerned about what's happening in Gaza. Like what the hell do you do if you're a member
of the House? It's a great question. And three Democrats in the Senate,
of course, oppose this. Peter Welch and Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Jeff Merkley. And they
said their reasons. Their reasons are right now in this moment, we can't have $14 billion of extra
aid. We already give every year three to four billion dollars of military and
economic aid to Israel, to a country that is accused, let's remind our listeners, of a plausible
genocide by the International Court of Justice. That is what is at stake right now. And I think,
for me, it's a no-brainer. I understand the importance of funding aid to Ukraine. I'm not
someone who is soft on Putin, but I think right now, we need our best
minds in government to find a way to fund Ukraine without funding Netanyahu's war in Gaza, which,
as I say, the top court in the world says could be a genocide. I think history will judge us very
harshly if we continue voting for aid, if our elected representatives continue voting for aid
to a government that is accused of war crimes, whose ministers are talking openly about ethnic cleansing. I think that's a real problem. And I,
you know, if we were, if it was just the occupation, which is bad enough, like if it was
pre-October 7th, maybe we could have some debate about, well, you know, the pros and cons of
Ukraine aid versus Israel. I think in the middle of this right now, where we're not even ensuring
a ceasefire or using any kind of leverage, I think it a real problem and i think as i say i think in years to come this will be like the iraq war
where now everyone's like of course everyone wants to say they opposed iraq you'll never find anyone
who says they defended iraq apart from john bolton but everyone else is like we never supported iraq
and i think this what i think that's what gaza is going to look like in 5 10 15 years from now
so i appreciate what bernie sanders and p and Peter Welch and Jeff Murtley did,
as difficult as it is.
And I'm sure in our labyrinthine process that we have in Senate and House,
we can find another way.
We have to find another way to get the right aid to Ukraine.
The reality is the American public, if you poll them,
how supportive are they of either?
That's the reality.
American voters will look at this stuff stuff and they are kind of,
what about us? What about the money at home? And I'm not saying that's right or wrong,
but I mean, that is the political context during an election.
Yeah. That kind of America first nationalist argument is exactly what you're hearing from
the MAGA Republicans. It's a powerful one, both currently and historically and in other countries.
I was surprised and kind of heartened by a recent Pew poll
that found 74% of Americans view the war in Ukraine
as important to U.S. national interests
and 59% said it was important to them personally.
So that did make me think maybe they would be more open to aid than I thought.
I mean, maybe you're, you know.
And I have the polls to hand on,
but there's also polling showing a lot of Americans support aid to Israel with conditions.
Yes, yes.
And don't forget, that's what US law says.
That's what the Leahy law says, that you can't just give aid willy-nilly to foreign militaries
who are accused of committing war crimes.
Yeah, and sometimes people talk about this in terms of, well, we shouldn't single out
Israel.
The point you're making is very important here, which is conditioning aid to say you
have to follow international law would be what we do with every other country. Very briefly on that singling out, I just want
to say one thing. If Donald Trump were president right now, tell me, God help us all. I think you'd
see a lot of liberals, a lot of Democrats much more upset about the war in Gaza, and they would
be much more supportive of conditions on aid because they would see this as a Trump, Netanyahu
thing. And we saw that when he was supporting Saudi Arabia. There was a big support to get conditions
on aid to Saudi Arabia and arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the killings. Remember, they passed
a resolution in the Senate on the War Powers Act. And that is the reality right now. We're not
singling out Israel. If Israel was any other country and we were in a different place, we
would say, wow, what the hell are we doing here? Why are we supporting this? And that's what we want. We just want some
consistency on human rights grounds. And you don't want to let partisanship sort of swamp
the security and moral interests here. Last Friday, we learned a great setup for the Trump
piece of this. So we learned that a Russian opposition leader named Alexei Navalny had
been killed. Navalny was being held in a Russian penal colony in the
Arctic Circle when he died. Putin tried to poison Navalny several times before throwing him in jail
for 30 years on trumped up charges. So we should all assume that this was just a state sanctioned
murder of Alexei Navalny. Now that everyone listening knows that context, I want you to hear
a clip from President Trump at a Fox News town hall last night. President, the crowd's going
crazy here, but during this campaign, a huge amount of your
time has been spent in court, in the courtroom in New York and so forth. Now, in this New York
civil fraud case, this Judge Arthur Engeron ruled against you for almost half a billion dollars,
plus interest that runs every day. When I first read this, like $87,000 a day.
How would you put up that kind of money?
Because you have a bond to put up.
Even if you appeal, you've got to put up escrow money.
That's a lot of dough.
It's a form of Navalny.
It is a form of communism or fascism.
How could it be Navalny and communism and fascism i feel like that's
that doesn't quite work i mean it's it's unlike trump to speak in an incoherent manner
historical or or english sentence um i mean maga i made this point recently on social media
maga want to have their cake and eat it they want trump to be putin and the victim of putin at the
same time he'll play anyone going right in going, right? And also,
this whole Navalny comparison is so absurd. Anytime something happens abroad, Newt Gingrich
jumps up and says, this is what's happening to Trump. It's like, no, it's not. If only Merrick
Garland worked for Vladimir Putin, if only he had an attorney general who refused to do what needed
to be done in the time frame that he had.
Trump is the luckiest man in the world.
He incited an insurrection.
Then the next guy came in and said, let's look forward, not back.
And the next guy appointed attorney general who said, let's not go after Donald Trump too obviously.
And now we're in an election year and none of the trials might be concluded or even start before people get to vote.
So this idea that he's like Navalny is absurd absurd he's actually the luckiest accused criminal i've ever
come across um and teflon trump continues to dodge prosecution look navalny was almost certainly
killed i mean the russian defense is that he died what was it he sudden death syndrome you're saying
the walk just for adults as far as i'm aware it's 47 so it's absurd and
by the way on a serious note tommy there are all of republicans now who are claiming that trump is
going to get assassinated the deep state wants to kill him um and you remember and we can laugh and
but these are people who thought including trump that scalia had been assassinated and if you're
in 2016 uh when that seat or 2015 whatever, whatever it was, when that seat became
available. These people are obsessed with this stuff. So look, this is not Russia, obviously.
We have a president who's not actually involved in any of the trials, has run away from any
involvement with any prosecutions of Trump. And again, to go back to the Russia issue,
I was never a big kind of, to quote unquote, Russiagate, as the right person.
I was never somebody who thought the biggest problem with Donald Trump's presidency
was that he was an agent of Russia.
But I always did wonder, how come the guy who slams everyone on Earth,
calls everyone an insult and a nickname, never says anything about Putin?
How come he never, ever, like, find me one statement where he insults, belittles.
He even mocked Kim Jong-un as Little Rocket Man before he fell in love with him.
It's true.
Putin, nothing.
Nada.
Not from before presidency, not during presidency, not since.
And even now with Navalny, refuses to say anything critical of Putin.
So for me, that's always been a problem that nags away at me.
Yeah.
And the irony here is that Navalny you know built his career fighting corruption exposing
corruption from people like Dmitry Medvedev who was the former president of Russia or Vladimir
Putin uh but you're you know you're right to call out the people who think Trump will be assassinated
because people who believe things like that will do things like January 6th and it's it's worrisome
well Tucker Carlson who is kind of wants to be Trump's VP. Yes, he was asked in Dubai, I think, you know, he flies from one oasis of democracy to another. And he said, he sat there and they said to him about, you know, you didn't bring up all the killings under Putin when you did your interview with him. And he said, Well, you know, every leader has to kill people. And it's like, that is now the mindset on the right. Like, this is not your Ronald Reagan's Republican Party. This this is the body that just says and remember trump said that to bill o'reilly like you think we're
not killers and in one sense as a lefty i would say i'm glad people are bringing up the fact that
we've killed a lot of innocent people but the idea that republicans now just go around saying
it's fine for foreign dictators to assassinate people because because merrick garland's coming
after our guy i mean they're not the same thing.
Yeah, because Trump cheated on his taxes.
Well, I want to ask you about Tucker Carlson.
So he went to Moscow, he interviewed Putin.
He forgot to ask about Navalny,
but he did have time to film some propaganda videos about the subway being nice and about the grocery stores.
Do you think Tucker Carlson uses a subway in this country?
No, no, no.
He's black cars only for the last 30 years.
I would love your point, your take on this. I don't really have a problem with interviewing Vladimir Putin.
I do think like, if you're going to do it, you do it right. Like don't throw the guy softballs
in the middle of a war. You're known for doing really tough interviews. People often retweet
the videos of them and wonder why the hell did this person agree to go on many show?
What's your philosophy on interviewing a bad actors like a Vladimir Putin?
So totally we should a Vladimir Putin?
So totally, we should interview Vladimir Putin. How could we not? And the lie that Tucker told in that video that he did announcing the interview was that nobody else, nobody wants to interview
him. That's why I came here, which is, which even Putin's spokesman said, that's not true.
We turn down interview requests from the West every day. Like even Putin's own spokesman disowned
Tucker Carlson's nonsense. So of course people want to interview him it's how you interview him it's not in a kind of friendly chatty sycophantic way
and we've seen trump's in we've seen tucker's interview with trump was very sycophantic and
with putin and look if i was interviewing vladimir putin and by the way putin has now told other
interviewers i was very disappointed with this interview. I thought it would be more challenging. Imagine Vladimir Putin mocking you and saying,
you were too soft on me.
So good.
Right?
That's just, I mean, take that to your epitaph.
For me, what I find fascinating about Vladimir Putin is
he's taken some interesting stances in the past.
And like, if I sat down with Vladimir Putin,
if he ever let me do an interview, which he probably wouldn't,
you know, I would want to talk about what he's done to Ukraine
in the context of years of pontificating
about national sovereignty and borders, right?
Putin was the guy in 2003
who stood up against George W. Bush and Tony Blair
and said, you cannot invade Iraq.
That's an illegal invasion.
It's going to be a disastrous occupation
and you're violating national sovereignty.
Hello, Ukraine, 2014 and 2022.
I feel like you can have actually
a quite interesting back and
forth pushing him on the inconsistencies of an informed policy and of course he's a gaslighter
like trump you're not going to go too far with such people but i think exposing contradictions
and inconsistencies is always an important thing for interviewers to do i would love to hear that
interview i'll probably be in a cell next to poor evan who we should remember as well an american
journalist who is still being held yes uh it's's a very good point. Putin is detained,
a Wall Street Journal reporter named Evan Gershkovich. Yeah, Mehdi, if I were you and
you interviewed Putin, I would probably not drink the tea that you're offered.
I would do it via Zoom.
Yeah, good idea. Okay, we're going to take a quick break. When we come back,
we're going to talk about how impeachment is blowing up in Republicans' faces.
So Republicans went into this election season hoping to run hard on border security and the idea of the so-called Biden crime family. Lately, it seems like both of those issues are kind of
blown up in their faces. So last week, the Justice Department indicted an FBI informant named
Alexander Smirnov, who was a confidential source at the center of the Republican allegations that
President Biden benefited from Hunter Biden's business dealings in Ukraine. This is the guy
who allegedly said that Burisma, this Ukrainian natural gas company, had added Hunter to its board
to curry favor with Joe Biden and that there had been some sort of bribe or a shakedown
or something by the Bidens to get a prosecutor fired. Turns out, Mehdi, it's all fake and there's
evidence that Smirnov might be a Russian intelligence asset. In a new court filing on
Tuesday, Justice Department prosecutors alleged that Smirnov had, quote, recent and extensive
contact with Russian intelligence officials
who were involved in passing him
information about Hunter Biden.
So today, President Biden's brother,
James, is appearing before
the House Oversight Committee
and Hunter Biden is set to testify
as part of the impeachment inquiry
next week.
So, Mehdi, the whole paragraph
I just read you about this Smirnoff guy
and what a name.
It's all giving me flashbacks to 2016, 2017, the Steele dossier, the Russian interference.
You know the story.
What do you think Democrats do here?
There seems like some credible evidence of Russian involvement, but I don't want to sound
like I'm wearing a tinfoil hat again and deal with this nonsense.
Which shows you the power of Republican propaganda that even you and I sitting on Pod Save America are like, oh my God, not Russia again. Like they're so beaten into us
that the Russian thing was nothing burger when it wasn't a nothing burger, that we're now kind of
getting PTSD and getting defensive. Let's be clear. The indictment is not just from the Biden DOJ.
It's from a Trump appointed prosecutor, David Weiss, I can never pronounce his last name,
who has brought these charges
saying this is ridiculous. This guy was not a credible informant or witness. And don't forget,
the entire Republican impeachment strategy against Joe Biden depended on this guy. Like Ted Cruz,
I believe I saw someone tweet that Ted Cruz did dozens of his podcast episodes just on this guy's
allegations. James Comer called him a credible witness. Chuck Grassley, when he's not
out looking for pigeons, was citing this guy, right? They were all there, like, bigging up Smirnoff.
Remember, the FBI didn't want to give the form with this guy's evidence on it, because they said,
we don't think he's valid. Republicans insisted, give it to us, give it to us, and then built their
entire impeachment case around this guy, who the FBI said, hey, this guy's not credible. He's now
being charged. I mean, the indictment, by the way if pod save america listeners have some time tonight sit down with
a copy of the indictment because i'll tell you what i've become a fan of reading doj indictments
recently they are very well written of course you are whether they're written by david weiss or
whether they're written by jack smith there's some good stuff in there i mean going back to
like the mar-a-lago bathroom photo, I've become a fan
of DOJ indictments. Put that on my reading list. This one has a whole section, Tommy, where they
talk about Mr. Smirnoff meeting with Russian official one, who Smirnoff describes as the son
of some government minister, who apparently is in charge of assassinations abroad. Come on,
where do you get color and detail like that even in the best of novels? So Smirnoff,
the Republican's guy, is talking to a Russian official who's in charge of assassinations
abroad. I guess they have a different team for assassinations at home. But this is who he is.
And the idea that the entire Biden impeachment campaign could have been a Russian op is
hilarious. But yes, will be treated by a lot of MAGA folks as, oh, that's just another conspiracy. That's Democrats blaming Russia. But what's interesting is in the indictment,
they make it very clear this isn't just about Russian officials. It's about demonstrable
evidence of falsehoods. Like he said, Hunter Biden was in Ukraine when Hunter Biden never
went to Ukraine. He made certain specific time and date allegations which weren't true. Of course,
we've never found any evidence of $5 million going to Joe Biden. And I do want to add one thing, Tommy. I am no defender of Hunter Biden
or James Biden. I do believe they did trade off their name. I do believe they did get jobs and
contracts because they were related to Joe Biden. That's a different argument. Were Biden family
members behaving in an unseemly, morally corrupt, I don't know, financially corrupt way? Perhaps,
probably. That is not the same thing as saying the President of the United States took a bribe, in an unseemly, morally corrupt, I don't know, financially corrupt way? Perhaps. Probably.
That is not the same thing as saying the President of the United States took a bribe,
which is a big allegation, which is an impeachable allegation.
There has been zero evidence of that from the very beginning.
And the Republicans needed this dodgy dude called Smirnoff to try and make it.
And look, they don't care.
Fox are not even covering the stuff.
Sean Hannity made it the centerpiece of his programming.
They'll never do a fact check, which is why I refuse to call them fox news it's not a news channel it's
a problem yeah they're not in channel i love the idea of like you waking up in the morning
brewing some coffee just flipping through some indictments don't read that robert her one well
maybe read it it starts shitty but you know by the end we get the details yeah yeah tonight honey
which indictment from the doj should download from medley's in bed with a three ring binder
and a little flashlight.
Okay, so.
I'm just doing it on screen.
PDF, baby.
Oh, there we go.
So plan B, Matty,
since you're, as you pointed out,
they cannot find any evidence
that Joe Biden benefited financially
in any way from his son's business dealings
is impeaching the Secretary of Homeland Security,
Alejandro Mayorkas.
This was, this is like the consolation prize,
right? Who can we impeach next? Who else? What's our list? Let's go down. It's basically like
the Republicans think that they're impeaching him because they don't agree with the Biden
immigration policy, basically. The Mayorkas impeachment passed the house by one vote.
It took them two tries, but it finally passed. The presumption was it was dead in the Senate. We're now learning that a bunch of conservative
senators like Rick Scott, J.D. Vance, Ted Cruz, et cetera, they want Mitch McConnell to force a
full impeachment trial. They might have been meeting with the parliamentarian to figure out
a way to do it. So there's sort of two schools of thought, maybe, on how Democrats should handle
this. One is dismiss impeachment via procedural means, just kind of like get it off the table.
The other is call the Republicans bluff, have a trial, make the case about how absurd all of this
is. Do you have a take on what is smarter politically? I would say the first option
only because the second option only works if you're good at that kind of political trench warfare and senate democrats are not i don't have any faith i'd have any faith that the democratic
leadership or the democrats in the senate would be able to fight fire with fire in the same way
you know i just watched recently uh chris murphy who's a senator i have a lot of time for is
you know very good on a lot of issues you know he was coming out recently and praising
my republican friends in the senate and i'm always like i never hear republican senators talk about their democratic friends funny that um but look
this is a dumb thing to do by the house uh dumb is the word i think kevin kramer republican senator
used recently saying it's dumb why we can't entertain this but yes cruz mike lee the usual
suspects are pushing it people like ted cruz and mightily shouldn't even be in the senate they
should have been expelled for their role in inciting an insurrection.
The fact that people like Hawley and Cruz are even still senators,
I know we've all moved on.
I'm still mad about the fact that there was never a full ethics committee
investigation of Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz's role
in trying to overturn American democracy.
So the idea that we should take lectures from them about impeachment is absurd.
No, I would try and get rid of it.
I do not believe in this Democratic Party argument that,
hey, let's talk about immigration and talk about how we did this bipartisan bill and
they turned it down and actually we're playing 3D chess. No, sorry. You look at the polling.
Did you see the polls after that bipartisan bill failed? They said they blame Biden more than Trump
for that failure. People don't follow this stuff closely. When they think of
immigration, they think Republicans tough, Democrats weak, Republicans win, Democrats lose.
The idea that you should want to be talking about the border going into the presidential election,
and that the idea that that helps anyone other than the Republicans is mad.
I agree with you broadly. I think you need an answer on the border. And I think that the
Republicans negotiating and
then killing their own bipartisan immigration bill is that answer. And you're absolutely right.
There was some polling that came out right away that showed the majority of voters blame President
Biden for what happened, which, as you note, shows that they're just not paying attention
and they just have negative feelings about Biden. So they're blaming him for anything.
So I do think, you know, there will need to be some paid media efforts to get that message in front of voters. So they are better educated on
the issue. I do not think an impeachment hearing is going to do it. I also think the Democrats just
need to highlight how extreme Trump would be on immigration in the second term. That for me is
very important. See the post today, deportation with the military. Yes. And going back to our
earlier conversation about Michigan and Muslims, but when I talk to people who are skeptical about Biden and say, one of the things
that comes up is like, are you okay with a Trump term? And they're like, they're either not okay
with the Trump term or they'll say something like, well, we survived Trump once. We can survive him
again. And then what I do in that case, Tommy, is I lay out what's coming in Trump term two,
because Trump two is not Trump one, right? This is not a sequel
to a movie which is the same as the first movie. It is very different what is coming down the line.
It is full-blown fascism. And I'm not just saying this in a hyperbolic way as a critic. This is the
stuff they're saying, what Stephen Miller is saying, what Mike Davis is saying, what Donald
Trump is saying, what Steve Bannon is saying. And I lay out what's coming up, including massive
detention camps to sweep up people well inside the interior of this country
from day one,
the use of the Insurrection Act
to deploy the military.
So a friend of mine said recently,
well, you know, we marched against Trump,
we'll do it again.
And I said, yeah, this time
you might get shot at.
And that's, again, not hyperbole.
We know from Esper,
his former defense secretary,
that Trump said,
why can't we shoot them in the legs?
The George Floyd protest,
and he said, you can't do that, Mr. President.
Next time round, Defense Secretary Kash Patel will not said, you can't do that, Mr. President. Next time round, Defense Secretary Kash Patel will not say,
you can't do that, Mr. President.
He'll say, let's do it.
So this is what's coming down the line.
And actually, when you talk to people and explain what's coming,
actually, you do get some sense of there are persuadables.
And I think the Democrats need to be doing that full bore right now,
24-7 of what is coming from a Trump second term,
and not this whole,
my Republican friends in the Senate. It's the fascist enablers who are coming down the track.
Yes, totally agree. And luckily, Trump is kind of helping us tell that story.
He doesn't mind anything. He says it out loud every single day.
Yeah. So he did a Fox town hall last night. It was with Laura Ingram, where he was his usual
thoughtful coach himself, talking about
his legal prowess, many other things.
I was loved by billionaires.
Let's take a listen to a little supercut we did.
There's crime.
There's violent crime.
There's migrant crime.
We have a new category of crime.
It's called migrant crime.
And it's going to be worse than any other form of crime.
I have to say, I don't, this is in a very positive way.
Tim Scott, he has been much better for me than he was for himself. I watched this campaign
They come out with
Faucets where no water comes out, you know
If you go and buy a home and they know what I mean
The showers you stand under a shower and there's no water coming and you're saying you you end up standing there five times longer
If you are a male in voting you automatically have fraud if you have okay well
there's mail-in voting in florida and you won huge that's right if you have it you're going to have
sort of a uh greatest hits some new stuff i mean the greatest hits are there the shower the
obsession with showers and faucets and water pressure that is a book in itself one day we
will discover why donald trump is obsessed yeah and when people say to me, oh, Joe Biden,
he confused Sisi with the president of Mexico.
I'm like, the other guy wants to inject Clorox into your veins
and is obsessed with toilet flush levels, right?
It's insane.
You would get up and walk away from the guy on the subway,
on Tucker Carlson subway,
who talked about shower pressure incessantly.
By the way, in that clip, Tommy,
he yet again admits to crimes because he says mail-in voting is fraud. That makes him a fraudster because he voted by mail
in Florida in 2020 in the GOP primary. So once again, he can't help himself but just admit to
all sorts of wrongdoing, even on his own terms. If it's fraud, then he's a fraudster.
We're going to have to listen to a lot more of those. CNN reported that President Biden personally told his staff to be more aggressive in highlighting
the stuff Trump is saying, the inflammatory comments, et cetera.
I guess the shit I think was the crazy shit.
It's exactly which was as reported on CNN.
It's nice of Trump to make it easy for us.
So, yes, clearly they will keep doing this.
Mehdi, thank you so much for doing the show today.
It's so great to talk with you, as always.
And everyone should buy your book, Win Every Argument,
because then you can just beat everyone in your family over holidays
or whatever debate you need to do.
Or ahead of an election, if you're trying to persuade people.
Yeah, there's that one.
Yeah, there's that one.
That too.
Thank you for having me.
I look forward to coming back next week as well.
You're not going to be that easily, Tom.
Damn right.
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In a year as divisive as 2024, there's a lot to disagree about,
but something we can all get behind is Jon Stewart's return to The Daily Show.
The late night legend takes to the host chair to help us sort through news, politics, and entertainment with hilarious and satirical takes you need to survive this election season.
I watched the first one. It's great. It's great to see Jon back there, you know?
Really, he just got right back into it.
Yeah.
Like we're going back in time.
Wiser, you know?
More lines.
Hotter.
His face is the map of the world, frankly.
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