Pod Save America - “Keep your heads up.”
Episode Date: December 21, 2017Republicans celebrate passing the least popular piece of legislation in modern history, and Democrats plot their strategy to protect DREAMers and the Children’s Health Insurance Program while fundin...g the government. Then Senator Dick Durbin joins Jon and Dan to talk shutdown strategy, and Rep. Adam Schiff discusses the Republican effort to shutdown the House investigation into Russian interference.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. On the pod today, our last
Thursday pod of the year, our last live pod. We already recorded a Christmas pod that'll
show up next week. Today we're going to have the Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin. We're
going to talk to him about the DREAM Act and the shutdown politics.
And we have the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, my representative, Congressman Adam Schiff.
Stacked show today, Dan.
I know. It's trying to jam it all in before the end of the year.
Tommy also has a pod save the world coming out on Friday with Republican foreign policy expert Kori Schake.
She wrote a piece about how the Trump administration's rhetoric on North Korea sounds scarily like the pre-Iraq war rhetoric from the Bush administration.
So check that out.
Again, our holiday pod schedule is Tuesday the 26th.
We'll have a Christmas mailbag with John, Tommy, and I.
John, Tommy, and I.
And then on New Year's, around New Year's,
we're going to have our end of the year retrospective,
which will have clips from all of our favorite Pod Save America moments.
Isn't that exciting, Dan?
Yeah, that one kind of worries me
because it sort of feels like the robots
are taking over the podcasting.
Like we're going to do a podcast
and none of us have to do anything.
We recorded voiceovers on the type of clips
that we're going to have on the show,
but we haven't heard the clips yet.
So it'll be a surprise to us and a surprise to all of you.
But we ask people for their favorite moments,
so it'll reflect the will of the listeners and tweeters.
So there you go.
Unlike the United States presidential election,
this will reflect the will of the voters.
All right, let's get into it, Dan.
What a day.
So let's talk about the Donor Relief Act of 2017, which has passed.
I think there was an Onion headline said it best yesterday.
The headline was,
GOP leaders celebrate decisive win over Americans.
So with zero Democratic votes or input,
Republicans rushed through their $1.5 trillion tax cut in the dead of night.
Here is what everyone got.
Corporations got a permanent tax cut of $1 trillion,
along with new rules that encourage American companies to move jobs, manufacturing, and profits overseas in order to avoid paying taxes.
The populace over at Goldman Sachs released a
report on how this would affect the profits of various banks. Wells Fargo would gain $3.7 billion,
Bank of America $3.5 billion, Citi $1.4 billion, J.P. Morgan $3.3 billion, and Morgan Stanley
a measly $833 million. That's just the profits of banks, Dan. Well, thanks to the tax cut.
Oh, yeah, Apple.
Apple, $47 billion.
You know, those guys were hurting for cash.
I'm glad that Apple is going to get $47 billion in savings.
They needed it.
Yes, hire some people in America
and make phones with longer-lasting batteries
with your money, please.
By 2027, 83% of the total benefits
in this bill go to the top 1%. That includes a lower tax rate for millionaires and billionaires,
a lower tax rate for hedge fund managers and real estate moguls like Donald Trump and Bob Corker,
and lower tax rates for inheritances that fall between $11 million and $22 million.
for inheritances that fall between $11 million and $22 million.
See, what happened is, you know, up to $11 million,
you had your inheritance tax-free up until this bill passed.
Now, those inheritances between $11 million and $22 million,
they get a tax break, too.
They don't have to pay taxes on it.
That was a critical constituency that I'm glad this bill has taken care of.
So good for them.
So what did everyone else get?
Not much.
Most families, but not all families, will get a temporary tax cut.
Temporary tax cut.
But for the middle fifth of the population, this is people earning between $48,000 and $86,000 a year,
the average 2018 tax cut amounts to $18 per week. To put this in perspective,
foreigners who own U.S. corporate stock will get a bigger tax break from this bill than the entire working and middle class population in every state that voted for Donald Trump
combined. Combined. Some poll numbers. The latest NBC Wall Street Journal poll
from this week found that only 24% of Americans approved the tax plan. Among rural voters,
the support is 28%. Among non-college educated white voters, support is 29%. And get ready for this, only 57% of Trump voters like the bill. And only 7% of all Americans
believe it was designed to benefit the middle class. So Dan, my obvious first question to you,
was this a win for Donald Trump and the Republicans or what?
Huge win. Huge win. Passing legislation that is deeply unpopular seems like a great win
i think i have so many thoughts that like the rate my brain is just moving in a million miles
a minute with the anger and frustration that i have um and i've like i almost tried to encourage
you to do an imaginary pod with me yesterday so I could just get some of this out in advance because holding in was causing me to be an obsessive tweeter.
This is way more fun.
I know.
I know.
Trying to keep the hot takes in is hard.
It's real work.
Let's do a couple things here.
First, I don't know if it's a political win or not, frankly.
The elections in 2018 will tell us that.
History suggests that this is going to hurt more than it helps um and we can talk about
why that is in a minute but i don't give a shit about the political benefits of it i do not care
about the horatio aldra story of paul ryan former tortilla coast waiter passing his lifelong
ambition to reduce apple's tax burden by 47 billion dollars i don't care about any of that former Tortilla Coast waiter passing his lifelong ambition
to reduce Apple's tax burden
by $47 billion.
I don't care about any of that stuff.
He went from slinging margs
at a shitty Mexican restaurant
on Capitol Hill
to presiding over the greatest transfer
of wealth in U.S. history.
What a story.
Only in America, Dan.
Only in America.
I cannot wait for the Netflix series about this.
It'll be inspiring. It'll be wonderful.
I will say the press coverage of this was not as horrendous as I thought it would be.
No, it was quite good, with one exception that I would like to talk about. But I think the New York Times, the Washington Post, Politico, CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, Wall Street Journal even, they did a good job of breaking down the facts of this tax bill.
analysis from all kinds of nonpartisan organizations and you know it's it's one a lot of people say oh well the reason it pulls so low is because democrats have been lying about the
bill that's bullshit like the media has been telling the truth about the bill and so have a
bunch of fucking tax experts who who aren't part of either party so just go read the facts of the
bill if you want i don't care we don I was saying this last night. Democrats actually don't have to spin or exaggerate any of the aspects of this bill. It's all right there.
Feel free to go. Anyone should go feel free to look at the bill themselves and find out what it
does. I don't care. Republicans don't want you to read the bill. I would love everyone to read the
bill. I would love everyone to look exactly at what this bill does. I'm happy for people to do
that. The other thing the press did was there were a few,
and you know who you are, people,
who did winners and losers columns
talking about which politicians won and lost in this battle.
Those people are terrible.
But most people did which Americans won or lost, right?
Like which groups of Americans,
which corporations did well, which, you know,
corporations did well, people making X amount did less well, these people get a tax increase.
That's like actually really good policy oriented journalism. I think that was actually
the overwhelming majority of what happened, which is why the bill is unpopular.
The other reason the bill is unpopular is tax cuts for corporations in rich people are unpopular.
I know they're unpopular because
Donald Trump ran against them in a lot of ways. Here's my message to Paul Ryan and all the other
people whining about why this bill is unpopular and blaming the press. If you do not want to have
unpopular policy, do not pass policies that people on a bipartisan basis hate.
One quarter of Trump supporters in some polls oppose this bill.
Think about fucking that.
These are people who believe Donald Trump has saved the economy, defeated ISIS,
did nothing wrong with Russia, that Hillary Clinton is a criminal,
that Barack Obama is a criminal.
Those people, Sean Hannity viewers, a quarter to a third of those people think this bill is shit.
So, great job, people.
There's people who believe that Barack Obama
wasn't born in America who still hate this tax bill.
That's where we're at on this thing.
But you know, Dan, Axios says
it's the high note of Donald Trump's presidency
and that the media often appraises presidencies
and politics through liberal tinted glasses.
But the vast majority of the Republican Party
like, even love, Donald Trump's policies.
That post is Axios doing the equivalent
of John Cusack standing outside with a boombox
and say anything.
It's just like, please return my calls.
I would like to get together
i just i don't understand i don't understand here's the one thing i would say to that which
is it is the high point of trump's presidency yeah it's pretty sad there are no other high
points yeah there are none like this is it this is the tallest of the seven dwarfs of Trump's policy accomplishments. That is it. So kudos. And if he had not passed this, he's like, there's always if you're going to decide what the highest point is, there's always going to be something no matter how low it is. And that is this. Congratulations, Republicans. You own the economy. You own this terrible tax bill. And let's see where it goes from here.
Dan, what did you think of the North Korean victory parade at the White House yesterday?
Which one are we talking about?
Are we talking about the one with the cabinet or the one with the second independent?
Oh, I missed the cabinet one.
I heard that they were all praying at Donald Trump.
Yeah, it's incredibly uncomfortable.
It really is. yeah it's it's incredibly uncomfortable like nothing nothing wrong with a good prayer but
the the praying praying at donald trump at a cabinet meeting like multiple people ben carson
and then mike pence seems like a little much but i was i was referring to the um the the display
outside of the white house where it was like you know where donald trump was emceeing this this
parade of republican politicians just slobbering all over him in a way that I've never seen any legislators slobber over any president, Republican or Democrat ever.
Particularly since we know that most of them hate him.
And we know that because most of them have made public statements about how he is unfit or racist or immoral.
about how he is unfit or racist or immoral.
And there they were, standing side by side with him because they got their tax cuts
and because Lisa Murkowski and Don slash Dan Young,
because Trump didn't know what his name was,
they got oil drilling in beautiful Alaska.
So that's what everyone was pretty excited about.
I mean, these are the people,
the people who stood there
in the Rose Garden of the White House and genuflected at Donald Trump are the people that we are theoretically counting on to hold him accountable for his crimes, his corruption, and general incompetence.
So if you were waiting on Paul Ryan or Mitch McConnell or any of these other people to stand up to Trump, you will be waiting a very long time.
Yeah.
No, I thought the same thing.
Although, you know, there's also the argument that now that they got what they wanted out
of him, maybe they don't need him anymore.
Nope.
That is not.
They have convinced them.
Like, Orrin Hatch's speech was unbelievable.
What is wrong with him?
It was like, I have even Ronald.
Some of them were like putting down Ronald Reagan, saying that like Trump was better than Reagan.
They've been genuflecting, you know, to Reagan for decades.
Now Donald Trump's their new hero.
Donald Trump, many good people on both sides in Charlottesville.
That Donald Trump. OK, cool.
The Republican Party has lost its collective mind. It has. And so this is not like, so there is like you raise one theory that we have held on to, and many liberals grasp to, is that once Paul Ryan gets the tax cuts he's been dreaming about since his keg stands at very unfun parties in college, gets those, then he will finally do his duty and fulfill his oath
to the Constitution and conduct reasonable checks and balances on the President of the United States.
Nope, that is not happening. These people, even Paul Ryan, they listen to Fox News,
they are hypnotized, they have Sean Hannity mainline into their brain and they are addicted
to Trump's base. They are scared shitless of Trump's base, which is why they have,
like, let's think about this. This is how much Paul Ryan wants tax cuts. He has coddled racists,
Trump, and people in his caucus like Steve King, who is a racist.
And every week, Paul Ryan goes to lunch with him and pats him on the back because he wants
his vote for tax cuts.
They are covering up crimes and corruption that they know are already bad and don't even
know how bad the ones that they're covering up are.
They're doing all that in exchange for tax cuts.
But once they have their tax cuts, they're still going to be with Trump.
You don't take that smarmy, shit-e grin thumbs up picture in the oval office unless you are in with trump
to the very end that is who they are now that is their future is they are trump they've decided
they are going to enable trump the man through the next two elections the man just spent the
last month campaigning for an alleged child molester. That is their president.
The Republican National Committee endorsed and supported the alleged child molester who doesn't
believe that Muslims should serve in Congress, who doesn't believe that women should vote,
who believes that homosexuality should be illegal. This is someone that the president
of the United States campaigned for, and yet they all stood behind him yesterday and patted him on the back and said that he was the greatest leader ever.
If they really wanted the tax cuts, fine.
They get their tax cuts, and they could have just shut the fuck up about it.
They didn't have to go out there and slobber all over Donald Trump,
a man who just went to fucking Pensacola to campaign for an alleged child predator. It's disgusting.
He is their leader. They are fine with it. And they own every single thing he does. There was
an opportunity for moral courage, and they passed on it. And so for the rest of Paul Ryan's life,
whether he's in Congress next year or not, he is going to have to live with the fact that he,
in Congress next year or not, he is going to have to live with the fact that he, excuse racism, excuse misogyny, defended a man accused of sexual assault by more than a dozen women
and is trying to help cover up potential crimes of inclusion.
That is a life decision that he made, and they're all going to own that forever.
And it is now incumbent upon us as Democrats to make them pay for these decisions so question is
was this was this inevitable could democrats have done anything to stop it i would say no
yeah i mean republicans voted for a tax bill that broke many of their promises uh and polls at 25
which tells me that they were immune to reason or pressure on this one. I mean, you can go through all of them.
Susan Collins is all upset that everyone's saying she got duped by Mitch McConnell
and she's telling us all the things she got in this bill and how she made it better.
Susan Collins very clearly said she wouldn't be for a bill that cut the top tax rate for millionaires.
This bill does that.
She clearly said that if you repeal the individual mandate,
This bill does that. She clearly said that if you repeal the individual mandate, that premium spikes would pretty much erase the benefit that people get from their middle class tax cut.
She went around and showed her colleagues the calculations on how premium increases would erase the benefit people get from middle class tax cuts.
She was such she cared so much about that. And then she just voted for the bill anyway so like no i don't think there's anything democrats could have done to reason with these people who just clearly said
fuck it i don't care if i break all my promises i don't care if this bill does all the things i
said that it shouldn't do and that i won't vote for it if it does i'm just going to do it anyway
i don't care that it 20 it polls at 25 i'm just going to do it anyway so the only thing we can do
is to vote them out of office. That's it.
Yeah, that is exactly right.
There are no Republican heroes of the resistance.
I appreciate your floor speech, Bob Corker, or whatever, Jeff Flake, and your near time to interview Bob Corker.
But you all got to go.
And you have to be replaced with Democrats. Because this intellectually and morally bankrupt party is doing tremendous damage to this country in service of a dangerously unfit president.
And I like I'm very I'm very worked up today.
I'm trying.
I'm trying to be measured about it.
I really am. know there are people, reporters have critiqued Democrats and liberals, frankly, effort to defeat this tax bill and said it's not as effective as what we did to preserve the ACA earlier this year.
But when you control no levers of government, the only thing that Democrats can do is tell the
country about what Republicans want to do and hope that you can make it so politically unpalatable
that they will walk away. And Democrats made it the least politically palatable piece of legislation
in history. Think about the lies told about Obamacare. Think about Fox News, the Tea Party
town halls, the millions and millions of dollars spent by the insurance industry to make Obamacare
unpopular. This tax bill is significantly less popular than the Affordable
Care Act. So Democrats did their jobs, but we don't control government. So I don't think
grassroots supporters should be angry at Democrats because this bill passed. I think
they should be angry at Republicans and motivated to elect more Democrats.
If we win the House back and the Senate back in 2018,
one reason we win Congress back will be because of what grassroots supporters did
to make this bill unpopular and to let people know what this bill would do.
And so I think that that's what—
And look, you're right.
I mean, Collins and Murkowski and McCain and some of these people,
they're not immune to reason or pressure on any issue.
It worked on health care.
And we should say that.
And we should give them the benefit of the doubt for that.
Right.
Good for Collins.
Good for Murkowski.
Good for McCain.
Good for other people who decided to vote the right way on health care.
But they weren't.
They weren't.
They were immune to reason and pressure this time around because Republicans fucking love tax cuts.
to reason and pressure this time around because Republicans fucking love tax cuts and they saw enough polling presentations and heard enough from donors and heard enough from strategists that if
they didn't do anything, it would be worse than if they passed this really shitty bill. And they
decided to believe that over their constituents, over the facts, over anything else. So what can
you do? You can elect them out of office.
Let's talk about the politics moving forward. You brought to my attention this Washington Post
piece by James Homan, who said, Republicans are banking on this bill becoming more popular over
time as people experience the benefits. They're saying, you know, most people right now believe
their taxes are actually going up. But in fact, eight in 10 Americans will pay lower taxes next year. They plan to run a campaign that
says, you know, Democrats, one party wants to impeach the president, the other party cut middle
class taxes. And you know, and their billionaires are going to start running ads about that now.
What do you think about this strategy and this belief that they'll be able to make it more popular? Let me address this as someone who told the press, the public and Democratic members of Congress many times that once the Affordable Care Act became law, it would become more popular.
I was wrong about that.
It is more popular now.
It took seven years.
But in the short term, it did not because people's views are very hardened. And the fact of
the matter is, many of the benefits that people experience are going to be so small as to be not
noticed. Clearly, Apple is going to be very happy because they're going to get $47 billion and FedEx
is going to get $1.5 billion and all these banks will be happy. But the average person is going to
get a very small benefit from it. And that is not going to outweigh – they may not even know they do it.
So this is the other experience that we had.
There are two recent historical examples of this that belie the argument that this is going to –
once people see more money in their pocket, this is going to help,
which is in 2001, George Bush passed a huge tax cut.
Middle class and rich people overwhelmingly benefiting the middle class, but a pretty big, decent tax cut for the middle class.
That did not approve George Bush's poll numbers.
And they were so aggressive about telling people about it that they actually sent them
a letter telling them at taxpayer expense, telling them that they got this tax cut just
so that they would know.
And it didn't juice the economy and it didn't change George Bush's poll numbers.
The one asterisk I put by that is 9-11 happened a few months after that. So we don't really know
exactly what happened, but early indications were it didn't make a huge difference. And then
I know this goes against all conservative fever dreams about the Obama presidency,
but the first thing Obama did when he came into office was pass a massive tax cut to juice the economy by cutting people's payroll taxes.
What?
And I know it happened.
He did.
We did that.
It was one of our...
It happened.
Did you know the Recovery Act was divided into three parts, Dan?
And one of the parts was the tax cuts?
Because I wrote that 45,000 times in speeches for two years.
And I don't think this is a critique of how compelling your speech writing was or how persuasive the communication strategy that I worked on was.
But no one had a fucking clue they got that tax cut.
And I saw this yesterday.
I saw this yesterday.
For the bottom 60% of the country, so most of the country,
the tax cut they got from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act,
the Recovery Act, the stimulus, whatever you want to call it,
was bigger than the tax cut they will be receiving from this legislation.
Bigger under Obama for the bottom 60%. So if they didn't notice it then when it was bigger than the
one it is now, what do you think is going to happen with this bill? Now, the pushback on this
that someone maybe noted contrarian, Josh Barrow pointed out was that that happened in a contracting
economy. That's true. When other people, when your tax people's were getting a federal tax cut,
but their city and state taxes were going up at the time and this is an expanding economy.
But I think the lesson is still – if you were a betting person, history both in a Republican and Democratic administrations would suggest this is not going to change opinions.
And because it's also – people don't actually make decisions about – their opinions on these things is not particularly tied to their
personal benefit from it.
Right.
That's sort of a fallacy of politics.
People feel this way about this bill because they think that it is unjust and unfair.
And even if they get a tax cut, but corporations and millionaires who don't need a tax cut are getting a very big one, that is going to bother them.
It wasn't like all those Republicans who got the Obama tax cut were like, well, yeah, I think he was probably born in Kenya and he seems to have some terrorist sympathies.
But I got a couple hundred bucks in my things.
I'm cool with it.
That's just not how politics works in our very highly polarized tribal age. And I think it's just worth reflecting on the
fact that we do live in a moment, in a time of great economic anxiety. I don't use the term of
excusing racism, like Republicans who did it to justify some of Trump's supporters. I mean it in the sense that, look,
populism has been emerging on a growing basis since the financial crisis.
And you saw it in the power of Bernie Sanders' message, right?
Right.
And you saw it in Trump's message.
As much bullshit as it was, that's what he ran on.
And the Republicans get into office
and their response to the populist fervor spreading across the
country is to cut taxes for corporations and hedge fund managers. And you can even already
see the blowback on this from the right with people like Ann Coulter and Tucker Carlson and
others all of a sudden discovering that their populist hero just left in place a – the Carrie Dinger's loophole, which benefits hedge fund managers.
And so that is the bigger picture thing that goes much further beyond the ads that are going to be run by conservative groups.
The money that is going to end up in people's bank accounts whether they notice it or not.
whether they notice or not. The ultimate immorality of this bill is something that actually crosses party lines and is why people, why it polls so terribly.
Yeah. So McConnell this morning previewed the ads that they're, or the type of ad that they're
going to be running, which is basically what they're going to try to say is, you know,
maybe $1,300 doesn't seem like much to to joe mansion but it sure means a lot
to this single mom and her kids um and so you can already see this on twitter two conservatives are
like uh typical out of touch liberals they don't they're they're poo-pooing you know eighteen
dollars a week even though eighteen dollars a week could really mean a lot to people and stuff like
that it's like you know what fuck you like it's not that it's not that we don't think that that could mean a lot to people.
It's that you just spent a trillion dollars on corporate tax cuts when you could have given a lot more to that single mom and to that family.
Like, don't try to pull the like liberals are out of touch bullshit with this now. It's just it's so ridiculous.
It's so ridiculous.
It's like I was thinking about this, looking at some of the tweets from the Republican staffers today, the triumphalism of Republicans who finally got an accomplishment for the first time in more than a decade.
So fucking kudos and welcome to governing.
But it did not have to be this way. They could have done a bill that cut the corporate tax rate to 28% instead of 20% and had more money to make it less of a deficit driver.
They could have kept taxes flat for rich people and given a bigger tax cut to the middle class.
Like that was an option.
And that's a point that I think Democrats should make. They could have done what Marco Rubio wanted and Mike Lee wanted and actually done a real doubling of the child tax credit and lifted more children out of poverty.
And it would have cost them like, you know, a fraction of a percent of what they did on the corporate tax cut.
They could have, if you truly believe that what ails the American economy right now is not enough money in the pockets of middle and working class families.
If that is your belief, then this is a terrible solution for that.
Because you could have done that.
You could have spent $1.5 trillion in tax relief for people under a certain income threshold.
Like that was a choice.
Yeah.
And Republicans let their – it is just so funny that Republicans are even more absurd than we have spent the last seven to ten years saying they were.
I said the Republicans, by voting for this tax bill, have made the argument against Republican economics better than Democrats ever have.
They did.
They did an outstanding job of that by passing this bill. Because the other thing is, this tax bill will not be viewed by people in a vacuum. It will be viewed as a contrast
to what Republicans didn't do, that they didn't reauthorize the Children's Health Insurance
Program, that they didn't do anything to make health insurance less expensive for everyone else,
that they didn't do anything for the people of Puerto Rico who are still without power,
that they didn't do anything about the opioid crisis, they didn't do anything for the people of Puerto Rico who are still without power, that they didn't do anything about the opioid crisis.
They didn't do anything to make education more affordable, didn't do anything about
stagnant middle class wages or anything to bring back all the coal jobs.
They didn't do any of that shit.
They just passed a tax cut for corporations and then they went home.
It's just so I'm like, I'm just sort of amazed by the whole thing, you know, like I don't
because the other thing they're doing is all the Republicans are all liberal tears,
and I'm sure some of them are going to listen to this and be like,
oh, the Obama bros were so upset and blah, blah, blah.
I'm just sort of amazed.
I actually think it's going to be – I mean, it is the issue that we're going to run on in 2018
along with their attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act
and potentially win back the House and the Senate.
So I'm looking forward to the conservative tears after November.
But like, so I just think it's shitty policy.
It didn't have to be this way.
And it's amazing.
It's amazing to me how bad they made this bill when it didn't actually have to be this way.
Now, we said earlier, and I i agree that democrats could not have stopped this
there is nothing they could have done if republicans were going to decide to vote for to
violate all their own previous statements about what they will vote for and vote for this but
the one thing that i it wouldn't have changed the outcome but the but what i think democrats need
is an alternative policy here right and so I agree with that. I agree.
And so this is like the response to the ad they want to run against Joe Manchin or whoever else, right?
Which is, yeah, you got a $1,300 tax cut.
We'll give you another $1,000 for X, Y, and Z
and we're going to pay for it
by closing the Republican loophole
that benefits hedge fund managers
or oil companies, whatever it is.
There is now a pot of revenue to be used that we can go to to say,
we're going to raise this tax.
We're going to close this loophole.
We're going to use it to pay for things that people actually care about.
Simply, we have to have something that people are for.
Because absent that, you're going to allow the Republicans to define what it is we're for.
Like we spent years, they did not have a plan for a very long time.
And we spent years explaining what their plan was and defining it.
And it's why we won the 2012 election.
Now, it has turned out that we were overly generous in our description of how corporatist their plan was.
They're actually even worse than we thought.
They're corporatist, and their plan was.
They're actually even worse than we thought.
I mean, if we had said that Republicans would leave open the hedge fund loophole and then cut health care for poor children, the fact checkers would have gone bananas.
It turns out that was right.
That's exactly what was going to happen.
Like, you can't actually come up with an attack that is unfair for these Republicans when it comes to their economic policy. It is exactly what it is.
They have changed nothing and they've actually become more extreme and less compassionate in the years since Reagan, you know, Reagan and Jack Kemp brought supply side economics to the forefront.
So I think this point about, you know, what Democrats should propose
and it is a really important one.
You know, there was a New York Magazine story about this,
talking about some of the things
that Democrats could possibly propose.
And it was saying that even if you only raised,
so the corporate rate was at 35%,
they cut it to 21%.
They said, even if Democrats said,
okay, we're going to take it only back up to 25%, which is what Mitt Romney had proposed as a corporate rate cut in the 2012 campaign, which we attacked him for, you'd get $400 billion just from that move.
That would be enough to fund a child tax credit that would lift 3 million kids out of poverty or finance Bernie Sanders' very generous plan for paid family and medical
leave. And that's before we repeal the estate tax provisions, the pass-through provisions,
the tax cuts for the wealthy, and all that other shit. And we can pay for all of this
using the reconciliation budget process that only requires 51 votes, and it won't raise the deficit
because they already gave us this $1.5 trillion worth of money to play around with now.
I mean, it should make it a lot easier for Democrats to propose a very robust, very progressive economic agenda in 2018 and 2020
without having any of the annoying fact checkers or anyone else screaming about the
deficit um which fuck that at this point um but but we're still we'll still stay within the window
if we just just just by repealing most of the bullshit that they just did yeah it really is uh
you know in 20 let's say it'll take a couple of months. Let's say it's like March of 2021 when Democrats have passed paid family leave,
free community college, boosted funding for things,
and are well on their path to Medicare for all.
The Republicans will look back to this week as to why that happened.
Right.
So if you're looking for a – I know that seems like a long time away
and I haven't listened to this upcoming pod save the world yet, but hopefully we don't die between now and then in a nuclear standoff.
Yeah, no, that's important.
But if we make it that far and we are neither dead nor we've slipped into a Venezuela-style authoritarian state, there's some real upside for progressive policies once we win the levers of government back
yeah keep your heads up democrats keep your heads up this is uh there are silver linings everywhere
here uh so don't uh don't don't worry about this there are political silver linings and there are
substantive policy silver linings from this shit show uh speaking of shit shows tomorrow the
government runs out of money and currently Republicans cannot find enough votes from their fellow Republicans in Congress to keep it open
Let alone Democrats
Currently there's a group of House Republicans who don't want to vote for a clean extension of the Children's Health Insurance Program
With no strings attached
They don't want to vote for bipartisan measures to stabilize Obamacare
They don't want to vote for a hurricane and wildfire disaster relief package that they view as too expensive. And they don't want to vote for the DREAM Act
that would protect 800,000 young immigrants from being deported. This means that Paul Ryan probably
has no choice but to try to pass a short-term funding bill that keeps the government open for
another month and kicks all the rest of these fights to January. But even if he does this,
Mitch McConnell will need at
least eight Democratic votes in the Senate to pass the short term funding bill. Seems as if right now
Schumer is willing to give McConnell those votes and kick the big fights over chip over Obamacare
and the Dream Act to January. Dan, what do you think of this strategy?
I think it is a massive mistake from the Democrats if they do this.
Yeah, it's baffling to me.
Yeah.
Pete Rouse, our old boss in the Senate and in the White House, used to say that there's nothing more powerful for United States senators than the smell of jet fumes when it's time to go home.
And I think we're facing a little bit of that.
People have family vacations that they're set up.
They want to go home and spend the holidays with their kids and their families,
which I totally get.
But once we prove we're willing to blink,
we are setting ourselves up for government in one month increments.
So we're going to blink now, and then January is going to come, and the exact same deal is going
to be on the table. And we're going to then say, well, we're willing to do it last time because
we had to get home and eat some roast turkey. But this time, no, we're going to draw a line
in the stand and not cross it the
politics are the same whether you do it in december you do it in january and you have more leverage if
you do it now mcconnell's not stupid mcconnell is gonna sense if we're just bluffing you know i mean
like at some point this is why i'm i'm very annoyed that we've gotten to this point and Democrats aren't standing up now.
But I'm willing to believe that at least in January, like January to me is the key moment right here.
Like it's stupid that they gave up their leverage in December for sure.
But they can still come back in January and we should all put the pressure on every Democratic senator and everyone should call their Democratic senators and say, do not vote.
You cannot vote for a long term funding bill in January that doesn't include a deal to protect the dreamers, to protect 800000 young Americans who will be deported in March.
be deported in March. Do not vote for that long-term funding bill unless the Dreamers are taken care of, unless the children's health insurance program is extended for 9 million
children, unless Obamacare bills pass to stabilize Obamacare so that people don't lose their health
insurance. And every Senate Democrat should be on record saying that they will not vote for that
long-term funding bill in January without all of those protections passing.
That's where I am right now.
Yeah, I agree.
And I think there are a couple of things that are important contextual setting for this.
One is, since the day Trump was inaugurated, the Democratic base, and I don't mean just hardcore partisans.
I mean people who are motivated by their deep concern for what's happening in this country, have done their job like you never possibly could have imagined in an off year.
People marched.
They made phone calls.
They donated to candidates in states far from their – in districts far from their own. They protested. They called members of Congress. They have gotten on buses and gone to places like Alabama and Virginia and Georgia to knock doors.
people who are so deeply concerned by what the country is going through and so motivated to change it for the better, they must prove themselves to be worthy of those voters.
If they want them to turn out in the off year, if you want to keep that energy going
and to walk away on an issue of such fundamental fairness and morality as the DREAM Act,
would be very disillusioning for those people because you
want them to vote for – they have to believe it is worth all the work, all the energy, all the
blood, sweat and tears to change who's in charge of Congress. And when we walk away from things
like this, we send a message that says it really doesn't make that big a difference who's in
charge because you're going to get screwed either way. I recognize that we have a lot of Democrats who are in tough states,
who are up in 2018. We're defending in places like North Dakota, in Indiana, and that's going
to be hard. But I promise you the politics, if the view is that fighting for the DREAM Act is bad for you, then you're not good at politics.
Because if you can't win this fight, you can't win any fight.
A poll this month showed that 84% of Americans, including 74% of Republicans, favor protecting these 800,000 young Americans from deportation.
So, like, look, I get it.
I get it if you're in a tough state.
I get that no one wants to shut the government down, especially Democrats.
No one wants to threaten to shut the government down.
But this is a party in the minority right now.
And yet, on this issue, we have leverage.
And there is a choice.
We have leverage and there is a choice.
Either you say, I will not vote for a long term funding bill until the dreamers are taken care of and the Children's Health Insurance Program is taken care of.
Or you say, I trust the Republicans that they're going to come to the table and and do some deal.
Because if they don't, then, you know, it's going to happen in March.
Eight hundred thousand people will be deported from this country. There's 800,000 people who are working in this economy that will have to leave this country,
families torn apart, people who've been here their whole lives. And basically, what are Democrats
going to say? Oh, well, the Republicans promised that they'd give us a vote on this, and I guess
the promise just didn't materialize. Trump seemed like he was going to extend the program.
Yeah, maybe he will.
Maybe Trump will suddenly extend the program.
Maybe Republicans will suddenly put the bill on the floor.
But do we trust them after what we've just seen for the last year to do that?
Or do we have to use the leverage we have to say to them, no, no, no, no, no.
You're not going to get your way here unless you keep this promise to these dreamers.
I think we have to do that.
And I get it.
I get that it's not popular to say,
like, no one wants to shut the government down,
but you have leverage.
Use the fucking leverage.
And we are not in charge.
Republicans are in charge.
They could fund the government if they wanted to.
All it requires is having a little compromise.
We're asking for something that Donald Trump himself has said he supports, that Paul Ryan has said he supports.
Multiple Republican senators have said they support it.
This is not that hard.
And I will say to their credit, Democratic leaders have done a very good job this year.
They have had a terrible hand and they played it as best as they possibly could.
They have fought hard.
They have protected much of Obamacare.
They have called Trump to the carpet
on things he's done.
They have used what little levers they have on oversight
to try to get to the bottom of things
like the potential collusion with Russia
have done a good job.
But what I worry about right now is that pre-Alabama,
we thought we had nothing to lose.
Probably couldn't take the Senate back,
but we were going to throw everything at it.
Post-Alabama, all of a sudden, like, oh, maybe we can take it back,
so we're going to play not to lose as opposed to play to win.
And no one has ever won playing a pre-fed defense.
And that's what this feels like.
It's like, oh, no, now we – instead of fighting for what we all agree for and fighting like hell, we're going to start drafting our strategy around what we think is the best thing to win over voters in North Dakota or Indiana.
Dakota or Indiana.
And that's a mistake,
not just because that will be deflating to the base, but also because that's a misreading of the politics of the moment.
Like fight hard,
fighting hard.
Even if you lose is going to be worth more than not fighting at all.
Keep your heads up,
stiffen your spines and fight.
That is what we need.
Full hard.
That's what we need Democrats to do. Can't lose and fight. Clear eyes, full heart. That's what we need Democrats to do right now.
You can't lose or something.
Full eyes, clear heart, don't fold.
And look, the same thing with the Children's Health Insurance Program, too.
There's a lot of, you know, I was arguing with Paul Ryan's communications director,
Brandon Buck, on Twitter this morning as we all were over this chip thing.
Like, don't get confused about what's happening here on the Children's Health Insurance Program.
A couple months ago, a clean extension of the Children's Health Insurance Program,
which insures 9 million kids, passed the Senate Finance Committee. And Orrin Hatch, Republican,
who just slobbered all over Donald Trump yesterday, and Ron Wyden, Democrat, they put out a press release saying, here we are.
We passed a clean extension of the bill, just like, just in a bipartisan way, just like people have forever.
And then in the House, in the House, Republicans decided to pass an extension that said, no, no, no, we're going to pay for this. We have to pay for this program by cutting medical benefits
elsewhere, by charging some high-income Medicare beneficiaries more, by cutting public health
programs and prevention programs, by cutting some Obamacare thing that's going to kick more people
off if they don't pay their premiums in times. It could kick hundreds of thousands off Obamacare.
So we're going to cut medical
benefits everywhere else to pay for the Children's Health Insurance Program, which, by the way,
would cost $8 billion to extend five years after they just passed $1.5 trillion tax cut that they
didn't fucking pay for at all. So don't let anyone tell you that it's like both sides that are
trying, that are screwed up, that it's political squabbling that is preventing the Children's
Health Insurance Program from being extended. It's's not they could pass a clean extension of the children's health
insurance program tomorrow and it would get majorities in both houses tomorrow this is the
house republicans holding it up as they usually do because they're trying to get their own priorities
in there and not trying to just do what they should be doing. John, I think you're being unfair to the Republicans.
If we just pass a chip with it,
who is going to teach these poor, sick children the value of hard work and sacrifice?
Yeah, maybe someone at one of the banks
that just got tens of billions of dollars in profits
from this tax bill.
Maybe they will teach them.
Maybe they will generously give them a bonus someday if they happen to be in their employ.
Apple, with its tax break, could pay for all the children to have health care and still
bring home more than $38 million.
Billion dollars, excuse me, with a B.
That is billion dollars with a B.
Something else. This does reveal something about Republican psychology is it is so vindictiveness is their animating philosophy.
We can't do it unless someone who needs help has to pay a price for it.
That's the deal.
Okay.
When we come back, we will be talking to Senator Dick Durbin.
And then we'll be talking to Representative Adam Schiff.
On the pod today, we have Senator from Illinois, Dick Durbin.
Senator, thanks for joining us.
You bet.
Dick Durbin. Senator, thanks for joining us. You bet. So I know how confusing these end-of-the-year spending negotiations can be when you're inside the government, let alone watching as a citizen.
Can you give us an update on the current negotiations and let people know what's at
stake here? Well, I can tell you as a preliminary that because of the tax effort, the tax bill
passed by the Republicans, they put everything on the back shelf. And so it wasn't until this morning that we actually saw the proposal to end this year's
session tomorrow and to return in the middle, early January, and start voting again in mid-January
on spending.
So this is all kind of new to us.
I saw it this morning for the first time at 1030.
all kind of new to us. I saw it this morning for the first time at 1030. Basically, what it does is to move things just ahead to January the 19th, 18th or 19th, where we'll face another
make or break deadline when it comes to a budget for the remaining months in the fiscal year.
So you guys think you'll end up with a clean spending bill that's short term that doesn't
resolve any of the issues, CHIP, DACA, anything else that's
out there? Well, it will temporarily address some of those issues, but only temporarily.
CHIP may be a few weeks longer than the community health care clinics and the like.
No version from the Republicans yet addresses the DACA issue, the Dreamer issue. And that is what's holding things up in the House
of Representatives. I just got off the phone with Nancy. We talked about where they are.
There's going to be a supplemental offer for disaster assistance. And then there's going to
be the CR that I just described, a continuing resolution. She believes that most of the
Democrats in the House will vote against that continuing resolution.
If the Republicans need Democratic votes, they may not pass it.
Senator, if that bill were to come over to the Senate, do you think there are enough Democrats who would vote for it without DACA to allow the government to stay funded for a few weeks?
I don't know the answer. I won't be one of them. I won't be voting for it without some provision in there for DACA or the Dreamers.
I haven't done a whip count on my colleagues.
Several of them have said publicly that they support the Dream Act, support DACA, but they don't want to see the government shut down.
So I cannot tell you how many votes would be generated among Democrats in the Senate.
So, you know, I've been saying this.
I'd like to see, you know, a whole bunch of Senate Democrats say we're not going to vote for even a short-term funding bill without a vote on DACA first.
But say this goes to January and you're fighting again in January for a long-term spending bill.
Do you think that there will be enough Senate Democrats in January who will say, I'm not voting for a long-term spending bill unless we do something to protect
the Dreamers. I think so. And I've heard Leader Schumer express that over and over again,
and I'm counting on it. I can't tell you my depth of feeling on this issue. I introduced
the DREAM Act 16 years ago. I know these young people probably better than most,
and my heart's breaking that we can't fix this problem this month.
Senator, as you pointed out, you have been working on issues related to the Dreamers longer than anyone else.
You have tremendous credibility with that community.
What would your message be to the 800,000 Dreamers who are both deeply concerned about their own status and also frustrated that the Democrats may let this opportunity pass to call the Republicans bluff on DACA?
Well, I've faced them before. Five years ago, when we lost this measure in the Senate by five or six
votes, the galleries were filled. They were wearing caps and gowns to deliver the message
that they're students who want to be part of America's future. I had to face them afterwards.
that they're students who want to be part of America's future.
I had to face them afterwards.
It was a tearful exchange between us.
And I had to say to them, you know, I'm not giving up on you.
Don't give up on us.
It's hard to explain to somebody when their life is on the line, when their family is on the line, about the messy nature of American politics
and how some things are unpredictable.
We thought this week would be the showdown,
not on the tax bill, but on the whole question of the budget for the rest of the year.
And the Republicans punted and said, we'll do it in January. Well, how do you explain that to
three young dreamers who got in a car and drove all the way out from Arizona to sleep on the floor
of an apartment in Washington and come up to Capitol
Hill and beg for their future. But we have to wait four weeks. That is, as you both know,
the reality of the political scene in Washington. But it is hard as heck to sit down with these
young people and make them understand that they still have a strong fighting chance,
as far as I'm concerned. Senator, I know you've been in bipartisan meetings about combining a vote on the DREAM Act
or something like the DREAM Act with some additional security funding,
border security funding that the Republicans want.
Have you seen sort of the outlines of a deal that you believe Democrats could support
or the Republicans insisting on, you know, border wall or bust kind of stuff?
Well, the honest answer is no.
There was a presentation by the White House, General Kelly,
and people from the Department of Homeland Security this week.
But it was what you might expect, the first offer or first demand in a negotiation.
It was the sun, the moon, and the stars and things we would never consider doing.
And we basically said to him, for goodness stars and things we would never consider doing.
And we basically said to him, for goodness sakes, we're running out of time here. We have a little over two months left before the president's imposed deadline. Come back to us with something
basic and that we might even consider instead of saying you want everything. And they're supposed
to return with that message tomorrow. I'm hopeful that it'll be constructive, but so far it just,
there have been a handful of Republican senators who have been extremely helpful,
but many who are not.
Senator, on CHIP, on the Children's Health Insurance Program,
are Democrats going to insist on a clean extension?
I know in the House, you know, they're trying to pay for it by cutting medical benefits in other places.
Do you think in the Senate you can get a clean extension of CHIP?
I don't know the answer.
They are going, I believe they're going back to the same well that's been used over and over again,
and that's the Prevention Fund and the Affordable Care Act, which is an important fund,
but because, and it was created by Tom Harkin, it was one of his measures in the bill.
It's an important fund, but because it isn't a hard money transfer,
it's an investment in public health and research.
It's been rated over and over again.
I think that's where they're headed this time.
But this prevention fund, incidentally, is 12% of the budget for the Center for Disease Control.
It is a big piece of it.
And I think that's where they're headed to buy an
extension of time for the health insurance program for kids and the community health center.
Senator, this will be a softball question. I was wondering if you could reflect on the fact that
Republicans passed just yesterday a unpaid for $1.5 trillion tax cut, mostly benefiting the
wealthy and corporations. And today
are asking that we pay for health care for poor children by cutting health care spending.
How do we make that argument to the public?
It's a clear reflection of the difference between the two political parties. There was a time when
people say, you know, there's not a dime's worth of difference. There was a governor from Alabama
who used that. Not a dime's worth of difference between Democrats and Republicans. Well,
they're sure as heck is.
Just look at this week. It's a clear example.
The Republican tax measure adds a trillion and a half dollars to our deficit for our kids to pay back.
For what?
For tax breaks for the wealthiest people in America and the biggest corporations.
That's what it comes down to.
And all of these Republican speeches that we've heard, as Congressman Dave
Obie used to say, posing for holy pictures about fiscal conservatism, fiscal sanity, and let's do
something about the debt and deficit, thrown out the window, first chance they had to give a tax
break to the wealthiest people in America. Then they turn around the next day, and we have actual
programs that deliver health care to working families across America.
And they basically say, you know, we just can't afford this unless you want to cut some spending in some other area.
What a sharp contrast in terms of values.
What a sharp choice, a clear choice people are going to have in this next election.
in this next election.
Senator, thank you for joining us.
And we will be telling all of our listeners to be in touch with their Democratic senators
to let them know to hold firm
on making sure that we get a vote on the DREAM Act.
I can't tell you how much this means
to so many of these young people and their families.
And I think it is just the best issue
for us to test the issue of justice
and fairness in America.
Okay, well, thank you.
And make sure you tell Schumer and the rest of the gang
to hold strong on this one.
We're counting on you.
Thanks a lot.
Appreciate it.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
On the pod today, we are very happy to have back
Representative Adam Schiff, my congressman.
How are you, Representative?
I'm doing very well, and it's great to be on the pod with my constituents.
So let's talk about Russia as usual.
You recently said that you're worried that Republicans are getting ready to shut down the Russia investigation in the House.
What kind of steps are they taking that lead you to that conclusion?
And what, if anything, can you and other Democrats do about it?
Well, the most obvious sign is they've refused to schedule any witness interviews after December 31st.
And there are dozens more that we've requested to come before the committee.
They've also been departing from investigative best practices in very substantial ways,
bringing in witnesses before we have the documents to question them on,
scheduling witnesses out of state.
They scheduled two key interviews this week.
While we are in town for votes on the tax bill,
and these are witnesses we asked for months ago,
and to schedule them out of state
at a time when members can't be there, it just tells you they're more interested in going through
the motions, looking like they're conducting a credible investigation, than making sure that
this is done right. And in terms of what we can do about it, we are trying to bring public pressure
to bear that this investigation needs to go on and it
cannot be shut down the way Bannon and the White House have been urging. Because I think the goal
here is shut us down, and then try to shut Bob Mueller down. Congressman, do you think Republicans
are doing this because they have seen enough of what's happened so far that they're scared that
a continued investigation is going to be bad for the White House? This is a little bit of a layup, but I
want to get you on the record on it. I think that they are heeding the calls from the White House
and Steve Bannon and others that have been putting great pressure on House Republicans,
Senate Republicans as well, that they need to have the president's back. And they need to not only shut us down,
but they need to begin investigations of Hillary Clinton as a means of distracting attention.
And unfortunately, these calls are having all too much success in our committee, where we,
on the Democratic side, have kept our focus on the Russian intervention in our election and
contacts with the Trump campaign during that pivotal time.
The Republican focus has been initially on unmasking, and when that proved to be fruitless,
they've now turned their attention to trying to discredit the FBI and to discredit Bob Mueller,
so that no matter what the FBI and Bob Mueller find, it can be undermined.
FBI and Bob Mueller find, it can be undermined. And that draws us to a very precarious place in terms of our democracy when you're undermining institutions because you're afraid of what
they're going to find. And I just think that this is a time when we need people to do their
patriotic duty and not put party above all else. But unfortunately, we see all too many of my colleagues in the GOP
willing to do the presidential bidding. What do we know about potential collusion so far between
Trump, Trump associates, and the Russians? What have you learned through the course of this
investigation that you can share publicly? Well, we've learned a great deal. And when I think about the first open hearing that we had in March of this year
with James Comey and the opening statement I made at the time,
if I had any idea then what I know now, it would have been a much more powerful statement
because, and I can just go into what's in the public record,
we now know that in April of last year, the Russians, through intermediaries,
approached George Papadopoulos, one of the president's few foreign policy advisors,
and informed the campaign.
They had stolen Democratic Party emails, basically dirt on Hillary Clinton,
and intimated they were willing to share and they were willing to play ball with the campaign
and was there an interest on the campaign's part in having a relationship?
The clear message back to the Russians was there was very much an interest in having a relationship
at the very top levels. There was a subsequent meeting with high levels of the Trump campaign
at Trump Tower with the president's son and son-in-law, as well as campaign manager,
in which the Russians again dangled dirt on Hillary Clinton,
and the campaign again said, we would love it.
We'd love to have the help.
And the message that went back to the Kremlin from that meeting was,
we'd love to have the help, but what you gave us at that meeting was really disappointing.
And bear in mind, at this point, the campaign is on notice that they have much better to offer.
And bear in mind, at this point, the campaign is on notice that they have much better to offer.
When the campaign found out in April that the Russians had Hillary's stolen emails or the DNC emails,
that was before the Clinton campaign was even aware that the Russians had possession of these stolen emails.
So you have all these contacts, all this outreach, all these offers of help, the campaign saying they want the help.
And then you have the Russians acting to help them, publishing these documents through WikiLeaks, through their own cutouts.
You have the president's son in private secret communication with WikiLeaks.
You have advisors like Roger Stone in private communication with Guccifer II, which was a Russian intelligence cutout.
And you have the president himself, then candidate Trump, touting these WikiLeaks, these stolen documents on a daily basis and egging the Russians on to even hack more.
That's all now in plain sight.
And so when the president says no collusion, no collusion, no collusion,
you really have to ignore all of this evidence in plain sight.
I will say this.
It will be up to Bob Mueller whether he thinks that these connections
and others amount to proof beyond a reasonable doubt
of a conspiracy to violate U.S. election laws.
But we need to make sure that he's allowed to finish his investigation.
And he's already moved with dramatic speed.
By contrast, the Benghazi investigation, which produced no evidence of wrongdoing on anyone's part except the attackers, lasted three to four years. And in a matter of months, Mueller's returned four indictments.
Trump campaign did and did not do with relation to the Russians. Does shutting down this investigation prematurely make us more vulnerable to a similar attack from the Russians or others in the elections
to come? Certainly, because one of the most powerful deterrents to the Russians is exposure.
And if the connections between the Russians and the campaign aren't allowed to be exposed to the public,
then we're in a much more vulnerable position.
What puts us in the absolute most vulnerable position, though, is we need to forge a national consensus
that if a foreign power like Russia ever intervenes again, we will reject it, no matter who it may help or who it may hurt.
And the chief impediment getting for that national consensus is
the President of the United States, who continues to deny whether it even happened or whether the
Russians were responsible. It's worse than a deterrent. It's an invitation to the Russians,
because should they choose to intervene again, and let's say that this time the President calls
them out, Russians can easily say, are these the same intelligence agencies that you said were perpetrating basically a hoax and a witch hunt and couldn't be trusted?
And now you're asking us to trust them or asking the world to trust them?
So he's undermined our ability to both deter the Russians, to protect ourselves from further Russian or other intervention.
And in that way, I think, really weakened our national security.
Congressman, there was a Politico story last night that said House Republicans have started to
secretly investigate the DOJ and FBI for, quote, improperly and perhaps criminally
mishandling the contents of the famous Steele dossier.
What do you think about this? Is there
anything to this notion that Republicans and even some of the media have been pushing that,
you know, the Steele dossier was, you know, improperly funded, that somehow the FBI's
investigation into Trump started because of the dossier or relied heavily on the dossier. What do you think about that?
Well, it's clearly an effort by the Republicans to discredit the FBI and discredit Mueller and
really just sort of cast doubt on the government. It reminds me of my days as a federal prosecutor
when if the defense had a really bad case, they would try to put the government on trial.
defense had a really bad case, they would try to put the government on trial. But there are real limits to that, both in terms of its effectiveness, as well as the degree at risk damaging these
institutions. They hope, I think, by trying to discredit Christopher Steele or the FBI,
that they can cast out on the whole enterprise of the Russians. But there's no denying the Russians hacked into our institutions.
There's no way that the dossier, whether it proves to be completely true or not,
can undermine the conclusions of the intelligence agency that the orders came from the top of the Kremlin.
The fact that Mike Flynn just pled guilty to lying about his contacts with the Russian ambassador, nothing about the dossier can change that. The fact that the Russians approached the campaign through Papadopoulos and offered these stolen emails, nothing in the dossier or discrediting the FBI is going to change that.
admitted to lying about it, admitted to these contacts. So there are limits, I think, to this,
but the most pernicious thing is there a message to the White House that if you fire Mueller,
or you fire Rosenstein, you can count on a certain number of the members of Congress to ignore their constitutional duty and essentially lay down. And I think that is a
and essentially lay down. And I think that is a tremendous disservice to the country.
Yeah, you know, in my view, I've been thinking it seems like they might not need to fire Mueller to achieve their goal, which is undermining the investigation to the point where
congressional Republicans feel free to ignore even the most explosive findings because of
supposed bias.
What do you think about that? Does that concern you? How do you guard against that?
Well, I'll tell you what concerns me.
First of all, I think it's going to be very hard to undermine Mueller and what Mueller concludes, because an indictment is an indictment.
And if Mueller brings additional indictments and when they put on these cases at trial,
people will see the facts.
A lot of this investigation obviously is being done behind closed doors,
but when these things go to trial and when people are forced to plead guilty,
that is very public.
So it's going to be, at the end of the day, very hard to undermine Mueller.
What I worry even more about, though, is that they could take action
to limit the effectiveness of
Mueller's investigation. And they could do that, for example, by putting pressure on Rod Rosenstein
to prevent Mueller from looking at things he really needs to look at, like the issue of whether
the Russians were laundering money through the Trump Organization, and that is something they're
holding over the president's head. There are credible allegations along these lines that need to be investigated.
And, you know, we didn't know at the start of this that Mike Flynn and the vice president
were lying about these conversations over sanctions with the Russian ambassador.
Now, there's no evidence the vice president did so knowingly,
but he did misrepresent to the
country that, no, we would never have these conversations with the Russian ambassadors.
It didn't happen. You don't know until you investigate when you have credible allegations.
And here, it could be really dangerous to the country if the Russians, in fact,
have something they can hold over the head of the president of the United States.
can hold over the head of the President of the United States. And if they fire Rod Rosenstein,
and they put someone else in his place, that can confidentially and out of the public eye tell Mueller, you will not look into these issues, you will not follow the money. That could be
a more effective way of undermining the investigation. That really worries me.
Is that the main thing that you're worried about in terms of limiting Mueller's investigation into
potential money laundering? Are there other steps they're taking to limit that? Or is this just if
they fire Rosenstein, that's what you're worried about?
Well, I'm worried at how much they're eroding the independence of the Justice Department.
And that could have effects on the scope of Bob Mueller's investigation.
It could have effects on whether there's a new unwarranted investigation into Hillary Clinton,
as the Republicans are pushing.
We are already seeing the effects of this pressure on the Justice Department.
The Justice Department last week did something inexplicable,
and that is they released the
private text messages of two FBI personnel during the penancy of an Inspector General investigation.
That never happens. That never happens. There's no good reason for it. There's no excuse for it,
except that they're feeling the heat. And if you're going to capitulate in small ways like that,
then you're at risk of capitulating in bigger ways.
The Justice Department capitulated when the White House said,
lift the gag rule on this witness in the Uranium One investigation
so we can rekindle another investigation into Hillary Clinton
and take the focus off Donald Trump and his ties with the Russians.
These things all undermine the Justice
Department. They undermine the FBI. And the long-term damage to these institutions
is something that we also need to be really concerned about.
Congressman Schiff, thank you, as always, for joining us, giving us an update,
and good luck to you in keeping this investigation going in the new year.
update and good luck to you in keeping this investigation going uh in the new year well it's good to be with you even talking about these very serious subjects uh wish you a very good new
year and and let your local congressman know if you need anything i will certainly i will certainly
do so one day we will have you on and talk about fun stuff i promise excellent all right congressman
take care bye-bye all right thank you to dick Durbin and Adam Schiff for joining us today.
Dan, this is it.
This is our final pod of the year.
Do you have any thoughts to take people home?
Well, think about this.
This time last year, we were texting, actually probably WhatsAppping,
back as love it, we didn't have an iPhone back then,
and trying to come up with a name for this
podcast and i would like to say were it not for you to come up with pod saving america at the last
possible minute this podcast would have been a failure because we would have had some bad names
guys we had some bad names so bad we dodged a bullet like you would not imagine so i would
like to say thank you to several groups of people, our listeners for being awesome and making us inspired.
People always come up to us and say, you help keep us sane.
I was like, no, no, you guys have it backwards.
You keep us sane because we get to talk about this and then go meet inspirational people who remind us that politics can still be a force for good.
I want to thank you, John and Tommy, for what you've done to build Crooked Media into
an amazing thing and be a great platform for this podcast. And thank everyone else at Crooked Media
who actually does all the work. Well, that's very nice of you, Dan. Thank you. Thank you for lending
your voice and your brilliance every Thursday and all through the touring and just about every day.
Thank you, John. This is great. We're so excited to hear this compliment each other.
We're basically,
this is like the Trump press conference yesterday.
That's right.
That's what it's turned into.
That was my original gag
and then I stepped on it
because I got overly sentimental about the listeners.
No, I feel the same way about our listeners.
I also feel the same way about the staff at Crooked Media.
We could not have assembled a better team
and they work tirelessly behind the scenes,
nonstop, way too much. And we're hoping to
hire more people next year to alleviate some of the pressure. I would also like to say to everyone,
like, you know, we're ending this year on a note where everyone's like, oh, tax bill. We just got
through Alabama. We were so excited. And now we have to deal with this tax thing. But it's almost
it's a good example for all of us because, you know, I've been saying this all year.
What Trump has taught us more than anything else is that democracy is an everyday fight it is an everyday battle
we can never rest i'm sorry about that i know i know that must seem tiring but we have to be in
this battle every single day and we should also take heart for what everyone who's listened to
this pod and all the activists and everyone else out there has achieved this year.
I mean, Donald Trump was inaugurated almost a year ago next month and he had a Republican majority in Congress and everyone was very worried and very afraid what might happen.
very afraid what might happen.
And the way we responded to that inauguration,
there was the largest single protest in history with the Women's March. When he tried to implement the travel ban, people flooded the airports.
We won an election in Virginia.
We won an unthinkable election in Alabama.
Even with the Republican president and Republican Congress,
we stopped the repeal of the Affordable Care Act.
This tax bill, thanks to our listeners and thanks to all the activists out there, polls at 25%.
Donald Trump started the year with an average approval rating of 45.5%.
It's now 37.2%.
The generic ballot for 2018 has Democrats up by 18 points.
None of that happened by accident.
That happened because all of you who are listening and everyone else out there who's been at town halls,
who's been protesting outside the Capitol, who's been calling their senators, it's because of you.
And if you guys hadn't been involved and fighting and active for this very, very long year,
who knows where we'd be right now. And so everyone should feel very proud of what they achieved, and they should
relax over the break,
and then come back in 2018 ready
for an even more challenging year
because we have an election, and it's going to
be hell like most elections are,
and we're going to need every single person to work their ass off.
So rest up now
and then keep your heads up
and stay in the fight that's how
i'll end it yeah it's gonna feel pretty sweet when we win in november 18th it's just gotta do the
work all right thank you everyone and uh and we'll see you next year bye dan happy holidays everyone