Pod Save America - “Stockholm Syndrome.”
Episode Date: January 8, 2018The President assures the country of his mental stability, Mueller hones in on obstruction while Republicans in Congress try to undermine him, and the Democrats plot their strategy to protect the DREA...Mers. Jon, Jon, and Tommy do the pod live from Stockholm, Sweden.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, Stockholm.
Welcome to Pod Save America.
I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
It's great to be here.
It really is.
This is our first stop on our European adventure.
We're heading to Oslo and Amsterdam and London after this.
But it's been fun in Stockholm.
How many people here are Swedes?
Good amount of Swedes.
How many people here are expat Americans?
How many people here are from other sundry European locales?
All right.
That's good.
All right, good mix.
Good split.
Good split, yeah.
And other places. There's good. All right, good mix. Good split. Good split, yeah. And other places.
There's other places.
You egomaniacs.
It's not about you.
One little bit of housekeeping for all of our pod listeners out there.
Next week, Tommy is hosting his first live Pod Save the World show in Los Angeles.
Gotta get ready for that.
On January 17th, tickets are on sale.
It's going to have Ben Rhodes, Samantha Power, and the filmmaker behind the documentary,
The Final Year, about the last year of the Obama administration.
So if you guys are in Los Angeles, please check it out.
We'll get you in for free, if you're here, not if you're listening.
Let's start with the news.
So I don't know what's happening in Swedish politics
these days, but over in America, we are in the middle of a spirited debate about whether the
man we elected to lead our country is mentally and emotionally fit to hold that job. A headline
in Saturday's New York Times reads, Trump defending his mental fitness says he's a very stable genius.
That is very exciting for us.
Of course, Donald Trump's mental fitness...
Who can forget?
Who can forget?
When Albert Einstein famously wrote that letter that said,
I am a genius.
And when Newton, the apple hit him in the head and he said, I am a genius. And when Newton, the apple hit him in the head,
and he said, I'm a genius.
A very stable genius.
I'm a very stable genius.
So, obviously, we've had this debate
since Donald Trump ran for president.
But the latest kerfuffle is taking place
because of a new book by Michael Wolff
called Fire and Fury, where he interviews most of Trump's advisors, friends, and family, who all come to a similar conclusion, which is that the president is sort of an idiot.
Now, there's been a lot of questions about whether all of Wolff's reporting is accurate or embellished.
But I guess my first question is,
how much of it is surprising?
How much were you surprised reading that book, Tommy?
I was not surprised about the fundamental character of Donald Trump.
I mean, I think everything we've learned about Donald Trump
over his entire career is that he's a narcissist.
He doesn't give a shit about anyone but himself.
He's not particularly thoughtful
or interested in learning about anything
but his own news clippings
and whatever's on cable news that instant.
So I don't think the basic thrust of what was reported
is somehow new or revolutionary or jaw-dropping.
I do think to see a White House that has so little regard for the president of the United
States when they're currently dedicating their lives to working for the man, that they
would shit on him to a person, including his own children like that.
It tells you a lot about what it's like being in that building, what they actually think
of him, you know, and it sort of confirms all the things that we know from afar because he tweets things that, you know, lead us to these
same conclusions. What do you think, Leavitt? Yeah, you know, it sort of confirms what we
suspected or assumed. I think it is valuable insofar as it eliminates any doubt. I think
even those of us who are very anti-Trump,
there is a part of us that wanted to at least believe
that it was 5% better than we feared, right?
Just that the Trump we see on television
is worse than the Trump that exists behind closed doors,
that it's a bit of a performance.
Maybe there is some exaggeration.
Maybe there is, right.
Maybe there is some exaggeration.
Maybe we're exaggerating once in a while.
Yeah, maybe we've taken this, not even just 10% too far. No. No. It's as bad
as we think. One of the things that's fascinating is it seems as though from everyone from Rex
Tillerson to Gary Cohn to Kelly to McMaster to his own children, it seems that it's not possible to
come away from an interaction with Donald Trump or to hang up the phone with Donald
Trump. And like a lot of these guys have this inability to stop themselves from saying,
what a fucking idiot. Oh my God. Holy shit. Over and over and over again, they hang up the phone
and they're exasperated. Yeah, no, he is, I've said this before, a Fox News loving,
low information voter who became president. That's who he is. I mean said this before, a Fox News loving, low information voter who became president.
That's who he is. I mean, I think it's interesting because so much of the coverage
of Trump and his presidency is, you know, and he's got this low approval rating and Democrats hate
him and they've never hated him more, but the base loves him. And so it's sort of, it becomes this
partisan coverage, right? And what was interesting about this book is literally everyone who has ever worked with
the guy, including family members, the Republicans in Congress, the people in the White House,
his friends, they all think that maybe he has some sort of genius or intelligence when
it comes to showmanship, salesmanship,
marketing. But when it comes to any other policy issue, substantive issue, that he's just not that
bright, that he can't focus. There's also been this thing, you know, when he first became president,
everyone's like, is he distracting us with this, right? Is this some strategy to distract us from X issue and Y issue?
And the truth is, he's the one who's distracted.
He's not distracting us.
Like, he can't focus on anything for more than a couple minutes.
All he does is watch TV.
And you've said this to me, like, he has access to the most secret,
interesting information in the world,
more so than any other human being on earth,
and doesn't seem like he wants to
read any of it. And this is,
I think, is an interesting point, because
the one thing people maybe gave him credit for was
marketing and PR, and that he understood how
to, like, sell a message to a nation.
I think his election maybe sort of
led us to believe that could be true.
The reality with this book is, his team
fucked up royally
by the way they responded to this.
This would have been likely another 24-hour, 48-hour news story
that just went away.
I mean, literally, there have been North Korean nuclear tests
that have had a shorter shelf life than this book
because Donald Trump went out with this insane statement
savaging Steve Bannon.
And now
like all of us are like, oh my God, I got to download this right now. And his lawyer go out
and then send a cease and desist letter. So they have leaned into this thing so hard and made it
this fascinating food fight that everyone wants a piece of it. Let all the Sunday shows today.
And it's entirely because they fucked up the response. The Clinton people back in the day,
remember like Philippe Reines is a friend of all of ours.
There was this devastating book
that was supposed to come out about Hillary
and they managed to get a copy of it early
and they all read through it
and they found out the most salient points
and they leaked it to a reporter
and they gave a quote,
can I be quoted snoring?
Yawning.
Yawning, fuck.
Let's do this again.
Edit this.
And they gave a quote,
can I be quoted yawning?
Amazing, right? Great quote. And they gave a quote, can I be quoted yawning? Amazing, right?
Great quote.
And it killed the book
because they just wrote it off as a nothing burger.
We're going to cut this too.
I've gotten so much shit from this guy
for pulling that during live shows.
Leave it in.
Leave it all in now.
Leave it all in.
Well, just one other thing about this.
To Tommy's point,
much as a tweet saying,
I'm a very stable genius is proof of the opposite,
the book itself
makes its own point.
I was just going to say, no, their response
to the book proves that
the book is true. Their response to the book
proves the point of the book. The book's existence
itself makes the point that the book
makes, which is that this is a White House that is off the rails, that there's no control.
You know, Donald Trump tweeting, I didn't want to interview with this guy. This guy never did
anything. I didn't want anything to do with this book. Michael Wolff, who's a sleaze,
sleaze in the right place at the right time, used the fact that nobody knew what Donald Trump thought
or cared about, that Donald Trump was erratic, that nobody knew where they stood, to get access
to the White House over and over and over again,
and to make these people feel comfortable enough around him to get endless absurd quotes from them.
Because there was no one watching the store, no one who felt like they understood how the White House was supposed to be working,
so that one of New York's sleaziest reporters could camp out in the West Wing for weeks on end. Yeah. I mean, you remember, like, every administration deals with the first big book about the White
House.
Usually it's Bob Woodward and his, you know, he's one of the best credentialed reporters
in the world.
And what he would do is he'd have a source come to his house and park in his garage with
no one would see you go in and out and his private chef would make you food.
And he would say, all of your colleagues say you're a disaster why is that not true and then they're like vomit up all these
attacks on their colleagues you had to work hard to put one of these books together you had to be
sneaky about it you had to ask tough questions you had to work your sources you had to be
sophisticated and we had to have done fucking watergate now you could just get yourself on the
fucking emails you get yourself on that get yourself through security you can just get yourself on the fucking emails. You get yourself
through security. You can just camp out there.
Any one of you could have written this book.
All you needed was a visa.
No, I mean,
look.
Give it up
for visas.
Other reporters have
pointed out that there are certain
facts in the book that aren't facts at all.
There are certain things that Wolf made up, which is fine.
But those same reporters and those same outlets have, through their own reporting over the last year,
confirmed much of what was in the book.
This is a staff and a president who they did not expect to win in the first place.
As soon as they did win, they got in there and then they thought, yeah, we deserve to be in here.
And they had this chip on their shoulder the whole time that since everyone was wrong about guessing that we were going to win the race in the first place, all the criticism now must be wrong too.
Donald Trump, as we've said many, many times over the last year, a 70-something year old who's never going to change.
You're not going to teach him anything
new at this point. He doesn't want to learn anything
new at this point. He just wants to watch
Fox television and
sit in his bed and eat McDonald's
and yell at the screen. That's who he is.
At least William Randolph Hearst
had the decency to go crazy
in the privacy of his own home.
We have to all witness this together.
He's doing it to us,
to the whole world.
What did you say, Wolf?
He was the one that collected
his pee in jars at the end, right?
Who's with me?
Is that right?
Howard Hughes!
I was thinking of Howard Hughes.
Leave it in.
You going to say say something Tommy?
I don't know all I can think about is peeing jars now
I wanted to fix it I'm glad I corrected it
what I was gonna say is
I think what's interesting about the book
is not just what it tells us about Donald Trump
which is what we already knew
but what it tells us about all the people
around Donald Trump
because it's hard enough to believe
that we could get to a point in our country
where we elected someone like this as president,
but you would think that there will be institutions in place
that would stop this from happening
or at least alert the rest of the world
and the rest of the country that this was going on.
The people in the White House are not those people.
Yeah.
And the Republicans in Congress are not those people either.
Love it called Michael Wolff,
a sleaze at the right place at the right time.
That could be the name of the autobiography
of almost anyone working in this White House.
Steve Bannon is just this shitty opportunist
who happened upon the Trump campaign
and now he's at a downfall like nothing
we've seen in recent history.
And by the way, Steve Bannon has not
said that anything in the book is not true that he said. You know it was recorded And by the way, Steve Bannon has not said that anything in the book
is not true that he said. Katie Walsh. He knows it's recorded, by the way. Yeah. So Michael Wolf
has, in case you're wondering if some of this stuff is true, Michael Wolf has tapes of Steve
Bannon. He has tapes of Katie Walsh, who was the deputy chief of staff, who was also quoted
extensively in this book. Everyone's upset about Katie being in it too, but no one has totally refuted what she said either.
So here's the scary thing.
What does it say that
our government is
essentially on autopilot
right now? That the United States government
has, I mean, people have
criticized other presidents in the past.
Obama's not a leader. Why won't he lead?
Why isn't George Bush leading?
Right now is a situation
where we actually have, we just have someone
who is watching television,
tweeting about it, yelling about it, and looking at his press coverage
and decisions are then
thrust on him that
sometimes he doesn't want to make.
And what does it sort of say, like what do we do?
What does it say about the country?
What does it say about all of us that now we're sort of running on autopilot
here and how long can we last that way?
Yeah, well, I mean, one of the things about Trump is,
and this may be an exaggeration,
but they talk about him as sort of being functionally illiterate,
or at the very least not interested in reading memos that are long,
not interested in engaging in policy conversations,
or at least being in a room in a meeting
where he's not the one talking for 54 out of 60 minutes, right?
So to me what that means is, even if you have a staff that's undergoing a process, taking a really rigorous
look at a very difficult challenge, let's say it's sending troops to Afghanistan or like dealing with
a crisis in Yemen, he doesn't actually give a shit or wade in, which means you have these little,
you know, policy staffers like Stephen Miller or Steve Bannon
or H.R. McMaster that can sort of
de facto make these decisions
by greasing the process or
doing certain things their way.
So you don't have anybody like you had with Barack Obama
who was whacked for being aloof
and professorial and for dithering
because he would try to pick apart
assumptions and get to the heart of what
the reality of a problem is and not just sort of take on the Washington response that, you know,
we're doing X thing because that's the way we've always done it, right? So there is this autopilot
feel which is going to run up against a big challenge at some point. We just don't know
what and when. Yeah, I think the scary piece of this is the world is coming for Donald Trump at some point,
right? There's no, every president deals with a crisis that demands them, demands that they
perform the job. He's already failed that when hurricanes have come, devastating hurricanes
that have caused dislocation and misery. You know, Puerto Rico still needs a lot of help. That is a terrible and sad and
an enraging example of presidential failure. And it can get much, much worse than a storm.
So I think that is a really terrifying reality. On the other hand, one of the sobering parts of this
is that in the same way that when we thought Donald Trump would lose, we were all kind of
realizing that the only reason Donald, the only reason Donald Trump wasn't doing better in the same way that when we thought Donald Trump would lose, we were all kind of realizing that the only reason Donald Trump
wasn't doing better in the campaign
was not because our institutions were holding up,
not because the media was holding up so well,
but because Donald Trump was his own worst enemy.
And that's still true now.
In many ways, Donald Trump not wanting to do the job,
not wanting to go campaign for health care,
helped us in the fight to stop health care.
Donald Trump not having an attention span,
not being able to lead an organization
is part of the reason he hasn't had more success
on issues like immigration
and hasn't had more success on some of his plans.
It's clear that the man has plenty of authoritarian impulses
and that if he knew better,
might do some much scarier things.
And the reason that he hasn't been able to be more effective
is because he isn't that bright,
and he also didn't bring a staff of people
who are all ideologically committed in the same way.
And it also speaks to, I think,
the nature of the United States government,
where in the vast bureaucracy that is the executive branch,
the president is allowed to make certain political appointments
in each department,
but there also is sort of this vast group of civil servants
in the Department of Defense, in the State Department,
in the Justice Department, everywhere else.
And those people, because of their hard work
and because they are nonpolitical and nonpartisan in many ways,
they have sort of kept the government running
and kept us out of more trouble
even when we have a president
who is, you know, completely
manifestly unfit for the job.
And by the way, one of the great challenges of being
president is figuring out how to steer this giant ship
and how to get semi-autonomous
bureaucracies and agencies
to bend to your political will. That is
one of the challenges of being president. Which he has not been able to do in any way. Not able to do at all. You know,
every president, I think, spends some time, this is true of Obama, Bill Clinton, every Republican,
Democrat. At first, you know, the president kind of tells you what to do. You know, you spend some
time figuring out what the job is, and then the person slowly figures out how to wield this power,
how to make the, how to fit the presidency
to what they want it to do.
Donald Trump just can't get on.
He can't board the thing.
He keeps his, I don't know what
a sports metaphor would be, he can't get on the jet ski.
Making the decision is the easy part.
Implementing it and forcing the government
to comply to what you've demanded is actually
the magic.
Maybe getting on a moving carousel.
Okay.
That's not sports.
Cool.
I think we also learn from this book. and Gary Cohn, and Dina Powell, and this group of moderates in the White House,
moderate Democrats or moderate Republicans,
whatever they may be,
who have tried to steer him in the right direction.
And so far, they have all been abject failures in that regard.
Yeah.
And you sort of understand why that they've been abject failures, and it's because he is this guy who only listens
and can only process the last person who's been in his ear
and even then can't focus past the next few minutes
or until the next Fox segment.
And so even if Ivanka's telling him all the wonderful reasons
that we should stay in the Paris Climate Agreement,
if Steve Bannon walks into the office five minutes after her
and says something different,
or if he turns on Sean Hannity and he says something
different, that's how that decision's gonna get
made. Yeah, turns out Jared's a conniving
little shit. He's just not very good
at it. Yeah, those people
are not good at their jobs.
You know, I feel like there's
a, is he crazy or is he not crazy?
Is he stupid or is he smart?
And I think it's... It almost doesn't
matter. It doesn't matter and it's more subtle than that.
Whatever sharpness or innate abilities he may have once had,
he has allowed to atrophy by virtue of his disorders,
his whatever, narcissism, lack of discipline,
laziness, selfishness, and lack of curiosity.
We keep going through this.
There's a million articles today
and conversations on all the Sunday shows. Should we diagnose him? Is it a mental thing?
It almost doesn't matter. It's his personality is, will always be unfit for this job. That's
just the way it is, whether it is a mental disorder or not, it doesn't matter. He's just,
he can't do the job. The other thing I took away from, from all of this is to your point about the,
the people who claim that they were saving America. I used to give them a little bit more credit in that I recognized that there was virtue in having a few sane people around him.
we've seen in the recent weeks,
he is so out of control,
he is so unable to do the job, he is so disconnected from the job, that actually
what we need is much simpler, which is
we don't need a sophisticated
group of people pulling the strings.
We need to know that there
are people who will stop him if he tries
to do the big, terrible things.
And that's it.
It doesn't matter whether
Dina Powell and Gary Cohn
are there to stop Stephen Miller.
What matters is having the one
final check against this person because
the reality is
that for all the ways in which he's not
up to the job, all the ways in which he's not sophisticated,
he is still the most powerful person
in the world and the hope
has to be that for all the criticism and for all the
ridiculous and for all the rest,
that people like John criticism and for all the ridiculous for all the rest that there's that that people like john kelly and others who are you know whatever they're telling themselves that if they are put to that one big test that they'll pass it and i don't know
the book makes me i get like where the sort of so-called moderates are coming from and
sure it would must have been awful fighting and ste Bannon, like a bona fide racist,
awful nutjob every day.
But I actually ended up
holding them in even more contempt, because
they knew goddamn well all along
what a bad person Donald Trump is, and they
still helped him get fucking elected, and that's
a risk that they never should have taken. Right, because the choice
that Ivanka Trump and
Jared Kushner and Dina Powell and Gary Cohn
didn't make was to walk out the front doors of the White House, go in front of a bunch of microphones
and say, this man is crazy and unfit for the job and he shouldn't be there.
And they could have done that.
And it might have made a little bit of difference.
Maybe it wouldn't have.
If Ivanka did it, that would have made news.
But they thought to themselves, we're here because we need to be here and we need to
help this.
And if we're not here, worse people are going to be here.
And I get that rationalization, but they all told Michael Wolff for this book, and they've
told Jonathan Swan and Mike Allen and Maggie Haberman, all these reporters, that the guy
is crazy.
They've been doing it for a year, and they just don't say anything about it publicly,
because why?
Well, that's the...
But that...
And every single person from The Hill,
all the people that know,
there's the few crazies,
but all the ones who know damn well
that he's unfit,
from Paul Ryan to Mitch McConnell
to Dina Powell to Gary Cohn
to all of them,
Mattis, McMaster, all of them,
they've all made the compromise
for themselves that says,
this is the world,
and I have to do my best within it
to function,
and this is the moral compromise
I'm personally making.
But all of them together
have the power to change this.
Right.
All of them together are making the decision to make this the world.
And so it is a collective action failure.
It is a tragedy of the commons.
None of these people individually are willing to do the right thing.
And so all together, they're doing a terrible moral failure, participating in a giant moral
failure.
And speaking of all of them together,
the other thing I found very interesting is that Donald Trump, from the beginning, this book says,
basically outsourced his entire legislative agenda to Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell,
and especially Paul Ryan, because he hated Paul Ryan during the campaign, because Paul Ryan said
bad things about him. And then at the beginning of the administration,
Paul Ryan walked into the White House
and kissed his ass.
To the point where it made Trump's staff
embarrassed for Paul Ryan.
Right.
Trump's staff.
People who have totally killed the part of themselves
that can feel embarrassed.
Murdered it.
And basically, Donald Trump said,
I'm not interested in policy.
I don't care that much.
I don't want to know about health care. I don't want to know about the budget. And you go
handle it. And so Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell
are basically in charge
of the U.S. government in terms
of domestic policy, in terms of legislation.
And that's what we have right now.
They're basically two kids wearing a trench coat
pretending to be president.
And it also tells you something about why, when we're all like, why won't Paul Ryan stand up to him?
Why won't Mitch McConnell stand up to him?
Why won't these Republicans stand up to him?
There's two reasons.
Number one is they know that this guy will sign whatever bill they send to his desk.
It doesn't matter.
They have cart.
They can do whatever they want now.
And number two, they also think, well, he's also super popular with the base.
And if we go against the base, then we're screwed in our elections. So...
Doesn't hurt him, it hurts us.
Right. It hurts us. And so we get whatever legislation we want signed,
and we also get to be elected again if we just don't say anything about Donald Trump. And that's
the bargain they've made. And so no matter what Donald Trump does, no matter what awful decision
he makes, no matter what awful thing he says, they're thinking to themselves, my career and the legislation that I want
is more important.
And it's what we've said for a long time.
They're going to tolerate his head as long as his hand can sign things.
Yeah.
And that's it.
So we should talk about the Trump response.
On Saturday, he accused the Democrats and the media of, quote, taking out the old Ronald
Reagan playbook
and screaming mental stability and intelligence.
Boy.
Like, just watch one documentary on Ronald Reagan.
You know what I mean?
There's probably a one-pager somewhere
that could show you what actually the truth was
about his precipitous mental decline.
Right.
And I don't know if I'd call that the Ronald Reagan playbook.
Nor would I.
And then he continued. You know, he's the Ronald Reagan playbook. Nor would I. And then he continued.
He learned, you know, he's threading his tweets now.
He's learning.
Actually, throughout my life, my two greatest assets have been my mental stability and being
like really smart.
It's funny that the biggest laugh line tonight is just a verbatim Donald Trump tweet.
I became president of the United States on my first try.
Also not true.
He ran in 2000.
First try. On my first try. What the true. He ran in 2000. First try.
On my first try. What the fuck?
It's not riding a bike, you know?
What are you doing? On my first try.
Like learning to dive.
I think that would qualify as not smart, but genius.
And a very stable genius at that.
So that's our president.
And then he gave a press conference at Camp
David with all of our favorite Republicans standing behind him.
And now we are going to play a little bit of a game.
Now for a segment we call OK Stop.
We happen to have a little snippet of this press conference.
Here's how it works.
We roll the clip.
As it goes, we say OK Stop to talk about it.. We roll the clip. As it goes, we say, okay, stop to talk about it. Let's roll the clip.
But this morning you were tweeting about your mental state.
Okay, stop.
Mitch McConnell couldn't dress up for this? What's going on?
So you set the scene.
Describe this for the people at home.
So Donald Trump is standing at a podium
at Camp David,
the presidential retreat.
Behind him are several members of Congress.
And his cabinet.
You've got Sexy Rexy.
Mike Pence is back there.
The CIA director for some reason.
Which is deeply strange.
Mitch McConnell, for those of you at home,
has his
saddest sad turtle face on right now.
It is just...
Look at that.
It's funny, the red sweater and his face
are in a disagreement.
Because the red sweater says
this is fun for me, I'm having a nice time,
I'm feeling colorful,
I'm in jeans.
The jeans are like like what body is this
how did I get with
this doesn't feel like a body that wears jeans
look at that face
okay
I need to tweet about that this morning
well only because I went to
the best colleges. Okay, stop.
You can see
the souls of the people behind him
floating up in the air and disappearing.
It's like one of those Dementors from Harry Potter
came. They just sucked the life out of these
fucking people having to listen to him talk about his
college. You guys, what, 73?
You went to the best colleges.
No, you didn't.
I went
to a, I had a situation
where I was a very excellent student, came out,
made billions and billions of dollars,
became one of the top business people,
went to television, and for
10 years was a
tremendous success, as you probably...
Okay, stop. You hosted
The Fucking Apprentice.
Many things you can say about
someone who hosts a successful reality TV
program, but like, you don't have
to be a genius. It's not
something where they say, oh, we only let the smart ones do
that. You fired Meatloaf.
Yeah, it's not like
Yeah, I mean, it's not like
Kim Kardashian, like, goes to a Mensa
meeting and then
heads over to the thing.
He didn't lose 80 pounds to play a part.
He just sat in a fucking boardroom and said,
you're fired.
Ran for president one time and won.
And then I hear this guy that
does not know me,
doesn't know me at all. By the way, did not interview
me for three, he said he interviewed me
for three hours in the White House. It didn't
exist, okay?
Stop. Okay, stop. That is...
It's not true, apparently.
Michael Wolff... He might not have
interviewed him in the Oval Office, but he interviewed
him many times and of course knows him.
Just trying to fact check it. Good?
But I don't know this man. I guess
Sloppy Steve brought him into
the White House quite a bit. Okay, stop.
Sloppy Steve? I might have gone House quite a bit. Sloppy Steve?
I might have gone with like, schlubby, or like
sloppy Steve.
It's like he was sloppy
on his job, but he's also
just a sloppy look.
I think it's one of his better nicknames.
Look at Kevin McCarthy.
It's not quite Lion Ted. It's not quite
Low Energy Ted. It's no Little Marco.
It's no Little Marco. It's no little Marco.
It's no little Marco.
Yeah, Kevin McCarthy, you guys can't see right now,
but everyone else is trying to do the staid dear leader face,
and Kevin McCarthy is losing it.
He just cannot keep up the facade.
It's one of those things.
That's why sloppy Steve is now looking for a job.
If Robert Mueller asks you to come and speak with his committee personally, are
you committed still to doing that? Do you believe that's appropriate?
Just so you understand. Just so you understand. There's been no collusion. There's been no crime.
And in theory, everybody tells me I'm not under investigation.
Okay. That's so funny. In theory, my lawyers say I'm good.
In theory?
Where did that come from?
In theory.
In theory, everybody tells me.
It's so funny.
Those words have never appeared next to each other in any sentence.
In theory, everyone tells me.
I'm not under investigation.
I don't understand when Donald Trump chooses to be lawyerly.
Right.
You know, like, he'll just look at you and tell you a stone cold lie,
and then he'll come back and say, in theory.
Also, there's no crimes.
Four of your associates have been indicted right now.
Two have pled guilty.
You colluded on television.
National Security Advisor.
There have been crimes.
There have been several crimes.
Some of them confessed to already
And the collusion
We're not waiting for some smoking gun
He colluded on television
Hack her
He did it
I fired him because I didn't want this Russia thing going on
He told Lester Holtz
Yeah, no, it's all out there
But anyway, in theory
Maybe Hillary is, I don't know,
but I'm not. But there's been no collusion. There's been no crime. But we have been very
open. We could have done it two ways. We could have been very close and it would have taken years.
But, you know, sort of like when you've done nothing wrong, let's be open and get it over
with, because honestly, it's very, very bad for our country. It's making our country look foolish.
Okay, stop.
Hey, wait, you know what?
That's great.
I'm glad we're in Stockholm.
There's definitely something about this
making our country look foolish.
I want to ask you guys a question.
All right, you have to decide
which has made us look more foolish.
Is it the special counsel provision
allowing for an investigation
of administration of potential crimes
during the campaign,
or is it the fact that we elected
our worst person president?
This one, or this one?
The Trump one.
You know where Sweden stands.
We're also in a part of the world
where we don't have to be reminded
of the role the Soviets and the Russians have played as an aggressor for a very long time.
It's an ongoing challenge.
Countries that I don't want looking foolish.
And it's not going to look foolish as long as I'm here.
That's interesting. Good way to close.
That is reassuring
because imagine what it would be like
for America to look foolish
Not as long as he's here
So let's talk a little bit about
the federal investigation
into the president and his associates
which as we mentioned has so far led to
two guilty pleas from
Trump's national security advisor
and his foreign policy advisor as well as two additional indictments from Trump's national security advisor and his foreign policy advisor,
as well as two additional indictments from Trump's former campaign manager and his deputy.
Again, this is just a hoax.
Before we even just...
That is crazy.
That's the end of a story, right?
That's not the beginning of a story about what's wrong.
That's the culmination of a story of historic
importance. Right, like you haven't had
that since Nixon. And also, those
facts, in some ways,
confirm everything that's in the book. Because none
of those people would have taken the jobs that they
took, Michael Flynn or Paul Manafort, knowing
the things that they had done
that would cause them problems that they'd end up
lying about if they ever thought Trump was
going to win. They all did this because they thought it would prop them up financially for a while
and get them some more fame and fortune,
because that's how the U.S. political system works.
Right, right. They got caught up in this.
So before all of our American political news
got sort of swamped by the Wolf Book,
there was a fairly explosive New York Times story
that broke last Thursday
about the part of Mueller's investigation that's focused on whether Donald Trump and his associates obstructed justice.
himself from the Russia investigation because he wanted Sessions to protect him because he thought that the job of the Attorney General was to protect the President.
And then we also learned that before Trump fired Comey, a Jeff Sessions aide was running
around trying to dig up dirt on Comey and push it to reporters so he could slander Comey
in the press, thus making up an excuse to fire him.
Joke's on you, Sessions aide.
James Comey is perfect.
I was going to say, joke's on you.
We didn't need the bad stories.
We just fired him anyway.
So, question.
Does any of this information advance the case
that the president obstructed justice
more than we already know?
Where does this leave us?
Well, I mean, yes.
I think that if Mueller's
team has confirmed that Trump
went to Don McGahn as White House counsel and said
don't let him go,
tell him not to recuse himself,
I think that's probably significant. It also
sounds like Reince Priebus, who is the chief of staff,
who's since been fired
and frog-marched out the door, has handed
over contemporaneous notes that buttress the case.
There's a lot of evidence in this story
that seems like it would very much add
to whatever case Mueller is putting together.
Yeah. And again, just to reiterate this,
because we've talked about this before on the pod,
the standard for obstruction of justice is corrupt intent here.
And so there's a lot of people who say,
well, the president, of course, had the authority,
any president has the authority to fire the FBI director.
And, you know, there was a lawyer in the White House that came to the conclusion that said
with or without cause, you can fire the FBI director.
And that might be true.
But you also, a president doesn't have the authority to do things if they may also cover
up crime.
So you could not fire the FBI director if you were given a bribe to fire the FBI director.
That would still be illegal even though you had the authority to do so.
Right.
There are a lot of facile arguments about, well, he can fire him any time he wants for any reason.
That's ridiculous.
You're allowed to shred documents.
You can have a shredder.
You can shred documents whenever you want.
You can't come in in the middle of the night and start shredding shit
to conceal a crime
trying to tell me scissors are illegal now
there's all kinds of things that you have the authority to do
but then when put in the context of obstruction of justice
are illegal, all of this goes to
what we already knew
I mean that feels like the theme of what's happening right now
there's more and more reporting confirming
the public shit
where the crimes have been committed right before
all of our eyes is being affirmed
by what's been going on behind the scenes.
That what we didn't know just confirms what we saw
on television, which is that Donald Trump
fired Comey to obstruct justice.
He practically
said it. He said, James, I'm sorry, you have to go.
I'm in the process of obstructing justice.
Well, and we know, again, because
the biggest smoking gun was the day after he fired him, and we know, again, because the biggest smoking gun
was the day after he fired him,
and Lester Holt interviewed him and said,
why did you fire this man?
And he said, oh, because of the Russia thing.
And then Russians came to the White House.
The Russian foreign minister was in the Oval Office.
And he said, oh, you know,
I fired the FBI director, you know,
and I was facing a lot of pressure
because of this Russia thing.
That's not happening
anymore. Yeah. Again,
it's all right there in plain sight.
So, I guess the question is, is there
a scenario where the president could have obstructed justice
even if he didn't have any crimes
to cover up? Like,
is it possible that there is,
that Mueller ends up with
no actual collusion
or crimes of collusion
connected to Donald Trump,
but that he still committed obstruction of justice
because he hated the investigation into him so much
that it just wasn't giving him good enough press.
And so he was so angry about that
that then he obstructed justice.
Yeah.
I mean, that's possible, right?
It's one of the weird things about Donald Trump
is that he just lies so casually.
Like, he can be swinging a golf
club while a reporter watches him and he says,
I never play golf. I mean, he'll go to a course
for four hours and they'll be like, no, no, no,
he didn't play golf. What are you talking about? So
in the course of that process,
I guess he could lie to the FBI
or someone relevant in this process
and get himself in trouble. That's what
I'm waiting for. At some point, if the FBI,
if Mueller actually interviews Donald Trump,
if they put him under oath
in some way, I don't think things are going to
go too well for him.
That's just a guess. I know he can be very disciplined
if he needs to be.
That's an interesting question.
I find myself not
sure how much
of the decline we're seeing
is something he can contain. How much of the decline we're seeing is something he can contain, right? How much of this
is a lack of discipline? Because during the campaign, he was deposed. He was deposed as part
of the legal proceedings around Jose Andres pulling out of the restaurant that he was going
to open at Trump's DC hotel because Jose Andres didn't want to be associated with a fascist Hamburglar.
And in that
deposition, it's fascinating. You can go watch it.
It's online. And you see
the Donald Trump that is
not on television, that is his
most controlled, that is aware that if he
lies, it's a crime, or at least will
have negative consequences for him.
And it's still him, but it
is more contained, and it does seem more rational and more in control.
And so I don't totally know how much of that guy is left.
It's possible if he knows his ass is on the line,
that if this goes south,
you're either going to jail or there's going to be impeachment proceedings
or there's going to be a big problem
that maybe he can pull himself together enough to tell the truth.
Donald Trump has trained himself to lie
because he's trained himself to not fear
the consequences of the lies coming out
a week from now, two weeks from now.
He'll just lie again in the future.
That's something he can deal with.
There's always another lie to make up for the last lie.
That's how he glides through his despicable little lie.
Because the worst thing that can happen is people in the press
and Democrats can yell at you and whatever.
He can get past that. But there are the lies
you can't get out of.
The ones that you tell under oath, yeah.
So in case you're wondering whether congressional
Republicans will do anything about
Trump's potential crimes, there's also been
more evidence over the last few days that the
only actions that they're planning on taking
are to actively help Trump
cover these potential crimes up.
It turns out that the only person Republicans in Congress
want to investigate in relation to Russian interference in our election
and Trump potential collusion
is the British spy who found evidence of Russian interference in our election
and Trump potential collusion.
And so these congressional committees
have been investigating the Russia stuff for a year now and trump and
they have one recommendation out of this committee from lindsey graham and chuck grassley to go to
they believe that uh christopher steel lied to the fbi this is this is what they're doing now
yeah that's very strange huh i mean they made grassley instead of graham made what's called
a referral department of justice where they said you should look into this. Really, anyone can do that. It doesn't mean they'll
pick it up. It doesn't mean there'll be a case or a prosecution. But it is very significant that a
senator of that stature would send that letter and do something like that. It's also very strange to
me because, like, the underlying crime, allegedly, in the Trump case is that he or his campaign
conspired with the Russians
to change the outcome of our
election. The underlying allegation
here about Christopher Steele is that he talked
to journalists about what he found in the
course of his research, which is
not a crime in
any scenario. I guess they're saying he
lied about it to them, but I'm
still not really sure what the sort of
base case here,
like what is the relevance of that fact?
Yeah, I mean, it seems like there's two things going on,
and they're both about obfuscation.
So on the Steele front, there's like sort of a,
you step back and there's sort of a deeper lie
or deeper manipulative effort going on,
and it's basically to try to disqualify
the entire Russia investigation
by disqualifying the Steele dossier. And you guys remember
the Steele dossier, it's where the
rumor of the sort of...
The P-tape, John.
Which, you know, because we don't live
in a simulation where there is a P-tape,
it will never come out, it's just something we'll dream of.
It's just not going to be a P-tape.
Yeah, it's dreaming of the P-tape.
The P-tape is a fantasy, we hope is true.
But regardless, the dossier, you know, they're trying to disqualify the dossier to disqualify the whole investigation,
but reports including the New York Times and elsewhere over the course of the past couple of weeks
have made it clear that the dossier is not the whole source of this investigation,
that the dossier confirms some stuff that they had separately,
that there was a larger investigation going on because of Papadopoulos and others.
No, he got drunk in London and told the Australian ambassador that there were Russian crimes.
And it set off a whole thing because that's crazy.
And the second part of this is trying to boil the entire Russia investigation down to did Trump personally collude with Putin to do this? And while it's
important to find that out, what is undeniable and what is tremendously important for our democracy,
and by the way, your democracy and every democracy in Europe, is Russia's attempts to influence and
undermine Western democracies around the world. And that unequivocally happened, and it is dangerous.
And the point Mark Warner has made over and over again, which is
important, is, okay,
you've made this entirely about you. It is incredibly
important that we safeguard our elections from Russia
moving forward, but because Trump has made it about himself
and the Republicans are carrying his water,
we're actually not doing what we need to do to protect
ourselves. What Grassley's trying to do is actually even
a step crazier, which is they're trying to say
the Clinton campaign,
at least in part, paid for the Steele dossier,
which pushed it over to the Obama-run
FBI, which kicked off an investigation.
So this whole thing is Hillary's fault,
like everything else in our fever dream
of an existence over the last 30 fucking years.
Which is just...
Lindsey Graham, wasn't he normal at some point?
Yeah.
You know, like a Republican we disagreed with.
But like, at one point he said Donald Trump was a Republican we disagreed with. But like,
at one point he said Donald Trump was a kook
who shouldn't be in office.
There's a bunch of other Republicans
who are still self-agents to Donald Trump
but said, you know, on this Russia thing
we still need to know what's happening, what's going on,
we need to investigate it. It seems like it's
deteriorated even worse than
it started
in the last couple months.
And maybe it's just a coincidence,
but it's happened as Mueller
has started handing down indictments
and we've seen more evidence.
I don't know what's going on with Lindsey.
I mean, look, Lindsey Graham was never an ally here.
No.
But he was one of those people on the list
with the Corkers and Flakes and McCains of the world
that once in a while would remember
that they liked to believe
that they had really strong principles.
And he once in a while would act
on them. And they'd put that statement out and then they'd be
like, that was my principle.
You see it? It's a statement. Principles.
It's all right there.
It's right there, my statement. But Lindsey Graham
has gone down a path.
He golfed with Donald Trump and that was it.
He was hooked. I don't know if we're just becoming
numb to it or what. The other thing I
noticed this last week is, and I don't know if it's
everyone's just getting back from
break and they're all negotiating the spending
deal that we're about to talk about, but
there weren't a lot of Democrats out there
this last week just sort of
screaming about this. I mean,
they're telling the Justice Department
to investigate Hillary Clinton's
emails again. They're
trying to, you know, indict
Christopher Steele,
investigate Christopher Steele as the British spy who tried to
warn us about Russian interference.
Paul Ryan is letting Devin Nunes,
who's already been disgraced
because he did one shitty thing
with the White House, to just go on another
fishing expedition.
Like, there's just, the Republicans are engaged in sort of a vast conspiracy to help Donald Trump cover up potential crimes.
And I don't see, like, I saw Adam Schiff out there talking about this, but I don't see
a ton of Democrats yelling about this.
And I don't know what's going on.
Is it because we feel like there's nothing much we can do now except focus on the 2018
elections, you you know get these
republicans out of office and go from there or what dan made this point on thursday's show about
the fact that we don't just need to scream about this but we actually have to lay out what exactly
want to do to hold trump accountable on these matters on these not policy not like democrat
not uh domestic policy matters like health care and and taxes but what are we going to do on the
institutional questions that donald trump has raised and the Republicans have failed on?
I think that's really important,
but I think part of the reason we don't have those steps
is I think Democrats, we know we need to focus on healthcare.
We know we need to focus on taxes.
And we also know we need to have the right things to say
about investigating and holding Trump accountable.
But I don't think as a party we know where we're supposed to land.
And I think there's a bit of fatigue
on the part of Senate Democrats
to just continue to beat this drum.
Like, I think they're more comfortable
fighting on healthcare,
they're more comfortable fighting on chip,
more comfortable fighting on taxes.
And maybe ultimately that's where we'll win,
so it's okay.
I'm not sure.
What do you think?
I mean, I would just say to Democrats,
it's not like you need to be talking
about the Russia thing all the time, because this is actually broader than the Russia thing.
This is about sort of the Republicans in Congress degrading our institutions and the rule of law.
There's all these norms around the Justice Department and what it should do and how it
should be independent and how the Federal Bureau of Investigation should be independent
and when you should investigate someone and when you shouldn't.
And this goes beyond, like,
is there a P-tape and a Russia scandal
that we should all be talking about?
This is about our institutions.
You know, I think that many Democrats
need to stand up and make those points.
I think part of it is I think we're all a bit...
We're still in a kind of daze.
We're still in the, oh, shit, Trump won.
What does that say about what people care about?
And I think we know people care about pocketbook issues.
We know that.
And I think Democrats, we really don't.
I think it's an open question.
I think one of the most troubling things about Trump is, we should just face it, is an open
question as to how much in the voting booth, in an election, you can make issues of norms
and institutions and civic virtues around
governance part of how you win. And I don't think we know the answer to that. And I think there's
Democrats who just are retreating to safer ground. And that may be okay, but I think you're right
that these are issues that are incredibly important to talk about. One last question,
and then we'll get to our game. The thing that Democrats and Republicans are focusing on
this week is
they're currently trying to reach a deal that will fund our government
for more than a month or two at a time.
Which would actually be relatively
new for us in America. Hold on a second.
Swedes.
Are you guys on a weekly
budget?
Your government funded by the Fortnite?
Or you guys have a longer process?
Do you guys have these
showdowns every couple of weeks?
Applaud if you do.
I think you're so hot.
Highly functioning.
Bunch of arrogant Scandinavian
bastards think you're better than us
with your
functioning government.
Your generous social insurance
program.
You're better than us.
We got some hisses. You took not better than us. Oh, we got some hisses.
See what you did?
You took it across the ocean.
Enjoy your iPhones.
What are you, Foxconn?
What are you talking about?
So the big controversial sticking points are
A, whether we'll fund the bipartisan
children's health insurance program
that guarantees coverage to 9 million American children.
And B, whether we'll protect
at least 800,000 young American immigrants known as Dreamers from being deported in March.
Trump is now saying that he will only protect the Dreamers if he gets $18 billion for more fencing
on the U.S.-Mexican border, which he's calling his wall. He also wants 10,000 additional immigration officers
and other immigration restrictions. So, question. Is there a world where Democrats make a deal
on border security in order to protect the dreamers, or do we hold still and say,
absolutely no deal on anything else, and if Trump wants to shut the government down over this wall,
he can shut the government down over the wall I think this is an easy one because I think this is kind of a type of politics
that existed before Trump and I think because Trump is so heinous and he's made this whole
thing about the wall which is such you know dumb nonsense that he just clicked in on because it
rallied some some old southern white people on his tour.
You know, we have to remember that any compromise in immigration, going back to Reagan, to George W. Bush, to whatever Obama proposed, it was always a compromise that was about legalization,
path to legalization, protecting the dreamers, and money for border security and interior
enforcement.
And we should be open to that deal.
We should fight really hard.
We should actually make sure that enforcement
is about holding companies accountable
and not punishing hardworking people
who are here just doing jobs.
We have to make sure it's compassionate.
And we shouldn't just fund a dumb wall.
But I think we can call border...
Donald Trump can go on television and call border security,
which was going to be part of any deal, his great wall.
And he can take that. And then we can protect the 800,000 people that deserve to stay in America
because it's the only home they've ever known. Yeah, to me, this is analogous to what just
happened on health care, which is they repealed the individual mandate, which was not a good thing,
and it's going to lead to higher premiums, but it is far, far, far short of repealing Obamacare.
It's not touching Medicaid. It's not touching any of the subsidies
or anything else. Nevertheless,
once it happened, Trump went out on TV and said
individual mandate was central
to Obamacare, which means now we've repealed
Obamacare. It's gone. Don't talk about it again.
It's dead.
He can put
a little bomb on a psychic wound
that's just for him. He just wanted to say it was dead.
They're already saying that some of this money
on the border fencing
would not build a wall, but it would repair some fencing
that's already on the border.
If that ends up what it is, and Trump wants to go out
and say, this is my wall,
and it's just actually...
Put some fucking bricks in a pile, he can take a picture.
I think that the key...
Knowing that a government shutdown
is actually a big deal and hurts a lot of people.
Knowing that the clock is ticking on kids getting health insurance
as we get further and further from CHIP being authorized,
and we're going to get to a point where DREAMers are having to leave the country en masse.
I think the politics of a government shutdown is ultimately good for Democrats
and very bad for the party in charge,
so that we should fight to have every single priority we have in there. It is
hard for me to
swallow an idea as stupid as
$18 billion
for a fucking phony wall that
won't work and is probably not real anyway
but maybe that's where we are.
We've got $18 billion helicopters that can't fly.
We've paid for dumber shit.
I think we've got to watch it. I think we've got to make sure
that some of the things that they
want, some of the poison pills that
fucking C-plus Santa Monica fascist
Stephen Miller are inserting in this deal
about cutting legal immigration and chain
migration and stuff like that. That's all the shit they're trying
to jam in late, too. Right. And it could
get to a point where it's too much and we've got to say
no. But I think the most important thing for Democrats
is no Democrat should vote
to fund a government that will deport
800,000 people who it promised to protect.
And no Democrat should vote
to fund a government that will not
extend insurance to 9 million
American children. And we have to just
be absolutely firm on that and not
take that vote. That has to be a line
that Senate Democrats
understand is
something that is being
drawn by the millions of people
that have become engaged in a way they haven't been before
that have been paying attention that these are
the people that are going to deliver the House, these are the people
that can deliver the Senate, and whatever they think
about the broader politics of immigration, whatever they think
about that, this is a moment where
the entire Democratic base is
looking to see if Democrats are going to
give them something to vote for.
And if they let us down, I think we have to unleash holy hell, but we have to just push them right now to do the right thing.
Okay.
When we come back, we'll have another game. And we're back!
Now for a game that we call Stockholm Syndrome.
Sorry about the name, guys.
There were some backups, but this is what we went with.
Here's how it works.
Donald Trump and Republicans have spent a lot of time using Sweden like a pejorative.
Oh, you're going to make America like Sweden.
I'm sorry, but it's what goes on.
And so we wanted to quiz one of you about the ways in which Sweden has been used in
this manner.
So would anybody here like to play Stockholm Syndrome?
This person in the front row is waving. Did you just scream
Seattle?
Your merch is in Seattle. Oh, well, maybe
we'll call on you there.
Hi, what's your name?
Hi, Emily. Emily.
Yes. Are you from Stockholm?
I'm from Gävle, outside of Stockholm.
It's a
different town.
Where are you from? What's it called? Gävle, outside of Stockholm. It's a different town. Where are you from? What's it called?
Gävle.
No.
No, I don't think so.
No.
What was it?
Gävle.
And what was your name?
Emily.
So it's Emily from Yardley.
Yardley.
So, Emily.
Yep.
Your first question.
Emily from Yardley.
After Donald Trump mistakenly referred to a non-existent terror attack in Sweden,
Fox News host Bill O'Reilly interviewed Swedish defense and national security advisor Nils Bilt
to provide insight into the extremist violence occurring in Sweden.
The Swedish government released a statement admonishing Fox for inviting Nils Bilt to speak.
Why?
Was it A.
His appearance on American television was not authorized by the Swedish government.
Was it B.
He revealed classified information about an ongoing security operation.
Was it C?
He flew business class to the U.S., which was very expensive.
Or was it D?
He is not a Swedish defense and national security advisor.
He does not live in Sweden, and his name is not Niles Biltz.
The answer is D.
That is right.
Nice job, Emily.
How did that...
Did you guys all catch up with that?
Did that all...
You guys all saw that happen?
Yeah.
Did that piss you guys off?
Yeah.
Cool, us too.
Question number two, Emily.
Senator Bernie Sanders, a Democratic Socialist,
ran an insurgent primary campaign against Hillary Clinton in 2016,
often drew criticism from Republicans for his left-wing platform.
Which Republican said the following?
Quote, I think Bernie Sanders is a good candidate for president of Sweden,
even though Sweden does not have a president.
Was it A, Paul Ryan before endorsing Donald Trump?
B, Marco Rubio before endorsing Donald Trump?
C, Mitch McConnell before endorsing Donald Trump? B. Marco Rubio before endorsing Donald Trump. C. Mitch McConnell
before endorsing Donald Trump.
Or D. Hillary Clinton before it all fell apart
and we ended up in this nightmare hellscape.
Paul Ryan?
It was Marco Rubio.
Ooh.
Who, by the way, I will separately point out,
said he used to say
the line about Norway,
but he's like, he got in trouble
because Norway doesn't have a president.
Hey, John, let's take a behind-the-curtain
at Crooked Media for a second.
We have two conference rooms.
One is large, one is small.
What are their names?
Big Marco and Little Marco.
Good.
We have a good time at work.
Our staff did that.
Sweden doesn't have a president either.
We know.
That was the whole thing.
Keep up.
Okay, listen.
I didn't think I'd have to do this in Europe.
Here's the thing about shouting things from the crowd.
You've got to be so sure that you're right.
Thank you for coming. Emily, I'm sorry. I'm sorry for me, and I'm sorry for coming.
Emily, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry for me, and I'm sorry for that person.
Question number three.
In a debate about income inequality,
one conservative offered the following rebuke to liberals.
You said, gosh, these executives make too much money.
I don't think the government should be in the business
of deciding what you get paid.
In socialist countries like Sweden and Denmark, if you are born poor, you usually stay poor.
Who said it? Yeah, you don't like it, do you?
Who said it? Was it A?
Paul Ryan, before voting for a tax bill to make school supplies more expensive for teachers.
Was it B?
Mitch McConnell, before voting to cut Medicaid for millions of working people.
Was it C?
Ted Cruz, despite the fact that study after study has shown that there is more
economic mobility in countries with a strong
social safety net, and that in America, you're
more likely to be stuck in the same economic
situation as your parents than you are
in countries like Sweden and Denmark.
Or was it D?
Bernie Sanders, but like
he was being sarcastic.
That's a hard one, but I'm going to go with C.
Nailed it.
Emily, you have gotten two out of three correct.
But this last question is for all the marbles.
Do you have that saying here?
It means
for all the things.
The whole enchilada.
Question number four.
Guys, can you focus?
These are funny.
Emily again.
I'm sorry.
How are you, Emily?
Great.
Okay.
Thank you for wearing the merch.
You're welcome.
It cost a ton in shipping and customs fees, so you should be grateful.
Did we get the incorrect sound?
Unfortunately, you are now two for four.
Question number five.
This is some good news.
Sweden does have at least one big Republican fan.
His name is Donald Trump.
How do we know this?
Donald Trump pretended to be of Swedish ancestry for decades,
including the line in his book, The Art of the Deal.
What are Donald Trump's true familial origins?
Was it A?
Donald was found in a crashed alien craft in Kansas
by lovely farmers named Jonathan and Martha Trump
who raised the boy as their own.
Was it B?
Fred Trump, Donald's father,
who was one of those guys that snuck onto the left boats
on the Titanic before the women and children
because that kind of makes sense.
Was it C?
The Trump family was German, but pretended to be Swedish
to avoid angering Jewish tenants during World War II
and then just kind of went with it because it seemed cool.
Or was it D?
No one knows where Donald Trump came from.
We all actually can't remember anything before 2016.
We are all in a simulation and we just relive the Trump presidency
over and over again to see if we ever figure out how to save ourselves.
They've done the simulation 14,000 times.
It'll end when we get it right.
Okay, the answer is C.
I forgot that there was a quiz.
So, Emily, who paid for the shipping for the merch, you've won the game.
And for that, you will get a lovely one of these Pod Save America hats, shipping included, because Tanya's handing it to you right now.
Guys, give it up for Emily.
Thank you to John and Tommy
because they sat there
while I screwed up the intro to the game.
When we come back,
some Q&A with you guys.
Okay, we have time for a couple questions.
Hi, I'm Peter from Sweden.
Hello.
From Stockholm.
So in Sweden we have eight parties in Congress, in Parliament.
Hearing about your grievances about splits in the Democratic Party, and if you consider the thought experiment of having
maybe a Mitt Romney party and
a Donald Trump party in 2016,
do you hope and in any way expect
that there are two parties in 100
years in the States, or
don't you? I mean, I just
think that
the way we're going,
you could see
an independent
run for president
and succeed
I would have never said that
in a pre-Trump
era but now that
Donald Trump's president anything's sort of
possible but I do think that our
two party system right now makes it
extraordinarily difficult for a third party or a fourth party to pop up and take hold.
I think the Electoral College makes that really tricky.
I think the way that congressional districts are drawn makes that tricky.
A lack of proportional representation makes that tricky.
I mean, the U.S. has four parties.
They're just stuck into two categories. The Republican Party
has the corporate
conservative wing, and it has
this nationalist front.
And the Democratic Party has the
Bernie Sanders left wing,
and it has a more center-left
party inside of itself.
We just fight a lot of these things out
inside of primaries, and because
of the way our system is designed
There's just it's harder for a third party to emerge and also it's you got to want it
like I don't think the Mitt Romney party is pretty much just gonna have Mitt Romney in it because
the other the other possibilities Bob Corker Jeff Flake all those guys, you know, they decided to quit and
Bob Corker, Jeff Flake, all those guys,
they decided to quit and supposed to stay and fight Donald Trump.
And so if you had this portion of Republicans
who really despised Donald Trump,
who were in elected office
and had this following in the country of Republicans
who thought likewise,
like our friend Tim Miller,
who is one of our contributors
and plenty of other Republicans we know,
they would go do that and and they would field candidates,
and they would try to do this.
But a lot of them don't want to do it.
They don't want to battle Donald Trump
because they're afraid of right-wing media.
They don't think there's support in the base.
They don't think that they can get money from donors.
And so the will has to be there to actually have that fight.
And I think right now, on the right side of the
spectrum, that will isn't there. And on the left side of the spectrum, I don't think the splits
between sort of the Bernie supporters on the left, on the far left, and a lot of the center left
folks are that extreme, even as they were. The Democrats are more ideologically united, at least
elected Democrats, than they have been in some time.
But if it gets to that point, you actually need the people to go fight for that.
And I don't see the will there.
And just one other thing that this point you made a lot, we made a lot.
One lesson of Trump is there actually wasn't a big constituency
for the Paul Ryan agenda that that's not what the certainly not what Democrats wanted.
It turns out it wasn't Republicans wanted Trump.
Trump ran roughshod of these people
on trade, on immigration.
He wasn't pushing a more right-wing tax policy.
He ended up voting for it
because he ended up signing it because he didn't care
because he outsourced it to Paul Ryan.
But deregulation and cutting taxes for billionaires
doesn't have a party.
In fact, it's what may bring Trump
and the Republican Party down in 2018.
Not some of the things that Donald Trump ran on,
but some of the things that Paul Ryan pushed him on,
which are cutting taxes and taking away Obamacare.
That's what may do them in in 2018.
Thank you.
Seb, you're on from Linköping.
And my question is to Tommy.
I really like Pod Save the World.
Thank you.
It's a short question. Tonya's wearing the shirt.
So,
what do you believe is the trajectory
of on foreign policy views
within the Democratic Party?
On foreign policy views? This is
hard. I don't know.
The challenge is
the Obama
versus Clinton
fights on foreign policy
were sort of the last big inter-party debate we had.
And that almost entirely revolved around the Iraq War,
which ultimately was a pretty obvious answer, right?
Like, she voted for a war that was a fucking disaster
that we're still paying for,
that has led to uncertainty in the region,
the rise of ISIS, like, all these challenges.
Barack Obama was opposed to it, and it was a very clear contrast
and probably the reason he was able to win.
Obama, when he got in office, had talked about, you know,
how we needed to win the war in Afghanistan,
how we needed to get tougher on al-Qaeda in certain parts of the country.
And then I think Democrats were actually kind of shocked
when he followed through on some of those promises,
including going after bin Laden in Pakistan,
increasing targeted strikes against targets in various places,
and sending tens of thousands of troops to Afghanistan.
Both sides seem to, in the last election,
have coalesced around a desire to pull back militarily from the world
in a pretty significant way. And unfortunately, on the right, that's been coupled with a desire
to pull back diplomatically in terms of diplomacy generally, contact with the world, attempting to
lead in trade agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership to pull back on foreign aid. I don't know what those fights are going to look like the next go-round.
It's hard to see because the focus right now is so domestic in nature
and we're always fighting about social and economic issues first
that foreign policy almost gets second shift.
But I think hopefully, the good thing about the Obama administration is
there was this reflexive assumption that Republicans are muscular and Democrats were soft
and that the muscular foreign policy, the more militaristic foreign policy was the one that was
electorally effective and can be used as a cudgel to whack Democrats in an election. I think Obama reversed that thinking somewhat,
and I'm hopeful that can lead us
to make slightly more intelligent,
informed decisions going forward,
even in the context of a political process.
That said, right now we're having a big debate
over Iran and the Iran deal we cut
to reduce the threat from their nuclear program,
and it's still just as fucking stupid
as all the other debates we have in Washington.
So maybe we haven't learned our lesson yet.
All right.
That's it.
Stockholm, you've been wonderful.
Thank you so much to everyone else.
We'll be back with a pod on Thursday, our live show from Oslo.
Thank you.
Thank you, guys.
And good night. Bye.