Pod Save America - Trump “Not Joking” About 3rd Term
Episode Date: April 1, 2025Donald Trump's long-promised "Liberation Day" of insane new tariffs approaches, but what's his plan for the global trade war he's promising to start? Jon, Lovett, and Tommy discuss all the latest madn...ess, including Trump's new hints that he'll serve a third term, the galling new details about Alien Enemy Act deportations, and Elon Musk buying votes in the Wisconsin judicial race. Then, Jon sits down with Arizona Senator Ruben Gallego to talk about how Democrats can fight back against Trump and how we can win again in states like his.
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That's simplysafe.com slash crooked. There's no safe like simply safe. Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
On today's show, Trump says he's not joking about trying to serve a third term and that
there are, quote, methods to get around the very clear constitutional amendment that prevents
him from doing so.
Of course Trump's already acting like a dictator.
The Supreme Court will decide whether he can round up people without due process and send
them to a foreign gulag, which apparently ICE agents are now doing based on tattoos
that they think might be suspicious.
The first pair of elections that could give us a hint as to how voters are feeling about
America's golden age are Tuesday.
We'll talk about Elon's last-minute trip to quite literally buy people's votes.
Then you'll hear my conversation
with newly minted Senator Ruben Gallego of Arizona
about how he's feeling about Trump's second term
and what more Democrats can do to fight back.
But first, by the time you're hearing this,
we'll just be one day away from liberation day.
Big day, guys.
That's what Trump is calling Wednesday, April 2nd,
the day he's expected
to announce a set of reciprocal tariffs, which are tariffs on other countries that impose
tariffs on us. But in remarks aboard Air Force One on Sunday, he indicated that he'll be
going much bigger.
You're expecting to hit something like 10 to 15 countries, is that right?
No.
All of the countries.
Is it across the board?
Who told you 10 or 15 countries?
We heard that. So we heard that you were going to aim for the 8%.
But you didn't say anything told you 10 or 15 countries.
Well, we heard that. So we heard that you were going to aid for the...
But you didn't hear it from me.
Okay. So how many countries will be in that initial trunch?
You'd start with all countries. So let's see what happens.
We're going to be much more generous to them in terms of heart.
We're going to be much more generous than they were to us.
This country is going to be more successful than it ever was. It's going to boom. We're going
to have a boom down USA. We're going to boom.
It's going to boom.
It's going to boom. All right.
We're going to boom. So no one seems to know what Trump is actually going to do here, including
his own advisors. There's been a bunch of reporting that he may just do blanket tariffs of up to 20% on all
imported goods from everywhere, which is what
he talked about during the campaign.
Peter Navarro, Trump's trade guy, told Fox
over the weekend that the tariffs will raise
$6 trillion over 10 years.
Only?
Which experts say would be the largest tax
hike in American history, although Peter Navarro
calls them tax cuts.
Sure. Yeah, of course he does.
And when Kristen Welker at NBC asked Trump
about the 25% auto tariffs that are scheduled
to go into effect this week, he said he quote,
"'Couldn't care less if car companies raised their prices.'
"'Couldn't care less,' was the quote.'
"'Sure enough, the S&P ended March
"'with its steepest monthly decline
"'since the Fed raised rates in December of 2022
and the worst quarter at the start of a president's term
since the financial crisis in 2009.
Not good moments, either of those.
What do you guys think?
How's America's golden age looking right now?
So the only way I can make sense of what Trump is doing
with tariffs as a policy matter is it's gotta be part
of a negotiating strategy where he's just trying
to convince these other countries that he's so crazy
that he's gonna tank the global economy
so they come to the table and cut a deal.
Because the stated rationale for all these tariffs
are self-evidently ridiculous,
like cutting off fentanyl flows from Canada, right?
It just doesn't make any sense.
And that's because tariffs are a tool,
they're not a strategy.
They're designed to protect existing industries
against unfair trade practices by other countries,
like China dumping a bunch of steel or aluminum
into the US market.
But they're not designed to grow a US industry on its own
like the CHIPS Act was, which Trump
says he wants to get rid of.
And so even in the most charitable scenario
where Trump tariffs the auto industry. So Mexico, it becomes more
expensive to create, assemble vehicles in Mexico. So GM and Ford rev up some plants
here. That's going to increase prices for everybody. And I know Trump doesn't care,
but the companies can't eat that hit. So labor costs are much higher in the U S than in Mexico.
So it's going to raise prices for everyone. So just like none of it makes sense. It's like tariffs, when used effectively, they're targeted.
But we're talking about a broad-based 20 to 25% tariff
on every country maybe.
And if China's the real threat and the real problem,
why are we starting by tariffing the EU and Canada
and Mexico and all the allies that we actually need?
Or all the countries, as he sort of hinted at.
Right, it's the maybe reciprocal tariffs
if it's tariffs on the whole world.
The other fundamental problem is the more money
your tariffs are raising, the less your tariffs are working
to produce the result that you claim they're going to produce.
If putting tariffs on the world leads to a boom, a manufacturing boom domestically,
then the revenue coming from those tariffs should slowly tick down. If tariffs really are raising
$600 billion a year, consistently it means we are still importing huge amounts of goods.
The other part of this that's confusing is on the one hand, you have Navarro out there saying,
this is going to raise vast sums of money, the greatest tax increase in history, which would be
extremely disruptive to the economy. And then today you watch as the markets kind of flit around,
but still are behaving as if this is sort of an idle threat. Like they're not, you know,
we're not seeing the kind of like chaos in the markets you would expect.
If we thought we were gonna see the biggest tax increase
in history and some of the most,
some of the greatest disruption to trade
that we've ever seen.
I mean, I think that the markets are pretty,
the fact that we had the steepest decline since,
in a couple of years, in just one month of the first term
and it's like entirely self-inflicted.
I think that obviously there's some uncertainty
on what's actually gonna happen here,
but I think most of the economic indicators
and most of the people,
like everyone's raising the recession risks, everyone's like.
I'm not saying the signs are good.
I'm not saying the signs are good,
but like the Dow is still up year on year,
the S&P is still up year on year,
Nasdaq's still up year on year.
Like everybody is still behaving as though Trump is gonna do
these kind of chaotic tariffs, he turns off,
turns on, he turns off, no one is behaving.
The markets aren't behaving as if what we're about to see
is like a fundamental shift in US economic policy
that's gonna last.
I think what the markets think is that what will happen
this time is what will happen last time,
which is Trump will threaten this universal tariff
and then he'll delay it.
And then an army of lobbyists will storm
into the White House and they'll carve out special deals
for big companies like Apple or GM
or whichever foreign leader buys enough Trump coin
will get an exception, half kidding there.
And so I also think that these countries
that like cut a deal with Trump,
they know that Trump only cares about the day one headline.
Like the Chinese in the first term said they were gonna buy
billions and billions of dollars of American exports.
And Trump trumpeted that and took a huge win.
And then they bought none.
They bought zero additional exports.
They just didn't care.
So you can give Trump the win on the negotiation
and then win for real in the implementation.
He also said over the weekend that these,
someone's like, are you gonna lift them at some point?
If something happens, he's like,
no, these are permanent now.
I have been trying to envision a scenario
where this trade war doesn't ultimately inflict
real political damage on Trump and the Republicans.
I am coming up short.
I think that there have been certainly many times
in the first term and even at the beginning of this one
where he has gone forward, backed off, delayed, backed up.
But like, I think that it is, I don't,
I think that he believes that, and his advisors believe,
some of his advisors at least, most of them,
that they are sort of restoring economic nationalism
to America and they're gonna remake,
I saw somewhere that he thinks he's going to remake
the global economy, not just for years or decades,
but maybe centuries.
Centuries. Centuries.
Yeah, that's what they said this morning.
I love a century.
I love a time horizon on Trump that's centuries.
And so I do feel like it's more of an ideological project,
a crazy one, but an ideological project
than I had originally assumed,
just based on what Navarro's saying, what Trump's been saying, what Vance has been saying,
and Bannon and all the big economic nationalists. I think it's fucking crazy, and I think they're
gonna find out pretty quickly that it is very damaging, but I don't know what you guys think.
Yeah, I mean, there's another school of thought that some economists think that the Trump plan
is to
Long story short like weaken the American dollar by cutting a bunch of deals with other countries and forcing them to stop currency
manipulation to make it cheaper to export American goods and thus resuscitate
American manufacturing that too sounds a little far-fetched to me. Yeah, you also have
Politico was reporting this that Republican House members, industry groups are scrambling right now for exemptions.
Like to the point Tommy made earlier,
that they are desperately trying to exempt,
farmers are already being hit hard
by the impact of tariffs,
that there are tons of industries in Republican districts,
that these Congress people are worried
are gonna be adversely affected,
their industry groups desperately trying
to figure out how to lobby.
And so now, look, maybe they are doing some grand ideological realignment, but one way
to make sure you are in control, able to do the kind of corruption you want to do where
companies and Republicans have to come and pledge fealty to you is by being deadly serious
right now while so you can then claim you've put on these big tariffs
while there's tons and tons of holes cut into them
for which you've gotten God knows what concessions,
promises, et cetera.
It is just worth quickly pointing out
that there's no legal authority to do this.
Trump is claiming he's gonna do it,
or some of his team is suggesting
they're gonna use a law called AIPA,
which allows the president to regulate commerce
in response to a national
emergency overseas.
So we're going to declare there's a national emergency in every single country and therefore
we're slapping a 20% tariff.
It is.
It's nonsensical.
The legal basis for many of his foreign policy decisions seems quite fragile.
Not there.
There was a great story in the journal about Harley Davidson and tariffs.
Harley Davidson, great American company.
They could face a 50% retaliatory tariff
on selling Harleys abroad.
So they did the math on a Harley Davidson sale in Denmark.
It would go from $28,000 to purchase here
in the United States to $124,000 all in
with all the that tax and everything else over there.
So it's just gonna decimate Harley Davidson.
And they dealt with this in the first Trump term.
And in response, they actually moved some production
from the US to Thailand.
So there's like effects you cannot anticipate.
They're not gonna be good.
I was gonna say, not only are prices gonna go up
and he doesn't care about that,
but the stated goal of the terrorists
to bring back production and manufacturing
in the United States isn't gonna work
on a whole host of industries
because it's just, it's not the way
that the world works anymore. It's like, it's just, it's not the way the world works anymore.
It's like, it's just, it's cheaper to move stuff overseas.
And just even on its own terms, like look at cars, right?
They're gonna, Navarro's out there saying
it's gonna generate a hundred billion dollars.
Let's say it's, there's eight million cars imported
that were sold, right?
That's over $10,000 per car.
There's not some immediate increase in the supply
of American-made cars to make up for the more expensive cars
that would be coming from abroad.
The cost of all of these cars goes up.
The cost of everything goes up.
And for the American car companies,
the cost of the materials to make the car is gonna go up
because they rely on materials from overseas.
And these materials cross the border
like three, four, five times.
Are we gonna tariff them every single time?
I've heard a lot of people make the argument
that the Trump tax bill that we're gonna be debating soon
is gonna be like when Bush tried to privatize
social security in 2005.
I actually think that Trump's tariffs could end up being
the more apt comparison here because he's just sending out
a lot of signs that he doesn't really give a shit
about the prices.
And Berkeley said as much.
Yeah, right, exactly.
And, you know, there was this thing that,
like maybe the stock market,
he cares so much about the stock market,
and like that'll be, you know,
I kind of bought into that too.
It doesn't seem like that he cares about that either.
Yeah, but it's only been a 10% correction.
I mean, like, we haven't felt real pain
in the stock market yet.
That's, like, there's, but I think the bigger,
the thing he cares about more than that, right?
Like if you watch Fox right now, they're like,
Donald Trump's approval rating has never been higher
because it touched like 49, right?
And while his approval on the economy has gone down,
his approval on immigration has never been higher.
And you watch his immigration number,
he is at the lowest he's ever been on economic approval
since he's been president.
His approval on handling inflation is going down.
These are fox polls.
Like those are numbers he does care about
and those are ticking down and down and down.
Yeah, the fox poll said that 53% of people said
that tariffs will hurt the economy
versus help the economy at only 28%.
69% accurately say it'll make products more expensive.
So it's not like people don't understand tariffs
or don't get what's gonna happen here.
They're pretty sophisticated in these answers.
Very sophisticated.
And the, the new AP poll in the economy does
have him at 40, 58 on the economy and trade
even lower at 38, 60.
And you know, his approval is sitting at 42.
There's also now talk about stagflation, which
he was asked about, which is, you know, when
you have both inflation and weak economic growth.
Seems bad.
And high unemployment, yeah.
Ask Jimmy Carter.
Yeah.
How that went for him.
Can't ask him anymore.
But we can try.
Yeah, I agree with you though.
I mean, I do think the big caveat is always like,
if implemented as currently described,
I think these tariffs would be disastrous.
And we're already seeing polls where you have people saying
Trump is too focused on tariffs.
Only 23% of people think Trump's policies
are making them feel better off financially in the CBS poll.
And to the point on the stock market,
like there's been a 10% correction so far,
which basically means like the stock market has given up
the gains it had from election day until now.
But if these tariffs really go into place as described,
that could lead to another 10%, 20%, 30%, like a serious hits of the stock market.
And that's when all of his donors are going to be calling him and be like,
what the fuck are you doing? This is not what we bought you for.
Yeah. And also like stock market aside, just if economic indicators outside the
stock market keep getting worse, then it's just going to be bad for everyone and his popularity.
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Let's talk about the other news Trump made on Sunday that I referenced at the top of
the show and his call with Kristen Welker, which sadly there's no audio of.
Trump apparently said he was, quote, not joking about serving a potential third term.
When asked why he wanted to do that, Trump said quote, I like working. He also talked about this in that press avail on the plane.
Let's listen.
You said you were not joking about a third term, about possibly wanting a third term.
Does that mean you're not planning to leave office on January 20th?
I'm not looking at that, but I'll tell you, I have had more people ask me to have a third term,
which is in a way a fourth term because the other election,
the 2020 election was totally rigged.
What do you wanna talk about?
I'm just telling you, I've had more people say,
please run again.
They said, we have a long way to go
before we even think about that.
Please, please sir, run again.
More tariffs and run again.
Here's the 22nd Amendment, quote,
"'No person shall be elected to the office
"'of the president more than twice.'"
Trump fans are pointing out that the amendment
only refers to being, quote, elected and not serving.
Welker also said she floated to Trump the idea,
like why did she do this,
but she floated to Trump the idea of
J.D. Vance running with Trump as his running mate,
winning and then passing the baton off to Trump,
like a little Putin, Medvedev thing there.
Yeah, that's really cool.
Let's definitely emulate that.
Trump said that that was one method,
he acknowledged that was one method, quote,
but there are others too,
which he then refused to elaborate on.
I should note here that the 12th Amendment states that,
quote, no person constitutionally ineligible
to the office of president shall be eligible
to that of vice president of the United States.
So the whole swap thing doesn't seem like it would fly
with the 12th amendment either.
Does fly with the 12th amendment because he is eligible
as long as he's not elected.
If he's not, that he can become president.
Like there's a-
I think it's just you and Larry tribe think that.
I just think we should assume... Two greatest legal mobs.
Look, look, look.
We've been down this road before, I believe.
Last time we were on the opposite side of the issue,
and I won in front of the Supreme Court.
Larry Tribe, zero, love it, one.
Are we taking Trump seriously and literally on this one?
Absolutely.
I think Trump is, first of all,
I think he's having fun with this, he's enjoying this, right?
The idea that we're in a place where Trump is, first of all, I think he's having fun with this. He's enjoying this, right? You know, the idea that we're in a place where Trump is so resoundingly popular that the
country is clamoring for yet another turn is of course ridiculous and exists only in
his mind.
For what it would take for Donald Trump to become president a third time is a kind of
medyadov as president, Putin as prime minister, an actual campaign in which Republicans are fully admitting
that they are just vassals for a Trump dictatorship
or some other ridiculous scheme
in which he has made speaker of the house
or some other cockamamie shit
in which the whole Republican party
is now completely given over to the idea
that Donald Trump is a dictator.
But we don't really need to worry yet
about the possibility that Trump is gonna behave
like a dictator three years from now,
because he's behaving like a dictator right now.
We probably should focus on that.
And our job is to make Trump so completely unpopular
and unpalatable to the American people
that this becomes a joke.
Yeah, we need him to have a Katrina level approval ratings.
Yeah, I think these things start as outrage bait.
It's just like chum for media attention.
It's chum to get MSNBC fired up.
Like Steve Bannon being intimately involved in this,
I think is a real clue.
But over time, I do think the outrage bait evolves
into something real in a lot of cases,
like Greenland, invading Greenland, for example.
Overturning the election?
Yeah, and once Democrats get really worked up
about literally anything,
negative polarization can take over
and Republicans in Congress, for example,
decide that politically they would rather be opposed
to what the annoying Democrats say
than in favor of what the Constitution says.
And so I do think there's like a real risk here
and it's part of a very rapid authoritarian slide,
but I agree, like I just don't wanna take the bait on it.
I don't think we need to have members of Congress putting forward bills to focus on it. Focus on the here and now.
I was going to say those bills aren't going to go anywhere anyway.
Right.
I mean, just so people know, how this would work if it happened is he would try to seek his party's
nomination, which the party probably would just let happen, maybe. Let's say the Republican party
doesn't stop him there. He eventually would need to get his name on the ballots
in all the different states.
And certainly the blue states wouldn't put him on the ballot.
So then it would go to the Supreme Court
and then we'd hear the Supreme Court said.
And then the Supreme Court would either be like,
obviously this is fucking crazy, you can't do it.
Or they would do what sometimes they've done in the past
and surprise us all and say, go for it, right?
But if they tell him no, and then that's, it, this is, we're getting to the point
where he clearly does not give a fuck about the judiciary.
Right.
They are testing this out.
As you said, like we don't have to think about this four years from now.
They're testing it out right now.
Um, and they're gonna, they're testing it out with birthright citizenship, which
they'll get a ruling on, right?
Like there's going to be a whole bunch of things like this, but yeah, I mean, I, I
forget which one of you said it,
but one scenario is he just doesn't leave office,
which is basically the scenario he tried last time.
Yeah, we saw that one, yeah.
Yeah, so we don't have to think about a campaign
or handing off to JD Vance.
You could imagine a scenario where he either says,
I'm not leaving office and I'm staying,
or there's an election between JD Vance and some Democrat
and it's close enough and it's like a 2020 situation.
And he's like, oh, well, while we do a recount
and while we fix this out,
I'm just gonna stay in power for a little while
and then it just goes and goes and goes and goes.
So yeah, I think everyone should like be,
I don't think we should like laugh about it, right?
But I do think we should be like,
fuck you, you're not doing this.
It's, it's.
Yeah, I just think he would do it.
He would love to do it.
I think he would do a fucking,
make JD Vance his little puppet.
That's a fun way for, there's a lot of methods that look, you don't believe in the constitution.
We should also say like, it is a disqual like we're so used to this now.
Saying this is disqualifying.
It's despicable.
The clear intent of the 22nd Amendment is that that he should not be able to seek a
third term.
The language is not like the language leaves like a loophole for him to seek the office
in some ridiculous roundabout way.
But there's lots of ways that if you just,
you know, if you don't believe in the constitution,
don't care about its precepts,
there's all kinds of workarounds,
including with the pardon power
that he uses every fucking day lately.
So this is a vaguely,
this is like on the verge of an impeachable offense
to claim you're gonna kind of not leave office,
but it's not our job to kind of,
you know, let's leave it at that.
Obama should run.
Yeah, that's fun.
We should mop the floor with this piece of shit.
So he would-
Right, run it back, sir.
Right before we recorded,
Trump was doing an avail in the Oval Office again
for another one of fucking executive order.
I don't know what it was, Kid Rock was there.
He was asked about the Obama thing
because Mike Lawler, a Republican from New York, was
asked about Trump running again on CNN.
And instead of just saying, no, of course not, that's crazy, he was like, well, we wouldn't
want Obama to run for a third term, would we?
So then Trump was asked about it and he said, I'd love it.
But if he's going to try to bait us and make us freak out and have some fun with it, we
should have some fun with it every time we're like number one, we should
just say, yes, Obama's going to run and mop the floor with them.
We should also, reporters should be asking JD Vance about this, because
if I was JD Vance, I'd be pretty pissed.
Yeah.
Right.
Like there was a story today that JD Vance is doing his first fundraiser
tonight by himself and he's getting this network of donors getting ready for
2028.
So I would ask JD Vance, even better, if JD Vance and Donald Trump are ever together
and do a joint interview, I would ask them together
so that JD Vance could be really sad
when Donald Trump is like, oh, I don't know.
I don't know if I'm going to do it.
There's so much we can do with this.
There's got to be a little bit of a,
yes, we don't freak out, but we also don't say like,
oh, we can't talk about it.
Like, let's fuck them.
No, you're not going gonna run again, you asshole.
Yeah, I think the mere act of asking him about it
suggests we're taking it seriously
and their response will be like chill out, Libs,
but yeah, I'm with you.
No, I'd like you to-
Mock him back.
You chill out when Barack Obama is the nominee against him.
I do like thinking about the scenario where like JD Vance
has just won and been elected president of the United States
and it's now like kind of the deal. The deal is that he's supposed to resign.
Right, yeah, good luck.
Or, and like, yeah, what are we talking about here?
He's like, no, no, my loyalty is to the guy
that I once called Hitler.
That's, no, I'm sorry, sir.
I gotta stay here and go be, you know,
go take over Greenland.
And presumably, unlike some of the reporting we've seen,
unlike Biden, Trump believes
his vice president's actually up for it.
Well, he was asked, is he the heir apparent?
Remember, like a couple weeks ago, a month ago,
and he was just like, no.
He's like, a lot of heirs, a lot of heirs.
He could be, couldn't be.
So maybe more like Biden than we think.
So as we were saying, Trump's already
in his dictator era, one sign of that
is the administration is seeking to dictate
which media outlets get to cover the president and how. On Sunday, Axios' Mike Allen wrote that the White
House plans to hijack the White House briefing room seating chart from the White House Correspondents
Association in the coming weeks. Back in February, of course, they took control of the press pool,
another historical prerogative of the Correspondents Association, and separately,
they barred the AP from the pool and from covering White House events,
which the AP is now in court over.
Seating chart, big deal, not a big deal.
Tommy, what do you think?
Much like a wedding, it matters.
It sounds silly, we're literally talking about
where reporters sit in the White House briefing room,
which sounds silly, but it matters for a couple reasons,
because the seating is supposed to reflect a pecking order
in terms of which outlets get to ask questions and when.
It's traditionally, it has gone, the Associated Press,
major TV networks, other wire services up in the front,
two rows, followed by big newspapers and so on.
Press secretary gets to jump around,
but like that's how it's supposed to go.
So the most influential outlets that are the most serious
traditionally get to ask the question.
The Trump people want like Marjorie Taylor Greene's
boyfriend whose name I can never remember. There's a bunch of them, I bet. They will- They're all Marjorie Taylor Greene's boyfriend, whose name I can never remember.
There's a bunch of them, I bet.
They will be-
They're all Marjorie Taylor Greene's boyfriend.
Yeah, they wanna stack the briefing room
full of right-wing propaganda sycophants
and make sure that more of the briefing room
is eaten up by sycophantic questions.
And that like lets them get off,
get out of the briefing without making a mistake,
but also lets them own the media. And I do think like the things you off, you know, get out of the briefing without making a mistake, but also lets them own the media.
And I do think like the things you mentioned at the top,
the bigger picture is they just wanna control the press.
And when you combine this step with kicking the AP
out of the pooled press rotation,
which for folks who don't know,
the press pool is the group of reporters
who go with the president into smaller venues
or rooms into the Oval Office, et cetera.
And then the White House dictating
which non-wire service news outlets
rotate as part of the print pool.
So instead of the Washington Post,
you have some right-wing YouTuber
shouting questions at Trump.
That really matters.
It's a significant erosion of press freedom.
And I will say at the same time,
Trump is taking way more questions from the press
than Biden did or past president has.
So I don't wanna sound hyperbolic here,
but the press corps writ large
is dealing with industry disruption
and a collective action problem
that we're seeing everywhere else.
And they just do not know how to fight back.
They're fighting back by like wearing a pin.
And they're doing it individually.
And canceling.
And Amber Ruffin.
Yeah, canceling the comedian at the Correspondence Center.
Fascism is rising, no jokes.
But the one impact of this is, you know,
we're used to, like sometimes the questions are funny.
There are famous reporters shouting questions like,
what about your gaffes?
But when questions were shouted at the president,
they would be substantive questions about,
and now some of the questions coming from these people.
You're starting to hear.
They're like, how long have you been this handsome?
What are we gonna do to stop these liberals
from stopping you from protecting our citizens?
Zelensky, why aren't you wearing a suit?
Right, Zelensky, why aren't you wearing a suit?
And you still get, at least at this stage,
you're still getting some tough questions here and there,
but you can already tell that the balance
between the softballs and the ridiculous ones
and the tough questions is way off at this point.
And like he, the question right is like,
who owns that briefing room?
Like who owns that space, right?
And Trump wants to control it.
He wants to own, like it's what he's doing with Doge,
it's what he's doing to colleges,
what he's doing to law firms.
He's exerting control.
And it starts with seating charts
and who like fucking cares about seating charts.
But it ultimately ends with, you see,
AP is having to fight to get their way back in.
You slowly but surely have fewer and fewer major outlets
with access and with regular frequent ability
to ask questions of the White House,
of the press secretary, the president.
And then now that briefing room is just another place
controlled by Donald Trump. I think what about your gas was a great question. to the president and then, uh, uh, now that briefing room is just another, it's kind of
another place controlled by Donald Trump.
I think what about your gas was a great question.
I agree. Shout out Ashley Parker.
Uh, next thing you know, we're going to have
like NBC and CNN sitting in Greenland asking
questions.
Yeah.
Just fully kicked out of the White House.
How much did you guys see by the way, did you
catch JD Vance's speech in Greenland?
I saw the photo of him standing sadly in front of a group of people that have to be there
because it's an order.
And he was sort of, he had like a little
Zolinski outfit on kind of that.
Yeah, he did.
But the creepiest thing that he said,
because someone asked him a question like,
what are you doing saying that you're gonna take over
Greenland, like what's going on?
And he goes, we can't just ignore the president's desires.
It's real fascism, real authoritarian.
Also just like creepy and weird.
We can't ignore the president's desires.
That's why we're in Greenland today
talking about taking it over.
It's really strange, right?
It's what he's saying, right?
Is that like, I am a representative of the president,
this is the policy of the president,
I'm not gonna ignore that.
But it's this deep, the way in which it all revolves
around Donald Trump's psychology.
Also, the trip started as Usha Vance going,
doing a bunch of cultural stops,
and it evolved to JD Vance, like, big footing the trip,
and then they never left the US military base
because everyone hates them.
Yeah, they couldn't find a person
who wanted to talk to Usha Vance.
Did you see JD Vance with his tray,
getting a meal with the service members there,
and you can just feel him having no place
to sit at lunch in high school?
You just see it in his face?
I related to him.
I felt it, I felt it.
I was just trying to make sure he listens
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One more update on our budding dictatorship. After the DC Court of Appeals ruled that Trump
can't just ship people to El Salvador's torture dungeon without due process, one of
the judges actually said that quote,
Nazis got better treatment under the Alien Enemies Act.
The administration asked the Supreme Court
to settle the matter.
Should see what happens when they visit Mar-a-Lago.
Get a full meal, get a shrimp cocktail.
Get to meet Kanye, it's great.
If you've been following this,
you might have come across the heartbreaking story
of Andres Hernandez Romero, a gay makeup artist
who came to the US legally to seek asylum
but is currently being held in that Salvadoran prison
after the government decided he's Tren de Aragua.
Well, we know from court filings
that the government's only evidence
are tattoos of crowns on his wrists,
one with the word mom under it
and the other with the word dad,
which a random ICE officer decided
were Tren de Aragua tattoos,
even though Hernandez Romero repeatedly denied any affiliation with the gang.
We also learned from this about the existence of the so-called alien enemy validation guide,
which is a checklist that ICE agents use to assess whether someone is a
TDA member, which includes whether the person's friends say they're in the gang,
whether they're thought to associate with known members of the gang.
And of course, whether the person has tattoos that could indicate gang membership.
Uh, I think what's most alarming about the story is how hard the administration is
also fighting judges who are merely asking for evidence and due process here.
Nothing more at this stage.
Stephen Miller posted a fucking hysterical rant over the weekend.
Part of it said, quote, America voted for liberation.
If every foreign trespasser gets to have their own federal trial prior to removal, then there
is no liberation.
There is no restoration.
The invasion will be made complete.
What do you guys make of all this?
And why do you think it isn't a bigger story right now?
Why aren't like more elected Democrats talking about this?
I would like to just quickly start with the dumb part,
which is hysterical is the right way to describe
that Stephen Miller tweet.
He, the guys are such drama queens,
like we were invaded and occupied,
entire neighborhoods were conquered,
entire towns were subjugated, our treasury was plundered.
What are you talking about?
What do you mean do you live in, Stephen?
Where is that?
Where, yeah.
Join a community theater troupe.
It's, the actual specifics in the documentation,
it's so paltry and so pathetic and so damning.
And you look at this guy,
Andre who did truly nothing wrong.
He applied for asylum at a port of entry,
seized, not deported, but kidnapped. Legally showed asylum at a port of entry, seized, not deported, but kidnapped.
Legally showed up at the port of entry
like you're supposed to.
Another, there's another report out of Miami
of a Venezuelan who has been going to his appointments,
had an appointment on February, I think 25th.
It got moved up, gets grabbed, was showing up,
was doing what you're supposed to do,
applied for asylum, was, and then seized
because he had a tattoo, that tattoo he got
with his ex-girlfriend, again, a crown.
Then you look at some of the documentation
that ICE has used, at least in the past,
and the symbols are just random tattoos
taken from what looks like a Google image source,
including a known gang symbol being Jumpman,
Jumpman being the Air Jordan symbol with the 23 above it, pretty popular guy.
A lot of kids in my middle school were in Trendy Aragon.
Yes.
Gazing at their shoes and t-shirts.
They didn't have the tattoos.
The Jewish mothers would never allow it.
But nevertheless, yeah, where are those guys?
And then you see all of, I think, look, obviously,
this is horrible on its own.
But then you see Republicans refusing,
they go right to the politics,
Democrats are defending gang members,
which is of course not what's going on.
They go right to these sort of Kafkaesque evasions,
which is there can't be due process for invaders.
Well, first of all, that's ridiculous,
but also how do you know they're fucking invaders
without the due process?
That's the whole point.
Victoria Spartz, who's a congresswoman from Indiana,
had a couple of rowdy town halls over the weekend
where people were just yelling at her the whole time.
They were complaining about this and asking her about this
and she yells at one point,
you violated the law so you're not entitled to due process.
That's when due process, that's how it works.
That is, well, you missed something there.
You missed something.
I do, look, to your question of why
aren't more Democrats talking about this,
I do think in the very beginning,
the stated objective by the Trump administration
is like we're gonna get the worst of the worst
and we're gonna send them out of here, right?
And so no one wanted to be seen as supporting
a Venezuelan murderer, gang member, or whatever.
But clearly the implementation of the policy
is anything but getting rid of the worst of the worst.
And we should have, this was easy to anticipate
because hardened gang members and criminals go to ground.
They're hard to find.
It's the people who are here legally
who brush up against the system,
who let the authorities know where they are.
They're the ones getting swept up.
And I do think that as these individual specific cases
get surfaced, there has been a lot more coverage of this.
I mean, Andre's story is so shocking.
A mom and a dad tattoo gets you deported.
It would, if the outcome wasn't so evil,
it would almost be funny,
but like he's far from the only one.
There was a guy deported because he had a tattoo
of a Rolex logo. There's the Michael Jordanorted because he had a tattoo of a Rolex logo.
There's the Michael Jordan Jumpman logo
you talked about, love it.
There was a guy with an autism awareness tattoo.
That's so sad too,
cause it's like in honor of his brother
and there's like videos of him
like helping kids swimming and everything.
It's just like.
Yeah, and this, you know,
clearly ICE Googled these tattoos and
put that in their lookbook.
And that somehow got swept into this absolutely
evil bureaucratic process where you get points
for various gang affiliations.
So if you had a roommate in Trendaire, Aragua,
you could get two points against you for living
with him, two for closely associating with him,
two for being in a group photo, two for social
media posts where you're both
in the same post, and just with that,
you're sent to rot in hell in a prison in El Salvador.
So what's also, like, these are meant,
like, we're really conflating, the news is conflating too,
like, deporting someone versus rendering them
to a foreign jail, right?
Like, some of the people that I'm sure
the Trump administration, maybe they will,
maybe they won't, they don't tell us fucking anything.
Some of these people were already in detention, right?
For crimes, what have you.
Those people were sent to a jail.
But some of these people showed up for appointments.
They were not in prison, they were free.
They were living, they were doing their jobs,
they were showing up for their appointments.
They are going, they are free.
They're not being deported.
Like Andrei told his family
that he thought he was gonna be deported.
This guy in Miami thought he was gonna be deported, right? Next thing you know, they're not being deported. Like, Andrei told his family that he thought he was going to be deported. This guy in Miami thought he was going to be deported, right?
Next thing you know, they're not sent back to Venezuela.
They're sent to a prison.
They have no sentence.
They've not been charged with anything.
I mean, there may be some charges coming
related to undocumented immigration.
We have no idea.
But we have no idea.
But as of right now, these people haven't been
certainly publicly charged with any crime,
convicted in any crime that would warrant them
being in prison in the United States,
let alone being sent to a gulag in El Salvador
without any timeframe.
Like how long is this person meant to be there?
And the rationale in the first place
for the El Salvador prison and for Gitmo again,
for some of these deportees is that
you can't send them back to some countries,
their own country, some of them,
because they're not accepting flights, deportation flights.
So for a while, Venezuela was saying like, no,
you can't send people back here.
And so then they're basically the Trump
administration justification is okay.
So if you have this dangerous terrorist, a
criminal gang member who has a bad criminal
background, has murdered people, whatever.
Um, and we are overcrowded in our detention
centers here, then we're gonna use Guantanamo
and we're gonna have this deal with El Salvador to do that.
Which is like, maybe for the worst of the worst,
you can like make an argument for it.
But now, now when you are just like,
there's people have picked up with no due process
and don't have a background
and they're making mistakes all the time,
now we're just shipping them to a fucking prison?
And they're free the day before.
In another country?
The other part of this too is, I really like,
it was, you know, things are bad enough
and it's I think sometimes not valuable
to like to live in even worse hypotheticals.
But I do think it's worth noting
that they are calling Tariff Day Liberation Day,
they're referring to going after immigrants
as a kind of liberation,
they're putting these things together.
Right now, we don't know what their plans are, but I don't believe, obviously the Trump
administration is not planning to ramp down deportations.
They want to ramp this up.
Does anyone believe that the number of errors or mistakes, if we're going to, not even,
they seem quite purposeful at times, are going to go down as they do this more?
Does anyone think that legal permanent residents aren't going to get swept up in this?
Does anyone think citizens aren't going to get swept up in this? Does anyone think citizens
aren't gonna get swept up in this?
Like that is what's coming.
That's what they want.
They want, like Trump likes a circus.
He likes the circus of these deportations.
When this ramps up and they do it on a broader scale,
there's gonna be a circus too.
They're gonna look for the worst of the worst
to make them the face of it.
Then there's gonna be all these harrowing stories
and all these examples.
And like, that's what we're heading towards.
And so if we're not fighting for the due process
of people like Andres, of people like these Venezuelans
who applied for asylum, did what we told them to do,
then watch as this happens and gets closer and closer
to affecting more and more legal permanent residents,
citizens, more and more people.
The one silver lining is that you're seeing
some really fringy, even far-right conservatives
say this is crazy, we shouldn't be doing this.
But the thing that really worries me is that,
so you've got Rubio Bukele, Nae Bukele,
the president of El Salvador, saying that
these individuals sent down to El Salvador
are gonna get a one-year sentence and it's renewable.
On what legal authority are they being held?
How long are they gonna be locked in prison
for being accused of a crime?
And even more scary to me, let's say a judge says,
this is F'd up, you gotta get him back,
Trump administration, Bukele is just gonna say no.
Like F you to the judiciary, like come invade my country
and Stephen Miller and Rubio and all the gang
in the administration are gonna cackle and love it.
Yeah, I was gonna say, yeah, he could say no
because Rubio was like, hey, you can say no if you want,
I don't care.
Yeah, I don't want the problem.
Your Supreme Court can't touch you.
Well, we've already seen that, right?
He's the Secretary of State for the United States.
A judge ruled that these flights had to be turned around.
The president of El Salvador says,
"'Ha ha, oops, too late.'"
And Rubio doesn't say, excuse me,
how dare you on behalf of the United States.
He reposts it, he loves it.
I do wanna talk about the Democrats issue
just before we move on because I asked Ruben Gallego
about this, you'll hear in the interview.
And it was a bit of a frustrating exchange, I would say.
Like on one hand, Gallego, so he started off by basically saying like,
no, we shouldn't fight, I was like, why aren't more Democrats talking about this?
And he's like, well, we shouldn't walk into the trap he set for us.
And he was like, and then he said, he was like, we should talk about, you know,
the people who were getting deported without due process
and all this kind of stuff.
I'm like, well, that's what I'm saying.
I was like, I actually haven't heard a bunch of Democrats
just condemn deportations just writ large, right?
Like people are making these specific stories
and I feel like we should.
He's like, yeah, it's just that they want us to do.
And so it's like a political sort of,
Democrats are gonna get stuck in, you know,
get stuck in a trap on immigration for arguing.
And I just, I understand where he's coming from.
And like I said to him, like I've been critical of Democrats on immigration as well.
But if, like, if we go back to the first term, when he was separating children from their families,
there was a huge outcry, so big that he he had to reverse course on that, mostly, right?
And he had to stop it.
And I just think that if you're a Democratic politician
right now, you just have to have the confidence
to know that you can make a case that, yes,
you can deport criminals and gang members,
but don't deport or don't rendition someone
without due process to a foreign prison.
I feel like that's an easy case to make.
Also like, okay, let's say it is a trap.
Let's say it's bad politics.
The US government is kidnapping people.
That guy, he doesn't know that there's people
fighting for his freedom right now.
He doesn't know that.
He thought he was being deported.
Next thing you know, he's on this flight to El Salvador.
He's an awake nightmare.
He's been there for what, two weeks?
Hadn't spoke to a soul?
Trapped in-
Many of them now.
How many stories?
Well, most people in that prison,
their families haven't heard from them in years.
And they are, this guy, you are,
it's not his country, right?
I'm sure they're all, you know,
all Latinos are the same to them.
It's not his country.
He's in a foreign country.
Has no idea how long it will last.
Who knows what he's being told?
This man's being tortured.
This is torture.
If we're not, like the politics.
I just.
I think the politics are good.
I think like due process is something
everyone should care about and want.
We should make it something people care about.
We should make it something.
That's why I want more.
I want more Democrats out there just yelling about this.
Tariffs, people learn through these debates.
They really do.
Maybe not as well as they used to.
Maybe it's all fucked up by a lot of noise
and misinformation, but if we don't have the debate,
we will lose on due process and watch
as this gets worse and worse.
Before we go, we wanna talk about some important elections
taking place on Tuesday.
Maybe as you're listening to this,
in Florida, there are two special elections for the House
seats vacated by Matt Gaetz and signal enthusiast Mike Walz.
Gaetz's seat is widely seen as being safely Republican, but the race for Walz's seat,
which he won by 33 points just in November, is making Republicans quite nervous.
A poll from last week showed Republican State Senator Randy Fine ahead of Democrat Josh
Wheal by only four points.
Again, this is in a district that Walz won
just four months ago by 33 points.
The other election, a swing seat on Wisconsin Supreme Court,
which we've talked about a lot before,
has turned into the most expensive judicial race
in US history.
Over $90 million has been spent.
$20 million by Elon Musk alone,
who held a town hall in Green Bay Sunday night, where he gave away two legally
questionable million dollar checks to voters who signed a petition against
quote activist judges. Here's what else Elon had to say. I feel like this is one
of those things that may not seem that it's gonna affect the entire destiny of
humanity, but I think it will. I mean, it was inevitable that at least a few
Soros operatives would be in the audience.
Ha ha ha ha.
Give my regards to George.
Say hi to George for me.
Eee hee hee.
The richest man in the world demagoguing George Soros.
I'm sorry, buddy, it just doesn't work.
As he goes to pay people for votes.
A million dollars.
George Soros is a great man.
He's a great man.
Couple operatives right here.
Also, he's so hyperbolic.
It doesn't matter if it's the space race
or a Wisconsin judicial race,
the future of humanity is always at stake.
Come on, buddy.
Big race in Wisconsin.
We've been saying that. It's very important.
I don't know, it's civilizational.
A little much there.
A little much there.
I don't know if it's civilizational.
Can I, this is not the most important point about this,
but like he, the idea that like anyone who's opposed to him
is a sorosoporative, everyone who's against him is evil.
This race is civilizational.
Everything has become like Manichaean,
that sort of good versus evil struggle. It's almost like he's taken on the personality of the social media app. is evil, this race is civilizational, everything has become like Manichaean,
that sort of good versus evil struggle.
It's almost like he's taken on the personality
of the social media app he bought.
Well, yes, and well, and he's taking on the politics
of someone who just found out about politics.
He's talking about it like a 13 year old
who's doing their first like debate tournament.
And like he goes on these tirades about like,
liberals don't, they're only doing this
because they want undocumented people
to get social security and also vote.
It's all just like this bullshit.
And then he's confused why people aren't like,
he acts as though there's no legitimate criticism
that could possibly exist of what he's doing,
dismissing half the country.
And then wonders why he's not more beloved
and why these protests are all popping up.
I find it very frustrating.
By Monday, he's offering $20 to literally anyone
willing to get a Wisconsin resident to hold up a picture
of Brad Schimel, who's the Republican candidate
for the court, in the thumbs up sign.
The Wisconsin attorney general, Josh Call,
tried to get the Wisconsin Supreme Court to shut down
the million dollar checks, but they declined
to take the case and, you know, I guess last minute,
Musk tried to make the whole contest
less legally questionable maybe by saying
that it was an appreci, he originally said
the million dollar checks would go to people who,
in appreciation for taking the time to vote,
but you're not supposed to do that
because you're not supposed to induce anyone
or reward anyone for voting.
So he ref-
Can't buy votes.
Pretty bedrock principle.
He reframed it the giveaway to focus on the petition.
And so that's that.
But I don't know, it still seems a little shady.
Yeah, look, I think Elon Musk has now made himself
the main character of this race.
And I think like a lot of people assume,
oh, that must backfire, right?
Because everybody, I mean, Elon Musk is not a popular figure
and I want that to be true.
I think there's a little bit of method to the madness,
which is Republicans are doing the math
and saying in this lower turnout off cycle election,
if they get 60% of their Trump vote,
they can win.
And they're begging on the fact that the hardcore Democrats
are already pretty well motivated, which they are,
I was there, they're motivated, that's exciting,
that's great, they know that we have this sort of post,
we have this midterm advantage,
this hyper engaged advantage.
And so they're assuming that Elon Musk,
as much as it does damage from to be in Wisconsin to them,
which I think it does,
that they need him there to make this a Trump referendum,
because that's their only hope
of getting enough of the Trump people out.
And when you look at what the Republicans
are putting on doors in Wisconsin,
like the Democratic flyers,
the pro-Crawford flyers are Crawford and Schiml,
and they're two sets of positions.
The Republican flyers is a big old picture of Trump.
And it just said that Trump is winning for America
and radical judges are trying to stop him.
Yeah, they need the Trump voters.
They usually only vote in presidentials.
Base versus base turnout election.
Maybe Elon going there will help motivate
some significant number of people to turn out
who wouldn't otherwise have known about the election
and voted.
So we'll see.
I do think Elon, he claims his spending
is about free speech.
It's a disgusting perversion of democracy.
So I don't know, like Ben Wickler was saying
he might've spent up to 26 million at this point.
He has made himself the face of this campaign.
If they win, that sucks and I'll be very sad.
And if they lose, we need to tie it around
Elon Musk's neck, make this an argument that
there's a political cost to everything he does
of being associated with him of even his money.
Because, um, that's a pretty significant check
on his political strength early on.
I think that's right.
Do you see one of the, um, million dollar
checks went to the chairman of the Wisconsin College Republicans?
Nice.
So just grab it.
He was a Turning Points USA
ballot chase representative in 2024.
Well, everybody's talked about the illegality
around buying votes, but in the run-up
to the election in November,
there were questions about whether
this was a true random drawing,
and it's clear that it wasn't. Like this is why the joke is like,
oh, liberals sign up, sign up.
Like, no, they're not choosing at random.
You can't win.
They're going through and finding ideal candidates
to give this money to,
which again feels completely ridiculous.
Like the image of a billionaire
who is also one of the most powerful figures
in the government flying in on a private jet
to throw shekels
down in front of people, to come crawl and grab them
to get votes for people is so fundamentally un-American.
It's so disgusting to see this guy
who's basically now acting as like the grand vizier
to the Sultan.
And, you know, we just,
if you have a friend in Wisconsin, text them.
If you like, you can go to votes of America.com
slash Wisconsin, they still need some cash.
They still need people to make calls.
But I do think right now the most important thing,
if you're in Wisconsin, if you're near Wisconsin,
text friends, text people in that state.
We gotta get every last vote out
because it will be a lower turnout election.
And it's just, this has to be stopped.
Yeah.
What do you guys, I mean,
while we still don't know the results of any of these races,
what do you think they will say about how people are feeling
about Trump 2.0 and Republicans?
If, do you think like, are you,
what are your expectations?
Oh, I'm like so afraid.
So we went through this cycle
and Judge Janet Protasewicz beat the Republican.
Crushing that name now.
Yeah, I'm a protasewicz.
Takes a protasewicz to say protasewicz.
But I think what's interesting, right,
is like we're already seeing the impact.
Like Elise Stefanik is not gonna be ambassador to the UN
because even in her deep red district,
they're not sure they can hold it, right?
That makes me so happy.
It makes me so, she already did her farewell tour.
She had so many meetings.
It's awesome.
What's so many boring, boring briefings
with the UN's current chancellor.
She gave up her leadership job,
she gave up her leadership, that job has been filled.
It's awesome.
She went to an apartment,
I guess they have an apartment for you,
but she went shopping for furniture in New York, nope.
I will say if we lose Wisconsin,
I think it will rightly be quite bad for us.
Oh, no, absolutely.
This is all politics,
substantively very bad, obviously, right?
But not like we should win this,
but if the margin is like the same as 2024,
then it's gonna be like the general election 2024,
then it's just fucking frustrating, you know?
But if, you know, if everything that's happened
over the last couple of months,
and then we get that result, Wisconsin.
I think it'd be pretty devastating, yeah.
It also just would tell us about the Trump base
and their willingness to do what they're told, right?
And to show up, which would be make them more formidable
than we thought.
And I will say if we win, and we win by, you know,
a couple of points here and there, like,
Elon Musk going there and then dumping $26 million
and then coming up short is,
then we should feel pretty good, you know?
And then I'll be looking at the margin
in that Florida race too to see if, you know,
look, if a 33 point district
and he only loses by like four or five,
that's fucking- I think they're a four or five. That's fucking.
I think they're common eight, yeah.
That should be a huge siren for all Republicans
going into midterms.
Also just bigger picture, $81 million have been spent
on a Wisconsin Supreme Court race.
That is disgusting.
Like Citizens United was such a disaster.
Our campaign finance system is such a disaster.
I don't know how we can fix it at this point
with this Congress, with these courts, with these judges,
but this is just a terrible way to run a railroad.
I will say too that the timing of these races,
the week that they are going to be debating
this tax bill in Congress.
So if it is bad for Republicans
and Randy Fine barely squeaks it out or whatever,
you're gonna see the Mike Lawlers
and some of these Republicans
and swing districts in the house.
Like they're gonna be thinking twice about
how much in Medicaid cuts you want,
what to do about the tax hikes,
what to do about some other budget cuts.
Like they're gonna be thinking about that.
Absolutely, look, I mean, yeah.
Even the same week they learned that
Republicans have lost like 10, 15 or more points
in the generic ballot.
And they learned that Elon Musk's money can't protect them
if they vote for Medicaid cuts, tax cuts for the rich.
That's pretty damning.
All right, when we come back from the break,
you'll hear my interview with Senator Ruben Gallego.
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Ruben Gallego, welcome back to the show. First time on since I've been able to call you Senator.
Yeah, it feels good.
Considering how Trump's second term is unfolding so far,
would you say your win was more of a blessing or a curse?
Look, it's always a blessing, man.
Like that, yeah, you know, it's a hard situation, but I get to say that I'm a U.S. senator.
And if you kind of look at where I started in life, all things aside,
I never even ended up being in Congress.
And the fact that I get to be the first Latino U.S. senator from Arizona is pretty cool.
How does what we've seen from Trump in the last few months
match up with your expectations
for what a second term would bring?
Are you more alarmed, less alarmed, or is it about what you expected?
I'm more alarmed.
Look, I kind of saw some of the autocratic bullshit that he's doing ahead of time, but
not at the level that he's doing it now. I kind of foresaw some of the stuff when
it comes to the government cuts, firing of these workers, but not the way they're doing it right
now. And then some of the stuff, I'm just like, what the hell is going on here? Like the cuts to
federal, to the VA cuts to firing all these veterans. Like this is the kind of stuff that
like makes no logical sense, makes no political sense,
and just tells me like, you know, he might be out to lunch when it comes a lot of this
stuff.
I mean, what's most alarmed me in the last month has been what they're doing on immigration.
And like, you know, I'm good with deporting criminals.
I get that any president has quite a bit of power over immigration and deportations, even
if I don't agree with the policy, but they are grabbing students off the streets,
detaining legal residents,
jailing people in this foreign prison in El Salvador
with no due process, no trial,
in some cases based on guessing what tattoos might mean.
And then when a judge asks for evidence,
they are threatening him with impeachment.
Mike Johnson's talking about eliminating district courts.
And I guess I'm just wondering like why more Democrats
aren't hair on fire about this?
Well, because most Americans are actually agree
what the president's doing on immigration.
And that's just like, you know, that's actually one area
where he's still pulling well.
He's still like at 54 to 55%.
And one of the things that, you know, we have to focus on are, and I talk about this all the time,
it's like when we fight on the grounds of immigration, let's fight smartly.
So we should talk about the fact that we have, for example, a stylist who has no contact
with criminal world that was deported without due process.
That's a really good example.
But to overall argue that we shouldn't be deporting criminals to El Salvador, I think
it's a very dumb argument that will politically, it's not going to win.
Because if you talk to a lot of people and you tell them, hey, should we be deporting
these hardcore criminals to another country since we can't hold them in jail here anymore,
a lot of people are going to say, absolutely.
Now, if you add, can we do that without due process?
That's when people understand, no, obviously, obviously, we need to have due process.
Due process is important, obviously, not just for the immigrants.
It's also important for United States citizens, because you will see, unfortunately, from
my experience, is you will see US citizens get wrapped up in this kind of stuff without
due process.
So we have to be very smart about how we fight when it comes to issues of immigration and
border security.
I think a lot of what we want to do will sound very good on a little circle and bubble.
But when you get out and talk to real America, including Latinos, they're going to agree
a lot with what Donald Trump is doing.
And we have to figure out a way to kind of get in there with a precision strike of a
good argument that kind of keeps our morals together, but also allows us to have some
type of ability to bring these voters back to us.
So I get that.
And I was one person who, after the election,
has been fairly critical of Democrats' position
on immigration and letting people know, by the way,
most people in this country want people to come here legally.
They don't want people to come here illegally. They are more likely to be in favor of deportations than not.
This to me feels like something so much different than just deportation.
It's designed to be different.
It's designed for you to get into this fight with him instead of focusing on the fact that
he's deporting mothers and children, the fact that he is causing a lot of foreign students that usually are great contributors to our economy
to be missing, he wants you to fight him on this.
There's a reason why this is all happening right now.
He wants us to be talking about these majority of them Venezuelan gang members that got sent
over there, and he wants us to get into his nitty gritty.
So we have to have arguments in public about due process, knowing that the American public
understands almost zero of it, right?
Don't get into the trap.
If you see an ambush coming, you have no responsibility to actually walk into that ambush, right?
This is just my personal advice to Democrats.
Fight your fight.
Talk about Dreamers.
Talk about the fact that there's this Colombian couple that's been here for 30 years that was
recently deported who had no criminal history whatsoever. Talk about green card holders,
but don't jump into the fight where they want you to fight. They're doing this on purpose.
They're doing this on purpose. But do you think there's... I haven't seen, I've been pleasantly
surprised, I have not seen a I've been pleasantly surprised.
I have not seen a lot of Democrats in the last couple of weeks sort of just be fighting
the deportations in general.
I actually think that the people who have raised alarms have been over these specific
cases where people just aren't getting any due process.
And I guess one of the things I worry about, and I do think this would be appealing to
a much broader part of the electorate is now it's, you know,
Venezuelans that they think are gang members and a foreign student who they say, you know,
was participating in pro-Hamas protests.
But like, if there's no due process, where does it end?
How do we even know someone's a non-citizen that they're rounding up?
Exactly.
How do you know that citizens that aren't being rounded up and taken away without, well,
they shouldn't be taken away because any citizen needs to stay in the United States.
You focus on the actual case. Don't get involved in this bigger fight that is very popular. I'm
telling you right now, if you get into this fight over, should it be said to people, I'll
sell it or not, you're giving him the ground that he wants. Fight for the individual cases,
fight for the actual stylist that we're talking about. But if you try to get into this bigger argument,
you're losing. And that's where they want you to be. They want you to be on that losing
ground because then we have to explain due process, we have to explain why it's different
for these, you know, gang members versus non-gang members. Like it's, it's just not smart. We
need to figure out how to fight so we can win, so we can stop this shit.
We're talking at the beginning of a week where Republicans in Congress will be figuring out
how to pay for the massive tax cut that Trump wants.
Senior White House official told Axios that they're actually discussing getting rid of
the tax cuts for the top 1% because, quote, if we renew tax cuts for the rich paid for
by throwing people off
Medicaid, we're going to get fucking slaughtered.
Do you think your Republican colleagues would ever give up on tax cuts for the rich and
Medicaid cuts?
I mean, they're more likely to cut Medicaid cuts than they are to, you know, give up on
tax cuts to the rich.
I mean, that's, that's their bread and butter.
That's the, you know, the whole reason of living for the Republican Party.
But politically speaking, I mean, I was out in rural Arizona.
I mean, this is the part of the state where you have to drive hours and hours in order
to get to some cities, and they're not big cities.
And in rural Arizona, people are worried because rural Arizona, 30% of rural Arizona is on
Medicaid.
So when you shut down or start throwing people off Medicaid, it's going to end up having
huge impacts.
Hospitals shut down, everything else like that.
And if people will know that the only reason they're doing this is to give tax cuts to
the rich.
So what I think they're going to try to do is they're going to end up doing a couple
of things.
Number one, they're going to try to shave Medicaid, see if they can politically get
away with it by coming up with bullshit reasons why people should not be on Medicaid. Number two,
they're going to try to change the law, the rule, as we call it here in the Senate, and saying like,
well, we don't actually have to justify these cuts. We actually don't have to find any further cuts.
They're already existing in law, so who cares? Just keep expanding them, right? And that way,
they don't actually have to go and find somewhere else to cut, and then the rich get their tax cuts.
At the end of the day, we still end up getting screwed
if you're working class because they're gonna end up borrowing
a ton of money that's gonna keep inflation higher,
it's gonna keep interest rates higher,
and it's not gonna, I think it's probably gonna slow down
the economy even more.
So, working class America is gonna end up paying one way or the other for the tax cuts
for the rich.
I'm not going to relitigate the politics of the shutdown fight,
but one takeaway seemed to be that Democrats in Congress
need to do a better job of communicating their strategy.
Obviously, you guys don't have the votes
to stop this tax bill from becoming law.
But what are you thinking in terms of the strategy
around this fight? Well, I terms of the strategy around this fight?
Well, I mean, the strategy on the fight is we have to show why they're doing this. So you talked about this, right? The only reason they want to do this is because they want to give their rich
buddies, Elon Musk, more money. And the only way they're going to do that is they're going to gut
the working class at some point. We need to, you know, trying to give an oppositional view
and a contradiction to that, something that actually people can
talk about. I think the Democrats should be talking about trying to bring a child tax credit
instead of giving tax cuts to the rich. I think Democrats should be talking about a minimum wage
that actually people can live on instead of giving tax cuts to the rich. This is the thing
that we need to kind of be giving a viewpoint of what you can get
is an alternative.
So just being a party of no is not going to work and just saying, hey, we're the party
that's going to stand up for working class people.
We don't actually introduce any real legislation to actually make people feel that that's a
case is not going to be a winning message.
And I think my lesson from the CR shutdown was a lot of lessons, but a lot of my colleagues felt uncomfortable
because they felt that there was no messaging that could give them a higher ground against
the bully pulpit of Donald Trump.
My argument to them was like, well, yeah, we got ourselves in a situation because we
never actually had an affirmative oppositional view that people could actually jump on it
and grab a hold.
And I think that's what we need to really do when we get into reconciliation coming
up.
It's interesting you say that because I've talked to some of your colleagues, particularly
your younger, newer colleagues, who also seem a little frustrated that there's not been
enough conversation about a sort of an alternative vision and agenda from the
Democratic Party. Is there is there resistance to that from leadership or
why haven't? That's good. I think a lot of us showed our frustration and were
very clear what direction the the party was heading unless there was we were
listened to and I think that's, they're listening now.
What do you, in terms of that alternate sort of vision agenda, I know you mentioned the
Child Tax Cut, but what does it sound like to you?
Like what is the, we haven't had a lot of debate about what sort of that forward looking
vision in the party might sound like.
You know, I just sat down with Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson.
I know, I'm going to sound like I'm just going to be repeating their shit.
I haven't read the book yet, so I can't plagiarize.
I think it's very simple. Number one, the problem that we have is we have a lack of energy, right?
And we need to make sure that when we take power, we use power.
What does that look like? You know, like, you know, A, actually fundamentally
changing people's lives for the better. You know, right away I would do a good minimum wage increase,
you know, 15 bucks, 17 bucks, whatever it is, peg it to inflation automatically so it keeps growing
every year. Child tax credit, as I said, $200, $300 per family, you know, everyone that's making less than, I'd say, $100,000, $120,000 a year. For child care,
I mean, right now it's more expensive for you to send your kid to child care than it is to pay for
tuition, in-state tuition for most universities. Let's just give direct child care subsidies
to families to take care of that, to take care of their kids. These are the kind of impactful things we should be doing right away.
I think we should help do a credit buster.
There's so many people right now that are paying off credit card debt that they were
living off of inflation.
During inflation, they basically survived by putting on credit card debt.
Now they're carrying the highest amount of credit card debt in the history of this country.
We should help these families at least pay off
a good chunk of their credit card debt.
Now that could just be a direct subsidy to them,
but that would be a huge relief.
We need to get Americans to understand
when you elect Democrats, good shit happens,
and I feel better, right?
It's that simple.
And a lot of times we get into these very kind of like
wonky bureaucratic process that we think will end up
getting credit for and we never ever ever do.
And you know, that's the one time I can tell you like
my family, working class family remembers,
especially not my direct family,
but my sisters and my cousins, they finally
remember when they were all getting the child tax credit.
And that's what they remember at Democrats is being good, right?
So having a real focus on an energetic response really to the needs of working class America
would be huge.
Something that every time there's an election, like Democrats got me this. Right?
That's it. What, what lessons do you take from the Biden administration, which obviously passed
quite a bit of significant legislation around infrastructure, climate, and then didn't really
get much credit for any of it, even if you put the worries about cost of living aside,
which was hard to put aside, but not a lot of people sort of felt in their lives any
impact from the Biden administration's legislation. Yeah, I mean, like I hate to be the Cassandra
here, but I was telling this to people in the administration from day one that they were too
focused on, first of all, infrastructure. Like every president runs on infrastructure.
Do they pass it, do they not?
But no one ever gets credit for it.
You know, if you look at even the unions that benefited from infrastructure ended up voting
for Trump, I think we have to understand that unless people feel it, then it's not real,
right? You can talk all you want about the quick chargers
for electric vehicles that run across the whole country,
but unless somehow someone sees it and how it affects them,
they're not gonna feel it.
You could talk about the IRA and all this kind of stuff,
but until you actually see the results,
you're not gonna, it's not gonna impact you.
One of the things that was really messed up by the IRA, people forget, is that a lot of
the stuff that really, really, really had impact, for example, the negotiations for
Medicare prescriptions of drugs.
The other one is, for example, bringing down the overall costs of what people have to pay
if you're a senior on Medicare to $2,000 a year capped.
None of that started until 2026.
Whenever they were negotiating the stuff that would be actually impactful to people, I think
purposely it was put off so it would actually not have any real impact on people's life
until after the election.
And when Biden and his administration
were negotiating this,
I think they were just happy to take the victory
and walk away.
And they should have realized that it was a whole thing,
was one big setup because we ended up creating
a trillion dollar bill that no one really felt
the effects of right away.
And I think that probably cost us
a lot of the election right there.
I don't know if you saw over the weekend, Gavin Newsom was on Bill Maher's show and
said that the Democratic Party's brand is, quote, toxic.
And then Ro Khanna responded and said, it's not toxic and we shouldn't be sort of joining
in the chorus of people attacking the Democrats.
We should be unified against Trump.
Where do you come down on that?
I don't want to get involved in this little California
Civil War. Most people don't really care about parties. Like this whole it's toxic versus not
toxic. Like that's like a bunch of like political scientists, pundits, and they're all talking.
If you want to change the opinion that people have for the Democrat Party, we need to start
winning.
That's it, right? The reason we're right now clinical at stock is because we lost, right?
And once we start having some wins, we start having some people actually, you know, I think showing, you know,
what the Democratic Party is in a real personal way for people running for office, the presidential candidates are coming up,
everything else like that, then, you know, I think we'll get our mojo back.
But some of the stuff that we're doing right now is just kind of, it's like public therapy,
I guess, when we should really just be focusing and I'm all for therapy, don't get me wrong.
But I really think we should be focusing on just like trying to figure out how to like
immediately bring wins, wins, wins.
So just from my experience in Arizona, Arizona, it's always been a swing state.
What happened in Arizona for many years when we started winning elections, Democrats, is
because we started in a momentum of just winning.
And eventually the message in Arizona, especially among voters, was like, oh, damn, these Democrats,
they know how to win in Arizona.
So there was always this excitement.
And right now, we just don't have that.
We need a couple of wins on the Rebels.
We need to make sure that we're really showing
who we're fighting for.
And I think that's where we get our mental back.
But these kind of sniping that politicians do to each other,
it's cute, but it doesn't really make a big difference,
I think.
So one story I wanted to bring up.
I've lost track of how many stories keep popping up
about the wildly corrupt relationship
between the Trump family and the crypto industry.
Just today I saw that Don Jr. and Eric
are starting a Bitcoin mining adventure,
so congrats to them.
I've always been a bit of a crypto skeptic
since the industry is largely unregulated
and seemingly rife with corruption.
I know you're one of the more pro crypto Democrats
in Congress and are the ranking member
of the digital asset subcommittee.
Why should I not be skeptical of crypto
if it is better regulated than it is now?
Yeah, I was gonna say, like, if it's not regulated,
you should be skeptical of it.
The fact is, you know, crypto is here to stay
no matter what, right?
It's either gonna be a US-based economy
or it's gonna be overseas. If we economy or it's going to be overseas.
If we could bring it here, base it here, and regulate it to American standards, it's going
to be a fine asset.
If we don't do that, it will be a bunch of rug pulls.
It will be a bunch of pump and dump, whether it's stocks, meme coins, whatever it is.
That's actually what's going to happen.
I think if we could bring this here, have it regulated under our US systems where you
could get prosecuted, you had to have transparency, you had to have consumer protection, I think
that's the better way to go.
Are we there yet?
No.
This is what Congress is really working on to make sure we get to that point.
But it is better than what is going to exist right now.
Because right now, it runs the gamut.
It can be legitimate bitcoins down to meme coins that are being hawked by anybody just
to kind of do a quick sale and get out.
So I would rather have it regulated under US systems than not. But
right now it's really not and it's only going to get worse if we don't bring it into, I think, US
compliance. So last question. Last time Democrats were completely shut out of power in DC, which was
after the 2004 election, one of the party's only new senators went on to become a history-making president
after just a few years in office.
How are you thinking about your role
in the Democratic Party right now in your future?
Oh, well, I mean, for me, I feel like my role right now
is to kind of bring some hard truths to the party, right?
And look, I won a very hard race,
and Latinos started moving away from the
party, Latino males started moving into the party.
And what I saw in other, in past campaigns is that, you know, a lot of times people just
kind of want to whistle past the graveyard.
And I want to make sure the Democrats have a fighting chance.
Our only fighting chance is two.
Number one, we need to bring Latinos back
into our fold and as the numbers we said before, and we have to have a fighting chance with men,
right? Not that we're going to win it, but we have to do better and stop sliding away.
I think like my role right now is to be that person that is unafraid and willing to have
conversations with fellow Democrats and be honest about, you know, do we want to win or do we want to feel good?
Because sometimes they don't align.
And for me, I want to win to make sure that we could protect, you know, our families,
our most vulnerable communities, you know, our standing in the world.
And sometimes that means we're going to have to piss off people within our tent, not on
purpose, but only for us to win.
And I think we have to, my job right now is to kind of have those
conversations. And if anybody that wants to run for president wants to talk to me about that,
I'm gladly sit down. I'll talk to you from my perspective. I'm here. I'm a good Democrat. I
want to make sure Democrats win in four years. And that's going to be my focus.
I know it's early, but how are those conversations going so far? Are you feeling more
hopeful or are you feeling more frustrated? Well, no one's talked to me yet. Not just about president, but just the
conversations you're having with people about what's wrong with the Democratic party and where
we need to go. I mean, this is kind of a loaded question. For those that want to see a path forward,
they're keeping their minds open and come and talk to me. I think, you know, I have ruffled some feathers, to be honest.
I know I did something wrong or right, or I did something right because sometimes when
I do something, I'll get it both from the left and the right on Twitter and social media.
And you know, I think there's some people from a more liberal bent that are mad at me.
And again, I do this all with love.
I want us to win.
I want Democrats to be competitive.
And some of that has to, we have to have a very realistic view of what the world looks
like and what these voters want.
And sometimes it doesn't align.
Our primary voter is very different from a general election voter.
And it's very easy for us to make our primary voter happy and then lose the general election.
I just don't want to see us doing that again.
And this is why, and because it has consequences.
What happens when we lose?
And I think it's not going to get any better.
The next Republican that wins will do just exactly what Donald Trump is doing.
And so we have to win elections from here on out and that
Means that you know if I have to guide some of my friends in a way that makes sure we win we win general elections
I'm gonna do it and that may tick off some people but we have to win
You know, we don't win not winning has really bad consequences on this country as we can tell
Sure does winning is much better
Ruben Gallego, thank you as always for doing Pod Save America.
And come visit us next time you're in LA.
I will. Adios.
That's our show for today. Thanks to Ruben Gallego for coming on. Dan and I are both off later this week, but fear not, Tommy's going to have a new show for you on Friday.
What?
Oh, sorry. This is the way we tell you about those things.
I mean, Jesus, you'd sit in an office with somebody.
You think they'd tell you.
Thanks everyone.
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