Pod Save America - Trump's Triple Crown
Episode Date: August 3, 2023Alyssa Mastromonaco joins Jon as guest host, and Strict Scrutiny’s Leah Litman breaks down the strength of the legal case behind Trump’s third indictment. Trump’s Republican opponents react to t...he new felony charges. A New York Times poll has Trump tied with Joe Biden. And later, Halle Kiefer joins for another round of Well, Well, Well, Looks Like Everyone’s A Fucking Lawyer All Of A Sudden. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
Dan is still on vacation, but I have a fantastic guest host with me today.
Hysteria co-host and my pal, Alyssa Mastromonica.
Favs, I'm so delighted to be here.
It's so great to have you.
I love we have little news.
Look, I dressed Trey California for you.
Have on my very old Led Zeppelin t-shirt from college.
You look like you've been here for years.
That's the whole plan.
Alright, on today's show, Donald Trump's back in court for his third indictment. Old Led Zeppelin t-shirt from college. You look like you've been here for years. That's the whole plan. All right.
On today's show, Donald Trump's back in court for his third indictment.
His Republican opponents react to the new felony charges.
A New York Times poll has him tied with Joe Biden.
And later, Hallie Kiefer joins us for another round of, well, well, well, looks like everyone's
a fucking lawyer all of a sudden.
But first, instead of us giving you regurgitated legal takes on the
latest Trump indictment that we got from listening to strict scrutiny, we are joined by one of the
show's hosts, the brilliant Leah Lippman. Leah, welcome. Thank you for having me. So let's dive
in. Donald Trump will be arraigned at the federal courthouse in D.C. today, obviously right after we
record this. He's adding four felony charges to his
growing collection. These are the most serious, all related to his attempt to steal the election
he knew he had lost. Trump's campaign has responded with a statement comparing the indictment to
persecution in Nazi Germany. And his lawyer, John Loro, has been on cable news previewing his
defense. Here he is on CNN. Mr. Trump had the advice of counsel, Mr. Eastman, who was one of the most respected
constitutional scholars in the United States, giving him advice and guidance. That's pure
politics. You may disagree with it, and people have spirited arguments about the law all
the time, and that's why lawyers are in business. But we've never had a situation where a spirited debate about the Constitution has become a criminal case. What's going to happen
when there's a Republican administration? Is there going to be an effort to criminalize speech by
Democrats? Is there going to be an effort to characterize something that a Democrat politician
says that doesn't meet some kind of truth standard at the at the
department of justice that that's going to be the subject of a criminal indictment we've now
entered a constitutional abyss as a result of this indictment just a spirited debate about
the constitution that resulted in uh flagpoles uh going being you know just being stuck into
police officers that's just that's usually what happens with spirited debates. Leah, I heard two arguments there.
I heard zero, so I'm curious what you heard.
Well, these are the two that have been floating around.
One is an advice of counsel defense where they plan to argue that Trump was just listening to his crazy lawyers.
It's not Trump, it's his crazy lawyers.
And two, this free speech argument that seems to be getting a disturbing amount of traction in the mainstream media.
I saw a New York Times headline that was like free speech versus, you know, overthrowing the government.
What would you say in response to each of those arguments?
Yeah. So on the first one, I mean, it's true that sometimes relying on the advice of counsel is a defense to crimes,
at least where the crimes have like a specific intent requirement where you have to know that what you're doing is illegal or you have to know that what you're doing is false.
The problem here is that he's relying on the advice of, you know, sure, his counsel,
who also happened to be co-conspirators in this entire criminal conspiracy. And he also knew that
he was getting the advice of basically every sane person on the planet, including, you know,
sane Republicans in the administration, other lawyers in the administration who were telling him all of this is bullshit and you
can't do it. And his response was basically, well, some other lawyers, right, are telling me this.
So I'm just going to go ahead and pick the guys who are telling me I can do a coup and stay in
power. And that's not really relying on the advice of counsel so much as picking the thing you want
to do and finding some cover for doing it anyways. So that's on the advice of counsel bit. I just have to note that the
fall from one of the most respected constitutional lawyers in the United States to co-conspirator
number two is really quite impressive. You know, on the First Amendment defense, I mean,
this was predictable. You know, this has been a favorite argument of a conservative legal movement that they have used to basically dismantle campaign finance regulation as well as attempts to regulate political corruption.
overthrow the results of a democratic election, nor do you have a First Amendment right to throw out legitimately cast votes and deny other people their civil rights.
The Constitution does not give you a right to violate the Constitution.
That's not how this works.
Yeah.
And Jack Smith in the indictment, in the first page or the second page is basically like Donald Trump is free to lie about the results of the election all he wants.
And that's not why we're indicting him.
It's that he used those lies to then try to throw out legally cast votes and keep himself in power.
Exactly.
and keep himself in power.
Exactly.
So resistance hero Bill Barr said on CNN last night that he doesn't think the advice of council defense
would work because he thinks that to make that argument,
Trump would have to take the stand.
Why is that?
Because it speaks to his own mind
and what he thought he was doing
and why he did what he did.
And because that's an element of the crime that Trump would be basically disputing.
If he said, well, I did this because I relied on counsel,
then he would need to say that's why I did it.
But that would require him to take the stand.
And that doesn't seem like it's ever going to happen.
Seems perilous.
Seems perilous.
It makes for real entertainment, though.
I mean, that's all he's about.
The fact that it seems perilous, though, I think is another piece of evidence why this defense doesn't work.
Because even though Jack Smith in the indictment said, you know, he has a right to lie about the election all he wants, that's not actually true in all contexts.
Like, he doesn't have a right to lie in court about what happened in the election.
That's called perjury.
You don't have a right to lie to federal officials.
That is a federal crime. So there are contexts in which you cannot lie. And using lies to, again,
throw out the results of a Democratic election and legitimate votes just happens to be one of them.
You guys did a great bonus episode on Strict on the indictment right after it dropped,
which everyone should check out. Now that you've had a little more time to sit with the document,
how strong of a case do you think this is?
I think the indictment is one of the stronger indictments I have ever read,
just in the overall theory it lays out, as well as in the specific pieces of evidence
that it marshals in support of all of the elements of the crime.
But I also think that there are things that are probably not included in the indictment
that Jack Smith will be able to rely on,
you know, at any trial.
You know, in addition to all of the things
in the indictment,
there have been other reports
about Trump telling people,
basically, I know I lost
and I'm embarrassed about that.
And not all of that is included in the indictment,
but that too would speak to whether he knew that what he was saying were lies. What's your best guess as to why Jack
Smith hasn't charged Trump's six co-conspirators yet? My guess is he did a single person indictment
just for efficiency to try to get this case to move along as quickly as possible. If he charged
other people together in the same
indictment, then that could lead to other delays and trying to coordinate between multiple
defendants and figuring out whether to sever cases and have different trials for some of the
charges. And so my best guess is this is an attempt to streamline the case to get it to proceed as
expeditiously as possible. But that's just conjecture. On that note of timing, what do you think the chances are this trial happens before
the election?
And do you think Trump's inevitable attempts to delay will work in this case?
I mean, he's already booked in March and he's already booked in May with other trials.
And there is a real limit on how quickly you can schedule a trial just because
there has to be discovery conferences, there might need to be settlement negotiations,
there will have to be disclosures of evidence. And so my best guess is we're probably looking
at summer or fall 2024. It's possibly twice to squeeze it in between March and May, or fall 2024, it's possible he tries to squeeze it in between March and
May, you know, or who knows, maybe really try to go January. But, you know, there's a reason we
are still seeing sentencing in the January 6th proceedings, right, in the same district court.
These cases take time. You said something on the strict bonus episode that is now keeping me up at night,
which is that your pals on the Supreme Court might end up weighing in on this case. What's the
argument you're worried about them making? So they are the true elite strike force legal team,
and they're all capitalized, and they are not above, you know, beaming down some conspiracy
shit from the motherboard that is the Supreme Court.
You know, I think there are different theories that they could embrace that we're worried about. One is they could narrowly interpret some of the statutes, like the general civil rights statute,
to say that what Trump did here, you know, attempting to throw out ballots doesn't
actually come within the ambit of the civil rights statute, either because
casting a vote doesn't qualify as one of the civil rights protected by the statute, or maybe because
challenging these ballots doesn't count as a deprivation under the civil rights statute.
I don't know what kind of hootenanny they will come up with, but they have adopted
really strange interpretations of federal laws in order to narrow federal statutes dealing with
political corruption. And then the second argument is the First Amendment argument. You know, it is
possible that they will narrowly construe the statute or say its particular application here
is criminalizing constitutionally protected speech. And if you think that's strange, you know,
that hasn't stopped them before. You know, they think that constitutionally
protected speech, you know, doesn't really include, you know, unions and fair share public
fees for unions. But it does include basically everything Republicans want to do, like spend a
ton of corporate money in elections. So this is, you know, the danger. Yikes. Leah Littman,
thanks as always for joining and for making us all smarter.
We appreciate it.
Thank you for having me.
Quick housekeeping note before we get to break.
If you're in the Los Angeles area, Love It or Leave It is bringing the Errors Tour back to L.A.
with a show at Dynasty Typewriter tonight, Thursday, August 3rd at 7.30.
Check it out.
The guests are Ife Nwadiwe, R.K. Russell, Justin Simeon, and Luenell.
Head to cricket.com slash events to get your tickets now.
We'll be right back.
All right, Alyssa, let's dig into the politics of Trump's third indictment.
Boy!
Because apparently Republican voters are cool with a frontrunner who's 78 felony counts deep,
and most of his opponents have no idea what to do about that.
Well, and since he's 77, it's like 77 and one to grow on.
Yeah, I thought he was 70. We made a mistake on the last pod.
We thought he was 78.
No, no.
It's one to grow on.
Yeah, one to grow on.
I like that.
So Ron DeSantis' first reaction was actually a tweet that said he hadn't read the indictment yet.
He's seen reports.
He hadn't read the indictment yet.
But he thinks that Trump should only have to face a jury of people who voted for him.
This is the Ron DeSantis argument donald trump has now adopted this too
is that like dc juries don't count because there's probably there's too many democrats in dc
so we only get to try you're gonna try cases now in in red areas that's the only fair trial so
that's cool tim scott right he tells us he's running the optimistic, positive campaign.
He's he's the hope and change guy for this race. Right.
He he accused the Department of Justice of hunting down Republicans, hunting Republicans.
Vivek Ramaswamy said he would pardon Trump if he's convicted.
But maybe the most interesting response came from Trump's vice president, Mike Pence,
who provided damning evidence to Jack Smith and will
probably end up testifying against his old boss. Let's listen. But the American people deserve to
know that President Trump and his advisers didn't just ask me to pause. They asked me to reject
votes, return votes, essentially to overturn the election. Sadly, the president was surrounded by
a group of crackpot lawyers
that kept telling him what his itching ears wanted to hear.
The president ultimately, ultimately, you know,
continued to demand that I choose him over the Constitution.
That I chose the Constitution, and I always will.
And I really do believe that anyone who puts themselves over the Constitution should never be president of the United States.
All right, Alyssa, before we get into the Republican reaction, one of which we just heard, what was your reaction to the indictment?
I know it wasn't exactly a surprise, but what were your thoughts when you read that thing?
OK, so first, I think DOJ's got the goods.
when you read that thing?
Okay.
So first,
I think DOJ's got the goods.
Okay.
I don't think that they're going to come out with this
if they aren't lock, stock, ready to go.
Like, that was my reaction.
One, I mean...
They're not going to Mueller this thing.
This is not a Mueller...
This isn't Mueller-lite, right?
And the other thing,
couple things,
I mean,
Favs,
I just feel so seen.
You know, like we feel so gaslit.
We're like, no, no, no, we watched this happen on television.
Like we watched this happen.
It happened.
And for the past how many years people have been like, but did it?
But did it happen? And I think what DOJ is telling us is that it did happen and that Donald Trump did sit in the Oval Office and not do anything for most of the day.
And so that was really, you know, and I think I think, you know, politically, it's going to be super disruptive to the Republican primary.
Yeah. You know, I don't think it does much for Democrats.
I don't think it does much for, you know, public discourse.
But I think for the primary, I mean, think about it.
Every single time these guys are running, they're going to be asked the question like Pence was yesterday. What do you think?
And the way that they parse their answer is going to get dodgier and spicier every single time.
I will tell you that when I read it and just now when Leah told us that her best guess for when the trial happens
could be the fall of 2024.
I got a bad feeling in my stomach.
You know, I always...
You and I always talk about
the bad feelings in our stomach.
Bad feeling, yeah.
Because pundits on cable,
Twitter, whatever,
they engage in a lot of hyperbole
around these things, right?
Stipulated.
But I really do think
this could be, like,
the most important trial
in American history, certainly in the last hundred years. And it really is. I think there
was a slight headline. It's like Trump or democracy. And the fact that we are heading
towards another election with Donald Trump as a potential winner of that election. My God.
And right before that, he is going to trial.
And I was trying to imagine, not to keep everyone up at night, imagine if he is acquitted in
the fall of 2024 as he's heading into the final month and what that's going to look
like.
So, and you know what I would think about that keeps me up at night?
What if the trial ends, but the jury is still deliberating around election day oh my i
mean they're just like i'm not like it's not funny it's not funny but no and and and we have treated
it in the last several weeks as like you know plenty of jokes because you have to laugh right
but it suddenly feels like we are back in a moment that is that is pretty high stakes yeah
the highest stakes yep and. And somewhat frightening.
And it's like, look, he, and watching,
and we're about to talk about the Republican reaction,
but just watching these people try to defend this,
and oh, he was just, he didn't challenge the election results
because he thought he won.
He tried to overturn the election results
because he knew he lost.
Also, if he thought that he won, if that is true, he is too prohibitively stupid to be president.
Right?
Like, that's not a good argument either.
And to how you started this, like, if he is either acquitted or he's not acquitted, but he wins the election and then pardons himself or does whatever.
Oh, my God.
I didn't even think about the fact he could pardon himself.
Oh, of course.
You're totally right. And so if that happens after what we all saw on TV that day,
like, I don't know what happens with this country. We're not a democracy. No, no. And I don't think
that's an exaggeration. No, it'd be catastrophic. So most Republican voters seem to be supporting
Trump. Sure. Despite or because of these indictments, which is probably why we have candidates like DeSantis and Scott who can't even bring themselves to say that trying to overturn an election should disqualify you from being president, let alone land you in prison.
Right. Like and, you know, Mike Pence, he didn't he didn't want to weigh in on the indictment itself.
And like, you know, he's before he's been like, I don't know if it's criminalized or he took that right out.
But at least at least Mike Pence said, of course, someone who did this should never
be president again.
Right.
And if you don't want to weigh in on the indictment in the legal process itself, for whatever
reason, and there are plenty of good ones, you can at least say if you are a fucking
Republican.
Yes, of course.
He tried to throw out people's votes. Right. Of course he
shouldn't be president again. But they can't do that. We do have Chris Christie, Asa Hutchinson,
Will Hurd, and now Mike Pence making that argument. Do you think it could start changing
some minds if a few more candidates join in? Or are these guys just going to do the right thing,
the ones I just mentioned, and end up getting 1%%. No. So here's the problem with all of this, is that they were such chicken shits for the past,
you know, since January 6th happened, since Hang Mike Pence was being chanted,
it took him, if I'm a Republican who is low-key MAGA, right? Like, I'm like maybe a little on the
fence. MAGA curious. I'm MAGA adjacent.
I think that to me, I'm like, OK, profiles encourage.
You came out now that you're a candidate, now that you personally benefit from him having done the wrong thing.
Right. And so it seems smarmy.
You know, it seems like, OK, good for you.
I think that for them, you know, I don't know that there's a lot of upside to being honest at this point. I think if someone had taken on Trump a year or two ago,
they might have been able to change hearts and minds. But now I think they're just
picking up whatever low hanging fruit there is for them in the fundraising world. I do agree that a lot of this sudden burst of
courage here is self-serving for these folks. You know, and motivations are complex. I could buy
that they are ashamed of how they kept quiet in the past. And now, you know what? Right. Cool.
Not on us to talk to your therapist. Who knows what's going on in their heads? Right. I like
the fact that there are some Republicans out there making this case.
Yeah.
Because I do think that our attention spans and memories are as short as they've ever been because the Internet has broken our brains.
And so there are probably a lot of people who, I mean, even me, right?
Like, I'm a political news junkie.
I read that indictment and you're like, oh, yeah, a lot of this was in the January 6th
committee report.
And we saw it on TV.
But I forgot how bad it is.
That's true.
That's a really good point.
And so I do think if you have a bunch of Republicans and, you know, Bill Barr last night was on
CNN and he's like, yeah, this indictment is the right indictment.
Here's my question.
Yeah.
Don't you think that the arguments they're making are more compelling to us than they are Republicans?
Oh, for sure.
That we're sitting here giving them credit for, you know, a little bit, a smidge, a smidgen, a morsel of credit.
But that to people who are maybe not so pro-Biden, they're like, you know, that Chris Christie's got something to say.
And he's right
about this. And, you know, also worth remembering, all of these people were for the travel ban and
everything terrible. And that this president stood up and was like, bleach can cure COVID.
And they were silent. So I would like them to remember that, too.
I was thinking about that one specifically with Chris Christie as I was listening to his
interview with Lovett, which Lovett did a great job. It was terrific.. I was thinking about that one specifically with Chris Christie as I was listening to his interview with Lovett
which I thought Lovett
did a great job.
Which is terrific.
It was terrific.
But I was like,
what were you thinking
when he did the
drink bleach to cure COVID thing?
Right.
Is that something that you like?
But no,
I take that point for sure.
I just think that like
there,
we talked about this Tuesday,
but there's like,
we see in the New York Times poll,
there's like 37% of the Republican Party was like Trump ride or die.
They like the indictments. They like January 6th.
Yeah. They're like, take my money for your legal.
Right. They're like they should have. He should have overturned the election.
He won. That's all great. So those people, obviously, their minds are made up.
Then there's like a group of I'm not going to vote for Trump.
There's like 25 percent of the party. Then there's like these group of I'm not going to vote for Trump. There's like 25 percent of the party.
Then there's like this group of persuadable voters in the middle who probably have some pretty, in our view, shitty conservative positions on a lot of issues, but may think that like, yeah, you know what?
The election was rightfully decided.
But here's my question.
There is such a delta in polls anyway between where Trump is and where, you know, DeSantis is, for example, that even like I feel like so much would have to change for it to really matter.
That's totally right.
And it has to.
And that change starts with one of these fucking people opening their mouths.
Right.
Saying something.
Right.
Right. There is this chicken or egg problem where, like, if you're Ron DeSantis and you're his dumb strategist, you're like sitting around and you're like, you know what,
here's the polls. Here's what people believe about Trump. They think that he was right. They think he
won the election. They're behind him. So you can't talk about, you can't criticize him for
these indictments because the base will not be with you. And Ron DeSantis is like, well, I want
to be president. So of course I'll follow that. And if everyone does that, then what information are those voters consuming? They're
consuming a bunch of people who are like, you know what, Donald, those indictments are trash
and Joe Biden's going after Donald Trump and it's a two-tiered system of justice and blah, blah,
blah. And so like, if no one ever says anything because they're worried about the base, then the
base is going to continue to think what they think. Well, right. But also the base isn't really going
to change what they think. Yeah, well, that's true. You know, for someone like DeSantis, I am shocked
that he's not trying to go out. They're so dancing on the head of a pin with everything
they're saying that it's like you're not going to get the people who are giving their life savings
to Trump so he can pay his lawyers. But if he were honest, he might get some people who are like,
lawyers. But if he were honest, he might get some people who are like, you know what?
Ron DeSantis believes all the crazy shit I believe, but he's not going to go to jail.
Right. Right. Like, don't they want someone who like might not go to jail? Like if I'm Ron DeSantis,
that's my campaign. I'm Trump, but I'm not going to prison. That would be pay me Ron DeSantis.
That's my strategy. But you are absolutely right that for these cases that they're making now against Trump,
to the extent that some Republicans are, for them to carry any weight, it would have been a lot better for those cases to be made right after January 6th, when, you know, a couple of
Republican senators voted to convict and that was about it.
And Mitch McConnell said, well, we're not going to vote to impeach because there's the legal system to take care of that.
Well, here we are. Here's the legal system taking care of it.
I wonder what Mitch McConnell says about that.
I wonder what all the other Republicans say about that who are like, oh, let the legal system take care of it.
We don't want to impeach him right now.
legal system take care of her. We don't want to impeach her right now. All right. So we have talked on this podcast a few times about the scheduling issues that might arise for a presidential
candidate who may be facing three or four criminal trials in the middle of the campaign. But you are
the perfect person to ask about this since you are the mastermind behind several presidential
campaigns. How do you go about planning a campaign when it's possible that the candidate might be in court as a criminal defendant for weeks or even months?
Like, what do those scheduling meetings sound like?
Favs.
Okay, you and I have been in so many planning meetings together.
My eyes are tearing up right now just at how funny these meetings would be.
Let's start top line before we get into mechanics.
Okay, the planning meetings.
Imagine, my eyes are tearing, you and I were sitting around a meeting and we're like,
okay, look, Obama's on trial.
And, okay, here are the beats for the day.
All right, what's the walk-in picture look like?
Like, what's the perp walk?
How are we going to get him in through a basement?
How, okay, they're going to be releasing the sketch artist photos.
How are we responding?
Is he going to do a press conference after the trial, after the date concludes?
How are we going to raise money off of this?
Like, okay, these are the things, like the macro questions that you're answering.
And then...
Is there going to be an OTR outside the courtroom somewhere?
Are we going to stop by and throw paper towels at people who don't need them?
You know, like, what are we doing?
And then you get into, like like how the campaign actually functions. And the thing about Trump that I think is so
sad for him, really, is that something that will be so critically important to him will be
surrogates. Right. Now, loathe as I am to say it, the best surrogate he ever had was Ivanka.
Right. Well, she's done the Homer Simpson,
like backed into the bush, like I never did anything. I'm not political, blah, blah, blah.
But then you have, you know, you have I am the eldest boy and you have I am the lesser eldest
boy. And they're just like not that persuasive. But then for actual Republicans, if you're doing
the surrogates, it's like, who are the people who would really go out there and walk the plank for him?
Right. You've got Matt Gaetz. You've got Marjorie Taylor Greene.
But like even sort of like kind of intense Republicans think they're fucking awful.
So who's out there making the case for him when the whole point, right, is this period between now and election days like how are
you persuading voters it feels like he has a real ceiling right that he it's going to be incredibly
hard for him to get past and as a campaign who are the people who can help you bring
you know a friend another fringe into the tent and like i think that they don't
a friend another fringe into the tent and like i think that they don't have that so it's sad that avanka ditched him but like it's a yeah it's a great point because um but you know it's funny
as you were saying that we think about surrogates first yeah because we have run democratic campaigns
and we have run those campaigns without a um propaganda media machine on our side.
So I do think when you ask that question, I don't think I think all the people you mentioned
are like sort of, you know, but he's going to have Fox and he's going to have Ben Shapiro
and he's going to have the entire conservative movement and the right wing media machine
on his side.
And what they're going to be doing is poor Donald Trump was persecuted in court again
today. Right. And there's Joe Biden and he stumbled over a word and he's too old to be
president. Meanwhile, his Department of Justice is like attacking Donald Trump. That's probably
what they'll do. The timing thing is interesting because I'm trying to figure out like, I guess
the best case scenario for Donald Trump is that he wraps up the nomination in February after South
Carolina or Super Tuesday in early March.
And then that period, which is sort of, I don't want to call it the dead period because we were all very busy during that period all the time.
But there's a period between then and the conventions in the summer where the campaign's a little bit quieter.
And then he gets all the trials done in that period, I guess.
But it's like, how does this happen?
You know, like, are they talking to the presidential commission on debates?
Like, hey, so let's work out the dates, provided he agrees to a debate, of course.
Yeah, may not.
But are they sitting around being like, okay, well, imagine not even the Trump campaign, but like the presidential commission on debates being like, okay, guys, so we've got Trump's in court these days.
What about the RNC?
What about the convention?
It is.
How are they going to plan a Republican convention if the guy who's going to give the nominating speech is in court that day?
Well, the funny thing, think about it.
It's like, are they going to just be like, okay, planes waiting at Dulles.
We're flying him straight.
He will literally coming to you live from the courthouse steps potentially you know
for his speech actually it's kind of a genius idea i know i know well you and i were talking
about when he uh when he was arraigned in florida yeah and then he went to versailles right afterwards
which is a like very famous cuban bakery restaurant and he did an otr which is an
it's off the record
stop
meaning that they don't
announce it to the press
so that you can go in
if you're the candidate
with less security
and we were both like
this is bullshit
but also
as professionals
as like
as political professionals
pretty smart
I was into it
and I do think
what he's gonna do
and he's gonna have to
figure out how to calibrate this
but he's gonna do the whole
like
go to a rally after his day in court and be like absolutely i was just there they can't stop me
stay and there i was and blah blah and look that's gonna work with his people um in a general
election setting or like rando normie voters who just casually turn into the news gonna be like
okay there he is in court and now he's doing a rally,
joking about his court thing.
Like, how is that going to land with them?
Like normie voters, as you call them.
I think they kind of start getting real
down to brass tacks.
Especially in the fall.
I think this is when people start asking questions,
you know, at the grocery store
among their neighbors, like,
can he be president from jail?
Right. And is that a good idea?
That seemed bad.
Yeah.
And I don't know that it's, I don't think that that argument or that line of questioning can he be president from jail? Right. And is that a good idea? That seemed bad. Yeah. You know? Yeah.
And I don't know that it's,
I don't think that that argument
or that line of questioning
gets people to vote for Biden.
I think it just keeps people
from voting.
Yeah.
Well, let's talk about that.
So our buddy Dan is on vacation,
but he's still writing message boxes.
I got my message box in my inbox
and I was like,
go on vacation, dude.
But then I was glad he wrote it because he always clarifies my thoughts.
He's on a family vacation.
The kids are there.
I think he's got Holly's parents and his parents there.
He's got a lot going on.
He's writing message boxes still.
God love him.
His latest argues that not only will this indictment hurt Donald Trump in a general election,
but that it will hurt the entire Republican Party as well, basically because this indictment is different. The documents didn't
really implicate the rest of the party. The hush money didn't really implicate the rest of the
party. Those were like Donald Trump crimes. This is one where quite a few Republican senators and
members of Congress who voted to overturn the results as well and are still defending him.
What do you think of Dan's argument?
Are you as optimistic as Dan famously is?
I was like, Dan had some Mai Tais before he wrote this.
No, I'm just kidding, Dan.
No, I think that he is right that the big lie is an anvil around the neck of these people.
I think that this hurts in general.
the neck of these people. I think that this hurts. In general, I think that Trump suffers less than House, Senate and local candidates, Republican do. Because I think that if you
bring things down, like, look, I love I go to the local debates up in my area. I love to listen to
a good town hall. And I think that things are still local-ish.
And I think that when people start debating local issues and, you know, people have a Democrat has a good answer and maybe a Republican has a good answer. But then a local news broadcaster asks a Republican, so tell me, we all saw people storm the Capitol.
Were they really on vacation?
Were they really on vacation? I think that it gets harder and harder to answer those questions with a straight face when you remove the questions from a Trump versus Biden on Fox News debate.
You know, I think that locally it gets harder and harder for them to answer questions and they just start, you know, I think it kind of I think it starts falling apart a little bit. Yeah. I have been of two minds on this because I had this experience leading up to the midterms in 22, where I did all these focus groups for the wilderness.
Right, right, right, right. And I sat down with all these voters of like different backgrounds,
beliefs, demographics, all over the place. And they were, you know, some independent swing voters,
Democrats. And I would always ask about what bothers them
and they talk about inflation but health care all the issues that you would expect
and then i'd ask about you know what what is the media paying too much attention to and what are
they not paying enough attention to and too much attention to they always said january 6th stuff
and there was this big thing about like we got to to move past that. We're tired of that. So I was like, oh, God, we got to really talk about economic issues. And then turns out in the fall, you know, the Democrats, the one six committee and President Biden himself made an issue of defending democracy.
And they made Trump's behavior an issue, even though he wasn't on the ballot.
And they made the election a choice between big lie believers, election deniers, and people who are defending democracy.
And it worked.
It did work.
And now look, how did it work?
Abortion was obviously a huge factor in that race.
So maybe that did it in a lot of different places, too. But there's a lot of data, and Dan puts it in the message box, that big lie believers, election deniers, fared worse than non-election denying Republicans in that midterm.
So I start to wonder, like, I do think that most people in this country probably do want us to move on from January 6th and don't want to relitigate the entire 2020 election and 2024.
election in 2024. But with that said, if you are reminding them all the time of what happened,
like the January 6th committee did, when tens of billions of people tuned in,
and now we have a trial, and that's in everyone's face, then maybe that does have an effect.
Maybe. We'll see. I mean, the one variable I think that's different than 20 than the midterms 2022 is that it's this is now literally about Trump's honor right this is about like will Trump like in like to his real hardcore base people
is like you know when it becomes Trump versus Biden I think it gets a little different
but it's the same thing it's like yeah like the local it it is hard for them to defend it
it is easier it's not easier for them.
But it is like I do think that when you have Trump himself on television and this is about like a lie he has fed them.
Yeah. And this is the final moment they can show their fidelity to him.
Maybe it's a little different. But I do think that Dan's right.
It's probably better for everybody than it is worse. Yeah. And I do think for, again, the the normie voter who consumes headlines once in a while, scrolls through their phone once in a while, but is not paying attention to news for those voters.
It really is about like, look, there's all these indictments. Donald Trump's in trouble. Is it political? What is it?
The January 6th indictment, I do think, is maybe the easiest to explain and the highest stakes. Totally agree. Because we all, we were
all there. We all saw it unfold. It was a big, horrible moment for the country. And I think
that even more so than the documents case, which I think is a pretty open and shut case in itself.
Right. And certainly the hush money case that it's.
I do.
And I also think we still have Georgia to contend with.
I forgot that.
And, you know, I think that is things like one of the things that I thought was so compelling
is like Rudy Giuliani saying yes, that he defamed the the two election workers whose lives were uprooted.
And I do think that for the normie voter, they're like, that's not cool.
That was, you know, I like wept during that part of the hearing.
It was devastating because we know what happens if we say something and the MAGA get upset.
Yeah.
That is nothing compared to what they faced.
Yeah.
And like you can only, yeah, you can you can only only, you know,
amplifying your brain what it was like for them living through that still living through it today.
So Trump's potential opponent in 2024, President Biden has said nothing about this indictment or any of the indictments.
He's on vacation. He was off to watch Oppenheimer when the news broke.
That was funny. And yesterday he biked past the press pool and waved.
White House put
out a statement referring all questions to the Justice Department. Democratic leaders in Congress
put out some statements. They called the charges serious and consequential. We saw something from
Schumer, from Jeffries. And Politico has reported, they reported this back in June, I think,
that the president has ordered the DNC and the reelect to not talk about the indictments.
Obviously, Biden himself can't be out there commenting on a case that his own Justice Department is bringing against his potential opponent.
Totally.
Stipulated.
But do you think the whole party should stay quiet about the fact that the Republican nominee is a criminal defendant?
Okay, Fabs, I hope the Democratic Party is listening to us right now.
Okay, great.
Because I have some advice.
So here's what I would do.
I think that they need to keep it tight, right?
Yeah.
Don't opine.
I don't care if you're a fucking lawyer.
Don't go be lawyerly.
Don't talk about what's happening.
Don't talk about the machinations of everything.
of everything. I think that if I am a Democrat running, I refer to Donald Trump as Donald Trump,
comma, who has been indicted on 78 criminal charges, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But you,
but like, that's it. You keep going. Just the facts. Just the facts, nothing else. Because the biggest problem I think is, you know, I know we have social media, but I still love local TV.
And if you have a soundbite, do you want the soundbite
being, if you're on local TV, do you want the soundbite being you opining on Trump's indictments
or do you want people explaining Bidenomics? And it's a choice. That's the choice. And so I think
that they should not be out there. I don't think people should be. I hate personally when you get the
fundraising emails that are like Trump's been indicted. Give me money. Shut up. No, I don't
think that's that's not helpful. I don't think any of that's helpful. So I agree. I think people
should largely be silent on it except for just the facts. He is indicted. Like that's it. He's
indicted. Yeah, I think I agree with that. I think it's just the facts. I also think I think that the Democrats need to make the case that they have made before these indictments ever happened.
Right. Which was still a pretty strong, sharp case about Donald Trump.
So like the New York Times today ran a story about this and it says, you know, Biden campaign officials and allies believe they can focus on topics with a more direct impact on the lives of voters economic issues abortion access and extreme
weather without explicitly addressing mr trump's issues so again i am have always been the person
who's like you gotta talk about what matters to people's lives what impacts them so like
of course but we know you win a re- reelection as an incumbent if you make it a choice
between you and your opponent. And if it's and if it's a referendum on you, even if the economy is
getting better, even if the people are cranky, they don't want to do a referendum. They don't
feel like the economy is getting better yet. And you know what? Just voters for the last decade now
have just been cranky. Right. And they're cranky towards people who are in power, Republican or Democrat.
Again, these are the normies.
The normies, right.
So I get that you have to talk about those issues and you have to make the election a choice that is about those issues.
Yeah.
I also get, and Dan has made this point too, that like, look, we don't have to bring up the indictments because it's going to be all over TV all the time.
Right. Exactly.
And of course it is. It absolutely is.
indictments because it's going to be all over TV all the time. And of course it is. It absolutely is. But we also can't trust the media to tell the story about the indictments in the most effective,
compelling way. Because what they're going to do is, again, that New York Times headline,
and I don't want to beat up the story because the story was quite good, but the headline was like,
is it free speech or is it overturning the election? You know, and that shit's going to happen.
Trump's defense is going to get into the news cycle.
And so I think Democrats at some point, maybe not now, at some point are going to have to make a case.
And if I'm Joe Biden, I think you can go out there and be like, I'm not commenting on any investigation.
That's not my role.
But I will say what I have said many times before.
Donald Trump is a reckless liar.
Yeah, definitely. Who tried to throw out your votes in order to stay in power he is a threat to democracy
he is dangerous and he should not be president again that's the truth that is the truth and
biden said that in the fall of 2022 he's been saying that for a long time and he should keep
saying it and he should keep saying it and i think that that think that it is more about some of the people who aren't the most sort of strict messengers.
Yeah.
I think that as a rule to people running, saying do not make Trump's indictment the center of your the focus of your campaign is correct oh yeah because
you know the uh you know the comms director of the Arizona state democratic party is going to
be like popping off a tweet that's like log them up log them up and then we're all fucked
exactly I don't know who that is by the way we're just joking we're just making fun
the North Carolina whoever it is yeah but but it is some field organizer in Iowa is going to do it
right like I just think that I just think that if I'm running right now and I'm a Democrat, I'm not releasing a press statement every time an indictment has come down.
I am not sending emails that are flooding people's inboxes with just that.
Like, I think it is fine to talk about it when asked.
And I think you have to make the contrast and remind people that this is very bad. But I think that it should not be this like, you know, you know, like, you know, when you first land in Las Vegas and the lights are like blinding.
Yeah.
Like they can't do that to our inboxes with all of their like Trump was indicted again.
Here's the like, you know, just let it be.
Just keep it straight.
Yeah.
Just keep it straight.
Yeah.
And make and make the larger case.
Yeah.
I agree with that.
Just keep it straight.
Yeah.
Just keep it straight.
Yeah.
And make and make the larger case.
Yeah, I agree with that.
The Republicans have made a decision to call Joe Biden a criminal, even though all their investigations haven't found any evidence that the president did anything wrong, let
alone illegal.
He does have a son who a Trump appointed prosecutor in Biden's own Justice Department charged
with crimes.
Right.
And, you know, he may have said hi to a few of Hunter's shady business associates.
Right.
But the January 6th indictment has seemed to make Trump and Republicans in Congress even more determined to do the Biden crime family thing.
So that, you know, I guess swing voters, normie voters will think both of them are corrupt.
Trump and Biden.
Does that worry you or do you think voters can tell the difference between the Hunter stuff and the Trump stuff?
Haven't people realized that Democrats aren't sophisticated enough to commit crimes?
We can't commit crimes.
It's like too hard.
We're too earnest.
We're like, no.
I mean, look, I think that I think the Hunter Biden stuff has been around long enough that it's baked in. You know, I think that for the most part, even look, if again, if you're a hardcore MAGA and you're nothing's going to change your mind, you already believe what they're trying to sell.
It's fine.
But for the normies, I think you kind of look and you're like, I think Hunter's maybe had a troubled life.
Yeah.
maybe had a troubled life.
Yeah.
And there is nothing about Joe Biden that says he is,
there is not a whiff of criminality around him.
And so I think that more than anything,
it's maybe kind of, it's sad, you know,
and it's hard.
And I think that,
but I think in terms of like trying to convince people
that Hunter, you know,
that this is like the Biden mob family. I don't think that
that works. I think that the story has been around too long and people largely know everything there
is to know. Yeah. And look, I am cognizant of like how this started with Hillary and where it ended
up, which is like, what are you grilling her about Benghazi for? It wasn't her fault. And then that
leads to the emails and the emails become something and it just grows and grows and grows and grows and grows.
So I get that that could happen.
And so that part does worry me that just like the steady drumbeat of saying it over and over and over is their strategy of keeping something in the news that's bad about Biden.
But I do agree that it is largely baked in.
But I do agree that it is largely baked in.
And, you know, their craziest charge, right, which is like Joe Biden took a bribe, is like complete bullshit.
No evidence for that whatsoever.
Wouldn't he have a better car? You know, the guy puts out his fucking tax returns every single year.
He's taking the train home to Delta.
What are you talking about?
He took a five million dollar.
That's crazy.
Right.
What are you talking about?
He took a $5 million.
That's crazy.
Right. Right.
If the best they can do is that Hunter was clearly out there trading on his family name
to make money, which it sounds like he certainly was.
Yes.
And that every once in a while he had his dad say hi to some guys and Biden didn't even
know what was going on.
Like, was that is that like, yeah, that's it.
But again, that Donald Trump tried to overturn the election what the fuck are we
talking about this isn't apples to apples he literally tried to throw out the vote stay in
power he had a fucking guy that he just appointed as attorney general say like oh that's okay we
have the insurrection act if people protest the fact that we are not allowing for the peaceful
transfer of power we'll just use the military to put them down. Mike Pence, you'll get hung
if you don't fucking throw away the votes.
What are we talking about?
There's no comparison.
There's no comparison.
It's silly season.
Haven't heard that one in a while.
So either way, this is going to be another close race
that will probably take years off our lives.
We talked about the New York Times-CNN
Republican primary poll on Tuesday's
show. Then they released their first general election poll. Trump 43, Biden 43, tie race.
The other 14% said they would vote for someone else or wouldn't vote at all. Yikes. What's your
take on the poll? Any numbers stick out to you? Okay, so I thought it was so funny. We were going
to talk about this because you know, for as long as we've known each other, I'm like, bad polls, polls are lies.
And that unlike you nuts, I am not super great at reading crosstabs, but I did just for you.
Nice.
Okay, so here's what I think.
Here are the things that stuck out to me.
One, a majority of Americans believe Trump committed serious federal crimes
and is a threat to democracy. Bonus. That's helpful. I'll take it. That's good. And probably
why he's sitting at 43 percent. Right. I mean, not as great. The economy actually is getting
better, but Biden's approval is still at 39 percent. Yeah. Room for us to grow because the
truth is the economy is getting better. Now, 18 to 29 year olds stress me the fuck out.
OK, this was what was not good.
So the one one of the crosstabs that blew my mind is that, quote, if you are a this was from the poll.
If you are a Democrat and the election for Democratic nominee for president were today, respondents aged 18 to 29 said as follows.
Thirty four percent said they would vote for Biden. 34, a third of
18 to 29 year olds. 27% said Marianne Williamson. 13% said RFK Jr. And 26% said they didn't know.
Now, upside seems like we got more ground to mine there. Okay, that's good.
But in general, the thing that scared me a little bit about the poll is that I saw RFK Jr. doing better than I think I would have ever thought at this point, right? Like that was concerning.
I will say that the two focus groups of voters that I did for the Wilderness last time that most concerned me were the young voters I spoke to in Orange County and the youngish black voters that I spoke to in Atlanta.
They were like in their late 20s, 30s.
The Orange County group was mixed race and it was like, you know, probably 20s.
And they're just it's not anything specifically against Biden.
They're just so like sick of politics.
They don't think it's speaking to them.
They don't think it's improving their lives.
They're very worried about climate, abortion access,
rent more than anything else, owning a home, making a living.
And when they talk about politicians, they talk about Biden.
They talk about him with everyone else who just seems old yeah right yeah and it's like he's old we got
trump we don't like trump we got all these other old people in congress and there's no new generation
and so i can in that crosstab yeah it would not surprise me if they're like a lot of young people
are looking around like what are my other options right the question is because then the midterms
happened and youth turnout was great we had a The question is, because then the midterms happened and youth turnout was great.
We had a great margin among young people in the midterms.
So the question is, if it comes down to Biden and Trump,
will they be like, I still think Biden's too old
and I'm not that excited, but Trump is scary
and I'll pull the lever for Biden.
That's my hope.
But that's why fucking Cornel west yeah on the green party and this
no labels bullshit is so scary that no label stuff go stop stop trying to make fetch happen
you know like like nobody wants you you're raising money to pay yourselves terrifying like this is
joe mansion boy come on now just because because West Virginia doesn't love you that much anymore doesn't mean you need to inflict yourself on the rest of us.
Did you did you see I saw some story today that he he wants Schumer to throw some money into West Virginia for like his campaign to see if he can like get his numbers up because he wants to see if he can win in West Virginia.
Because if he thinks he can win, then he'll then he'll back off.
Yeah, that guy's a piece of win, then he'll back off maybe.
That guy's a fucking, he's a piece of work.
He's not helpful.
He's a piece of work. He's not helpful.
Like you said, Biden's numbers have improved slightly since the last poll, but he's still
39%.
He's getting about 87% of his 2020 voters.
Right, which is great.
But losing the rest to, he's losing 2% to Trump, but Trump's losing 2% of his voters
to Biden, so that's a wash.
But he's losing some of his 2020 voters to the I'm not voting for either of them crowd, which is the danger.
And that mostly seems about, it's either about age or the economy.
Knowing all that, everything we've talked about, if you were mapping out this reelection campaign for Joe Biden, what would it look like?
What's your advice to the campaign here?
Because people love advice.
I know they love advice from us podcasters.
They're going to be like,
okay, why don't you come back to D.C. and do some work?
Yeah, why don't you sit in these fucking three-hour meetings with us
and map out the campaign.
We gave it the office.
Instead of doing your 30-minute pod and then peacing out.
Listen, I can't help but tan and looking good.
Okay, so if I'm Biden, look, okay,
I think that, one, he will always have the advantage of being more spry than Trump.
You know, like the age argument when you actually put them up on stage together, I think falls apart a bit.
Right. So I think that's good. I think that he needs an optimistic but realistic message.
That's like, you know what? Here's where we were. Here's where we are, but I know we still have more to do.
We have more to go.
I think like what you were saying before,
the fact that the 18 to 29-year-olds are a little uncertain right now,
I think they have to figure out what's attracting them to Mary Ann and RFK Jr.
And I'd love to think that if, you know, Taylor Swift
endorsed Biden, we'd all be fine. But I think they're tougher than that. The planet's on fire.
They don't have good paying jobs. The gig economy is crushing them. I do think that Biden has a lot
more ability to persuade than Trump does. Right. So if I'm Biden, what's his strength?
He's not someone who comes alive on a stage in front of a crowd.
That's not his vibe.
And that's fine.
But they should find ways that real,
he should go out and talk to normie voters.
Our piece.
And the real people,
this is, it's like we're writing
for an episode of Veep right now.
He should go out, find the real people
and they should find ways
to let the country
see those conversations, right?
I don't think it's necessarily,
it could be a town hall.
Town halls are okay.
But you do find that then you have the person
who's asking the question,
sometimes a little performative,
and they want to stick it to them,
or they want to, you know.
But I think figuring out ways to show those conversations,
you know, Trump will always go have his big rallies, but those aren't going to persuade people and they're only going to be on Fox News.
And he can only do those big rallies in certain cities.
And those people are already voting for him.
And also, I think those big rallies sort of in many respects reinforce Trump's worst instincts because he's getting all this adulation from the crowd.
And that's when he says his craziest shit. And then he's like he's getting into it. He's getting crowd. And that's when he says his craziest shit.
And then he's like he's getting into it.
He's getting lost.
And then he's like way off message.
Right.
So I do think those are not as helpful for him.
No, but I think that like Biden has to just look like he's hustling, that he is, you know,
taking no vote for granted.
You know, as Plouffe would say that he's low to the ground, you know, that it's like this
real sort of guerrilla campaign, like person to person, door to door.
That's what I would do if I were him. It's like, look, the world is so
problematic right now. And you have a lot of people out there who need empathy.
And Joe Biden has so much empathy. And many members of his cabinet are empathetic and helpful.
And so I think that using all of that in contrast to a person
who thinks there is only one victim on this planet, and it is him. Yeah, you know, and so I
think that that showcasing, you know, when we worked for Obama, empathy was always one of our
greatest weapons. Yeah. And so I think that for him, that is something that could really work to
his advantage. I think there are a lot of people in this country who don't feel heard or seen.
And if he can figure that out,
you know, someone else who I think has always been good
about making people feel heard and seen is Bernie.
You know, get Bernie out there.
Like, take everybody, listen to people.
I mean, look, like Bernie and Fran Drescher
doing their, like, their, like, SAG-AFTRA,
you know, like, crossover episode.
It's just a reminder that, like, you know,
Bernie does understand the plight of working people. And I think that that's as much as we as the party can get that out there from now until Election Day is vitally important.
remember the best look i was not i was not a big like biden supporter in the primary i love joe biden i've always loved joe biden but like i was looking at other candidates but then the moments
in that primary when he would like give someone a hug oh my god connect with someone at a town hall
you're like this is a good decent human totally and that was his best contrast with Donald Trump in 2020. And I think it remains so in 2024.
And it's harder right now that he's president to like go do those events.
What do you think about that?
Because like we know what reelect is.
We were both on in 2012.
Right.
Riding around on Air Force One with Obama.
It's not like you can just pop in somewhere and like, you know, hug someone.
Well, it's like, look, this is, I'm going to say something.
It's not super popular.
I think there was always such a phenomenon around Obama
that it was hard for us to do those things.
I do think that in some ways,
Biden has a smaller footprint,
which will greatly benefit him,
you know, in this next stage of the campaign.
Because I do think that even so much,
even if it's like they have their social media team, right?
All you need is an iPhone to catch Biden
having private conversation, not private.
I don't want to exploit anybody,
but having those one-on-one conversations
that aren't these, you know, in an arena with bright lights,
which makes even me nervous, right?
Like if I wanted to ask Joe Biden a question,
I might trip over my words. And so I think that there are ways to set moments like that up that
remind people, shit, he's just a good guy. And not just, I don't mean like, well, let's just
let grandpa. I mean, we all know he's fucking smart and that he can do the job. But I think
that for people who feel like the world is passing them by, I think Joe Biden's the only person who can remind them that he sees them.
Yeah, I think that he's fighting for them.
That's great advice, Alyssa.
Thanks so much.
I hope everyone's listening.
All right.
When we're back.
Before we go, Hallie Kiefer is here,
and she is ready to walk us through some of the best takes
over the last couple days since this indictment has hit.
Hallie?
Congratulations.
I'm sorry, gentle man and gentle woman.
Thank you so much.
You did it again.
Time to wrap this up again.
Pod Save America got Trump indicted again.
No, no, it was you guys.
You guys did it.
Just like you did it twice before.
We got him.
That's right.
Donald Trump is maybe hypothetically
going to see some repercussions
for some of his actions at some point in the future. And I personally get to feel less bad about all those soaking wet
document boxes I have in my bathroom, okay? There are no classified documents in those bad boys,
mostly just old cover letters. Remember cover letters? That's so weird. Remember the rule of
law? Anyway, what better way to celebrate Trump's triple crown than with a game we're calling,
we've called it this
before and now
we're calling it again.
Well, well, well,
looks like everyone's
a fucking lawyer
all of a sudden.
The way this game works,
you tell me
who wrote this tweet
which I'm about to read
about Trump's arraignment.
Was it a legal expert
or was it
just some fucking guy?
You will receive
a bonus point
if you could correctly guess
the profession of the person who tweeted it.
Oh, wow.
Are y'all ready?
Okay.
So ready.
Biden's DOJ is now criminalizing the First Amendment.
And anyone who dares question the results of an election.
Now, was that a legal expert?
Or just some fucking guy?
Some fucking guy.
I feel like I'm sad to think it was a legal expert. No, it's just some fucking guy? Some fucking guy. I'm sad to think it was a legal
expert. No, it's just a fucking guy.
Congressman Wesley Hunt.
Just some guy. Wait, you didn't let me pick.
I was going to say I knew they were a member
of Congress. Well, I have
great news because we have some more of them.
Okay, great.
Apparently now it's a crime to make
statements challenging election results.
I mean, if a prosecutor decides those statements aren't true.
Yeah, again, that's how law works.
When should we expect indictments of the Democrat politicians who falsely claimed Russia hacked the 2016 election?
Was that a legal expert?
Is that just some fucking guy?
I know this one.
Go ahead.
That's some fucking guy.
And which guy was it?
That's some fucking guy named Marco Rubio.
Damn.
You were dead.
Little Marco.
Little Marco. Little Marco.
Little Marco.
Just debasing himself yet again.
And it is fun to hear them, like, how wide they have to go to be like, oh, I guess it's
a crime to commit crime.
It's like, yep.
It's a crime to commit a crime.
Now it's a crime to overturn democracy.
Wow.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Wow, guys.
Oh, now we can't attack the Capitol.
All of a sudden, the people bringing this count they have here, conspiracy against rights.
They should be indicted for conspiracy against rights for bringing this indictment.
It's a conspiracy against his First Amendment rights.
Now, is that a legal expert?
I think it's a legal expert.
Unfortunately, it is.
And what legal expert is that?
Trump's lawyer.
I mean, which of the millions
of them?
It's a former lawyer. Is it a co-conspirator?
It is a co-conspirator. Eastman?
Nope. Giuliani. It's Giuliani,
baby. Rudy. And that's the
problem with this game is that eventually you realize
oh, but the lawyers on their side
are also just some fucking...
They don't give a fuck.
That is... It's just hard to realize
you know
wait Hallie
I actually have a question
yes please
Giuliani was disbarred
wasn't he
that's a great point
so yes
he's not
you're right
he's not
he is just some fucking guy
he's just some fucking guy
sorry I did
I literally
no no you're absolutely right
I did myself in with that one
but I had to be honest
that's good
no I thank you so much
for pointing that out.
And yeah, again, so if Giuliani approaches you out of a dark alley at office's legal.
Just some fucking guy.
Run.
Just some fucking guy.
The Trump indictment is their feelings masquerading as facts.
It's criminalizing thoughts.
Now, is that a legal expert or is that just some fucking guy?
Some fucking guy.
And what guy do you think that is?
I'll give you a hint.
He's the king of late night, unfortunately.
Oh, no.
It's Greg Gutfeld.
It is Greg Gutfeld.
I was going to say MyPillow.
It was either him or Jesse Waters.
I don't know who's the king, but I think it's Greg.
One of the two.
Where's the MyPillow guy?
Well, probably face down in a gutter somewhere.
And then finally, just one more.
This is like lawfare, they call it.
Legal warfare.
If this was political, this would be like a political war crime.
This is overkill.
This is political germ warfare.
These are political war crimes.
It is an atrocity.
It's like not dropping one atomic bomb, you drop 15 dozen.
Come on.
Enough is enough.
Now, is that a legal expert? I think it might be some fucking lady. Not dropping one atomic bomb, you drop 15 dozen. Come on. Enough is enough.
Now, is that a legal expert?
Or just a fucking guy? I think it might be some fucking lady.
That's got to be some fucking guy.
It is a gentleman.
Oh.
Oh.
We did just mention him.
It's Rudy Giuliani again?
No, no, no.
Oh, is it?
You just mentioned him.
Johnny Smith?
No.
Fox's own.
Oh, oh.
Is it Jesse Waters?
Jesse Waters.
15 fucking atomic
That's how crazy this is
I thought for sure
That was Marjorie
I was gonna
That was my first thought too
Yeah I was like
This is so hyperbolic
It can only be Marjorie
Or Matt Gaetz
I think
I think Marjorie's
She's cooking up something
She's writing a whole novella
She's gonna come out
She does have a novella
Now it turns out
There weren't a lot of
Actual legal experts
Who did weigh on this
Presumably because There's a lot of evidence.
And they're like, well, it's kind of there.
They're like, I still want other clients.
Yeah.
And let us move on to our celebration of the OGs.
Of course, the resistance libs.
Hope those aging knees are holding up as you take yet another victory lap.
Time to kick back with a glass of adaptogen
hop water, because wine during the week
at this point, your sleep gets all messed up.
Give yourself a little pat and you're
aching back. Before again,
we all return once again to the
24-hour toxic churn
of anti-trans, anti-queer,
anti-abortion rights, anti-black, anti-
labor profanity. The right continues
to vomit into
America's open screaming mouth.
But for right now, let's have fun.
Give yourself a minute of a breather.
Gentlemen and women.
Thank you so much.
I'm going to read you some mouth-watering resistance libs tweets, and you're going to
rank them on a four-tiered scale.
Okay.
Level one, Notorious RBG.
Level two, Cheeto and Chief. Okay. them on a four-tiered scale okay level one notorious rbg level two cheeto in chief okay level three dumbledore's army that's that takes you back okay and then finally four occupied
democrats okay okay all right here's one and if you want you could also guess who tweeted this
that's it wants to be an element we're coming towards an inflection point and a fraught moment
in the history of our democracy.
Oh, my God.
But frankly, considering the interests of justice and the rule of law, it's about damn
time.
Who do you think tweeted that?
Oh, that's a real crossing the Delaware moment.
I'm not on Twitter anymore, really.
Thank God for your brain.
I am not.
But I do feel like it's only a two.
Yeah, I was going to say, is that the Cheeto?
It's low key.
Cheeto God or something?
Yeah, Cheeto and Chief.
Cheeto and Chief.
Yeah, I agree with Cheeto and Chief.
It was Adam Schiff.
You gotta go big, though.
You only get an afternoon before we
move on on Twitter.
Election deniers. Never
and never is all is capitalized.
Prosper. Who do you think tweeted all is capitalized. Prosper.
Who do you think tweeted that?
She didn't.
It was never prosper.
Oh, it wasn't Trump.
Is that Midas Touch?
This would be Occupy Democrats.
Oh, it is. That's so close.
One of their less zany ones, I would say.
That's why I didn't.
A little tasteful.
I swear it was Midas Touch, yeah.
Election deniers never prosper.
Where are we putting this?
Is this a notorious RBG?
It's a notorious RBG. I think it's a notorious RGB. Especially for them. It's not that fantastical. Well, yeah, for them, yeah. Election deniers never prosper. Where are we putting this? Is this a notorious RBG? It's a notorious RBG.
I think it's a notorious RGB.
It's not that fantastical.
Well, yeah, for them, too.
Yeah.
Especially.
Especially.
Even Fidel Castro, Hugo Chavez, and Adolf Hitler never carried out a plan like Trump's
choice of acting Attorney General Jeffrey Clark proposed to use the Insurrection Act
to hold power by force by turning the U.S. Army against the people of America rising up against their coup.
That is, first of all, that is a full-on Occupy Democrat.
Full-on Occupy.
That's the craziest one we've ever heard.
Is it RFK?
Now, this is Grant Stern, who is the executive editor of Occupy Democrats.
Oh, okay.
All right.
Well, then he's like representing.
Exactly. Hey, dude, that is fucking kooky. I just want to tell right. Well, then he's like representing. Exactly.
Hey, dude, that is fucking kooky.
I just want to tell you,
that's kooky.
And again,
don't use Hitler in your comparisons.
Just don't do it.
Hitler's name,
Adi Yamal.
Finally, somebody said it.
No Hitler.
Ha ha.
You will never be president
is trending now
because salty ass Trump supporters
are letting former VP Mike Pence
have it for the part he played in making today possible.
So delicious.
And then sort of like the smiling, laughing face.
Emoji?
Emoji.
And I, again.
Someone used an emoji?
Favreau, I feel like you know these.
Oh, no.
This is terrifying.
I think you do know these.
First, I'm going to do the rating.
This is a three, and three was?
Three, of course, was Dumbledore's Army.
Dumbledore's Army.
Yeah, this feels like the Dumbledore's Army.
Who would this be?
Who uses emojis?
It's an individual.
Individual.
He has a location, a role within his family.
A role within his family.
Oh, oh, oh.
Is it a Krasenstein?
It is Brooklyn Dad Defiant.
Oh, Brooklyn Dad Defiant.
You guys, I'm not going to lie.
I'm feeling good about myself that I don't know any of these people.
You should.
Being on Twitter this week, I think the last couple weeks I'm like,
this might be, I might be breaking.
I don't know what it is.
The whole experience is bad.
Brooklyn Dad Defiant.
First of all, just what a name.
I mean, truly.
And then we'll just do one more
just the word
karma
period
so that's a
that's a one
that's a one
Victoria's RBG
RBG
hmm
karma
hmm
who's karma
that's a tough one
give us a hint
yeah
it's also Brooklyn Dad Defiant
I
got a lot of those from him.
Thank you for playing.
Thank you.
And I'm going to wait for him to get indicted a fourth time,
and you can have me back on to play again.
In Georgia, right?
Did you bring a Jack Smith bobblehead doll for the winner?
Oh, I...
Or are we going to light the votive candle later?
You know what?
The bobblehead is a candle.
So actually, we'll bring it.
We'll have a whole thing.
We'll have a sit-down meal.
Hallie Kiefer, thank you for those
fantastic games. Alyssa Mastermonaco,
thank you for being the
guest host. This was so much fun.
Please have me back all the time.
Anytime. It's like you and me
back in that horrible Carrie campaign office
in 03. And here we are.
20 years we've been together. Have we moved
forward? I think so. I mean, yeah, but we're still the same. And here we are. 20 years we've been together. Have we moved forward? I think so.
I mean, yeah,
but we're still the same.
And thank you to
Strict Scrutiny's Leah Lippman.
Everyone have a great weekend.
We will talk to you next week.
Pod Save America
is a Crooked Media production.
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is Michael Martinez.
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and Olivia Martinez.
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with audio support from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis.
Thanks to Hallie Kiefer, Madeline Herringer,
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for production support.
And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Phoebe Bradford,
Mia Kelman, Ben Hefko, and David Tolles.
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