All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Ro Khanna on Crime, Censorship & Congress: Fixing What’s Broken in America
Episode Date: October 2, 2025(0:00) Chamath and Jason welcome Rep. Ro Khanna! (1:10) H-1Bs and immigration (8:40) Giving Trump credit as a Progressive Democrat, why bipartisanship is broken, future Democratic leaders (15:08) Tech... industry: Can Democrats win back tech?; Economic patriotism, protection vs proliferation of AI (24:25) Government shutdown, what actually happens? (30:25) Extreme rhetoric: Importance of dialing this down (36:29) Censorship and lawfare on both sides (40:32) Crime issues in major cities, why Democrats are losing on safety, common sense solutions (47:46) Mamdani's surge: is Zohran the future of the party? (51:15) Congressional stock trading ban Follow Ro Khanna: https://x.com/rokhanna Follow the besties: https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://x.com/TheZachEffect
Transcript
Discussion (0)
bro how many times have you been on the pod now is this number four for you three or four no this is my
fifth time oh wait sorry i'm not rocana sorry over to rocana sorry we all look the same
you're sri lank and he's indian i know the difference we all look the same bro we all look the same
it's like you're saying to the irish guys that's how that's how i won my seat i just had
indian americans every indian america go knock on doors and say i'm rocana you know they all
thought i thought the candidate came to every door
All right, besties. I think that was another epic discussion.
People love the interviews. I could hear him talk for hours.
Absolutely.
We crushed your questions a minute.
We are giving people ground truth data to underwrite your own opinion.
What are you going to say? That was fun.
How much crap?
I will say one of my appearance. I think this is number four, but one of them was on election night.
And it was with Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr.
And I actually ran into him.
in the green room right before we were doing Squawk Box, and he brought up the Pod Save interview.
So there you go, bringing the sides together.
It's been pretty amazing.
I think it's a good place to start.
How successful Indian Americans have become.
And a really important topic, I think, for us to kick off with maybe this time on your
fourth appearance is immigration, H-1Bs.
What's your take broadly on what we're seeing out of the Trump administration on maybe trying
to correct the abuse in these systems and maybe monetize them.
And maybe do you think that's a good strategy for correcting the abuse?
First of all, there's definitely abuse.
Second, it definitely needs to be corrected.
The reality is that some of the H-1BVs holders are being paid below market wages.
Some of them are not going to super talented individuals or in the jobs that actually
require a lot of skill. And I had a bill, a bipartisan bill, actually, that would have
reformed it, requiring paying a prevailing wage, requiring, making sure that the categories actually
were skilled categories. I don't love the blanket 100,000 fee. I think that that's not the best
way to reform it, but if, partly because it puts an unfair burden on startups, it actually
may hurt with talent. But if you wanted to say, look, there's going to be some prevailing
wage standard and we need reforms. I'm open open to that. Do you think that the president is on the
right direction then in actually trying to reform the system? Yeah. I think in terms of reforming the
system, he's in the right direction. I don't, you know, I don't agree with the specifics of
the way he's doing it. Like many things, I think sometimes he identifies the right issue and
he has a solution that I don't agree with. But the reality is that it has to be reformed. I mean,
And anyone in Silicon Valley, I mean, you guys know this.
I mean, it's been abused.
It's been abused by some of the mass IT outsourcing firms that just have people coming in.
It's been very difficult to find some of the best young minds to work at our startups,
to your point, row, because it has been gamed.
And the people that have perfected the application process have won the H-1Bs.
And I think that that's where these systems go off the rails, because it should be, as you said,
the really talented young men and women that moved to the United States, supported by an American
company trying to do something ambitious, it should not be because you know how to apply multiple
times through multiple shell companies.
Yeah, I agree.
And as you know, some of the outsourcing consulting companies, I don't want to go through
all the names, but you know what they are, Tide Consulting or Cognizant or others, they've
gamed the system and they get a bulk of those H-1Bs.
And that needs to stop and there needs to be actual talent.
But I want to make a point.
I was just in China.
We had gone to a bipartisan delegation there.
One third of the AI talent is in China, according to a lot of the reports.
And so I want some of those folks to come to the United States so we can stay ahead of AI.
So there are legitimate uses of the H-1B program.
And what we need to do is fix the program so you can have the legitimate.
talent still coming to Silicon Valley and around the nation.
Do you think that for that cream skimming, things like national interest waivers and
01 visas and EB-1s and EB-5s, do you think that those are sufficient to accomplish the
task of that or it should be factored into the H-1B program itself?
I think there needs to be an H-1B program.
I don't think the national waiver and the other programs are enough.
A lot of times, you know, look, Hussender Pichai came or set.
came, we're now leading Google and Microsoft. They came, they studied here, and then they got
an H-1B. But I would also make it that you don't stay on an H-1B indefinitely, that we move
towards a green card, which, by the way President Trump said on your show, in one of your
episodes, he said, I'm going to make sure that we actually move folks quickly to a green card.
That to me seems like a win-win because you're then not exploiting an indebted.
individual. You're going to pay them the market wage as they have flexibility of moving.
And at the same time, they're going to stay in the United States instead of going back to
China or to India. By the way, a lot of these companies, if you just limit H-1Bs, they all have
overseas, a lot of the big companies have overseas headquarters. So they're going to just
offshore the jobs instead of bringing the jobs here.
One of the points that Jason has made really well, actually, consistently for years, is
In order to fix the immigration system, I think the first thing you have to do is rebuild trust in the immigration system.
Fair point.
And one of the things that the president has done effectively now completely sealed the border.
And I think the stat that he said is that since January, literally there have been no illegal immigrants at the southern border.
I'm presuming it's probably similar at the northern border as well.
Can you just talk about that part of the immigration spectrum and what you think, the positives and the negatives of what has happened?
over the last nine months? We need a secure border. The border, we let in too many people
under the Biden administration without having the proper security. I think the Democrats need
to acknowledge that, own up to that, and say that we need to make sure that there is a secure
border. Now, I don't agree with Trump in the way he's shut down basically all asylum claims
and he's just taking it to zero.
And I don't agree with that approach.
But do I think we need it to do things to secure the border more?
I do.
Now, the question is, okay, he's done that.
I disagree with how he's secured it
and in that he's basically made a solemn impossible.
But will he take some of that goodwill that he's earned in terms of the trust
and do two things that I think can be bipartisan in terms of immigration reform?
One is in industries like agriculture, food production, construction for people who are here,
who are paying their taxes, who have been undocumented for a long time, give them a path to legalization.
By the way, you want to see food prices come down.
That would be one way to do that in terms of giving those folks a path to legalization.
If they're here, no criminal record and paid their taxes.
And I've seen him sometimes suggest that.
Yeah, he came out and said it.
He said, we have to look at it, right?
explicitly said it i'm a democrat willing to work with him on that and the second would be on this
green card thing which he's said explicitly which is look people are here they if they've gotten
getting a college degree we're paying for their education uh we want them here i someone comes
600 000 students come from uh 300 000 from china i'm glad by the way the president
pushed back against his own base and said that those students should still come because
he got a hard time uh saying that they should still come well they come here they study at stanford
they study at Berkeley, they study at MIT or Harvard or at a state college. We're basically
financing in some way their education because all these universities get federal subsidies.
Wouldn't you want them to stay here and create the jobs here, an investor, instead of going
back to China and doing it in Shanghai or Beijing? Yeah, I think this is part of the, one of the reasons
I love having you on the program, Roe, is you take a very first principle in a logical, nonpartisan
approach to this. You just gave Trump his flowers for, hey, good job closing the border.
job identifying that 80% of Americans agree with that. I'm curious what's going on inside the Democratic
Party where a large number of people can't seem to give Trump any credit, right, for this
basic win and then challenge him and say, hey, but this is where we have to go. So how does a
Democratic Party look at you, your contemporaries, when you're a moderate, when you try to tone
things down, when you try to take a first principle logical approach to these issues? How are
You look at within your own party.
Are you the skunk at the garden party?
Is this for saying that Trump actually did something, right?
Well, yeah, and I'm a progressive Democrat, but what I am is a progressive Democrat who tries to call balls and strikes.
And like I said, I don't agree with all of the policies he's done to shut down the border.
But it would be just foolish to think that we didn't have a problem on the border that we weren't, didn't have too many people coming in, that we didn't do enough to strengthen the border.
I think that should have been Vice President Harris's answer of what she would have done differently.
And she could have even said, I learned.
We made a mistake.
We didn't have the right approach on border security.
Look, today I tweeted out something about how I agreed with what Trump's doing on the prescription drug issue,
that he has a government website that is basically going to sell pharmaceutical drugs at a cheaper
price. Now, that's a policy that if Bernie Sanders had put forward or Joe Biden put forward.
It's exactly what I was going to say. But Bernie Sanders had put this out. Sorry, go ahead.
That we'd all be cheering. I mean, it's not, is it as far as I want? No, but it's a step in that
direction. So I guess my point is, well, why not just then say, okay, that's good. Or I've been
very critical of the president's policies on the Middle East. And I've been critical of the
policies abided on the Middle East. But today, you put for the plan that the Arab countries are
saying that Hamas should take. So I tweeted out that Hamas should accept this, release the hostages,
Israel should withdraw. Now, that's because I'm rooting for America to succeed in peace in the Middle
East. That doesn't mean that I adopt Donald Trump's policy. But I just think we need as a party
to be honest about where someone is putting forth something that we may agree with.
with and where they're not. Now, of course, he's doing a lot of things that we could get into it that
are unconstitutional, and he puts, does antics like having Hakeem Jeffries in a, in a sombrero,
and you can see why there is such anger. He's been Randen Carr threatening to take Jimmy Kimmel
off the year. I mean, threatening universities with, with their speech. So there's reason for
for the anger. But I don't think just being anti-Trump is the way back for the Democratic Party.
Well, can you? Yeah, go ahead.
Can you just, just diagnose this for us because I think we've entered a phase of politics
where just it seems like decorum has been lost. And underneath that, is it that there's
hatred or is it that there's just incredible competition now to accumulate power and win
elections? What do you believe is that the root cause of why people can't call balls and
strikes. I think it's both. It's that, unfortunately, there has been more extremism and hate
in our country. I mean, people really have lost the ability to try to see the good in others
and to say, look, we've got some humility. We may not have all the right answers and we want to
engage. I think I used to say money in politics is our biggest problem. Now, I believe hate and
extremism is our biggest problem in this country. And then you're rewarded. If you're,
you do the most outlandish things because we're in an attention economy and if you pick a fight,
people pay attention. And so if you're kind of sober, you're going to lose support from your
own party, your own base. But my hope, and I hope this for both parties, that after the Trump
era, and I think even Trump supporters would acknowledge he's divisive, I mean, look at what he said
at Charlie Kirk's funeral, where Eric Kirk gives this beautiful statement of,
forgiveness. And he says, well, I can't forgive. I hate my enemies. But after eight years of that,
I really hope that we don't devolve into both sides, just hating each other more, mimicking Trump's
style of communication. I hope whoever the Republicans put forward will say, look, we want to go
forward. It's a new generation. We've had three 80-year-old presidents in a row in this country.
Like, we have a new generation of governance, and we're going to be aspirational, and we're going to
talk about positive things. And I hope the Democrats will do that.
Who do you think those are on the Democratic sign?
I think there are folks like Andy Bashir.
There's folks like West Moore.
You know, whatever you think of the three people are going to win in November,
Mamdani, Abigail Spanberger, and Mikey Cheryl, you know one thing all three of those campaigns
have in common?
They don't spend a lot of time talking about Donald Trump.
They're talking about their own vision, their own ideas about what they want to do for
their city, their state, for the country and the world.
And that's what politics should be about.
the politics should be about here's what my vision is here's my plan uh here's where i want to take
the nation by the way roe you know i don't agree with row on medicare for all i don't agree with him on
where he thinks the tax rate should be i don't agree with him on having the state play some role
in building modern factories in in ohio and this thing he calls economic patriotism i'm more libertarian
i'm for deregulation he doesn't understand how you really grow the economy that's that's what
we should be talking about uh instead it's just you know everyone's trying to
see how they can curse in terms of being authentic, as if that makes you intelligent, right?
I mean, it's actually just the expression of emotion without a thought. And I, I'm hoping that
we'll have a more serious politics. You had a really great moment on a podcast. I heard you on. I can't
remember which one. But you were saying, I wonder if comedy is the precursor now. Being funny,
being witty on programs is like the precursor to running for president. But let's talk about,
I think maybe an interesting place to go would be how the technology industry, how to win
that back on the Democratic side. You had essentially the entire industry.
Yeah, Monopoly. So let's call it what it is. Nine out of ten, 95 out of 100 Democrats.
We even had Sharmat. You had Shemot. You had Mark Pinkis. I mean, listen, even inside the cabinet,
Besson, Lutnik, Trump himself. Was Besson? I didn't know Besson. They were all Democrats, yeah.
all previous Democrats, including Trump himself.
So is there a road back?
And then if we were just to do a little, you know, post-mortem on how the tech industry
was kind of abandoned, vilified, I know for me as a moderate, basically up until this time
have been like two out of three times I voted Democrat.
Now it's like 60-40-ish.
The banning of the billionaires, the demonization of entrepreneurs, it must have been
uncomfortable for you to watch.
And obviously, you see the entire digerati at the White House having dinner.
You must be thinking to yourself, my God, Biden could have done that at any time.
He could have summoned everybody and said, hey, come, let's talk about your issues.
But instead, the industry was vilified.
So if you, I don't want to spend too much time on it, but what's your diagnosis of how that happened?
And then how does the Democratic Party win back technology and leaders and billionaires?
I do joke that I think the tech industry that has become the new, new aristocracy.
I look at the White House, there they are, Sunder Tim Cook and Satya and all the group.
And then the King of England, King Charles, there they are, or something.
So it's a group that obviously has a lot of stature and respect.
I guess here was my point to the Biden administration that they didn't agree with or they ignored.
I said, you're making a mistake if you think that getting Silicon Valley folks on your side is about the money.
Because they would always say, oh, Biden's going to raise all this money.
We don't need the Valley's money.
I said, yeah, you're going to raise all the money.
And they did.
They raised tons of money.
Kamala Harris raised tons of money.
I said, that's not what it's about.
It's about culture.
I said, there are a lot of young people in America who admire these entrepreneurs, who listen to all in,
who want to build wealth, who want to build the next generation of wealth.
By the way, all crypto is, why are there so many young black and Latino folks who care about
crypto because frankly it's the closest often they're going to get to a friends and family
round in technology that we've got to expand economic opportunities so they have more options
but there are a lot of people who want to have a part of the digital economy who want to
who look up to entrepreneurs and innovators and you basically let Trump this 1980s real estate
guy who was kind of passe who was wondering whether we were going to get more reruns of the
apprentice and another act on on politics and you let him be the cool guy with hanging out
with all these tech folks saying, no, I'm the future. And I said, that's the worst mistake our party
has made because we've got to be the party of the future. We've got to be the party of entrepreneurship
and innovation. And you can be like me a guy who says, we should text.
I'll just tell you, I'll just tell you one quick story. I think it's not that. I think it's something,
I think it's something more basic. When we were at that dinner, he asked everybody, what is the
biggest issue that you're dealing with. And he goes around the table and he asks what is a very
basic and open-ended question. And I can say this because I think it was pretty clear what happened
afterwards, but one of the things that was mentioned was just the overwhelming pressure that the
Europeans were putting on Google. I don't know if you remember this. And the day after,
beyond making some calls, what he did was he put a pretty meaningful pressure campaign that
allowed the release valve to get released so that Google had less pressure from the European
regulators and less onerous terms. I think that that's what it is because when you sit with
him, he's not selling an agenda. He mostly just asks you what's going on and then he says,
what can I do? And I think that that is a unique feature that many politicians I think have lost.
And you said an important thing, which I just want to double.
click on, because I would love your perspective on this, I do believe that President Trump
views the lens through economic patriotism. I've been largely convinced that I think that
that is a very powerful way of behaving in the world. You know, Alex Carpet or Allens Summit
referred to it in the spirit of Chinese Tai Chi, it's internal stability. It's how do you make
sure that you have the resources so that you have effectively infinite optionality.
abroad. That makes sense to me. So I'm just curious, what is the opposite of the economic patriotism
that Trump offers that you've seen expressed in other countries, right? The Chinese, I think,
is very fair to say, had their own view of economic patriotism. And why is the opposite of that
a better model? Well, economic patriotism is my platform. That's why Benin says, you know,
watch out for this kind of guy. I've been talking about it writing about economic patriotism for years.
Let me talk about why it's different from where Trump is, and it gets to partly your point.
I think, fine, he listens, but he's not listening enough to people saying, well, the tariff policy is not going to get us to economic development.
He's not listening enough, in my view, to people who are saying that you can't just take a sledgehammer to universities and research, that that's not going to help build the economy of this country.
He's not listening enough to people who are saying, don't, don't just have all this vetting for international students and don't insult immigrants coming to the United States.
So we do need immigrants.
Now, I agree that he gave some of those answers and all in.
But overall, there hasn't been the same understanding and case for the role of immigrants in the community.
What I believe is we need a Marshall Plan for America.
And I wish that we had a White House economic council.
So I did this bill with Marco Rubio that actually looks at Johnstown, that looks at Warren, Ohio, that looks at Milwaukee, and it says not only advanced manufacturing, we should put tech jobs there, AI academies, their health care, and let's have an economic renaissance in this country and bring the country together.
And that, to me, we should be arguing in the parties of how we do that.
And I have a different view on some of the policies I articulated, but that should be the goal.
If you look at promoting that economic exceptionalism, there are a bunch of categories where I think the policy has diverged pretty meaningfully and paradoxically.
The most obvious example is around AI, where we've gone from a much more regimented, stagegated way of seeing the world.
and under President Trump and our bestie David Sacks, we've gone into a much more open mandate
that acknowledges we're in a very tough competition with an extremely talented Chinese competitor.
What's your view on some of these groundbreaking areas of tech? How do we think about protection
versus how do we think about proliferation? Well, that's a big question. And first we start
by saying, I believe AI is going to do more good than bad in the world. I mean, I know that's a
simple statement, but there are many people who may not agree with that. The advances it can make
in human disease and diagnosis of human disease, the advances it can make in education
curriculum for young people, the advances that can make in production. You know, one of the places
as we went to in Beijing was Shaiomi, the factory that makes these phones.
And I was stunned.
Shami, yeah.
Shami is a, yeah.
I mean, I was stunned.
The AI has these machines that are basically putting together the phone.
I mean, it's a model of the iPhone.
To your point, we had Josai, who is the chairman of Alibaba at the summit.
The most incredible thing that Josai said is that, by,
government edict, essentially, they've mandated that 95% of all government institutions need
to be running on AI by 2030, where, and you and I both know, in any Western country,
if such an edict or something happened, you'd kind of just say, let's just discount this
essentially to zero. Maybe it's like PR fluff. But, you know, I don't know, Jason, what you thought,
but I was sitting there thinking, are the only country that can probably pull this off is the Chinese
because if they say Saudi, yeah, UAE South.
Top down, you can, you can, yeah, mandate it.
So to your point, Roe, like, we're going to have an incredibly formidable competitor.
And so in some ways, like, the infighting and the ranker just needs to get dialed down.
Otherwise, we're going to miss the conditions on the field.
And, you know, just to maybe pivot to this, you're on the verge of a shutdown.
Can you walk us through the inside baseball of what's happened over the last few days?
where we are, what the sticking point is and what you think the odds are that this thing will get
resolved and what happens if there's a shutdown? Can you just walk us through all of that? Sure.
Just two points on AI, though. We do need to think about the job displacement and what we can do
as a country. I believe the federal government has to step in for young people in particular to
say, look, you can work for a few years if you can't find a private sector job in helping on
child care, elder care, your communities, health care, government services. Maybe we make AI so that
the DMV works better and, you know, people start to think that the government services actually
are effective. But I think there has to be a lot of thought put in to the displacement and being
ahead of the curve. The only thing I'd say about China is, while they're formidable, the one
statistic that made me think we've got a lot of things right here that they haven't, 20% youth
unemployment in China. And that's because there are all these college graduates. They don't want to
work on a factory line. And I tease Latinique about screws on the iPhone or something. You know,
a lot of college graduates, they didn't want to do that in China. And at the same time,
not everyone is going to be like making EVs. And so in our country, you do a lot of what Chinese
would say, silly things. Like you make dating apps and you make comedy apps and you make sports apps
and you do a lot of other things, and they don't have that.
And I think that gives us a huge advantage in terms of the creativity and the culture,
if we can get the basics right.
Now, the government shut down the fight first is over something that I'm biased,
but I fundamentally believe is a basic principle,
which is if Congress passes something, like the president has to spend what Congress passes.
It's not discretionary.
You know, Federman said elections matter.
Well, the elections to Congress matter, too.
And you may just want to explain to the audience because I'm not sure all of us are up to speed on exactly the thing that has happened.
So, look, Trump said this view that, okay, spending is too high.
These agencies are wasting money.
I'm going to come in and I'm going to make certain decisions about cutting spending that Congress may have appropriated.
He did this on foreign aid.
He's done it on some of the things with Department of Education.
We can go through other programs.
I got into an argument with Elon when he was there.
I originally said, look, I'm open to working.
with Doge, if they're reasonable things that we can say, but you got to do it through a process.
And they have a view. Their view is, well, Congress is never going to do this. So we're just going to
go there and we're going to do it. And that's not the way the Constitution works. And so you can't
expect Democrats to say, okay, we're going to give you our votes for a budget if it's all
discretionary and Trump can do whatever he wants anyway with the budget. And that's the basic
fault line. The second argument is over health care.
This is just factual.
If the tax credits expire on the exchange, people who were paying about $7,000 on the
exchange would go up to about $21,000.
I mean, you'd basically be kicking off a ton of people off the exchanges.
And Democrats just can't do that.
Now, you can say, well, you lost the election.
And I have no problem getting rid of the filibuster.
And the Republicans have the votes in the Senate and the House and the Trump.
and they can pass the budget.
But my hope is that they will realize that these tax credits are worth saving, that they're not
going to want people kicked off health care, and they're not going to want these premiums going
up high, and that will be the deal.
The argument on the other side says that the tax credits and the health care subsidies
will largely go to folks that are here illegally.
Can you confirm or debunk that?
First of all, it's a very small point.
of people that we're talking about. So 90% is not anything to do with those who are undocumented.
That's just the math, right? I mean, so we can argue about the 10%. But we have in this country
something called emergency Medicaid. What does that mean? If you're undocumented and you
show up to the hospital, we will take care of you. I believe that is correct. I don't think
if you're undocumented and you show up to a hospital that you should be denied care. Well,
who pays for that? We have an emergency Medicaid program. And I guess if you mean that when you fund
Medicaid, when you fund the Affordable Care Act, that you're saying you're funding some of it
for undocumented people who are showing up in emergency situations, then yeah, you're funding that.
But my view of it is that let's be honest that that's not where the big money and the budgets are.
You're talking about a small group of folks. You can argue the cultural point
about it. But don't make that the numbers. So for the average person watching listening,
what technically happens if there's a shutdown? Like what happens to their everyday lives?
Well, first of all, it's bad for some of the public servants, right? Will the Capitol Police? Will
police officers get paid? Will military get paid? If they have a family member who is in government
service will they get paid? And they just may, as Americans or family members, care about that,
or you're going to have people without pay. Second, there will be some services that'll start
getting cut, right? Like, if you're flying a plane, you may not notice it for a few days, but then
after a few weeks, you're saying, oh, they have less government, less flights, because we don't
have enough people showing up or staffing at the airports. And some of the parks may shut down.
things that involve the government that aren't national security urgent are going to get affected.
Let's talk a little bit about the censorship issue. This has come up multiple times. It's a
culture issue for sure. But why are both sides so obsessed with this? And how do we get this
resolved between both sides? And then there's another both sides issue, which is political
speech that's violent, fight like hell, Trump is Hitler, stuff that I don't hear.
you saying, but that we'd...
Stephen Miller is a fascist.
Stephen Miller saying
Gavin Newsom's press said it the other day, yeah.
He's gone full Trump in terms of the dueling.
I wouldn't call it full Trump.
I would just say it was really, it was really over the line.
Yeah.
I mean, look, there's a way to argue.
I've gone back and forth with Stephen Miller and we have exchanges.
I've gone back and forth with Vice President Vance.
I mean, sometimes I think some of it is intemper,
But the point is, it's within a bounds.
You're not, he's not saying, you know, deport Roe.
And I'm not using the words of Hitler or other things in talking about him.
I mean, you can have spirited debate in a way that isn't Polyanish is tough,
but respects certain norms that the other person is a person of intelligence whose views you disagree with.
Is there no leadership, though, row, like when you're in D.C., people come together and say, you know what, the people who have the most to lose here are us.
So it's in our best interest in terms of self-preservation for all of us to just speak in a more kind, civil way to each other because there are a large number of mentally ill people out there.
I believe that's like at the core of this is mentally ill people here, different things when you say fight like hell or this person's Hitler, et cetera.
and they may act on it.
Can I say something?
I think this is an important point, but I want to just push back on that.
It's too simple to sweep it under the rug as a mental illness issue.
Like when you have somebody get assassinated where the bullet says, hey, catch this fascist.
And then less than 10 or 12 days later, you have one of the, if not the most visible, leaders of the Democratic Party in all caps screaming on X, Stephen Miller is a fascist.
I think that that's just irresponsible.
I think we can all admit that that is irresponsible and that I think what happens is, as Roe said,
the extremes have been amplified in an attention economy.
But I think it's too simple to say that they have something that can just be swept under the rug.
I think that this is a chronic issue.
And you can both sides it, you know, when Trump said, go fight like hell and they went and beat
police officers, you know, at the Capitol.
I don't know if you were there, Roe, and what that was like, you were there.
And like, it's pretty scary.
and that thing could have gotten out of hand.
And the Oathkeepers and Antifa,
these are both radical organizations
that will murder people, that will beat police.
They're very disturbed individuals
in both of these groups.
So I think it can both sides is.
And every time we see one of these crazy people,
these extreme people, it's really the same profile.
It's white men who are disconnected from reality.
So I don't know how a sane person drives into a church,
kills people, and lights it on fire like we saw the other day.
I understand, but I'm saying,
There's a broad group of people that are committing these actions that are not just deranged.
They're being incited.
They're being programmed.
They're being pulled into behaving in ways that if they had other things, other attachments,
they may not necessarily have done these things.
I would agree with that.
If there was religion and family and they weren't shut in and playing video games, I agree.
Let me try to.
Maybe, Matt's look at this debate.
We want to hear you, Ro.
No, no, it's good.
I feel like I'm in like a therapy session with an old married couple.
This is the whole point of the pocket is going to be at the poker table.
This is great.
Here you are at the table.
Go ahead, tell us your take.
Here's my view.
Obviously, it's that kind of extreme rhetoric is leading in cases of political violence.
But it's more than that, right?
It's not just the Charlie Kirk assassination or January 6th or the attack on Pelosi's home.
It's also making us hate each other as Americans.
It's making us incapable of coming together to say, you know what?
I agree with Donald Trump, what's selling farm.
pharmaceutical drugs at a cheap price, because that's the direction that Bernie Sanders would go.
Like, we're not able to do that. Why? Because we've created such anger and extremism in tribalism
in our politics. And the reality is, right now, you're rewarded for it. If you grab the attention
and you show that you've kind of got vengeance on the other side, your poll numbers go up
within your own base, you'll get more contributions. I mean, we just need to speak plainly
about some of the incentives. And if the election was in November of 2025, the next presidential
election, I think both sides would end up nominating the side that's going to take it to the other one,
the own the libs from the Republicans and, you know, fight fire with fire with everything and own the MAGA folks
from the Democrats. I am hoping, I don't know if that's true, I'm hoping that people will see
that this is a spiral downwards, that fighting fire with fire leaves ashes for everyone,
that's what Emmanuel Cleaver says, and that we've got to find a different way of moving
forward. By the way, even people who agree with Trump on policies, there have been a lot of
presidents in our country's history, FDR, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, Obama, not always
All of them were divisive.
There's one guy who did that.
And my view is, first of all, American politics disdains a copycat.
You're probably not going to be successful, just mimicking him.
And secondly, why wouldn't you return?
Why wouldn't you want this country to return to the aspirational, inspirational politics,
whether your choice is Kennedy or Reagan?
I think people are going to get burned out on it.
So the other two issues I wanted to hear from you on is the censorship one and then the
lawfare one, it was pretty clear.
that of the six or seven cases that were done against Trump during his time off and the Biden
administration was in, you know, we're reaching, right? And maybe we're lawfare, would be fair to say
were lawfare-esque. And now you're having the exact same thing Trump doing with Comey, where he's
firing the attorney general in that district, putting a new one in. So I'm wondering how you think
about the censorship wars going back and forth. And then now the war.
law fair ones because we as moderates, and I think moderates are the ones who are swinging these
elections right now. You guys are. We're getting very tired of it. I am exhausted with the fact that
neither side will stand down on censorship or on the law fair. What are your thoughts? Well, in censorship,
I have a particularly strong record. When people say, what makes you a different kind of Democrat,
I say free speech. And all these people who got outraged when Jimmy Kimmel was pulled down were silent
often when Twitter was censoring the New York Post with Hunter Biden's laptop stories.
And as you may remember, my email leaked where I said that, no, you shouldn't be pulling down
that story and you shouldn't be having the New York Post take that down.
And then I got criticized from my own side, even though I'm one of the strongest defenders
of trans rights and we may have disagreements of where I stand says, because I said that comedian
who was arrested at Heathrow Airport for a transphobic post should not be arrested,
that you should not be arrested for that.
I got criticized from the left.
So my point is, then when I speak out and say, okay, Jimmy Kimmel shouldn't be pulled down
and we shouldn't be canceling speech or going after left-wing groups,
there's at least some credibility because I'm willing to say, look, our side is engaged
in that kind of censorship as well, and it's wrong when either side has it.
And I think our side would have a lot more credibility in going after Trump, even if they didn't do it back then, if we just acknowledged that we've got this speech problem on our side.
It's easy to be for free speech when it's speech you like, like, Kimmel.
It's hard to be for free speech.
The test does not, will you stand up for it when you like it?
It's will you stand up for it when you don't like it.
And that's, okay, now do law fair because this is, you know, I didn't like it when they did it to Trump.
There did seem to be like some situations where he was provided.
or did some things that, you know, on the margins could have gotten you a ticket, let's say,
but then you have, you know, these big judgments against him that I don't think would have been
brought if he wasn't running for president again or they didn't want him to run for president
again. And now we have the same thing happen with Comey and they're literally picking the attorney
generals and firing them and putting people in who've never actually even been in front of a grand
jury just to get this, you know, revenge. And so it's a pretty dark time, I think, on the
lawfare front. What do you think? Yeah, look, I don't want to relitigate Trump's action. I do think he did
certain things like January 6 others that were blatantly illegal and unconstitutional. But I will say
this, that whoever going forward for the parties should be make a firm commitment that they're
going to follow the law and not engage in vengeance and not engage in retribution. And it's sad to me
that that we've gotten to the state. I understand Trump.
feels like, okay, he won a second term. He was spared from assassination. He had everyone against
them, and he's going to get the people who he feels he was wrong by. But it's a horrible thing
for the country. And we've got to, we've got to make it clear that we're going to move past
this chapter, not that, okay, now we're going to, Democrats are going to come in and we're going
to go after everyone on their side. I mean, then we're no different than any other country.
jumping off tangentially from lawfare. Let's talk about crime for a second. You know, you
describe, yourself described, progressive Democrat. One of the themes around that is social justice
reform. And you're seeing some of the implications of that, the abuse of no bail, the abuses
by DAs who are letting umpteen repeat offenders out on the street. You're now seeing how that
manifests in crime, right? Everything from this young woman from Ukraine.
who was brutally murdered to this young woman, the 22-year-old, who's killed as part of a home
invasion. Her father gave this gripping testimony a few days ago. Where are the Democrats
on this idea of keeping the streets safe and law and order through the lens of the social
justice reforms you believe in as a progressive?
So one of the things I say is that my district, and I don't say this to brag, I just say this to make
a point. My district is actually one of the safest in America, right? When you look at Fremont,
Cupertino, Sunnyville, Santa Clara, and San Jose, they're all in the top 25 safe cities. And I say
that's correlated with the fact that we have $5 trillion companies, Apple, Google, Nvidia, Tesla, and
Broadcom. You wouldn't have the economic prosperity of Silicon Valley if you didn't have the safety
of Silicon Valley because you wouldn't have executives living there. You wouldn't have families living there.
you wouldn't have people wanting to participate in the economy.
So safety is essential, if you believe, in creating economic opportunity and economic mobility.
And I think that there is a group of pragmatic mayors now, Dan Lurie, I would say, in San Francisco,
Matt Mayhem in San Jose, Raj Sal Juan in Fremont, who recognized that the pendulum had swung too far
that, you know, I supported that ballot initiative that was on the ballot last election that said,
you know, if you are committing multiple crimes of smashing into Walgreens, then you're going
to be charged that you can't just say, okay, yeah, you can keep smashing into Walgreens
committing, taking under $1,000 and it's okay. I don't view that as being not progressive.
I mean, progressives, I thought the whole point is you believe in the rule of law. Now, if you say,
yeah, you shouldn't lock someone up for the rest of their life or a mandatory minimums, fine.
But that doesn't mean you excuse behavior that is wrong.
How does a 14-time fentanyl, you know, never end up being held accountable and then is on the streets and then just savagely murder somebody in broad view?
Yeah, no, it's totally unacceptable.
I mean, it's totally unacceptable.
Totally unacceptable.
It happened with that Ukraine.
I don't remember all the details, but I think it happened with that Ukrainian girl.
It happened with this Indian American who was beheaded in Texas where the person had all these arrests.
and you know what the interesting thing is I spoke out about about those and I didn't get that much
pushback from a liberal base. So what I don't understand is where the pressure is coming from
from just saying, look, we've got to be common sense in this country. Now, I don't think the answer
to that is, you know, put federal troops like Trump is, but what the Democrats should realize
in my view is that why is the country letting him do that, which I don't think is constitutional,
or the right solution because they're so frustrated with what's going on. And just citing statistics,
you know, going out there and saying, well, the statistics are down. Yeah, it doesn't match people's
reality. People are smart. And, you know, I think this is really a stupid strategy by the Democrats.
If Trump says, I'm going to send in the National Guard because you guys haven't done the job,
the obvious kung fu move to redirect that energy and say, yes, here are the five places. These are
hotspots where we need those troops. If you can put these troops on these five corners on
Turk Street, on 6th Street, that's where we need them. And how long can we get them for
before you move them to the next hotspots? That would totally just take away what is an obvious
play by the Republican Party to make the Democrats fall for the trap of we're pro-crime. We don't
care about people's safety, which by the way is the, they're just so dumb. It's insane. It's so dumb.
Like, why are Democrats in this respect from these specific cities, Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, San Francisco? Why are they so dumb?
Well, these are hard cities to govern. I mean, it's so dumb.
They're not, they're hard. But I, and I disagree, you know, because I'm always honest, I disagree with you on the National Guard coming there. But I do agree with you. I agree with you, by the way, that it's not constitutional. But in a situation where people are suffering day in and day. What happened in why?
Washington, D.C. when they put those people, when they brought in the National Guard,
which you didn't have the right to do.
I think everybody said I love it. Jason, Jason, Jason, with all, I think this comes down to
leadership. When you look at these big cities, there are examples of when they have been
governed well, and it takes a point of view, and the balls to just say, this is how it's
going to be. The last best example of this is Mike Bloomberg in New York. I remember the first thing,
the first thing Mike did was he said, soda, out. Second thing he did, smoking, done. It completely
changed the way the world works.
If you guys remember, you used to go to bars
everywhere and you
smoke incessantly and even if you didn't
smoke, you were subject to all this disgusting
second-hand smoke. But when Mike
did that one thing, it cascaded throughout
the world. And Bratton takes leadership
for it. Bratton did crime stat
under Giuliani. But anyway, Roe, explain to
us what the right solution here is.
I think Bloomberg had a good record. I think
look at what Matt Mayhan and Dan
Lurie are doing closer to home. I mean, they're saying,
look, we need more police. We need to
understand that if people have mental health issues and that they're not getting off the street
again and again and again, that you can go to a court and say they need treatment, that we need
to be a funding more temporary housing, not just permanent housing, because yeah, we want
permanent housing long term, but that doesn't mean in the meantime, we do nothing. And, you know,
So I think that they're, they are pragmatic.
They would, they've acknowledged it's a problem and, and they're working at it.
What I, what I don't think works is just denying people's feelings because partly it's like
when I was growing up in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, we used to leave our house doors unlocked.
Unlocked.
And that's the lived memory of a lot of people.
And you know the problem of doing, denying it is if you embrace, Trump's whole thing is, look,
life used to be simpler in the 1960s.
and you could leave your doors unlocked.
You had a good job.
You worked in a manufacturing place.
You supported your family.
And you know what?
If you don't want to move backwards because there's a lot of social progress we've made,
there's a lot of great parts to our diversity and people from around the planet here,
that we've got to make you sure that everyone buys into the future.
And safety is first in that.
Stay on this local theme for a second.
Tell us about Mom Donnie.
What is he?
You know, it's $10 billion for, you know,
bodegas. It's billions of dollars for this. It's billions of dollars for that. I think I heard recently
he wants to charge a 2% tax on people above a certain salary. He wants to charge any company that
does business in New York City in extra tax. What is... And how does he come out of nowhere and just
run the table on the establishment? Well, I'll tell you, I'll tell you why. And I, you know,
I've campaigned in candor for three candidates on the November elections, or I haven't campaigned,
a campaign for Abigail Spanberger who's going to win in Virginia, Mikey, Cheryl, and I've
supported Mamdani because of the moment he's head. I think Mamdani's success was based on two things.
One, the recognition that New York City was unaffordable and just speaking about that
unaffordability. So there's certain things which are pretty practical. Like most people
don't pay for the buses anyway. They're on the buses without paying the ticket. And if he
wants to make the buses free, that's a reasonable policy. But he was basically saying, look,
you can't afford to live in New York. And none of the other candidates really spoke about that.
They were speaking about crime and public safety, and they weren't talking about the economy.
And the other thing is, and, you know, I have differences on him on the Middle East. I'm for a two-state
solution. And I condemn globalized the Intifada. But he was saying, look, there are too many people
that are being killed in Gaza and Yahoo's policies are wrong. And that resonated with people
in New York City. And so the challenge for our party is how do we recognize the...
Is he the candidate of giveaways or is he the candidate of where we realistically need to be
in order to have stability? I think he's a candidate that is sounding the five alarm fire on
affordability and the loss of the American dream. How he governs is, I think, going to be a
And I hope that he, he's a very talented guy.
I hope he says, okay, look, I'm going to sit down as I am with business leaders and other
leaders and say, help me achieve my goals.
Like, okay, I want to have a rent freeze on the apartments that are controlled by New York,
but I also want to make sure we're doubling housing construction and building new housing
and how do we do that?
I want to make sure that if I am increasing taxes, that there's not capital flight from New York City.
What happens if he, which is pretty clear.
after winning, he's a complete utter disaster in how he runs that city. What does that do to the
Democratic Party? I don't think he will be, but that would hurt us, right? I mean, I don't think he
can have a record that is a, that's a failure. I think he has, in fact, a lot of the progressives
are invested in him succeeding and making sure that he has a pragmatic success record. But look,
I think you would, people who just want to say, well, we should just reject Mundani, etc.
They're not understanding the amount of people that he speaks for in the Democratic Party
who feel like we need to tackle the economic inequality.
He speaks to young people.
He's clearly hit a note on those issues and then the question is, can he execute?
I remember when Dinkets came into office, that was when we bottomed out in New York.
I was a teenager.
And then that's when we got Giuliani Bloomberg back to back and we cleaned up the city.
I get Dinkins vibes.
If he doesn't actually take on the safety of the issue in addition to these
other issues. Man.
As we wrap, just one last question, which is there's a movement of foot to ban stock trading
by people in Congress. And you've been supportive of that. And then I think that we saw
something recently that said, I don't even know if you know this, but somebody that manages
your money has traded like 30,000 times or something in some number. Do you want to just
address what that is and where you stand on banning stock trading and whether it's just simpler
to move everybody to ETFs and just call this a day. I am totally for a stock traded ban. I've
led on that. I don't trade stocks. My wife's money was inherited in trust that I'm no say over,
no control over, and it's in a trust. And the trust act would require, actually, every person
to be in a trust. And that eliminates conflict. So I've been very consistent about it, and I've been
one of the leaders on actually a ban on stocks. So what do you got? What tip? Any
tips for us?
What are you?
No, but did you know that somebody related to trading 30,000 times a year?
I have no idea.
It's like a citadel inside of Rokane.
I don't know if you know this, but it's...
It has nothing to do with it, right?
It's not my money.
It's not, I mean, I have no, and frankly, I have no, no, no, uh,
involvement in it.
And so that's, it's tiny amounts too.
That's really interesting.
Like, it's, um, small trades, lots of small trades.
Anyway, whoever's working for you, it seems to be doing a good job for you.
seems to be doing a good job for you.
Not for me.
Working for the family.
Listen, Roecona.
Voice of reason.
Moderate, honest, and just really excited for you to run for president.
Bro, last question, actually, last question.
There's still a pretty open field for California governor.
Have you thought about it?
And if not, why not?
No, because a lot of, you know, I think you've got to really have spent some time in in Sacramento
to deal with those issues.
And a lot of my issues have been, how do we build economic prosperity in parts of the country that have been left out?
How do we deal with our competitiveness with China and other nations?
I'm on the China Select Committee.
I'm on the House Armed Services Committee.
I've been focused on economic patriotism.
And I don't think you just run for a title.
And so the type of person who should run is one who's going to focus on getting our utility costs down in California.
I was going to focus on making her streets safer, who's going to focus on building more housing.
and being a yimbie and saying that we need to do these things.
And so I think there will be good candidates emerging with those skills in California.
Ro, thank you.
Thank you.
Thanks, Roe.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, John.
Thank you, Jason.
Thank you, sir.
I'm calling.