Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 7/2/26: DSA Dem Party Takeover, Tucker MTG New Party, McConnell Found Unconscious
Episode Date: July 2, 2026Krystal and Emily discuss DSA party takeover, Tucker MTG third party, McConnell found unconscious. Trita Parsi: https://tritaparsi.substack.com/ Michael Lange: https://substack.com/@michaellangenyc&nb...sp; To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.com Merch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Wait a minute, Dakota.
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Yeah, that's right, Sophia.
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So as you guys know, the left wing of the Democratic Party
notched a few more victories, big ones in Colorado this week,
including with Milakiros.
political newcomer. She was inspired to run after she got fired from her job as a lawyer for speaking out with regards to Palestine.
She unseated a 30-year incumbent in Diana DeGat, Degat, truly astonishing someone who's been in Congress longer than Milat Kuros has been alive.
Let's take a look at a little bit of her victory speech.
We are winning from coast to coast.
So who are the people behind these victories?
Who are the voters that are making these big wins for the left happen?
And joining us now is Michael Lang. He is the author of the Narrative Wars Substack. And he digs deep
into these coalitions, especially in New York City, where the character of the coalitions has really
been disputed and become a sort of narrative war is a perfect title for what is going on with
regard to who is actually voting for these candidates. Michael, great to see you.
Oh, it's such a pleasure to be here. Thanks.
Yeah, of course. Of course. So I feel that the critique of the DSA has become a bit confused. Some
Some feel that it is too white in college, just college-educated white gentrifiers.
Some, like Stephen Miller, Jesse Waters, feel that it is too many third-worldest, as they put it, too
many black and brown people, and we let in too many immigrants, and that's what's going on here.
You actually dug into the numbers so that we can deal in facts and realities, put C3 up on the
screen.
This was your headline when narratives meet facts about specifically the victories of Claire Valdez
and Dari Elisa Chevalier in New York City.
What did you find about these particular winning coalitions for two DSA candidates?
Yeah, I mean, I think there's plenty of variables that go into one support for socialism or progressive values, things like that.
But when you kind of strip everything away, it's not necessarily race.
It's not even college education.
It's not even sometimes renters versus homeowners.
It's just a kind of a proxy war for age.
And this was kind of the story of the Mamdani Coalition in New York City last year.
You know, there was a lot that was made of his kind of lack of support among black voters in the Democratic primary last year.
But that was just a function of kind of the age of that electorate.
He did very well with white, Hispanic, and South Asian voters, but those Democrats were much younger.
And you see even, you know, in the cases of Claire Valdez and Dari Elisa Villa Chevalier, you know, they're not just winning.
white voters or white voters under 50. They're winning voters of all races under 50.
And again, you, to win an election in Claire Valdez's case by 20 points, you know, in that
North Brooklyn, Western Queens Commie Corridor to win, to defeat, you know, a 10-year incumbent
in the 13th congressional district, which is more renters than any other district in America,
you can't really build the winning coalitions as they did
if you're just, again, relying on like a very thin slice of, you know,
college-educated, more white-collar professionals, things like that.
So, yeah.
Part of your analysis was super interesting as well that even with Estelot,
it was pretty close with Hispanic voters over 50.
So still, I think Esplot still won, but barely, right?
Like those numbers started to become really, really, really close.
close. Yeah, I mean, that was another kind of shocking piece of digging into it more because, again,
you know, he is the kind of the, a Dominican political trailblazer here in Upper Manhattan and the
Bronx. And I mean, again, in those communities, he did do quite well. I, you know, I would imagine,
again, particularly with voters under 50 and voters over 50, but there are also many Hispanic voters who
live in that district who are not, you know, who are not Dominican, they're Puerto Rican,
they're Mexican. And I think that's where he really struggled. Because, you know, take a
neighborhood like East Harlem, for instance, which, which again is younger and is kind of outside
of his base, but still very Hispanic. That was a place where Dari Elisa was able to do very well.
But then again, you know, Washington Heights and the Bronx, older places, you know, he kind of held
on, but he still didn't really get the margins that he needed out of his core base of support.
it points to this age polarization that we've discussed so much.
You have a quote in your piece.
You say Claire Valdez won every age bracket and racial group.
She won the young under 50 by a landslide and the old 50 plus by comfortable margin.
So even as you find that the most dramatic divides are around age, and sure enough, if you look at the numbers, the younger you are, the more likely you were to support a DSA candidate.
But it seems that they're even making inroads with older voters, with voters that in previous cycles would have been very unlikely to vote for a DSA candidate.
Of course, yeah.
And I mean, I think that's kind of a testament to, you know, the close to decade plus of political organizing that DSA has been able to do in New York City, you know.
And again, you know, this is something, this is kind of a theme of my writing.
Ideology, I think matters a lot, but also the voters kind of relationships to the candidates, the institutions, they represent.
in and just kind of DSA and Mamdani now becoming these widely viewed and in the case of New York City,
widely liked institutions that does create a greater familiarity with older voters. And again,
also this, you know, when you're the Claire Valdez campaign and you knock over 300,000 doors,
you basically do outreach to every, real grassroots outreach to every Democrat in the 7th
congressional district. You know, that's kind of the margins that you manage. You know, that you manage.
manifest basically. And it's, you know, for again, there was a lot of talk about, you know, oh, you know, the
Rinoza campaign, things like that. They've been there for longer. They're the ones more rooted in the
community, but they were essentially out-organized. And again, this is, but, you know, 300,000 doors is,
you know, a tremendous number, things like that. But it was kind of the culmination of, I would say,
a decade of work kind of going into that. Yeah, that makes sense. Well, let's go into the racial
dynamics because they're getting a lot of attention from places like Fox News. So we'll roll here
C2. Here's a rabbi complaining about the whiteness of the crowd at the Milakiros victory
celebration. This is a VO. Folks, we can play C2 so you can see what Rabbi Pupko is responding
to. And then let's actually go ahead and flip to C1. This is Asat. This is Milakiros talking about
the victory after winning, so you can compare videos.
We are winning from coast to coast.
Lots of enthusiasm in that video.
So tell us, I mean, here's also Jesse Waters.
Let's roll Jesse Waters here.
C4, Jesse Waters is complaining.
These two things are existing at the same time,
and they don't totally make sense.
So Jesse Waters complaining about the racial composition.
Crazy communists to right-wing tough guys.
Is that how America is supposed to be?
because that's the way it looks.
These people don't believe in borders,
capitalism, our founding fathers.
They're here to steal,
punish us,
and then throw around welfare.
This is a third world takeover.
This is what happens when you import the third world.
Did you know that New York City is 70% non-white,
40% foreign-born, 50% of the apartments?
They don't even speak English,
not even their first language.
These three women who Mondani endorsed weren't even born in New York City.
Weren't even raised in New York City.
They're carpet baggers.
Carpet baggers, Jessica.
And everyone's talking about like, oh, Mondami, oh, you got all this juice.
Like he's this like harmless novice politician on a hot streak.
This guy is trouble.
This guy is a Trojan horse.
And communism is going to take over the Democratic Party.
and then we're going to have to beat it
because you can't do anything else besides beat it to a poll.
So, Michael, what we see there is the right not knowing
whether they should say DSA voters are too white
or not white enough.
So help us parse what the actual composition
of the DSA coalition looks like from Colorado to New York City.
Yeah, I mean, I think you've seen in kind of how people have responded to this
that they're responding in a way in which it's like,
I don't really know what I'm up against.
I mean, I think, again, first and foremost, the DSA and the Democratic Socialist Coalition,
it is very young, it's very millennial, heavy, shout out to you guys, right?
Best generation, probably.
Not probably, definitely.
Right, but it's also, you know, again, heavily indexed towards renters.
You know, again, it's very difficult for younger people, again,
particularly in these urban areas to own an apartment, much less a home.
I mean, again, very college-educated.
That was another big thread kind of between Colorado 1 and New York 7.
It's like lots of millennials, very high percentage of renters, and very college-educated, like 90th percent style and above.
So it's kind of, you know, those three things kind of mixing together.
And I think that you put those ingredients together.
it's like very potent, you know, potent factors to kind of organize politically. And again,
you're seeing also as, you know, kind of civic institutions and those civic bonds that I think
for, again, most of the 20th century kind of held society together as those are fraying. You see
organizations like DSA kind of fill the void, not just in terms of, you know, providing people
and organizing home, but also like, you know, real social bonds, you know, friendship. It's, you know,
It's like a kind of, you know, a collective, you know, like a shared, you know, shared principles and
interest and things like that. And again, and as these organizations have grown, as they've won more
campaigns, they're also more embedded in not just community, but in government too. And, you know,
that also builds trust and grows. And then you have an avatar like Suranamadani that can kind of
take that vision to a grander scale and introduce even more people to kind of what it means.
I think it's very unique that Zoran was able to transfer his coalition.
And Obama wasn't able to do that.
Trump has not been able to do that.
So it speaks to that level of organizing.
And I think also a very like cohesive vision that Zoran has that that people can.
And also his orientation is very communal.
You know, that's something he talks about a lot where he's not, even though he is this
incredibly charismatic leader, it's not just all about him.
It's about the ideas about what he's doing for New York.
So when people see, oh, Dari Liza, she's.
Zoran's candidate, that means something to them. But the other thing that I wanted to ask you
about Michael is to project this down a bit into the future. You know, Bernie Sanders ran into
the buzzsaw of like older black voters in the South in both of his presidential campaigns.
And I think part of the freak out from the Dem establishment right now is a realization
that their assumption that these left-wing values and candidates would only ever appeal
to first young white voters and then all multiracial young voters.
And then now, okay, the older white voters are also voting for them.
And now they're making inroads with older, you know, multiracial coalition.
Like their assumption that the coalition would permanently stay stuck in a way that it was not a winning one, I think those are proving pretty faulty.
So what does that look like going forward for the possibilities within the Democratic Party?
I mean, again, you know, late Tuesday night, early Wednesday,
morning, that was the question everyone was asking. It's like, how do you, how can you really take this
national? And I think, I mean, certainly it seems like, you know, the macro political conditions of Trump
2.0 have lined up very well in 2025, 2026, and I would suspect 2028. I mean, it's just also like,
look, is the Democratic Party New York City? Not necessarily. Is it Denver? Not exactly either.
But the party is getting younger, more diverse, more college educated. And it's also more.
Is it Michigan where, you know, Abdul al-Sayat is winning?
The truth is that it's probably all of these things combined, right,
literally and figuratively.
But it's also the Democratic primary electorates.
Also getting a little more urbanized, things like that.
And I think that does it mean that it's, you know,
that Zeramam Dani Copycat wins in 28?
You know, I'm not sure.
But it does mean that certain parts of, you know,
the mass field organizing, you know,
the kind of the media or sorry the the I don't I say this like the visual articulation of like a narrative about affordability about kind of your micro position in the economy but also how it relates to these greater forces like oligarchy and in corporatocracy things like that it's kind of blending all of that together and I mean I do think though that to your point that the greater established
panic in reaction to Tuesday, it's like a soft acknowledgement that they have lost kind of the next
generation. And that next generation is increasingly like asserting themselves far before they were
ever like supposed to. Yeah. And that I think represents a real threat. Let me also float this.
I'm just thinking this through in real time. But you, one of the ways that the establishment Democrats
were able to beat back the Bernie Sanders insurgency was by a weaponization of,
identity politics. And, you know, Hillary Clinton really is the person who sort of like
introduces this particular strain of wokeism into the Democratic Party when she says,
oh, breaking up the big banks, isn't going to end racism. And so that was, it was very,
it was pretty successful. And that type of politics has, I think, been fairly discredited and
is certainly not as central in the Democratic Party now as it once was. So, for example,
you have this very incredibly diverse group of candidates who are trailblazers, who, who
who are running and winning as DSA candidates.
But that's not the center or the focus of why you should vote for them.
And I think that that also is helping to create the possibility of a broader coalition.
Because underneath it all, like, yeah, if you're renters, you have a series of similar concerns,
whether you're, like, young and college educated and saddled with student debt and very limited
job prospects, or whether you are, you know, someone who is older who is struggling as the economy
in the way that most Americans are.
There are a lot of universalist principles at stake here
that bind these groups together much more
than create differences between them.
Yeah, and I think to kind of add to what you said,
the electability narrative is also, I think,
been used to really hurt progressive and left candidates.
I especially felt that in 2020,
but that narrative is complete, you know,
kind of completely exploded with Kamala Harris in 2024
and Hillary Clinton.
And so I think that's also why, you know,
it almost feels like every Tuesday we go to an even more higher-stakes selection.
That's where if someone like Abdul El-Sayed or Graham Platner can win in Michigan or when in Maine,
that would really, again, I think, you know, strike a significant blow to that narrative
because I do think that, you know, there are a lot of more, quote-unquote, conventional,
traditional Democrats who had, you know, been very moved by electability.
Like, we just want someone who can win things like that, who are now kind of,
you know, seeing things far differently, given the position that we're in.
Michael, thank you so much for breaking down your analysis.
Everybody should go subscribe to the substack.
It is called Narrative Wars and the level of detailed analysis that you do in New York City.
I mean, it really is.
Block by block.
It's really invaluable.
Yeah, it's great to see those kind of numbers.
It's really helped my understanding of what the dynamics there are on the ground.
And also your love of the city comes through in every post, which I appreciate to.
That means a lot.
Thank you.
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, our pleasure. We'll see again soon.
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Who is the artist Lady Gaga
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My husband is currently on a vacation with his mistress and I'm confronting them.
Tell me, Sophia, how did she even catch them?
One Amazon shopping receipt.
He accidentally sent her a photo of the kid's Christmas gifts with a delivery to another woman at the bottom.
He exposed himself?
That's a rookie move.
Couples massages, monogrammed back.
bath robes and lingerie he then mowed her for her.
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In his luggage, she came to play.
And the second he landed, he blocked her.
So she called the hotel room directly and got the mistress on the phone.
Ooh, she got the mistress live on the phone?
That is a bold move.
Let's see if it pays off.
Then it gets worse.
He took the mistress on the Bahamas honeymoon trip he had planned with his wife.
And then the mistress tagged him on Facebook.
outing the fair to her entire family.
That's like a whole public confession.
And spoiler, two years later, karma hits him so hard.
He's calling his ex-wife in tears saying about the mistress.
What a mistake that was.
To find out what happened, listen to the OK Storytime podcast on the IHart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Yesterday, both Marjorie Taylor Green and Tucker Carlson floated the idea of working on a third party.
Let's take a listen here to Marjorie Taylor Green on with Piers Morgan discussing her plans for potentially launching something to compete with the Republican and Democratic parties.
But is there a chance that Tucker, and maybe with support of people like yourself, could you see him making a run?
I mean, is there a new splinter version of the Republicans that could take over the party?
You know, I haven't had that direct conversation with Tucker.
I know a lot of people are speculating that, and I can tell you.
tell you right now, Tucker Carlson would be a great threat to both parties because there's many
Americans that are very independent that would support him. But there's also Republican voters and
Democrat voters that would support him. So I would say he's a very credible threat. There is a
group of us that have literally fought the system. And I think there's a group of us that if we
decide to align, we could launch a true America-focused party that doesn't fall into the traps of
Democrats and Republicans, but could align some serious players from the right and the left
and move forward. But peers, I'm also very realistic because I was in the system. I've served
in Congress. I've run campaigns. I know what it takes. It's difficult to launch a third party.
So the reality is this isn't something that gets off the ground
and just a couple of campaign cycles.
This is a movement that has to be developed
and would take time to develop.
I'm not sure where that is right now,
but I am in talks with people
and there are serious conversations happening.
Okay, so she says she's in talks with people
and there are serious conversations happening.
Now, meanwhile, separately, Tucker Carlson,
an interview he did with the Columbia Journal,
journalism review posted yesterday, wherein he talked about this as well. The reporter asked,
are you interested in aligning yourself with other anti-war voices? He says, I do know what really
matters is war in finance. Where does the money come from? Where does it go? And who gets killed?
And on those questions, the parties are in lockstep solidarity with each other. That's not a democracy.
That's a one-party state posing as a democracy and it needs to be broken. And there's going to be a
third party. And I'm going to do everything I can to bring that about. He goes on,
to say that's the less than the last two and a half months to me. If you vote for Trump and you
still wind up in a regime change war, if Chuck Schumer is strongly behind Trump's foreign policy,
which he is, then we need options. Or else, let's just give up and be ruled by the most unscrupulous
people. And I'm just too young to accept that. We need a third party. He then later says,
I'm going to help build a third party. There should be a good faith effort to figure out what
benefits the country. He's asked, would he be a candidate for the third party? He said, I don't
want to be a candidate. Before I did the New York Times interview, he's referring to with Lulu
Garcia Navarro. Someone said to me, quote, they're going to ask you if you're running for president.
I was very tempted to say, I'm running on the pro-patriarchy ticket just to make sure I gain
no new fans and make Crystal Ball as much of the 2016 meme of the lady screaming into the
void as possible. Of course. But that both happened separately yesterday. Neither of them
referenced one another. So I don't know if they are coordinating on this together. Let's put up
one more element, this mediate headline of Tucker Carlson, making a lot of headlines,
not just a mediaite, for saying not long ago that he was out of the Republican Party. He's been a
Republican, he said this whole life, but he is out now. He's done. How could I or any American
voter support a political party that's not loyal to the U.S. that puts the interests of a foreign
country above those of its own citizens? He said on June 22nd, it's not possible to vote for
people like that, and I'm not going to. So, Crystal, a lot to unpack here, or maybe
really not that much to unpack here because frankly I don't think this is happening. I think the
reason historically we get caught in or historically you've had third parties be more successful than
they've ever been in recent history is just that money has fundamentally bolstered, augmented the two-party
system in ways that it hadn't always in the past. But maybe I'm wrong about that. It's my theory.
I just don't see how it's possible to break the two-party infrastructure at all.
I mean, if you play this out and think about it.
about, okay, what would happen if Marjorie
and Tucker Carlson and Thomas Massey, let's say,
start this third party, like what would proceed?
And what would happen is they would peel off, I don't know,
10%? 20% maybe?
Maybe.
Of the Republican Party.
Which makes you a spoiler, basically.
And then the Republican Party would be guaranteed to lose
by a wide margin.
And that's what the result would be.
So I encourage them to go in this direction.
I mean, you know, as someone on the left who, like, is always thinking about, you know, we've got, been having this third party conversation to left for a very long time.
And should you do that? Or should you, like, work within the Democratic Party?
And are they going to co-op you? And then you never end up really, you know, being any different than them.
And this is an ongoing debate. Both paths are very difficult. But we can see with DSA, what actually works.
Look at the DSA versus look at the Green Party.
What is, you know, and I don't think it's fair. I don't think the Green Party were the spoilers in 2016.
If you look at the numbers, it doesn't really work out because you're assuming all of those voters would show up and would vote for the Democrats if they didn't vote for the Greens.
I don't think that really, you know, I don't think that math totally math.
I also don't think that blaming voters for deciding that they prefer this other alternative is really the way to go either.
But in any case, you could see the Green Party has had very limited impact on American politics, trying to pursue the third party path.
and DSA and before the Working Families Party
and even if you look on the Republican side,
the Tea Party or Trump taking over the Republican Party,
you can look further back at the DLC
taking over the Democratic Party in the 90s,
which is not a direction I would want them to go in,
would want them to go in,
but in any case it was a successful sort of take over the party.
That is the much more likely path of success
if you want to change the political system.
So without these more fundamental reforms,
which I support, by the way, we should have ranked choice voting.
We should make it so that there could be a broader array of political parties and views
represented in our politics versus just Democrat and Republican.
You have to start there if you're starting just with that we're going to have the third party
and it's going to work out.
It's not.
And I think to your point about why that is the money's part of it.
But I think it's more there's just such hardened partisan loyalties that if you,
if you put an R by your name or you put a D by your name,
you're like guaranteed this certain chunk.
And then you're just built, you're building from there.
Whereas if you come up, if you create something new,
you really are starting from vote number one.
And you're at a tremendous, tremendous disadvantage.
So I think it's better to look at these established parties
as the hollow husks that they really are.
And especially on the Democratic Party side,
I mean, truly just a hollow husk.
In fact, if you get endorsed by the establishment figures in the Democratic Party, it's a bit of a pox on you in a drag in an election.
They have no real organizing capability.
You know, they've just been completely.
Yeah, that's a great example.
They've been completely hollowed out.
So just look at them as like hollow shells that can be taken over and molded to, you know, a new conception and taken in a different direction.
So.
But I think for Tucker and Marjorie Taylor Green, there's a lot of wishcasting about what the Republican base.
would be and wants. But when you actually look at the polling of do they like Tucker Carlson
or do they like Trump, like it's not even close. So I, maybe that changes. But I think if Tucker
were to run or some Tuckerish figure, Thomas Massey or whoever, were to run in a Republican
party primary, I think they would get destroyed. It's interesting because right now polls are
finding historic levels of people identifying as independence as opposed to Democrats or Republicans.
but to your point about that hardened core,
what that does in our primary system is,
or I should say what that does in the general election system,
is make it so that there is this huge baked-in benefit
because it's really hard to overcome
when you have roughly 30%, 30% of the country
in either of those directions.
And so you're fighting over the scraps of remaining independence,
but that's also about voter turnout.
So, like, if you're in a mid-derm election cycle,
the independents aren't turning out as much as the partisans.
So it's really, really hard to overcome that for the reasons that actually get into how we conduct elections here.
So I think the theme of today's show is how elites are pushing to the brink.
And I'm very curious, we talked about this in the last block, the comparisons when the dust is settled between the DSA and the Tea Party movement, because the trajectory of the Tea Party movement is utterly depressing, obviously, because Trump comes along, co-ops it.
A lot of the establishment Republicans co-opted it.
And now the DSA is talking about term limits.
I mean, right?
Like, that's, the Tea Party movement changed the Republican Party in some ways.
Like, I'm glad that we have a more protectionist Republican Party right now,
slightly more protectionist, not really.
It's now become, that's another part.
We didn't even get to in the first block about Trump corruption is how the tariffs have been
applied in such a grifty way.
Yeah.
So I'm glad that the Overton window has been shifted on some of these issues.
But I wonder if the DSA can learn lessons from the Tea Party and actually change the Democratic
party in ways the Tea Party was not able to change the Republican Party. And I wonder if actually
that's what MTG and Tucker Carlson are really thinking about is shaping the Republican Party in a
different direction and building on maybe some of the scraps that are remaining from the Tea Party era.
That might be the better shot than actually assuming you could have a successful third party
Republican or third party independent right of center person rise in a presidential election
and become the commander-in-chief.
If that's what they're getting at, it's much more possible,
but there are a lot of ways.
I mean, the Tea Party was a very powerful political movement,
and it didn't end up, I mean, it ended up with Trump, basically.
Yeah, and I think there's a lot to dig into there.
I mean, I think partly, and I ran during the Tea Party, like, peak of Tea Party 2010
and went to Tea Party meetings and, like, took their questions and did the whole thing.
So I'm very familiar with...
Were you for term limits when you ran?
No.
Interesting.
And I think I'm still not.
Defensible position.
It's a defensible position.
I mean, my thing is just, I, if anything, think there should be more democracy, more choice.
I'm more in the direction we should force things like debates.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that there is more of a democratic choice.
People know what they're getting.
They're able to evaluate, okay, as my, you know, future member of Congress, able to string three sentences together or not.
That's more the direction I would rather go in, even versus, you know, becoming more inclined towards age limits, but even, you know, and I sort of oppose it.
But anyway, so that's a different subject for a different day.
But the Tea Party was always very inchoate, what they actually wanted.
They're just mad, right?
And there was not a lot of ideological cohesion.
So the closest thing you could come to is like, we want to cut the deficit.
You know, we want to spend less money.
But even that, you know, ultimately Trump takes it over.
Trump spends more money than anybody.
Yep.
So even that, I remember there was always this famous sign that was like, get your government hands off my Medicare.
And it was like, you know, that was kind of the vice.
was just like, we feel like the country is changing and we're mad about it.
And the bailouts were big.
The bailouts, I mean, I don't know, were they?
Because I don't know that that was really core to the Tea Party concerns.
I think it was much more, I think there was certainly a racial element to it with Barack Obama there.
That was definitely part of it.
But I think it was more the sense of the country is changing ways that we are uncomfortable with and we just want to hit the breaks.
So in any case, there wasn't a cohesive.
ideological strain that was consistent from the Tea Party to Trump, other than just rage.
And then Trump becomes this truly, I mean, you have to, it's a cult of personality.
It genuinely is.
And so then it just becomes about Trump and whatever Trump wants.
So I think one of the learnings for the DSA has to be that there has to be some more
consistent ideological content, which the DSA is more equipped for because they're certainly
ideological.
You have to give them that.
They do a lot of thinking about what the, you know, ideological content.
is and what sort of programs they would like to see.
So I think that's one of the things the pitfalls to avoid is it not just collapsing down
into this like cult of personality of a person who can then, you know, and then you can
justify whatever it is you want to do, whether it's complete, you know, graph for your
family or, you know, whether it's a giant tax cut and deregulation for the tech oligarchs
or whether it's doing tariffs in a way that is so insane that it just completely discredits
the entire program of tariffs.
Right. Yeah. And in this media environment, I think it actually is hard for political movements not to get subliminated to personality. Just that's the way that we've mediated our politics, exported them onto algorithmic platforms. It's really, really hard to avoid that happening. I don't know what that would look like from the DSA.
Well, Zorn is kind of an interesting example because it's certainly his personal charisma is like off the charts. And extremely, extremely, extremely talented. But also has.
immediately used that personal political capital to build out his movement. He is a DSA guy.
Like that was when he was getting 1% in the polls, he was a DSA guy. And the idea was we're going to do
this totally long shot insane thing just to push forward the movement and the ideas and the ideology.
And so he immediately turns around and takes some big political risks that right now are paying
off for him that are in the direction of it can't just be me. There has to be.
be this broader movement.
And, you know, it actually dovetails with the conversation that we're having with Michael
Lang about how he was able to transfer his coalition into other candidates in a way that
Barack Obama isn't able to in a way that Trump is not able to.
Exactly.
That's a good point.
So that makes it, you know, you can tell that it's different because of the nature of
that where people say, okay, well, these people are on board with Zoran's program.
And so he has made it, even though he's.
He is very important as a leader.
He has also made it much more about how do we build this movement in New York City to start
with, but across the country.
He really proves the AOC, the infamous or famous really, AOC quote where she said in a European
system, Nancy Pelosi and I would not be in the same political party.
Totally true.
And actually, we're seeing that in the UK right now, the rise of the Greens, the rise of reform,
totally undermining the institutional power of the two major parties there.
and they have a totally different system, of course, as well.
But what's interesting about that is it's about the coalition, too.
So Zora Mamdani brings in a coalition that is not just the Democratic Party coalition.
Trump did something similar.
He brought in a lot of Obama voters in the Rust Belt.
And that doesn't translate to any other Republican so far.
So the Zoran experiment then is to go to places like Colorado, California,
and take that same coalition and build it up around Amalakiros or someone else.
And if that's successful, that is a total transformation and a takeover of the Democratic Party in a way that if Trump is gone, we still don't know what happens to the Republican coalition.
The proof so far is that it doesn't remain the Trump coalition where in the Rio Grande Valley you're having Hispanic men vote in big numbers for Donald Trump.
That doesn't seem to be translating to literally anybody else.
Yeah.
My last question for you is Tucker in the same moment when he said that thing about like I'm out.
I'm done with the Republican Party.
He then was like, yeah, but I like J.D. Vance.
You know, he remained, and I think they talk.
I think they're friendly.
He remained open to supporting J.D. Vance.
So I also wonder how serious he is about, like, I'm done with the Republican Party.
Or, you know, whether ultimately is like, does this calculation?
It's like, yeah, but I really hate the Democrats.
So I got to stick with the Republicans.
I have to say I'm not often surprised by Tucker.
I was surprised to see him talking about working on a third party.
Yeah.
Yeah, because he's pessimistic.
and I think reasonably pessimistic.
And that, you know, the third party talk is naive generally.
And you heard Marjorie Taylor Green try to frame it as, you know, consciously kind of naive, right?
Like, we're aware this is really difficult.
And that's what lends me to the position or brings me to the position that they're trying to really just influence the Republican Party.
It's true there are a lot of independent voters up for grabs.
And yes, that's on the table right now.
That was true during the Tea Party era as well.
but I just think it's, I don't know, I was surprised to see that.
I don't think he has any interest in running for anything.
I think there are a lot of people who are chirping in his ear about running for things.
I don't think he's interested in that at all.
I think he's like less interested in politics.
And so the idea that he would be working on a third party was genuinely surprising to me.
I don't know what's going to happen with this.
I'm sure Marjorie Taylor Green is in talks with people.
That might be something we should ask Roe to see if she's brought it up to him
or if Massey's brought it up to him because Massey's going to be out of a job.
a few months. So we'll see what they're actually working on. But I think our audience is as skeptical
as we are, that something significant would come of this. We will see. All right, let's talk about
our declining empire here and the health struggles of several of our representatives.
You end up hell with weekend gold tickets to Lassau Montreal. Thomas Rhett.
Mumford and Sons.
Well, here's my pride and here's my share.
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And the prize gets even sweeter.
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Lassau, Montreal.
Every day you listen is another chance to win.
I'm Jake Brennan, and on the Disgraceland Podcast,
I explore the wild lives of rock stars and unbelievable true crime stories for music history.
These are the stories you haven't heard, the kind you'll end up telling someone else.
Like the time Paul McCartney spent in one of the world's most notorious prisons.
Imagine that. You're Paul McCartney. It's 1980. You're an ex-beetal,
and you're doing time in one of Japan's worst prisons right there alongside Yakuza
gangsters and for a ridiculous charge.
Or the bizarre crime Lady Gaga is accused of.
Who is the artist Lady Gaga as being accused of doing the unthinkable to
after allegedly stealing her music in style to become famous?
And what about that time, Blondie's Debbie Harry escaped a serial killer?
The man who had given her that ride she barely escaped from was Ted Bundy.
Listen to Discraseland on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My husband is currently on a vacation with his mistress and I'm confronting.
them. Tell me, Sophia, how did she even catch them? One Amazon shopping receipt. He accidentally
sent her a photo of the kids' Christmas gifts with a delivery to another woman at the bottom.
He exposed himself? That's a rookie move. Couples massages, monogrammed bath robes, and lingerie
he then moored her for her. So she spent four weeks gathering evidence and taped a 10-page letter
inside his luggage before he flew out. In his luggage, she came to play. And the second he landed,
he blocked her. So she called the hotel room directly and got the mistress on the phone.
Ooh, she got the mistress live on the phone? That is a bold move. Let's see if it pays off.
Then it gets worse. He took the mistress on the Bahamas honeymoon trip he had planned with his wife.
And then the mistress tagged him on Facebook, outing the fair to her entire family.
That's like a whole public confession.
And spoiler, two years later, karma hits him so hard. He's calling his ex-wife in tears saying about the mistress.
What a mistake that was.
To find out what happened, listen to the OK Storytime podcast on the IHR radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
New reporting about the state of Mitch McConnell's health, lest you think Mr. McConnell, oh, he's no longer Senate majority leader. He's no longer important. He actually is. He's appointed himself to be on ahead of big committees. But new reporting, he was, we can put this up on the screen, found, quote, unconscious and may have suffered a heart attack at his D.C. residence before being rushed to.
to a local hospital last month, according to a district fire and EMS dispatch call made public Wednesday.
The post reports the June 14th call referenced medical personnel in an ALS or advanced life support ambulance being sent to the home shortly before 9 a.m.
And mentioned there was, quote, CPR in progress for a cardiac arrest.
Now, to be clear, right now, we don't have a comment from Mitch McConnell, who is the sitting U.S. senator for the
state of Kentucky. He does helm important congressional committees. He has put himself in that
position very intentionally, and we basically have no idea what is going on with his health. It actually
reminded us of this report we did here exclusively at breaking points. Not long ago, we can put this
next element up on the screen. Ryan and I reported back in December that we got a picture from
Reagan Airport, Reagan National Airport, not long after the election. And Mitch McConnell was being
pushed around in a wheelchair by his staffer. Basically, this was not getting reported on by
anybody in the press. People in the press had seen this happening and had not reported on it,
was our understanding at the time. Again, not a huge bombshell exactly. It's obvious that Mitch
McConnell is enfeebled, to say the very least, he struggled to even make it through multiple
press conferences. He stumbled physically, literally in public. But just come on, the people of Kentucky
He deserved better, no question about it.
He is clinging to his power to wield it against the ascendant Trump movement, but particularly
against anti-interventionalist strains in the Republican Party.
He's deeply concerned about them.
And you can bet he's staying in the Senate to tamp them down.
That's basically everybody's understanding on Capitol Hill.
He's come out and said as much multiple times.
Now it gets weirder because Republican Tom Keene announced, you do all remember.
of the mystery that was happening with Tom Keen, this congressman, Republican congressman, who was just
nowhere. He just disappeared. And his office was giving totally cryptic responses about where he was.
They were saying things like, well, there are no cameras where Tom is. Again, insane, completely insane.
Well, he announced in a floor speech yesterday that he was gone for months because of depression treatment.
Let's roll the clip. Several months ago, due to health concerns, I entered the hospital for some testing.
I did not believe that this would result in a long-term stay.
I was given the diagnosis of depression.
Now, when people hear the word depression,
many people think simply means feeling sad.
But depression is so much more than that.
It is physical.
It is emotional.
And until you experience it yourself,
it is difficult to fully understand
how powerful this illness can be.
the doctors recommended that I remain in the hospital to address my illness.
They explained to me that this would be the fastest way to recovery.
And to be honest, I was hesitant.
I didn't think that I had time for it.
I had responsibilities to my family.
I had responsibilities to my constituents.
I had responsibilities to this institution.
And like many people, I believed that I could simply push through.
but I agreed to follow my doctor's recommendations.
Again, not believing that it will result in a long-term stay.
This guy was going for 116 days, and again, with no transparency,
with his staff giving ridiculous excuses, cryptic excuses.
And Crystal, you pointed out this Lever News article.
We can pop it up on the screen.
It's headline sick leave from me, not for thee,
and criticizes Keen for, quote, taking a taxpayer-funded four-month
absence from Congress to treat clinical depression, despite repeatedly voting against
paid sickly for workers while serving as a state senator in New Jersey.
So again, he's in Congress now, but this is when, in 2018, a New Jersey law requiring employers
to provide up to 40 hours of paid time off for workers dealing with an illness or medical
condition came up, and he was opposed to it.
So just a wonderful insight into our mighty, dignified elected officials here in Washington, D.C.,
who insist on clinging to their power, even though they clearly, I mean, listen, I think he is
totally correct about the severity of depression, the physical consequences of something
that looks like a purely psychological condition.
But he's totally right about that.
It's real.
Then get the hell out of Congress.
Get the hell out of Congress.
He won his primary while he was apparently being hospitalized for depression.
And by the way, to your point about his candor, he's still not being candid because
the story doesn't make any sense.
You don't show up for tests and then they admit you for months for.
depression. Typically, you're admitted for, you are hospitalized for depression if you are
a danger to yourself or others. So it seems to me, you know, he was either suicidal.
There was something else going on here that he's still not being candid about. And so,
look, it's a, it's a sign of, you know, the declining empire. With him, it's not an age thing,
but with McConnell certainly is. It's also a sign of democracy failure. Like, how is this guy
getting reelected at a time when we don't even know when he's like just vanished and we don't know
where he is or what he's doing or why he's gone or anything and he still gets the nod for the
Republican Party to go on and continue in Congress. It also shows you how little most of these people
do. I mean, you know, did his constituents or the nation suffer because he wasn't there doing his job
for four months? No. No one noticed other than, you know, to be like, well, that's weird that he's gone.
and isn't taking any of these votes.
So, you know, some members are more consequential than others.
The ones who just sort of check the boxes and do whatever the party leader tells them to do on the
votes, they basically don't matter at all.
It's their staff that are running the offices and doing anything that's, like, useful
or consequential whatsoever.
One person who was really not impressed with what Tom Keene had to say is Lauren Bobert,
who really pulled no punches in her response, you know, a fellow Republican in her response
to his announcement that he was out for four months with.
depression. Let's take a listen. I don't even think he used the word severe. He just said he was
diagnosed with depression. I for one have been marked safe from depression today.
And what do you mean by that? What does that mean? I'm here. I'm
haven't seen those memes. Come on now. I didn't know what the time. I didn't know what
happened. I guess it's a Facebook thing. Okay. So what's your take on?
I think it's embarrassing still, even more so. I mean, sure like take care of yourself,
get healthy, but who gets to take four months off of work because they're sad?
Like, that's not-
Well, it might not be sad.
I mean, it's depressed.
He's depressed.
He's sad.
And I, okay, whatever the reasons may be, it's embarrassing.
I don't care what party you're part of.
It's not okay.
I mean, I think there's a dose of depression that comes with these pins that we're given.
And so, I mean, if you can't build up a tolerance to it, then maybe don't be here.
Yeah, but it's, if his doctor's,
saying, hey, it's safe, it's not safe for you to go to work. I mean, doesn't that come before
this job? Did his doctor say that? I heard his doctor say that it is safe for him to return
to work. Yeah. I mean, I assumed if he was there for that long, he was there under doctor's
orders. Maybe he should have been institutionalized, like, if it was, if it were that bad. I mean,
I don't know. Like, I, I, I, it's embarrassing. Do you think you should come back? I'm not going to
just sit here and just dunk on Tom Keene or Kane. I think the speaker pronounced it Kane. I don't
I don't know. I'm not going to sit here and just dunk on him and his issue. I do think it is
an absolute disrespect to his voters that he has not shown up and had a reason like that.
If you're depressed, okay, come in the back door, put your card in, vote and leave. Like,
you don't have to talk to anybody. You can keep your head down low and vote and go home.
I like that M part too, where she's basically like, we don't really do that much. Like, you
could just come and vote and leave. It will take you 10 seconds. Just to think.
Just dip the card in, do your thing, and go, and your staff will handle everything else because
they probably do that all the time anyway.
By the way, this is why this ideas about remote voting for Congress are so stupid, because
you could have somebody literally lying about where they are or not saying where they are.
They're in clinical depression treatment, maybe because they are suicidal, and they're voting
because their staff members are just keeping up the act for them and, like, finding ways to just
vote whether they're there or not.
So I think this is a good lesson as Congress moves closer and closer to that.
There's a big push for that right now, by the way.
Worth noting also, just as I was saying, Mitch McConnell is trying to retain his power.
He is at the top of the Rules Committee.
Wow.
He is in charge of the Senate Appropriation Committee, subcommittee for defense.
The subcommittee for defense right now, he said it himself in an interview with the Financial Times,
quote, that's where the real money is.
And he's really referencing Ukraine, but also probably Israel as well.
here he is clinging to power despite and not being transparent about it again that's another part of this
his office hasn't said if any of this happened this is the new york post gleaning it from and i think punchbow got it from
medical from uh from uh ms records released in washington dc because people suspected something was going on
i mean he's fallen on camera multiple times uh broke his ribs right had a concussion because of a fall
froze on camera multiple times disgraceful and now at this time that's years ago that that that happened and this man
is still serving as the United States Senator.
And then on the Tom Keen point, like, I think Lauren Bobert, when she's like, who gets to
take four months off from their job?
I think that's exactly the question that many Americans are going to be asking themselves,
especially since he's a hypocrite on the issue.
It'd be one thing if he's a champion of universal health care and mental health wellness and pay time
up, but he is none of those things.
He is the opposite of that.
And so it is hard for me to think of any other job where you could just casually,
disappear. Well, Sagar does it.
For four months, outside of Sondon.
I mean, I guess if you,
yeah, if you own the business, I guess you get to do what you want.
We don't know where Saga is. He could
be fetterment. There are no cameras
where Sager is, Emily. That's actually probably
true. We do know where Saga is,
to an extent.
I could probably guess.
I love your consistent,
like, desire to dunk on Sager when he's not here.
I mean, it's the only best...
One of the best things about you have.
It's... I've no...
saga for long enough that I get I get a pass. Oh yeah. I've known him since he was a different
saga, a younger, more naive saga. Okay. And vice versa. Less jaded, heartened by the world. Yeah.
In any case, I think most people will be looking at this and be like, if I took four months off,
I would be fired. That's the way that would work. And then I'd be more depressed. You know,
I would be more depressed. If this isn't the job for you, there are other jobs.
Go do, like, you're clearly miserable and you are not doing the job.
So go do something else.
Please.
I don't know.
The whole thing is just too wild.
Mike Johnson has like tepidly criticized him.
Oh, did he?
Yeah, oh, yeah.
He was like, well, I would have been more transparent about it.
And it's like, all right, so we can all come together and tepidly criticize it.
It just keeps happening.
The former Senate majority leader is doing it right now.
And is anybody trying to push him out?
And I do really, I want to come back to the point about it says something.
about our system that this can happen and there's no political electoral consequence.
Kane might lose his seat.
Is it a close one?
Yeah, Republicans are partially, I bet it's partially why Johnson feels comfortable criticizing
him because I think it was one of those things where people didn't know if he was going to
come back in time for the primary to be okay.
So it was hard to field a replacement because people didn't know if he was going to step back in
or whatever.
And this time around, it's a swing district.
So he might actually lose the seat for Republicans.
obviously when they're clinging to every single seat they possibly can.
Yeah, but I'm just thinking of like Diane Feinstein, you know, where there was a progressive
challenge to her and it was beat back by Obama and Nancy Pelosi.
And, you know, they don't have to do town halls.
They don't have.
Like, it's much easier now than ever, I think, even as cameras are everywhere for them
to hide their true condition from the public.
And so it, you know, falls to people like Ken Klippenstein to be like a total asshole and be
like, why is Susan Collins shaking like that?
You know, because people deserve to,
no, because so much has been hidden in the past.
Yeah.
No, I think that's right.
Shout on to Ken for being the asshole.
For the people.
An asshole for the people.
If Ken runs, that's his slogan.
And it might work.
An asshole for the people.
I mean, that was kind of the central problems
to Trump, right?
Yes, yes.
It just ended up being an asshole for his own sake.
Chris, like, you have just brought the show full circle
in such a beautiful, poetic way.
I was very well done.
I'm glad you enjoyed that.
Oh, that's perfect.
It's been such a pleasure to be here this week,
and we have a Friday show.
Some people might be taking the Friday before the 250th off.
Not us.
Not us.
We have to cover all of the news for the Patriots that people need to know.
We will be there, and Emily, doing every single show this week.
So thank you, my friend.
I'm going to steal the IHeart Radio Trophy, and it's off camera right now.
I'm going to steal it.
I'm going to put it behind me.
You deserve it.
it. And not only are you doing that, you're doing your own show, too. Like,
hardest working women in show business here. You got to do what you got to do. You know,
you can't be can't be doing it. You can't be pulling at Tom Kane.
There are always cameras where Emily is.
Honestly, it's true about all of us. Shout out to flock. We are always all on camera. I bet they've
got some footage of Tom Kane that we can't do. Shout out to Palantir. There are always cameras
where all of us are. Oh, goodness. Anyway, thank you guys for watching. Sign up for the newsletter.
breakingpoints.com.
If you're driving trouble, support at supercast.com.
And we'll see you tomorrow.
Should be a good one.
I'm Jake Brennan.
And on the Disgraceland podcast,
I explore the wild lives of rock stars
and unbelievable true crime stories
from music history.
These are the stories you haven't heard.
The kind you'll end up telling someone else.
Like the time Paul McCartney spent
in a notorious prison
or the bizarre crime, Lady Gaga,
as accused of.
Or that time,
Blondie's Debbie Harry
escaped Ted Bundy.
Listen to Disgraceland
on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Joy is essential
and it's also elusive.
But now,
there's a new and exciting way
to start your journey
toward a more joyful existence.
Joy 101.
It's a new podcast
hosted by me,
How to Kotbe.
If you're craving inspiration
to maximize your joy,
tune into these candid,
uplifting,
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Open your free IHeart Radio app.
Search Joy 101 and listen now.
Joy 101 with Hoda Kotfi is presented by CVS.
My husband is at a spa resort with his mistress right now,
and I'm calling the hotel to confront them both.
Wait a minute, Dakota.
She's calling the hotel while they're checked in together.
Yeah, that's right, Sophia.
And it gets worse.
It's Vacate to Vacation Week on the OkayStorytime podcast,
where she caught him buying gifts on Amazon,
and then taped the 10-page letter inside his luggage before he flew out.
So she planted evidence before he even took off?
And spoiler, Sophia, two years later, karma hits so hard.
He's calling his ex-wife in tears saying about his mistress.
What a mistake that was.
To find out what happened, listen to the OK Storytime podcast on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
