Bulwark Takes - Tim Miller: Trump’s “Anti-Establishment” Act Is Over
Episode Date: November 12, 2025Tim Miller joins Nicolle Wallace on Deadline: White House to discuss Trump’s economic mess and why his “man of the people” act is collapsing under the weight of gold-plated excess and billionair...e buddies. Tim explains how Trump lost touch—and why Democrats are finally gaining the upper hand. Watch Nicolle’s on MSNBC: https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house
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Hey, everybody. It's Tim O'er from The Bullwark. I was on with my girl Nicole Wallace for a full hour today. And we covered some of the same ground that I covered in depth with Chris Hayes over the shutdown and the ways in which Trump is losing his anti-establishment cred. And so you should definitely go check out that Chris Hayes podcast video if you haven't. At the top, though, we really talked a bit about the economy and Trump losing the narrative around the economy. And I wanted to expand on that and kind of tie it into that,
conversation about why I'm a little bit more bullish on the Democrats handling of this
shutdown than some other people you're hearing from out here.
And that's just because my view of this right now, if you've been around here,
you know this has been that like I'm not rooting for this.
I don't want this to happen.
But like the number one way for us to get out of this mess is for Trump to absolutely
fuck up and botch the economy.
Like, that's the easiest way out of us.
It's not a guaranteed way out of it.
Okay.
That's why sometimes, like, when I jomey hit you on, I was asking,
I was like, why happened the people of West Virginia turned away from Republicans running
West Virginia if they've mismanaged the economy so bad?
It's like, it's not a guarantee.
But I just think if you look at all the political science, all the focus groups that Sarah does,
all of the reality of what we've learned from recent election years.
Like, the number one thing people are responsive to is to how.
their lives are going economically and how they're experiencing the economy and how they feel
how responsive they feel politicians are being to it. And right now on all those scores,
Donald Trump is just stepping on rake after rake after rake. This is not opium. It just is.
Like, the economy is worse than when he got in. The economy is worse than when he got in
because of the policies he's put in place, particularly around tariffs.
costs are higher on some issues since he's got in.
Costs are higher on some issues since he's got in because of the policies put in place,
particularly on terrorists, but in this case also around health care.
And the other issues are coming to the forefront during the shutdown.
And meanwhile, while that's happening,
while people are feeling unsettled and uncertain about this economy,
while new graduates are having trouble finding jobs,
while people are dreading the increase in their health care bills,
coming up. What did the Democrats do? The Democrats said, hey, we're going to pick a big
public fight with Donald Trump over this for 40 days. And we're going to be on the side of
wanting to help people whose costs are going up and offer him a chance to meet us at the table.
And he didn't do it. What have the Republicans been doing about this? They've been putting
in place the policies that are increasing the costs. And Donald Trump has been throwing great
Gatsby parties and, you know, putting fake gold bullion on the White House and budding up
with the richest people in the world.
I think that's a pretty good place for Democrats to be.
I think it's about as good a place as we could have possibly expected them to be on November
11 of 2025.
Is it, are we still in a shitty place for the country?
Yeah.
Yeah, we're still in a shitty place.
Are we still, do we still a bunch of risks out there?
Yeah.
We elected Donald Trump again.
there was no path to things being great and the Democrats being triumphant in November of 2025.
But given where we could have been, given where we were last year, November 11th,
the Democrat's been perfect.
I love the way Chuck Schumer's handling this stuff.
No.
Are they in a better spot than they were 40 days ago?
Yeah.
Yeah, they are.
is a big part of that
Donald Trump's fuck-ups
more than the way
that the Democrats have handled it?
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, it is for sure.
But all things considered,
I think it was a good point to stop and say,
hey,
we're going to take some of our chips off the table.
I'm going to go back to the negotiating table.
We're in a debate.
We're going to live to fight another day,
one battle after another.
Could be worse.
Look at me.
Rain Cloud.
Telling you guys, it could be worse.
More on that with Nicole Wallace.
She's the best.
Subscribe to our feed right here.
Please, please, by the way, please subscribe.
Subscribe to the feed.
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Do me a solid.
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Stick around for me and Nicole Wallace.
I'm Tim Miller.
I'm going to start with you.
I worked for the Bush family.
One of the most iconic sort of images or instances of a president who's sort of lost touch at the price of things and the modern way that people lived was George H.W. Bush with a grocery scanner for my time in politics, and now as the person who does all the grocery shopping in my house, I always know how much a gallon of milk is, you know, eggs, bread.
most politicians have people around them that make sure they know how much a gallon of milk,
a dozen eggs, a loaf of bread, you know, meat, steak, those things cost.
Clearly, Donald Trump doesn't know how much any of those things cost.
I'm sure he's never been inside a grocery store unless he wanted to knock it down and stick something tacky there.
But no one around him has told him that these things matter to literally everybody else in the country.
What do you make of what we're seeing of his inner circle first?
Yeah, I think they're in a bad place.
It's a wonderful intro.
I just have two minor nits that I need to check.
Please edit away.
I'm pretty sure George H.W. Bush got a raw deal on the grocery scanner thing.
It's been a while since I watched that, but I've got to go on Google it.
Number two, the Great Gansby Party.
There were two parties.
After the Great Gansby Party, they did a truffle and opera party.
Oh, there was an after party?
I think it was the next day or later the next week or something.
I looked at the menu for the truffle and offer party.
They had a truffle defunois on the menu.
I don't know what that is.
Maybe some of the viewers who are fancier than me do.
So it's just many, they're doing many, many fancy parties down there while this is happening.
And, you know, look, who he's hanging out with down there is well represented by Scott Besson in that video.
You know, getting back to your question about his inner circle, right?
And his inner circle right now is mostly extremely rich people who, at least in some of the cases with Howard Lutnik and Steve Wyckoff and others have family members who are in on the Trump family grift.
So you have extremely rich people that are in on the grift and the corruption as part of the inner circle.
And then you have like wild-eyed ideologues, you know, like Stephen Miller.
And that's it.
That's who's there.
Like that's who he's got around him now.
And so I don't think it's that surprising.
that this stuff isn't breaking through to him.
I mean, obviously, you know, he has always been out of touch,
but there was something to be said for, you know, kind of the rally stuff
that he was doing at a while.
Like he had this kind of call and response, like ongoing focus group with people
that, you know, sort of helped, you know, drive his little lizard instinct
towards what, you know, the types of people that showed up to those rallies
at least cared about.
But he's not getting any of that feedback down.
I mean, he's at Mar-a-Lago with Cougars on the pool deck,
and he's got billionaires in his cabinet.
Like, that's who he's talking to.
And it's not surprising that he does that interview with Laura Ingram, and he doesn't just do the, say the obvious thing that politicians say in this moment, which is, you know, we're trying to deal with this, you know, obviously we understand people are suffering, like we have a bunch of plan, here's our plan, A, B, and C. They don't have any plans. Like, it's not just that they're out of touch. They're out of touch with people's affordability issues, and they don't have any proposals to deal with it. Like, they're not, like, they're not even trying to deal with it. And, I mean, I think that is, you know, the main political issue that he faces,
over the next year.
So you edited me, I'm just gonna underline something.
You just said, what was it, Cougars on the pool deck
and billionaires in the cabinet.
I feel like that's like an album title
or a Netflix series or a book title
or something I wanna see more of.
Tell me the lie.
I love it.
And on the question of inflation specifically
in The Washington Post,
do you blame Trump for inflation?
60% blame him a great deal or a good amount,
only 40%, not much or not at all.
So regardless of what Scott Best
says, Tim Miller, this is their economy.
It is. And, you know, we've talked with this a couple of times.
I think it's just more stark now than it's even been in a while, just how much it's his
fault that it's his economy. And obviously, whoever is the president was going to own the
economy at some level, you could imagine an alternate Trump universe where he just even rhetorically,
like he really focuses on, you know, working class stuff, working class.
affect and you know we all rolled our eyes out if you go back to the campaign and he's in the
McDonald's thing and he's like a big boy in the truck right like you do that if he just did
that kind of stuff right where he is talking about the supposed to forgotten man that he
was supposed to care about and he didn't do the tariffs that are unconstitutional and are actually
hurting people and he listened to steve bannon and did a tax hike you know even a small one
on the wealthiest as part of the bbb you can imagine a totally different political situation
for this. He's done this all to himself.
He has stopped caring about
regular folks' concerns.
He cares instead about his gilded White
House and bombing boats in Venezuela
and the trophies that he's getting in Korea
and all that stuff.
And the one bill that they put through
was a bill that
cut taxes for the rich.
And the one, you know, outside of the immigration,
the one other, you know,
political priority he's had that
has dealt with economic issues has been
tariffs, which just raises cost on everybody.
like this is this is just a mess of his own making and frankly I just think it gets worse as you go into next year because he's already like done the things that he was said he was going to do about the uh um to allegedly help the economy and it's all backfiring
Tim some of the I mean Shane Gillis you know was one of the first folks to to jump on the Epstein um critiques he had a joke at the espies months ago now um I had an Epstein joke in here but somebody deleted it I mean the the the air bubbles have been.
been have been in there, I think. I don't know if they're hedges or strategy. I don't understand
the space enough. But the absolute face plan on the economy, I mean, these are their listeners.
And to do sort of a cover-up for Trump and the failures on the economy really cross-pressures them
with their own audiences. It does. And there's another element to it, which is what you'd
mentioned in the last segment. And we're talking to Nick about just this element of how Trump
somehow managed to maintain a anti-establishment cred in the first term. Why?
while being president.
And so in some ways, like, well, a lot of us were rightfully upset and mad about these
huge figures of tech and finance folding to Trump after the inauguration.
In some ways, it kind of set the seeds for this problem for him because he became the
establishment very quickly.
You cannot be the anti-establishment when you're partying around with Mark Zuckerberg
and all the richest people in the world, right?
And I think that if you're a comedian, and that's what Tim Dillon is,
and he's political, but he's a comedian.
If you're in that space, right,
it's hard to be a comedian and be for the man, you know?
And it's a special hard to be a comedian and be for the man.
When the man is screwing up and when the man is putting policies in place
that are hurting the listeners, right?
You know, in order to be, you got to speak to some level of truth, right?
And, you know, that's what humor is, right?
It's, you know, either an exaggerated or some kind of observation
about something that is fundamentally true about human nature.
And so I think that that's like another thing that is,
happened here is where Trump has really turned himself into not only, you know, kind of as you mentioned,
like a pathetic figure just in his like physical presence and the things that he cares about. He
carrying about these trophies and the bruises, but also an establishment figure. And you can't
be cool and countercultural, you know, if you also are in league with Palantir while they're
spying on Americans, you know? Like it doesn't work like that. Including your listeners. I mean,
The brand is so clunky for what some of them, I think, thought they were signing up for.
I understand why people were upset, but my view on this shutdown overall is that over 40 days,
the Democrats are in a lot better place now than they were 40 days ago politically.
And it's because they picked a clear strategy for once.
They talked about an issue that people care about, excuse me, health care costs, which are going to rise.
and I think that if you, I understand people are upset because if you went into that fight thinking,
okay, at the end of this, the Democrats are going to get a scalp, they're going to win, right?
And the Republicans are going to fold.
I just think that was the wrong expectation to have for this fight.
I just, I never believed that the Republicans were going to fold.
The Republican House of Representatives and does, it has no interest in extending Obamacare subsidies and is never going to.
And over the course of the 40 days, the Democrats gained a single vote, Marjorie Taylor Green,
who came over to their side.
And so, to me, this is the longest shutdown in history.
That's longer than any shutdown that the Tea Party Republicans ever did.
So I don't want to hear from people that's like the Democrats don't know how to fight like Republicans anymore.
They're folding, you know, and Republicans fight harder.
This was a harder, longer fight than anything even the most extreme and radical Republicans have done in the past.
And what they got out of it was the Republicans in a worst political position, voters understanding,
where Democrats are now on health care and the fact that Democrats wanted to make healthcare cheaper
and the Republicans don't care about that. And I think the Republicans right now are in as bad
of a political position as they've been in in a long time, probably since 2018. And I think that's a
modest win for the Democrats. I know that's not cold comfort for people whose health care prices
or whose health care insurance costs are going up. But that's not the fault of these eight
people. Their insurance costs are going up
because Donald Trump won the election and
the Republicans won both houses of Congress
and the only way to fix that is to
vote them out next time. And my
only thought on this is just
and I know people hate advice from
ex- Republicans but skip the circular
firing squad and go on to fight. Just
go back to fighting. Like that's how you sweat
the elections Tuesday night. That's how
you, as you said Tim, pulled off a shutdown
longer than even the most extreme
Republicans in modern political history
you know get back in the trenches and
fight. Basil, thank you for being here. Tim Miller,
thank you for being here.
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