IHIP News - Terrified Trump Forces FBI to Illegally Arrest Texas Democrats?
Episode Date: August 8, 2025We are joined by Rep. Julie Johnson who is actively fighting to protect the vote of her constituents. Order our new book, join our Patreon Cult, and more by clicking here: https://linktr.ee/i...vehaditpodcast.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Donald Trump and his fascist regime are so short-sighted.
They've come in to the federal government and no doubt done illegal and immoral things.
And then all of a sudden they're realizing, oh, shit, the midterms are coming up.
So what do cheaters do?
They start to try to cheat.
So they call up sycophants and ass kissers in Texas.
And I'm talking about the governor.
I'm talking about Paxton and they say, hey, will you cheat for us? And they're like, yeah, sure, no problem. We got you, Bub. And the Texas Democrats are not having it. And that's why I am so happy to talk to Representative Julie Johnson, a gaitriot from Dallas, Texas, you guys. Julie, how are you today? I'm so great. How are you today?
Excellent. All right. Tell us what on earth is going on with Abbott and Paxon, who I want to.
to remind our viewer is going through a quote biblical divorce is that correct oh yes it's absolutely
ridiculous he's the one of the most corrupt politicians who have ever graced the state of texas
which is saying a lot and it's it's outrageous what he's doing but you know what we're in is we're
in a mid-decade redistricting and because trump knows his policies are full of shit and he's trying
to cram them down the throats of the american people and it's not having it his poll waters are
underwater. They know that they're in dire trouble for the upcoming midterm elections. So rather
than actually have a policy that people want to vote for, that people want to support, the next
strategy is to try to rig and steal some elections. And so they're forcing a mid-decade redistricting
to try to draw five Texas congressional Democrats, me being one of them, out of our seats
and make them lean Republican or strong inclinations for Republicans.
And so Paxton now and Cornyn and Abbott are in a contest of who could be the biggest bully
to try to get the Texas Democrats who broke Quorum to protest this terrible situation back to Texas.
That's kind of where we are.
And am I correct that I've read that Abbott wants to send the FBI to arrest
democratically elected Texas politicians that are trying to ensure.
ensure that the midterm elections project the will of Texas voters?
Yes, you're correct.
But the thing about it is, what you have to understand is they've issued an arrest warrant.
Well, it's not a real arrest warrant in the way that you're you're accustomed to.
It's a civil warrant that's issued by the Speaker of the House.
And basically, it instructs law enforcement to bring an elected member back to the House chamber.
And it's not like your typical criminal arrest warrant where somebody has, you know, violated the laws of the state of Texas or the federal government and they're trying to bring them back for criminal prosecution.
This is a civil matter, a civil warrant.
And there's absolutely no legal precedent whatsoever for the FBI to be involved in this at all.
I think you'll be familiar with this phrase because I'm originally from Dallas.
This is what we call all hat, no cattle.
It is totally all hat, no cattle.
And this is what the Trump administration is.
It is a show pony administration that wants to terrorize people.
But let's talk about for our listeners that are not familiar with Texas.
And if you're in Dallas, if you're in Fort Worth, if you're in Austin, if you're in San Antonio, if you're in El Paso, if you're in Houston, these are large blue cities.
Furthermore, these are the economic hubs of Texas that produce the majority of the tax revenue that supports the state.
And I have a – when I'm not a podcaster, I'm an interior designer, and I have a lot of projects in Dallas.
And during this past election cycle, I was in the Dallas area, Ritzie neighborhoods.
Kamala Harris signs everywhere.
So the silencing of red state Democrats and red state liberals is something as a person that lives in a red state right now, I think is something that we have to really fight for.
And I think we have to show the nation red state liberals hit different.
We're built different.
We're tough.
We'll say come at us.
We're not going to bend the knee.
What is your take on that?
I totally agree with you.
you know and it's you know in my district for example it's currently all urban you know it's 80%
dallas county a little bit of colin county and a little bit of denton county and there's not a
single farm plot in my congressional district not one and what they've done is they've taken about
20% of my current district um and kind of the northern part of dallas county carleton through
Richardson and taken a swath of about, you know, 150,000 Democrats that are in my district
and paired them with six rural counties that go almost all the way to Louisiana. There's
absolutely no commonality of interest in these constituencies. And then the other thing is we have
thousands of people that come to our office seeking, you know, assistance with taxes, veterans
benefits, you know, Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, all the things. And think of how is that going to
manage administratively when you have a district that's hundreds of miles apart, how do you
effectively serve these people? So this is just brazen politics, and it's going to really harm
the actual constituents. And let's talk about walking and chewing gum at the same time. Let's talk
about what the needs are for people in your district as it's currently drawn. But as a party,
let's talk about messaging to rural folks that think that the reason that they can't have
nice things is because there's a lesbian serving, you know, as a representative or because this
trans kid over here that's just trying to exist or because of this wonderful family that has
this Mexican restaurant in the suburbs of Dallas. They have been lied to. They have been told
because they live in such a homogenous community. They have been told the reason that you can't
have nice things is because of these woke gays.
And because the liberals are sending kids to school and they're whacking off weaners.
And then the kids are, you know, taking shits and litter boxes at schools.
And all of this sounds so crazy to them.
And they think, oh, my gosh, we can't have nice things.
When in actuality, they can't have nice things because Ken Paxton and Greg Abbott and both of your senators.
And we could talk about Ted Cruz right now and unlikable he is and not finished for probably four more election cycles.
but I'll spare everybody that because I cover that extensively.
Because these guys are billionaires, bitches.
They support billionaires living an easier life.
And it's very easy.
These billionaires that are worth a billion, I think comedian Bill Burr recently said,
Congresswoman, he recently said, so what, you're worth a billion,
maybe be worth 900 million and pay your people a livable wage.
They're working 40 hours a week.
and they can't get ahead.
Right.
You know, you're exactly right.
And it's about, it's that, it goes back to that old adage of that LBJ quote.
You know, if, I'll paraphrase it, but it basically is if you can convince a man that he's
better than somebody else, you can police their pockets at the same time.
And that is sort of exactly what's happening.
You know, they've convinced these lower educated rural white voters in particular that they,
are better than the immigrants, that they're better than LGBT people, that they're better.
And so somehow, because if they have somebody to exercise their superiority over, that that
gives them, it sells the farm for everything else. And I think it's really important.
It's one of the struggles, honestly, that I have in Congress, I'm a red state Democrat. And there
are a few of us. And, you know, there's not a single red state Democrat in leadership.
There's not a single Red State Democrat on the messaging arm of the Democratic Party nationally.
And I think that's a mistake of the Democratic Party as a whole, that we have to elevate the profiles of and the voices of Red State Democrats, because we see a different, there's a different us.
And there's a different reality on the table.
And, you know, it was an example of, I was talking to Wendy Davis one time about National Plan Parenthood, for example.
They didn't have any red state members on their national board to understand what was really happening on the ground for abortion access in these red states in a deeply personal way.
And so I just think that we have to do a better job of the democratic media.
And like, I think it's awesome to be on your show today, for example, having this conversation, we need to do more of it to get people who are in the hard trenches of democratic politics, of moving the needs.
needle in red states, have their voices amplified a little bit more?
Yes, and I do think there needs to be a succinct messaging to rural Americans, and they're told
and have been propagandized for so long that the left is radical.
And I think in a very plain spoken way, we can say, we don't think that you making $7 an hour
and us advocating for you to make $15 to $20 an hour, we don't think that's radical.
What we believe is radical is that your bosses make 3,000 times what you used to make.
We think it's radical that that boss doesn't pay taxes and finds a lot of loopholes,
but you have to pay taxes.
And we think it's radical to bully people that you might think are a little bit different.
We think it's we think that they're the.
radical ones. And I believe that it's easy and I do this a lot to dismiss rural people as
rubs and they don't know what's going on. But if you live in a red state in this city and I live
in Oklahoma City, I end up around rural people. My son played basketball. Inside a lot of them
is a good-natured default setting. Do they vote for evil shit? Yes. But if we can focus
on you have that James Talarico, who I think is a really good messenger. I'm not religious, so
I'm not a good messenger to talk to Christians because they'd be like, oh, she's a crazy liberal
atheist. But I think elevating Christians in the Democratic Party as credible messengers, because
the only culture in rural America are the churches to go message to them that this is not what Jesus would
do. This is cruel. And I think he is a.
really good messenger about this. So regardless of what happens with the cheating that's happening,
I think we have to walk and chew gum and we have to start talking to rural voters. And I agree with
you, Congresswoman, Red State Democrats are the most credible messengers to lead the charge on this
nationally. I think it's also a notion that, you know, we're Texans, right? You're from Texas too.
You understand what, and then Oklahoma, very similar. You know, I think the notion is,
is we have to dispel this myth that somehow Democrats want government to run your life.
And that's not the case at all.
What Democrats do is we espouse policies that make you be able to lead an independent life.
We, you know, to have a wage that you can support your family on, that you're not dependent on government services,
that you have access to health care so that you can be healthy.
And, you know, all the other things.
I think it's we have got to go into these communities.
And I think, you know, Beddo tried to start that when he started going in there.
But we have to do that.
And I think we have to have more initiatives to really take it to these rural counties.
Because I think part of the problem, too, though, is they haven't been communicated with.
They haven't been worked.
They haven't had Democrats go out there and visit them.
And so one of the things of the hazards of what the Republicans have done,
pairing all of these urban areas with all of these rural counties is now these rural counties
are going to get a whole bunch of Democrats coming to visit and preaching our version of the
gospel of what it really means to love thy neighbor and to serve the poor and to do all the
things that your faith tenants tell you to do. Because now, otherwise, I've been forced
just to campaign in Dallas. But now we're going to have to go to them. And I think, I don't
necessarily think that's a bad thing.
Yeah, I don't either. And I do think you started off that statement with the propaganda that they've been fed that Democrats want to control your life. And I think it's a very simple, plain spoken case to make. The person that I see in Texas that wants to control your life is Abbott. Like, he's the most controlling. He wants to control what happens at your OBGYN appointment. And you can say, oh, yeah, sure, I'm pro-life. But until your daughter has,
a life-threatening pregnancy and then she's unable to receive care because your governor has said
he's going to throw her in jail and the physicians in jail and the nurses in jail that is controlling
your life that is not freedom and then to also say to rural voters well you know Kathy down at the
church her son always seemed a little effeminate do we want to be mean to Kathy's son do we want to
be mean to him because she's good she's a good church-going lady she always shows up for
Bible study on time. I don't want to bully her son. That's not my business. And one thing that I think
sits really well with rural people is mind your own business. Very simple messaging. And the people
who do not mind their own business are Maggot Republicans. They are all up in everybody's business.
They want to control who you love. They want to know what's going on in your bedroom. Even Mike Johnson
talks about how he and his son monitor each other's porn, which is just so weird. I can barely
even talk about it. You got Ted Cruz on 9-11 a few years ago liking porn tweets, but then he has
the audacity to tell you, Congresswoman, who you can love and who you can marry. And my thing is,
if Ted wants to watch porn, swing for the fences. It's not my business. Right. You know,
one of the things about me is I ran for the state legislature in 2018 after Trump 1.0 because I was
so annoyed. And, you know, I never thought as a lesbian I could win elected office.
in the suburbs of Texas.
And I flip my seat red to blue and the first Democrat to hold it in 40 years and I won by 13 points because I campaigned on these truths.
I want government to do its job.
I want us to have a balanced, reasonable budget that's responsible that takes care of the needs of government.
We educate every child in this country.
We invest in our infrastructure to make sure we have power and water and our roads are safe.
you know, all the things that government is supposed to do. And then on the other side, you know, we just get out of the way. We let everyone live their life. We don't tell people what they can do, you know, let people love who they want, do all the things and just get out of the way of interference in people's personal life. And I've flipped a seat and I won by 13 points. You know, I think that's a message that resonates with a lot of folks. It's not that we don't want government to do its job. We definitely want government to do its work.
But it needs to be done, you know, just be normal and be reasonable and be practical the way we all have to live our lives at home.
And I think just bringing it down to a basic level that everybody can kind of understand really makes a difference.
And just getting the message out is our biggest obstacle.
Thank you so much for sharing that.
And I want all of our LGBTQ plus listeners in Red States to just take a moment to marvel at what the Congress
woman has done in a red state. And when you feel isolated and you feel judged and you feel
alone, remember this interview and take it as some hopium because generally the majority of us
in this country love you the way that you are. And Congresswoman, I'm a big fan. Thank you for
your advocacy and your work in red states as a person that lives in a red state. I think your work
is so critical. And thank you for coming on today. Hey, thank you so much. I want to leave you with this
one story based on what you just said.
You know, after I was first elected, I went to an event and this woman who was probably
in her early 80s came up to me and she hugged me, hug me some more, hug me a little bit
more, you know, one of those that never ended kind of hugs.
And she had tears streaming down her face and she said, I never, ever thought I would have
somebody like me representing me in elected office.
So, you know, our participation matters, our seats at the table matter, and I really appreciate you having me on.
I'm a big fan of your show, big fan, and I would love to see you in Dallas sometime.
That would be a lot of fun.
Oh, that would be so fun.
Thank you for sharing that story.
It gave me the chills, and visibility is so, so important.
Thanks again, Congresswoman, and Godspeed.
Thank you.
Thank you.