Morning Joe - Morning Joe 6/4/25
Episode Date: June 4, 2025Elon Musk calls Trump agenda bill 'disgusting abomination' days after White House send-off ...
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Discussion (0)
Well, I hear something happened while we were at lunch, which led me to make some news here
today and say something I didn't think was imaginable.
I agree with Elon Musk.
Republicans should listen to him, and actually to their former selves, outraged about the
national debt.
Because it's here, Donald Trump's big ugly bill is in the Senate.
Behind the smoke and mirrors lies a cruel and draconian truth.
Tax breaks for the ultra wealthy, paid by gutting healthcare for millions of Americans.
Breaking news, Elon Musk and I agree with each other.
The GOP tax scam is a disgusting abomination.
Every single Republican who voted for the one big, ugly bill should be ashamed of themselves.
They aren't helping their constituents.
They are hurting their constituents.
That's an objectively verifiable fact.
Democratic leadership in Congress with rare praise for Elon Musk after the Tesla CEO criticized the massive tax and
spending bill passed by the House.
Meanwhile, another Republican who voted for that bill is now admitting to not rating all
of it.
We'll tell you who that is.
Also ahead, Ukraine continues its aggressive counterattacks on Russia, this time striking
a key bridge for Putin's army.
And we'll explain why the mayor of Newark, New Jersey is suing the state's
interim US Attorney Elena Haba. Good morning and welcome to Morning Joe.
It's Wednesday June 4th and Willie, what a significant rift that has opened up
between Elon Musk and President Trump, seemingly
out of nowhere.
Almost as big as a rift between the New York Knicks and Tom Thibodeau, Jonathan Lemire.
We'll talk about that in just a moment.
Elon Musk, yes, Mika, is lashing out against the president's domestic policy bill, calling
it, quote, a disgusting abomination.
Musk made that comment on social media yesterday, writing in part, those who voted for it you know you did wrong. Musk went on to say the
legislation will increase the budget deficit to 2.5 trillion dollars, actually
the debt, and burden American citizens. He then suggested next year voters quote
fire all politicians who betrayed the American people by voting for this bill.
The post comes on the heels of Musk telling CBS News last week the budget bill undermines
the work of his Department of Government Efficiency.
House Speaker Mike Johnson responded to Musk's criticism of the budget bill, telling reporters
he spoke to the Tesla CEO about the legislation on Monday.
With all due respect, my friend Elon is terribly wrong about the one big beautiful bill.
It's a very important first start.
Elon is missing it, okay?
And it's not personal.
I know that the EB mandate, very important to him, that is going away because the government
should not be subsidizing these things.
It's part of the Green New Deal, and I know that has an effect on his business, and I
lament that. We talked about the ramp down period on and I know that has an effect on his business, and I lament that.
We talked about the ramp down period on that and how that should be duly considered by
Congress, but for him to come out and hand the whole bill is to me just very disappointing,
very surprising in light of the conversation I have with him.
Joining us now, the co-host of our fourth hour, Jonathan Lemire, is a contributing writer
at The Atlantic covering the White House and national politics.
Also White House reporter for Axios, Mark Caputo, and
co-founder of Punchbowl News, John Bresnahan. Great group assembled to talk
through this. Mark, I want to start with you because you had the first reporting
yesterday for Axios about where this came from, this outburst from Elon Musk
about the so-called big beautiful bill which he said last week, a bill can be
either big or beautiful, but not both.
So what's driving his very public criticism of the bill?
Well, we're told that there were basically
four inflection points for Elon Musk.
There was the EV tax credit
that was just referenced by Speaker Johnson.
Starlink, which is a company that he owns,
a satellite company, wanted a bid or wanted to control, we're told, the FAA's new air traffic control system.
He was a special government employee. Again, it appears that he wanted to stay in that role and the White House told him, no, you can't buy statute.
And then lastly, and most recently and perhaps most importantly relative to when he came out and said this, Elon Musk's pick
to be the NASA administrator, a friend of his or an acquaintance, Jared Isaacman, was
summarily and unexpectedly canceled as Donald Trump's pick on Saturday night.
And there was a lot of suspicion that various White House staffers conspired to have this done as, according to one person
who I spoke to, an F.U. to Elon Musk.
And after that, it seems, and I'm told and we see, Elon Musk got very sour on the bill.
He waited until White House press secretary, Caroline Levitt, was at the podium for maximum
damage and then he released his post and just sort of wrecked the White House's
afternoon with what he said.
Yeah, so here John Bresnahan is part of what he said. I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore. This massive, outrageous,
pork-filled congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it.
You know you did wrong. You know it. In November next year, we fire all politicians who betrayed the American people.
That's Elon Musk's post yesterday.
So, Brez, I guess the question is, does this matter for the lawmakers on Capitol Hill?
We heard Speaker Johnson saying, well, Elon, my dear friend, just doesn't understand it.
I've reached out to him. I'll explain it to him.
Elon, based on those statements yesterday, doesn't seem terribly persuadable.
Does this criticism from the world's wealthiest man, a close ally for a long time of President
Trump, does it matter to the legislative process?
I mean, yes and no.
I mean, Republican senators, the Senate was in yesterday.
Republican senators couldn't run away faster from this question.
I mean they were literally I had one guy sprint I had a Republican senator sprint away from
me literally sprint away from me what they were trying to say oh Musk is a private citizen
this is his own opinion he's got you know as Mark in his excellent reporting talked
about you know he's upset about the EV mandate and Mike Johnson, Speaker Johnson had raised
this but this is a big deal. You also saw Republicans who were have problems with this
bill like Ron Johnson of Wisconsin who told us reporters yesterday he's like you know
Musk is right this bill doesn't cut enough it's got to be redone and that's a huge problem
for the House leadership for Johnson if the Senate tries to overhaul
the bill.
And it's a problem for Trump.
And this is where we have an important meeting today.
We have the Senate Finance Committee Republicans.
These are the guys who do the tax portion of this bill and the Medicaid portion of this
bill.
They're going down to meet with Trump and Senate Majority Leader Thun will be with them.
And they know that Trump is the only one who can get Musk off their back if there's a problem
on this.
So John Lemire, $2.3 to $5 trillion over the next decade, according to the CBO, this bill
would add massive tax cuts and everything else that comes with it.
How does the White House grapple?
Does it care with the criticism from Elon Musk, a man who was standing in the Oval Office
a few days ago?
Well, as noted, Musk's statement came
as White House Press Secretary Karen Levitt
was at the podium.
She was asked about it in real time and said, well,
she downplayed it.
So the president's aware of Elon's feelings about this,
but he still stands behind the one big, beautiful bill,
as in her words.
And then they quickly tried to push past it.
And we have not heard from Trump himself yet on this.
I think every reporter in Washington, myself included,
always glued to true social to see
if Trump would respond to Musk.
He has not, at least not yet.
But at some point, he will.
We do expect that he'll be in front of cameras today, which
he has not been for the last couple of days.
So we may hear from him later today.
I think this is already going to be a messy process.
Yes, this got to the House just
barely. There were some people who opposed Congressman Massey who gave Musk an attaboy
already yesterday saying, yes, I share your concerns. And Musk is not wrong in terms of how
it's going to increase spending and that does fly in the face of what Doge was trying to do. And
Mark, of course, also laid out some of the other behind the scenes reasons why Musk opposed this.
The Senate already had its real problems with it. This gives them more fuel. But I think, Mekhi, it also
is just worth taking a second here just to go big picture at how remarkable this
is. Elon Musk spent a record amount of money, tens upon hundreds of millions of
dollars, to help elect President Trump. He then, on January 20th, became the most,
I'd argue, most powerful sort of government official
we've had in a very long time,
an unelected government official,
but empowered by Trump to basically
hand it in the keys to the government.
Do what you will.
And here, just four, four and a half months later,
not only is he out, but he's out there taking,
savaging the president's signature piece of his agenda.
Like his entire legislative agenda is in this one bill.
And the guy who a few days ago was still his most powerful aide has said, it's a disgusting
abomination.
Just remarkable that we're here now.
The chainsaw still works.
So meanwhile, as President Trump ramps up pressure on Senate Republicans now to back
his massive spending
bill, he's calling out one vocal holdout.
That's Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky.
Trump posted on social media yesterday that the Senator has very little understanding
of the bill, later adding, the people of Kentucky can't stand him.
Paul later responded to the president saying he will not support a bill that raises the
debt ceiling by trillions of dollars.
The senator has said he believes four Republicans are opposed to the package as it stands.
Republicans have a slim majority in the Senate and can only afford to lose three votes on
the bill.
John Bresnahan, what do we know about how the Senate will respond to this, especially
given the impact it will have on people who rely on things that are going to be cut if
this passes?
Yeah, right.
And Rand Paul is right right now.
There's probably enough votes to stop this bill.
If you take Rand Paul, you take Ron Johnson, who would not vote for this bill as it is, you take some of the conservatives, and then there's
moderate senators like Senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska or Susan Collins of Maine. They
have problems. There's other senators have big problems with the Medicaid portions of
this bill. So I think there's, you know, they're going to have to change this bill. So I think there's you know they're gonna have to change this bill.
The question is and Mike Johnson was talking about it is like if you change this bill this
bill only passed by one vote in the House. If you change this bill in the Senate to get it through
somehow you lose that if you tack to the middle in the Senate you lose the right in the House and
that's a huge problem that's where trouble have to to be, you know, just knocking heads on it. But they have problems on it. I mean, they've got major work to be
done in the next couple of weeks, especially if they're thinking two things. One, they
want to get done by July 4th and they got the debt limit at mid-July and that's a huge,
that's the backstop of everything. That's the ticking time bomb on this legislation.
Yeah, Mark Caputo, I'm going to channel Joe a little bit who would say these guys who've
called themselves their entire lives small government conservatives who cast a vote in
support of this bill given what it does to the debt and the deficit, there's just no
way you can call yourself a small government conservative and vote for this and yet many
of them are doing just that.
So it does, Elon Musk's criticism as part of your reporting does give cover to people like
Rand Paul and Ron Johnson and others to maybe be a little more emboldened to come out and say,
yeah, what Elon said is right. This is we can't pass this. So do you think that perhaps Elon Musk's
public criticism has helped to torpedo this thing? I think it's certainly given credit or cover to
the critics that you said, but let's also
be clear about the history of the Republican Party.
Certainly back to George Bush II, George W. Bush, they've been massive deficit spenders
and expanders of government at the same time as presenting themselves as these fiscal hawks.
The difference with the Trump-era Republican Party
is that this is the first party that has said,
Medicaid, you know, it's pretty good.
Medicare, pretty good.
Social Security, pretty good.
Don't touch entitlements.
And that's where you come to this very precarious position
for Republicans when they're in charge of Congress,
because they basically got three issues that they're weighing.
They have tax cuts,
which all Republicans essentially have to vote for as part of their dogma. You've got deficit
reduction and you've got Medicaid that they want to continue. And in the end, the deficit reduction
is the thing that's going to crater. And that is where Elon Musk is 100% right. This does cause
higher deficits and bigger debt.
And there's just no way for the White House
to figure its way out of that.
What Donald Trump is gonna have to do
is he's going to have to twist arms.
He's going to have to do a little bit of subtle begging,
promising, cajoling, the full bag of tricks
he's gonna have to pull out in order to get this passed.
In the end, it's still a Republican Congress.
He's still the Republican leader.
He's still popular in the party.
It does look, judging by the past, that'll probably get it done, but just how he does
it is really hard to see right now.
Yeah, so often in the Trump era, it comes down to the personal Donald Trump weighing
and leaning on some of these guys to get their votes and them not willing to cross him.
One of those members of Congress, Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene, voted to pass the
sweeping domestic policy bill last month,
is now coming out against the legislation.
In a social media post yesterday, Taylor Greene appeared to admit she hadn't read the text carefully enough
and that she missed parts of the bill that strip states of the right to regulate or make laws concerning artificial intelligence for the next 10 years.
She says she is opposed to that and will vote against the final version of the bill unless
the Senate removes that provision.
So important to read carefully, I guess, is the lesson here, John.
Willie, the jokes write themselves.
I mean, this is typical of, well, maybe of Marjorie Taylor Greene, but it's reflective
of just how hurried this process was.
It was so rushed and they, some of it was done Taylor Greene, but it's reflective of just how hurried this process was. It was so rushed,
and some of it was done in the middle of the night.
We heard Democrats complain about that.
And now we're learning that some members of Congress
didn't even read through the whole bill.
They were their staff and missed important provisions.
And now Marjorie Taylor Greene is suggesting
that this is a real sticking point.
So not only is it a poor reflection of how they got here,
but it also, again, points
to the challenge that lie ahead, that if the Senate's gonna make real changes, they will
march here and agree, saying, if you don't make this change, I won't vote for it.
But we also know some other Republicans in the House speaker are saying that if they
do make the Senate, makes too many changes, we won't vote for it.
So yes, to Mark's point of a moment ago, President Trump remains very popular in the party.
He has an iron grip, it seems, on both houses of Congress.
It's hard to imagine too many Republicans will defy him.
A few do.
We see Thomas Massie, a congressman of Kentucky, do it all the time.
But very few do.
So the odds are he'll get this through, but there's a lot of hurdles he's going to have
to clear, particularly in that accelerated timetable July 4th, one month from today.
Wow.
John Brezhnehan, before we go, where do you see this going today?
Well, I think, look, there's the two big meetings.
There's the meeting with Trump at the White House with these finance committee Republicans,
and then the Senate Republicans themselves are sitting down and going to talk.
I think they've got a lot of work to do, as everybody's talked about. I mean, I do think they'll get this done at the end of the day because literally
they've done nothing else in this Congress. If they don't pass this, they have nothing
to run on in 2026. They've done nothing. So they get this done, I think, at the end of
the day. Will they have to scale it back? I don't know, but I do think this is a big
day for Republicans, Senate Republicans they've
got to get some forward momentum the must thing the must up yesterday really dented
them they've got problems on their right they've got problems in their center so you know I
do think this is it you know Trump is going to have to really get in there and tell guys
that I want this and we wrote about this morning you already see Thune, Senator Majority Leader Thune,
going to Trump, going to his Trump card,
very early in this process.
It's more like Mike Johnson
than you would have ever seen Mitch McConnell do.
So I think you'll see just,
Trump will just batter these guys.
But I think this starts in earnest today.
He's really gonna have to get these guys
if they wanna pass something along this line.
All right, co-founder of Punchball News, John Brezhnehan and White House reporter for Axios,
Mark Caputo, thank you both very much for coming on this morning and your reporting.
And still ahead on Morning Joe, Steve Ratner is standing by with charts.
He'll give us a deep dive at the cuts included in the Republican Party's sweeping tax and
spending bill. Plus, a
look at how President Trump's intense focus on immigration is reshaping federal
law enforcement. NBC's Julia Ainslie joins us with that new reporting and you
can listen to every episode of Morning Joe as a podcast for free. You're
watching Morning Joe. We'll be right back.
["Morning Joe"]
Beautiful live picture, sun coming up over the White House
at 619 in the morning.
Let's bring in former Treasury official,
Morning Joe economic analyst, our good friend Steve
Ratner over at the Southwest Wall.
Steve, good morning.
Good to see you.
Let's continue this conversation about the so-called big, beautiful bill and its impact
on the national debt.
What are you looking at there?
Well, look, it's a really big bill.
It's beautiful, not we can debate.
But as you heard before, the challenge is that there are people who think it's too big.
There are people who think there's other stuff that should be cut,
and so it's a really tough situation for the president.
But let's take a look at what the bill, as it was written in the House, would actually do.
First of all, it's important to note that we're already, as I think everybody knows,
starting with a really large deficit.
Our deficit is almost $2 trillion right now.
While it's projected to go down slightly,
it would otherwise then keep climbing up to about between $2 and $2 trillion right now. While it's projected to go down slightly, it would otherwise then keep climbing up to
about between $2 and $2.5 trillion.
That's if we do nothing.
The big beautiful bill, you can look at two ways.
As it is written, it would do this.
So it would have the budget deficit still higher than we have.
But there are a bunch of gimmicks in there in terms of making things expire that aren't
really going to end up expiring.
And so I think the real way to look at this big, beautiful bill is it would take the deficit
out to $3 trillion in 2035.
And that becomes a huge amount.
And then you see what it does to the debt.
So right now we're sitting here with $37 trillion of debt compared to a GDP.
The whole size of our economy is only 30 trillion, meaning
our debt is bigger than our economy.
That's the only other time this has happened was in World War II.
So we're starting with a huge debt load.
And then no matter really what you do, because the deficit stays high no matter what you
do, the big beautiful bill makes it worse, you could end up out here with 55 trillion
dollars of debt.
So the debt growing faster than the economy, this becomes unsustainable and this is what the
deficit hawks are really focused on. Steve, already bigger than the economy is the national debt and
this would just add to that as you say. This is a large conversation I know, but just briefly,
what are the risks to a debt that is larger than the economy?
Well, what you've seen happen in the last few weeks as this bill has been moving through
Congress is periodic spurts of interest rates moving up.
The federal government has to sell this debt periodically.
It rolls over, it matures, and they have to go out in the market and sell it.
And the risk is that we pay higher and higher interest rates for our debt, and
that in turn, as we'll look at in a few charts, squeezes out other kinds of spending and puts
inordinate pressure on our debt and forces some really, really unpleasant things. At
some point, reversing tax cuts, when the market says it's enough, we're not going to keep
financing these kinds of deficits. It's really a burden we're leaving to our children and
our grandchildren, and that is an incredibly selfish act that we're doing.
All right.
Speaking of tax cuts, let's look to your second chart.
These are, in your words, absolutely massive tax cuts, dwarfing anything we saw from the
first Trump administration.
Yeah.
So this bill, again, there's a bunch of gimmicks in it.
You can look at it as a $2.4 trillion bill.
You can look at it as a $2.4 trillion bill. You can look at it as a $4 trillion increase to the deficit.
But compare it to all the stuff we've done in the last few years,
the bipartisan infrastructure law looks puny compared to this.
The rescue plan, half the size of this.
The CARES Act, which was Trump's COVID rescue plan, $1.7 trillion.
And here, Trump's signature tax bill from his first administration, the Tax Cut and Jobs Act, $1.7 trillion. And here, Trump's signature tax bill from his first administration, the Tax Cut and
Jobs Act, $1.5 trillion.
So compared to his last tax cut, we're talking about something that is massively different.
Why is it so big?
He wants to extend all the tax cuts that were set to expire in the last bill.
This was the gimmick in the last bill.
They use these gimmicks to make these bills look smaller because then they come back and extend the tax cut, increase the
standard deduction, increase the child tax cut.
And then these are a bunch of campaign promises that Trump made, sort of out of nowhere in
states and in places where it would be politically advantageous, no tax on overtime, no tax on
car loan interest, no tax on tips and so forth. They want to
increase defense spending. He promised no taxes on Social Security for seniors.
You can't do that through this process, but he came up with a workaround
to basically provide the same thing. And then there are the cuts. And this is what
Elon Musk is on about rescinding the IRA climate funds. This is the EV tax credit in here.
And these are the Medicaid cut $700 billion, which have not only gotten criticism from
Democrats, but even Republicans like Josh Hawley, a very conservative Republican, has
said this can't happen.
And so, as we talked about in the last block, you've got people on both sides of this pushing
in different directions, which is going to make this unbelievably difficult to get through
the Senate.
And then it has to go back to the House and be reconciled with the bill that they passed.
As you say, that last line, Medicaid cuts, is going to be a big problem.
Let's go to your third chart.
You say debt is difficult to tame.
What are you looking at there?
Well, why did Elon Musk fail so spectacularly?
The president had talked during the campaign about cutting two trillion.
Elon talked about cutting a trillion.
The final number is probably less than 150 billion, maybe 100 billion.
And by the way, yes, people are dying because of that.
That's been now well documented.
But the reason it's so hard to cut is because so much of the budget is kind of off limits
Nobody wants to cut Medicare. Nobody wants to cut Social Security. You can't cut interest. Obviously people want to increase defense
Veterans benefits probably not food stamps
Maybe a little bit something there and then of course you have the Medicaid piece down here
But everything else that's left out of a $7 trillion budget is only about a trillion dollars.
You can't cut $2 trillion out of a trillion dollars.
You can't cut a trillion dollars out of a trillion dollars.
And so that's why, when Doge got in there, they found there really wasn't very much to
do.
But let's just say a word of what could have been, because we've now had 25 years of basic fiscal
irresponsibility going back to the Bush tax cuts in 2001.
And so if we had not increased discretionary spending faster than the economy, we could
have increased it just not as fast as we did.
If we had not had all these tax bills, the Bush tax cuts and then the TCGA and so forth,
the recession response, you could say we really had to do, but it cost a lot of money.
But in any event, if we had not done this stuff, we still would have had a government
that was growing and we would have ended up in 2021 with essentially no debt.
This was the missed opportunity.
Now because so much of the spending is constrained, now because we're paying so much interest. It's impossible to do something like this
Morning Joe economic analyst Steve Ratner. Thank you very much for being on this morning for those explanations
Moving on now several fat family members of the man accused of using a makeshift
Flamethrower to attack a group of people in Colorado have been taken into custody
by immigration and customs enforcement.
The White House made the announcement yesterday on social media posting an image of the suspect
Mohammed Suleiman, an Egyptian national, stating that his family could be deported as early
as last night.
They include the 45-year-old's wife and five children.
Separately, Homeland Security Secretary Christine Noem
posted on social media that DHS is investigating
if Solomons family knew anything about the attack.
Mohammed's despicable actions will be prosecuted
to the fullest extent of the law.
But we're also investigating to what extent his family knew about this horrific attack,
if they had any knowledge of it or if they provided support to it.
Solomon is facing several charges, including attempted first degree murder.
He was in the U.S. on an expired visa, but DHS said he had a pending asylum claim. Authorities say he
threw Molotov cocktails at a group gathered in Boulder on Sunday. They were
peacefully calling for the release of Israeli hostages in Gaza. At least 12
people were injured, eight of them ranging in age from 52 to 88. They were
taken to hospital with burns.
Joining us now, NBC News senior Homeland Security correspondent Julia Ainsley.
Julia, what do we know this morning about the suspect's family?
Well, we know exactly what they said there, that the wife and children were taken into
custody by ICE.
So, six people now in custody, part of the family.
When the White House said they could be expelled from the country, deported as early as last
night, we don't yet know.
I have not heard that they have actually been deported.
But the process they're fast-tracking them on, Mika, is called expedited removal.
That means removal from the country without a court hearing.
And they're going to argue that because of their connection to this case, they could
be fast-tracked for expedited removal.
Now, someone in federal law enforcement may also argue,
well, then what extent, you know, what good does that do
if you're trying to get information from the family
about this incident and trying to do
a thorough investigation?
So I think these are two things
they're going to have to balance,
but in this case, they really want to make a case example
out of this family by arresting them.
And some of them did have visas, as we understand.
There was some reporting last night that those visas have been revoked, and that's something
that we're still looking to confirm from DHS.
Yeah, making an example is understating it, really.
You know, the White House almost gloating a victory lap.
A number of tweets last night about, you know, about this suspect's family rushing them out.
And I was told by a White House advisor late yesterday that this is sort of the plan here.
We know from covering Donald Trump for a long time, his reflex is always to come back to
immigration.
He believes that's a signature issue.
He believes that's what got him elected.
And then Americans want to see things like this.
Now in this case, obviously, we don't know the family's involvement, the suspect is accused
of a heinous crime.
There are certainly plenty of Americans who would be glad to see him go, but might have
questions about the family.
But they're leaning into this sort of in-your-face imagery that didn't necessarily work per polling
earlier this term with the deportations to the
El Salvador prison and the like, but they're doubling down on that sort of
public image now. Yeah, that White House tweet talking about six one-way tickets
for the man's wife and five kids and final boarding coming soon. Again, as
some of those victims still recover in the hospital this morning.
Julia, let's turn to some of your new reporting on the Justice Department
shifting resources
in the second Trump administration to ramp up deportation efforts, sometimes at the expense
of other priorities.
What did you find?
Well, look, Willie, we know that the arrest numbers have been increasing.
We've seen reports across the country.
Now we're seeing the amount of manpower they're putting behind those efforts.
There's a new operation called Operation At Large, and the operation plan was described
to us here, and it includes 5,000 people from across DOJ.
That's FBI, alcohol, tobacco, firearms, DEA, U.S. Marshals.
It includes 500 from CBP pulling them off the border, 250 IRS agents, and they have
a request in that has not yet been approved
by the Pentagon or governors, but for 21,000 National Guard members to help in the support
of this mission.
This comes, this was planned just a week after the infamous, now infamous meeting where Stephen
Miller called in the leaders of ICE and screamed at them, yelled at them, threatened to start
firing the bottom 10% of performers if they didn't get their arrest numbers to 3,000 a
day.
So we're seeing this nationwide effort.
But all of those law enforcement agencies obviously had other jobs.
And oftentimes if they were called into immigration, it would be because there was a real criminal
element to this.
As we understand from Miller's direction to ICE is that they shouldn't just be focusing
on criminals.
They need to spread the net more widely.
And so there's some pushback we're hearing from DOJ and other agencies about how much
of their resources they're being asked to give to immigration.
In fact, this has been coming for some time now where US attorney's offices have said
they feel like they are passing
over U.S. citizens who have committed dangerous crimes, and they're not prosecuting them as
they would have, because the first question that they're asked in any prosecution is,
is this person a legal immigrant?
Because that seems to be the real cash prize here in terms of showing Trump that they're
doing something worth his while.
All right, NBC News senior homeland security correspondent Julia Ainsley, thank you so
much for that new reporting this morning.
The mayor of Newark, New Jersey is suing the state's interim U.S. attorney, Alina Habba.
Mayor Roz Baraka claims Habba violated his constitutional rights when he was arrested
last month at an immigration detention facility in Newark. According to his lawsuit, Baraka
says he was allowed into the detention facility by a security guard. He then claims to have
left as soon as he was asked to and was only arrested after he had left the property.
The misdemeanor trespassing charges against him
were later dropped, but Baraka is alleging
he was arrested for political reasons.
Saying that they've been victimized
by the weaponization of law enforcement,
the weaponization of government, of the courts,
and they've gotten to office and did the exact same thing that they're claiming other people
have done to them without any equivocation whatsoever, just as deliberate and intentional
as they want to be about doing this, telling people they're going to arrest judges, telling
people they're going to arrest anybody, and they're going ahead and doing it, bypassing
the courts and doing whatever they want to do.
And they should be held accountable for this.
The Departments of Justice and Homeland Security did not respond to NBC News' request for comment.
We'll follow that.
And coming up, we're going to bring you the latest on the war in Ukraine.
As one of our next guests argues, Kiev's recent drone attacks on Russia serve as a warning
to the world's other military forces.
Morning Joe, we'll be right back.
Welcome back.
Thirty-eight past the hour, a major bridge used by Russia to arm its forces in Ukraine
has now reopened after Ukraine targeted support structures under the bridge in an attack yesterday.
Ukraine's security service says that shortly before 5 a.m. local time, almost 2,500 pounds
of TNT was detonated underwater, damaging the bridge that connects the illegally
annexed Crimean Peninsula to the Russian mainland.
It marks Ukraine's third strike on the bridge since the start of Russia's full-scale invasion.
Meanwhile, a new piece in the Atlantic is reflecting on this week's drone attack in
Russia and how that stunning assault could reshape war strategy
around the world now that expensive planes, tanks,
and ships can be destroyed on the cheap.
Drones that cost just over $1,000 took out aircraft
that cost many millions.
The piece reads in part, quote,
for the United States and other major Western militaries,
Ukraine's use of trucks parked outside secure areas
near military sites will pose uncomfortable questions.
How closely do they, or can they,
monitor all the truck traffic that streams past their bases?
Do they know what happens in every nearby property from which an adversary could hide
drones, swarms, and then launch them with no warning?
And then for many years now, for instance, Chinese interests have been buying large amounts
of farmland right near important U.S. military bases.
They could be growing soybeans or they could also be staging
grounds for drone swarms that would make the Ukrainian attacks look miniscule.
Joining us now the author of that piece, Professor of Strategic Studies at the
University of St. Andrews in Scotland, Philip Spason O'Brien. Professor, it's
good to have you. This is the beginning of an interesting new era of warfare with these drone swarms used
by the Ukrainians in such a stunning attack.
Do you believe that it's changing the nature of warfare overall?
Well, it's actually been going on for a few years now.
It's just that the large militaries like the US military and European militaries haven't wanted
to fully adjust to the new world we've been seeing.
But the drone, or we might say the cheaper, smaller defensive weapon has been far more
effective in this war than the larger legacy, large system like a tank.
And that's become increasingly so.
The Russians have lost 4,000 tanks.
That's more tanks than all of the rest of Europe has together.
And most of them have been lost
to these small systems like drones.
So that's just the reality of where we are.
And as you said in your piece,
it's an enormous cost differential.
All the drones the Ukrainians used
against the Russians in Operation Spiderweb together
would have cost less than a million dollars.
They destroyed billions of dollars, billions of dollars of Russian equipment.
If we don't understand this cost benefit calculation, we in the United States and in Europe are
going to be in big trouble.
Professor, good morning.
It's great to have you with us.
Can you shed some light for our viewers on how Ukraine pulled this off?
It's really an extraordinary story.
As you say, relatively inexpensive given the cost benefit that you factor in.
How did they do this?
It was very high cost in brain power and low cost in economics.
They took 18 months to plan this.
It's clearly quite extraordinary.
It's one of the reasons I always get so angry when people say, Ukraine can't win the war.
Russia has all the cards.
Russia is so strong.
The Ukrainian military is more adaptive.
It's more creative.
It actually has the ability to plan these kinds of operations.
So far, the Russians don't.
Ukraine can win the war.
But how did they do this?
They started realizing that Russian bases, particularly a long way from Ukraine, were
really still poorly defended.
The Russians were sort of not thinking the Ukrainians could reach them.
So they had to come up with some way to get these drones to these bases.
What they realized was actually traffic was going on as normal around the bases.
The Russians weren't paying any kind of security concerns.
So what they did is they found a way to put false bottom tops, really quite extraordinary,
false tops on pickup trucks, trailer trucks, which they stuffed full of drones, very cheap
drones.
I mean, you could make these things for $1,000. And then they were able to find a way to get them by the bases, maybe using actually drivers
who didn't know what they were doing, so that they could all be launched at one time.
It really was extraordinary.
But they had used some really impressive stuff to plan it, like they had used AI to try and
understand where the weak points were in the Russian aircraft.
So they said, okay, we'll have one shot to get these aircraft without any protection. had used AI to try and understand where the weak points were in the Russian aircraft.
So they said, okay, we'll have one shot to get these aircraft without any protection.
We've got to make it count.
So they were able to program these drones to not only fly out at the Russian aircraft,
but hit in really, really damaging points.
So overall, it was an intellectual and strategic campaign of great, great effect.
It just didn't cost that much.
So Professor, let's now think about what lessons
other countries, namely the United States,
can learn from this.
Yes, that's a way for attack.
But let's talk about defense.
How do you defend yourself against something like this?
You write in your piece, the Chinese, Chinese interests
have bought farmland, a lot of farmland
near US military bases.
That's already raised the eyebrows of some here in the United States. What can the United
States do though to defend aircraft? Because there's some companion reporting in the New
York Times this morning about how in China, a lot of their aircraft, they've already got
hardened shelves. They keep most of their military aircraft in hangars. That's not something
we do here.
Well, right now, I mean, that is probably the most immediate thing to do is at least protect
them by making it so that these drones can't reach them.
These drones are not high explosive in the degree that they can take out a hardened shelter,
but that's expensive and you've got to build them now.
But that would be the immediate thing you would do is provide some kind of protection
to the aircraft so the drone can't reach them.
The problem that we're going to face though is drone technology is going to get better
and better and better.
And so we're going to have to basically, I would say, push the drones as far away as
possible from the base.
You can't have them launch with no time to respond.
And that's what the Ukrainians were able to do.
They launched these things, people were saying, within four miles of the Russian bases. By the time they reached the base, the Russians had no idea what was happening.
And if you're going to provide some coverage to these bases, you're going to have to have
hardened shelters, defensive systems, and time. And time can only be given if you can
push the drones as far away as possible.
Professor of Strategic Studies at the University of St.
Andrews in Scotland, Phillips Payson O'Brien, thank you very much for your insights this
morning. His piece for the Atlantic is available to read online right now and still ahead on
Morning Show, the Trump administration is asking Congress to codify Doge's massive cuts to foreign aid.
But will lawmakers vote for it?
Given the unpopularity of those cuts with some of their constituents,
also ahead we'll look at the impact of President Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs,
which are in effect now.
Plus a major shakeup for the New York Knicks
after their first trip to the Eastern Conference
Finals in 25 years.
That's all straight ahead on Morning Joe. First pitch Freeman.
Lifts one the other way.
Back goes Nemo.
Still back.
Still back.
It is over.
Freddie Freeman drives in Tommy Edmond.
The Dodgers come back and win it in 10.
Freddie Freeman just keeps doing it.
Walks off the Dodgers, walked off the Mets for the Dodgers.
Six-five win over the Mets.
Freeman doubling home the winning run in the 10th inning
after Max Muncie's second home run of the night.
Tied the game in the bottom of the ninth.
The Dodgers earned their 20th comeback win of the season.
20th comeback win.
Improved to two and three against the Mets this year.
Their series continues tomorrow night in Los Angeles.
Sorry guys, in Boston the struggles continue
for the Red Sox last night.
This time against the Angels.
Boston committing three errors, lost by one run
for the impossible 17th time this season.
As the Angels mark consecutive wins for the first time
this last month with a 4-3 win.
Let's check the Red Sox misery index with Mike Barnicle
who joins us on set right now.
I mean, you're only what, 60 games into the season,
you have 17 one run losses.
The odds of that are almost impossible.
Not only that, but last night for me,
just for me personally, was one of the most depressing
losses of this Red Sox season.
Because once you get past three or four players at the top of the lineup, you're filled the
rest of the lineup with career minor leaguers.
And there's no run production in that offense.
There's none.
You leave more men on base than any other team in the major leagues, I think.
And it continues night after night after night, Lemire.
It is deeply frustrating.
They're 29 and 34.
So half of their losses have been won by one run.
They lead the league by far in blown saves.
They are, I'm officially declaring,
I know it's early June, it's no longer early in the season.
They are now, I mean, the division, they're 10 back.
But even in the wild card now, they're five back.
They've lost, they're two and eight in their last 10.
And they have the best prospect in baseball,
Roman Anthony sitting in triple A still.
Holman last night in the ninth inning to tie the game.
And to Mike's point of a moment ago,
there's some real roster construction issues
and some very impatient fans.
And so will they call him up?
Are they gonna?
Oh, he'll, yeah.
They'll call him up very quickly.
But he shouldn't have been up already.
They're going to have to make some roster changes that
are going to be hurtful to some fans.
But they're going to have to do it.
I mean, it is June.
There's time still left.
But how many games are there left in the season?
Like, 95, 98, or something like that.
So we're going to have to win about 60 games out of the rest of the games played in order
to make the playoffs.
And they have to make the playoffs this year, ladies and gentlemen, or else I'm out of there.
You are not out of there.
No, you're not going anywhere.
Yeah, 10 games out and they come to the Bronx for three games this weekend.
So swing things in Miami, the Colorado Rockies.
How about this?
Won consecutive games for just the second time this season, beating the Marlins 3-2 last night.
Secures the team's first series victory in 22 tries and ends a record losing streak dating back to last year.
The Rockies now have 11 wins this season.
All right, let's get to the NBA. The New York Knicks, as we mentioned at the top of the show,
have fired their head coach, Tom Thibodeau.
The decision coming three days after the Knicks
were eliminated by the Indiana Pacers
in game six of the Eastern Conference Finals,
the team's deepest playoff run
in a full quarter of a century.
In a statement, the team thanked Thibodeau
for his contributions,
but said the move was, quote,
best for our organization moving forward. Hired to lead the team ahead of the team thanked Thibodeau for his contributions, but said the move was, quote, best for our
organization moving forward.
Hired to lead the team ahead of the 2020 season, Thibodeau has been the Knicks' most successful
head coach in more than two decades, now ranking fourth on the franchise list of victories
after leading New York to back-to-back 50-win seasons for the first time since 1995.
Let's check out the back page of the tabloids.
Daily News saying just that Tibbetto is out.
And the New York Post with a little more creativity as always.
Tibbetto go.
So let's talk about this, Jonathan Lemire.
I'm a Knicks fan.
You can make the case that if not for game one of that Eastern Conference finals,
Pacers deserve credit for the comeback, that incredible bounce that Halliburton gets to send the game to overtime.
The Knicks win this series and they're in Oklahoma City right now getting ready to play
in the NBA Finals.
In other words, he brought them to the doorstep of the NBA Finals for a team that has not
been there in 25, 26 years, a team that has not won a title since 1973 and yet it wasn't good enough I think a lot of fans and it looks like
the ownership and the leadership didn't like the way
you handle the roster giving the starters so many minutes
grinding them down not using his bench until late in the
season but to me you at least give him another year to see if
you can get over that hump yeah I mean that's been the
pervasive criticism on on tips and all of his stops coaching
that he plays the starters 20 minutes minutes, he wears them out.
And I guess there was a sense that he had reached his ceiling.
But the numbers are very striking.
Under Tom Thibodeau, the Knicks won four playoff series in the last couple of years.
They won four.
Under the previous 13 Knicks coaches combined, they won one playoff series.
So I know there is this sense among sports that certain coaches you know they get to hit their
ceiling and then they get replaced in the new coach
brings to the top we saw at the Yankees buck show Walter Joe
Torrey we saw with you know Tony Dungey and John Gruden in
football like it does happen from time to time like
Barnacle but
you know and clearly some of the star players were OK with
this would have happened otherwise but man like this is
a tough beat for Tom Thibodeau two
wins from the finals now out of a job. I agree with you both you're both NBA-philes okay I'm not a big
NBA guys but I want to ask you a question that's not just restricted to the NBA is this more a case
of the players voting them out rather than management at the top voting about? Well they
voiced support for him after that last game.
I mean, Brunson was asked, I said,
do you think Tibbidoz should come back?
And he got angry.
He says, is that a serious question?
Of course, I believe him.
I think he's an honest guy.
So, but I also don't think that you do this without talking to Jalen Brunson.
You're a generationally great player and maybe I don't know if he signed off on it,
if he's just informed about it ahead of time. But I get that argument about some of the next guy taking the team to the next level.
But what's the evidence that the next guy with this group of players will be better than Tibbs has been at it?
You know what I mean? It's a total gamble to say also who's the next guy.
Right. We don't know. I mean, there's some college coaches are being bandied about.
Hurley, Connecticut, Jay Wright, formerly Villanova, the Villanova connection.
There's an assistant
in Cleveland who's a hot name.
We shall see.
But I agree, this is a tough one.
And I would say I would leave Knicks fans with this concern.
Anytime James Dolan, the owner, is in there making a big decision, those tend to go poorly.
Yeah, and everything comes from the top, particularly in the Knicks organization.