Morning Wire - Newsom Campaigns for 2028 & Education Dept Downsizes | 7.16.25

Episode Date: July 16, 2025

California Governor Gavin Newsom hits the road, new economic data shows a slight uptick in inflation, and the Supreme Court rules to allow mass layoffs for the Department of Education. Get the facts f...irst with Morning Wire.   - - -   Today's Sponsors:   DeleteMe - Take control of your data and keep your private life private. Get 20% off your DeleteMe plan when you text WIRE to 64000. Message and data rates may apply.   Good Ranchers - Visit https://goodranchers.com and subscribe to any box using code WIRE to claim $40 off + free meat for life!   - - -   Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:03 With 2028 in his sights, Gavin Newsom goes on offense, attacking red states and defending his leadership in California. You hit me right there, man. The California exit, by the way, complete bullshit now. I'm Daily Wire, executive editor John Vickley with Georgia Howl. It's Wednesday, July 16th, and this is Morning Wire. Inflation ticks up, fueling President Trump's calls for an interest rate cut. They've had some big forecasting errors, and this may be one now. And Trump gets the go-ahead for layoffs at the Department of.
Starting point is 00:00:39 of education. What happens next? Thanks for waking up with Morning Wire. Stay tuned. We have the news you need to know. Right now, the headlines are chock full of data breaches and regulatory rollbacks, making us all vulnerable. But you can do something about it. Delete Me is here to make it easy, quick, and safe to remove your personal data online. Delete Me provides regular personalized privacy reports detailing what information was found, where it was located, and what exactly was removed. Plus, Delete Me works continuously for you, not just once. It's constantly, monitoring and removing unwanted personal information from the internet.
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Starting point is 00:01:45 The only way to get 20% off is to text wire to 64,000. That's wire to 64,000. Message and data rates may apply. Democrat Governor Gavin Newsom appears to be ramping up for a presidential run, while his state of California continues to battle a number of crises. Here to discuss is Daily Wire reporter Amanda Presser, Jacamo. Hey, Amanda. So there's been long speculation that Newsom is eyeing a 2028 run for the White House. the last month. He's made that really clear that this is his intention. So catch us up to speed.
Starting point is 00:02:15 What have we seen from him lately? Yeah, well, just last week, Governor Newsom visited South Carolina for a two-day tour. He met with local Democrat leaders and voters. He said he was there to discuss federal health care cuts, but it's pretty clear this was political. South Carolina might be a red state, but it's become the Democrats' first primary state and therefore it's significant if you're looking to become the Democrats guy in 2028. Here's Newsom talking to South Carolina voters, hitting on cultural issues and sounding a lot like a candidate. They're banning speech in classrooms but also in the boardrooms. DEI, ESG, CRT.
Starting point is 00:02:51 They're trying to bring us back to a pre-1960s. In addition to launching his own new podcast, where he's hosted a number of right-wing figures, Newsom is moderating his views. He's proposed limiting free health care coverage for illegals, and he's suggested that he's not totally on board with males who identify as transgender in girls' sports. More recently, he appeared on the Sean Ryan podcast, which is generally viewed as right of center. During the four-hour-long episode, Newsom said he was directing an objective review of California COVID policies. California had some of the strictest lockdown orders in the nation. And politically, this was pretty bad for Newsom.
Starting point is 00:03:28 It sparked a significant exodus out of California. And, you know, famously, he was caught dining at the very posh French laundry while Californians were locked down. Yeah, hard to forget that moment. So he's trying to get out ahead of all that COVID controversy. Yeah, that's pretty clear. And, you know, he's also trying to back away from the increasingly unpopular position of supporting trans procedures for minors. Remember, Newsome, California, the first sanctuary state for minors who were seeking these life-altering surgeries. Here's Ryan asking Newsom if an eight-year-old is too young to transition. I mean, is eight years old too young?
Starting point is 00:04:05 Yeah, I mean, look, now that I have a nine-year-old, it just became nine. Come on, man, I get it. So those are legit. You know, it's interesting. Just the issue of age, I haven't, as I am, as someone that's been so focused on, on equality, broadly, LGBT rights, particularly old gay marriage. The trans issue for me is also novel. It's over the last few years. I'm trying to understand as much as anyone else. So again, seeming to moderate, though, not really going on the record and saying anything directly there. Right, right. That's pretty common with
Starting point is 00:04:48 Newson. And then we have Newsome praising California and other Democrat-run areas for tax revenue surpluses. And we're, by the way, a donor state. We provided $83.1 billion more than we received from the federal government, Texas took $71.1 billion. Now, California is a top state when it comes to tax revenue to the federal governments. That's, of course, no surprise. The state is huge, and there are a lot of very wealthy people who live there. However, California has a lot of major problems. The cost of living is one of the highest in the nation and typically so are gas prices.
Starting point is 00:05:19 Electricity costs are rising. Insurance costs are at a crisis point. Homelessness is worse in California than any other state. Nearly 25% of all homeless people reside in California. There have been issues with drugs and human feces on the streets, especially in San Francisco. Newsom was asked about that, specifically about how this was all very quickly cleaned up for a short amount of time when California hosted Chinese president Xi Jinping. And it seemed like all of that was cleaned up when she came to town. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:50 Is that true? Complete bullshit. Here's Newsom in 2023. I know folks say, oh, they're just cleaning. up this place because all those fancy leaders are coming in a town. That's true because it's true. So a lot of moderating and reframing past controversies and unfavorable positions. And it's also clear that Newsom is trying to be the lead figure in this resistance effort against Trump. Well, a lot said there and suggested more like, but the actions or what matter.
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Starting point is 00:07:34 Yeah, economists and investors alike wait with bated breath each month for these reports to come out, as they provide a helpful snapshot of the overall health of the economy. Now, when President Trump first took office, economists had offered really apocalyptic warnings that his trade policy, specifically tariffs, would cause inflation to spike. Month after month, though, inflation fell significantly below expectations. expectations, defying all of their warnings. But on Tuesday, the latest inflation report showed that rates were going up, even if ever so slightly. Consumer prices went up 2.7% compared to the same month last year, while core inflation was at 2.9%. The goods most impacted were natural gas,
Starting point is 00:08:12 coffee, and beef, all of which were up around 10% compared to last year, while gasoline, televisions, and smartphones were all down around 10% on average. For more on the report, I spoke with Joe LaVorna, a senior advisor to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessett. The numbers met expectations, so they were not hardly bad at all. And on the CPI, the core CPI, that was weaker than expected. In fact, every month that President Trump's been in office, the core CPI, which some consider to be the underlying trend in inflation, has either met or surprise to the downside.
Starting point is 00:08:43 But if you look into CPI and you look at goods prices broadly defined, excluding food and energy, which is the way you probably should look at it, prices are up only up a couple of tents and they've been very well contained. So it sounds like the Trump administration isn't too worried about this. They are not. They're confident this is just a blip on the radar. And to their point, the context is important. Remember, from 2021 to 2024, people would have done anything to have a 2.7% rate. Inflation peaked at 9%.
Starting point is 00:09:11 And there was a two-year span where it was above 6% every single month. But this is really the first step we've seen in the wrong direction since Trump took office. And now his critics say that his terror. are to blame. So let's get into that. What's their argument? Well, they say that there's simply no way for businesses to pay a 20% tariff without passing at least some of that cost on to consumers. To that point, last month, furniture, toys and clothing all saw relatively significant price increases, and those are all items particularly sensitive to tariffs. Critics say this is just the start. They believe companies are trying to hold off on full price increases until President Trump sets
Starting point is 00:09:48 his final rates in September, which point they say prices will really take off. But again, for the time being, we really only seen a modest uptick that is nowhere near what economists have been projecting. Here's Lovorne's take on that. I would say that in general, the inflation numbers have been absolutely fantastic, meaning they've been much lower than virtually everybody, perhaps outside the administration had thought there's really been no noticeable impact of tariffs at all. In fact, A lot of the imported goods the CEA had done analysis on showed that at least through May, you actually had disinflation or deflation in many of these categories. So the inflation news has been great, and we believe the trend will actually get better,
Starting point is 00:10:31 meaning you'll see even lower inflation going forward. 60% of the vans on Amazon, provi, a vendor-independent, like Sac Magic. Hello, here Camille, of Sac Magic. Our compresses chode-fraud are fabriced here even, with the tissue that we're chisette
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Starting point is 00:10:58 Trouvee like the other on our own oner. Now, how is President Trump responded to
Starting point is 00:11:06 these latest numbers? He has not said anything. He's been totally quiet. No, I'm kidding.
Starting point is 00:11:10 Of course you know, he weighed in. once again urging Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to cut interest rates. Now, historically, the Fed has lowered rates when inflation is low, but Powell has been remarkably hesitant to do so, prompting Trump to accuse him of keeping rates high for political purposes. Here's Trump at the White House yesterday. Exactly as anticipated, very low inflation.
Starting point is 00:11:32 So what you should do is lower the rate. The Fed should lower the rate immediately. Now, President Trump has repeatedly called on Powell to resign, and he's even gone so far, as hinting that he might fire him. But he can only do that with cause. So it means he'll likely have to wait until 2026 for a new chairman. That's when Powell's term expires. Well, the markets don't seem to be that concerned about tariffs anymore.
Starting point is 00:11:54 Cabot, thanks for reporting. Absolutely. The Supreme Court says President Trump can move forward with mass layoffs at the Education Department. It's the latest in a string of wins for the Trump administration at the High Court. And Daily Wire investigative reporter, Moray DeLorty, is here to tell us what this means. for the department going forward. Hamerate, so first, what did the court decide? Hi, John.
Starting point is 00:12:17 Yes, so the Supreme Court decided Monday that Trump can go ahead with his plans to dismantle the Education Department. This was one of his key campaign promises. The court voted six to three along ideological lines to block a lower court's order. A federal judge in Boston said in May that about 1,400 employees of the Education Department must be allowed to return to work after they were fired in mass layoffs earlier this year. Now the Trump administration will be able to fire them, at least while the rest of the legal challenge plays out. And Trump said on truth social, that's exactly what they'll do.
Starting point is 00:12:50 He wrote, the federal government has been running our education system into the ground, but we are going to turn it all around by giving the power back to the people. America's students will be the best, brightest, and most highly educated anywhere in the world. Education Secretary Linda McMahon reacted to Monday's ruling. This lifts the handcuffs off of what we've been trying to do, which really is to get education back to the states where the president believes it does belong. Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote a pretty angry dissent accusing the conservative justices of making an indefensible decision. Sotomayor argued that Trump is trying to illegally shudder the department without congressional approval. The other two liberal justices, Katanji Brown Jackson and
Starting point is 00:13:30 Elena Kagan, joined Sotomayor's dissent. Now, what will the staff reduction actually look like? Does this entail firing any teachers? No. So in March, Trump signed an executive order dismantling the Department of Education at the federal level. As we mentioned, this was one of his key campaign promises to shift more control to local communities and parents. So also in March, Education Secretary Linda McMahon slashed about half of her department's workforce. That's about 1,400 staffers. Here's Trump talking about the cuts. They're number one, not showing up to work. Number two, they're not doing a good job. We have a dream. And you know what the dream is? We're going to move the Department of Education. We're going to move education into the states so that
Starting point is 00:14:10 the states, instead of bureaucrats working in Washington, so that the states can run education. So after that, the administration was hit with two lawsuits. One was filed by a pair of Massachusetts school districts in the American Federation of Teachers Union, and the other was filed by 21 Democratic attorneys general. And eventually this case ended up at the Supreme Court. And Republicans do eventually want Congress to fully shut down the department. Here's Secretary McMahon talking about how this would actually help students. We just got the NAEP scores. at the end of January, that's the nation's report card. And we saw the state of Louisiana come up.
Starting point is 00:14:46 I think there were number one in improvement in bringing their scores up. We had the Mississippi miracle in which those readers and their literacy test came literally from almost bottom in the country to now reading it at average level, which was an incredible jump. So there are states that have been innovative and aggressive in what they've been doing, and they didn't need the Department of Education to do it. And remind us, what are the criticisms against the education department? Why is this such a big priority for the administration?
Starting point is 00:15:18 Well, critics have pointed out that the education department doesn't do much educating. Though it spends $80 billion in taxpayer dollars each year, it has no say over public school curriculums, which are decided at the state and local levels. Instead, it doles out $18.4 billion annually for Title I, the low-income school district program, and $15.5 billion for special education. It also enforces certain Title IX civil rights laws and sets the rules for colleges to participate in the 1.6 trillion federal student loan program. The Trump administration says other departments are better equipped to manage these programs. And by the way, under the Trump administration, the Education Department has terminated over $600 million in grants for training teachers in divisive ideologies, including social justice activism, anti-racism, and recruiting teachers based on race. Seems like there's still quite a bit of fat left to cut there. Marais, thanks for reporting.
Starting point is 00:16:11 Thanks, John. Thanks for waking up with us. And if you're watching on YouTube, please like and subscribe. We'll be back later this evening with more news you need to know.

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