Morning Wire - Trump’s NATO Win & Senate Debates OBBB | 6.26.25

Episode Date: June 26, 2025

Trump secures increased funding from NATO members, Senate Republicans consider the One Big Beautiful Bill, and a therapy student blows the whistle on mandatory training in smut. Get the facts first wi...th Morning Wire.   - - -   Today's Sponsors:   Lumen - Go to https://lumen.me/WIRE to get 10% off your Lumen.   Lean - Get 20% off when you enter MORNINGWIRE20 at https://TakeLean.com   - - -   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 Trump departs the NATO summit with another feather in his cap after convincing U.S. allies to open up their wallets. This week, the NATO allies committed to dramatically increase their defense spending to that 5% of GDP. I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire executive editor John Bickley. It's Thursday, June 26th, and this is Morning Wire. The Senate is set to vote on the one big, beautiful bill. Will the GOP majority hand the president a win on his signature legislation? And a psychology student blows the whistle on her graduate counseling program after it turned into a crash course in sexual fetishes. My final straw was a sex dungeon tour in which a woman was flogged, gagged, and wrapped bare in plastic.
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Starting point is 00:02:01 Thank you, Lumen, for sponsoring this episode. And a significant foreign policy victory for President Trump, European allies, agreed Wednesday to his demands that they increase defense spending. Daily Wire senior editor Cabot Phillips is here to break it all down. So Cabot the annual NATO summit wrapped up and Trump got his wish. What happened? Yeah, President Trump was still taking a sort of victory lap following his successful strikes on Iran and the subsequent ceasefire. And on Wednesday, he scored yet another feather in his foreign policy cap. For years, Trump has been a vocal critic of NATO, saying the U.S. is being taken advantage of by our allies there,
Starting point is 00:02:37 who spend far less money than we do on defense for the alliance. He arrived at the Hague this week, demanding that member states up their defense spending from 2% of GDP to 5% and they quickly agreed. Leaders from all 32 NATO states signed a declaration committing to, quote, invest 5% of GDP annually on core defense requirements as well as defense and security-related spending by 2035. That means a trillion-plus dollars in new defense spending from all across Europe.
Starting point is 00:03:06 Here's President Trump announcing. that significant move. This week, the NATO allies committed to dramatically increase their defense spending to that 5% of GDP, something that no one really thought possible. And they said, you did it, sir, you did it. Well, I don't know if I did it, but I think I did. Now, for context, one country, the United States currently accounts for more than two-thirds of NATO's entire defense budget. Here's NATO Secretary General Mark Ruta to that point. For too long, one ally, the United States carried too much of the burden of that commitment, and that changes today. President Trump, dear Donald, you made this change possible.
Starting point is 00:03:49 Your leadership on this has already produced one trillion dollars an extra spending from European allies since 2016. And the decisions today will produce trillions more for our common defense to make us stronger and fairer by equalizing spending between America and America's allies. So in exchange for that increased defense spending, for his part, President Trump reiterated his commitment to abiding by Article 5. That is the NATO clause that says an attack on one member is an attack on all. Ahead of the summit, he had expressed doubts about Article 5, saying he wasn't sure where he
Starting point is 00:04:25 stood on it and that it, quote, depends on your definition. But once the other members agreed to step up funding, the president offered his full support for Article 5. That's why I'm here. If I didn't stand with it, I wouldn't be here. Now, there was one outlier that was dragging their feet with this new defense plan. Tell us about that country.
Starting point is 00:04:42 Yeah, while some countries may have been upset about that increased spending, only one really said so out loud. That was Spain. While they technically signed onto the deal, their prime minister said 5% was, quote, unacceptable and would force him to cut social services. Instead, they planned to up their spending from 1.2% to 2%.
Starting point is 00:04:59 So not much of an increase. That clearly angered Trump. who said it in response that he would make them pay higher tariffs. Oh, I think Spain's terrible what they've done. No, I do. They're the only country that won't pay the full up. They want to stay at 2%. I think it's terrible.
Starting point is 00:05:15 We're negotiating with Spain on a trade deal. We're going to make them pay twice as much. And I'm actually serious about that. Well, we'll see if Spain changes their tune there. Now, a major focus of this conference has been the Iran and Israel War. What's the latest there? Yeah, there were questions coming in about how NATO members would respond to President Trump strikes this past weekend,
Starting point is 00:05:35 and they were largely supportive. Later on, President Trump also refuted reports that Iran's nuclear facilities only suffered minor damage in those strikes, and he reiterated that their nuclear program was, quote, completely and fully obliterated. He then announced that Iranian officials will be meeting with the U.S. next week to ensure the country does not pursue a nuclear weapon in the future. Well, if this ceasefire holds, that is a serious win for the whole region.
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Starting point is 00:06:57 Again, that's Code Morningwire20 at Takelein.com today. I'm not for raising the debt ceiling $5 trillion. I think that's a mistake to have such a large expansion of the credit line to a Congress that is shown disregard for fiscal responsibility. That was Kentucky Senator Rand Paul voicing his concerns over President Trump's big, beautiful bill. The Republican-led Senate is set to vote on that bill this week, despite some continued divisions within the GOP. Joining us now to discuss is Stephen Myron, chairman of the Nonpartisan Council of Economic Advisor, Chairman Thank you so much for coming on. My pleasure. Thanks for having me.
Starting point is 00:07:38 Now, we're expecting a Senate vote on the one big, beautiful bill this Friday. What are the pain points within the bill that have some senators threatening to vote no? Look, you know, it is so important that we get this one big bill, this one big beautiful bill over the line. Because if we don't, it's going to be the biggest tax hike in history. It's going to be a $4 trillion tax hike on American families and American workers. It'll plunge the economy to recession. The number one sticking point that some senators are hung up on is the debt and the deficit. And I understand why they're concerned.
Starting point is 00:08:09 But what I think these senators hopefully will come to understand, and we just put it a paper on the Council of Economic Advisers website on this yesterday morning, is that we are taking a holistic approach to reducing the deficit. And there's been, I think, too much of a focus on the score from the congressional budget office, which really looks at only a small part of the deficit picture. It just looks at sections of the bill in isolation without thinking about the big picture. But the big picture is there's lots of stuff that's going on to reduce the deficit. And what are those exactly? Can you unpack that for us?
Starting point is 00:08:39 So on our calculations, we're going to reduce deficits by about $8.5 to $11 trillion of a 10-year budget window. Now, those are absolutely huge numbers, but let me tell you how we get them. First of all, better economic growth. Economic growth boosts revenue for the government because more economic activity means more income. more income means more tax revenues. More tax revenues reduce the deficit. And so the best way to reduce the deficit in debt is to grow the economy. And there are very powerful incentives in there for creating economic investment, right? Things like full expensing of factories, full expensing of equipment and R&D. Those are extraordinarily powerful incentives to get firms to invest in America,
Starting point is 00:09:18 to get firms to invest in American economic growth, to build new facilities, new sites, new factories, and hire new workers. We're cutting red tape everywhere we can. There's also lots of revenues from tariffs, right? We'll get about $3 trillion of revenue from tariffs over the next decade. We'll get about $1.5 trillion of savings from discretionary budget cuts to waste fraud and abuse, right? These are the things the White House has laid out on its budget a few weeks ago. So you add all these things up. You get to about $8.5 to $11 trillion deficit savings over the 10-year window. It's really truly historic. So you're arguing that when the CBO says the bill will add three trillion to the debt over the next decade, it effectively fails to take into account the growth aspects of the bill.
Starting point is 00:10:01 CBO just ignores growth altogether. CBO is also ignoring in its score tariff revenue, right? Tariffs are bringing in hundreds of billions of dollars of revenue every year going forward. So tariff revenue raised from foreigners to pay for to finance, to pay for tax cuts in Americans is just amazing policy. Now, Trump touts this bill as pro-family, pro-business, and pro-war. How do provisions in this bill help the average American? 60% of the vans on Amazon proven of a vendor-independent like Sac Magic. Hello, here Camille, of Sac Magic.
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Starting point is 00:10:46 everyone prefer. At from here, we're grandi. Trouve of little enterprises like our own on Amazon.ca. So the number one best way to help the average American is to create an environment
Starting point is 00:11:01 in which the economy is booming and therefore firms want to hire them. And that is what this bill does. Deregulation, creating a pro-business environment in which businesses are expanding and expansion requires more workers. More workers require more wages, right?
Starting point is 00:11:15 And so workers will bid up for employees. So this is a blue-collar boom aimed at working Americans. It worked in the past. It'll work again. Americans know that, and that's why they overwhelmingly voted in a landslide to give President Trump a second term. We'll soon see if the GOP gets the votes to pass this chairman. Thank you so much for joining us. My pleasure. Thanks for happening.
Starting point is 00:11:36 The following story is not appropriate for younger listeners. A California psychology student training to be a therapist is blowing the whistle on alleged ideological bias in required sexual disclosure in therapy training. Naomi Epps Best says she was required to write a sexual autoist. autobiography and was subjected to gratuitous amounts of smut in one of her classes. Daily Wire investigative reporter, Marade Alorty, has more. So Marade, this is a crazy story. What is this graduate student claiming is happening at her Catholic university? Hi, Georgia. Yes, so Naomi Epps Best is a graduate counseling psychology student. She's 26 and she's a wife and mom of a one-year-old, and earlier this month, she decided to go public with allegations against Santa Clara University near San Jose. We interviewed best
Starting point is 00:12:24 about this situation. Here's what she said happened in her human sexuality class. I immediately discovered in the syllabus, sadomasochistic erotica, a crassly written pornographic illustration guide, and the final exam was an eight to ten page comprehensive sexual autobiography. When did I start masturbating, chronicle my sexual past and present. I requested an accommodation not to complete this sexual autobiography, and I was denied. I went up the chain to the professor, the chair, the dean, the provost, the president, the Title IX office, the campus ministry office, and the ombudsman. And I was met with institutional indifference to my ethical concerns. Best said she still had to take the human sexuality course to graduate, so she enrolled
Starting point is 00:13:11 again and asked for the accommodation that she had heard was offered to Muslim students, that is, to take the class remotely. But instead, the professor asked to meet with her and promise that there would be no required sexual disclosure and everything would be professional. In this new class, I was required to write something down anonymously about my, something I disliked about my breasts or my genitals. We watched bondage videos, tutorial videos. I walked out of that class. The images were quite disturbing of the violence against this woman.
Starting point is 00:13:43 And there's an argument to be made that therapists should be aware of the breadth of human sexual practices, including BDSM. I am not contesting that. But the manner in which this material was presented was promotional. And when the video ended, the professor said, so what do you think? Who wants to try it? There was no clinical framing.
Starting point is 00:14:05 I want to be able to talk with clients about sex if they want to talk about it. Best said she was also disturbed by a trans-identifying psychologist who allegedly came to the class as a guest speaker. And she also said the main professor who goes by they, them, talked about attending kink. festivals. That person also described their own erotic response to viewing themselves in the mirror. And that level of personal sexual disclosure from a psychologist is unethical. Best said she went up the chain at Santa Clara University, but her official complaint was ultimately dismissed. I filed a Title IX complaint alleging quid pro quo sexual harassment because they were requiring me to write my comprehensive sexual autobiography as a condition of receiving
Starting point is 00:14:50 a degree. We reached out to Sande Clear University and they claimed their human sexuality class has been taught with a similar approach and similar assignments since the mid-1990s and the schools say, quote, we do not agree with many of the students' public assertions about the class and that, quote, people who were present dispute best characterization of classroom discussions and course content. Psychology and counseling has been ideologically captured. That means that there is one permissible worldview for upcoming therapists to hold. and it is grounded in critical theory. This is happening at educational institutions, training grounds,
Starting point is 00:15:28 in professional bodies, and licensing and accreditation bodies. We need a set of therapists with diverse worldviews and more importantly, tolerance for people with diverse worldviews, including traditional and religious ones. Well, it's hard to shock me at this point, but this did. Marade, thanks for reporting. Thanks, Georgia. Thanks for waking up with us.
Starting point is 00:15:52 And if you're watching on YouTube, like and subscribe. We'll be back this evening on DailyWire, Apple, Amazon, and Spotify with the news you need to know.

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