No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen - New Epstein revelation undercuts Trump's DOJ
Episode Date: February 4, 2026An explosive new revelation from the Epstein files makes national news. Brian interviews Ro Khanna, Don Lemon, Dan Pfeiffer, and Mark Warner.Shop merch: https://briantylercohen.com/shopYouTub...e: https://www.youtube.com/user/briantylercohenTwitter: https://twitter.com/briantylercohenFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/briantylercohenInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/briantylercohenPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/briantylercohenNewsletter: https://www.briantylercohen.com/sign-upWritten by Brian Tyler CohenProduced by Sam GraberRecorded in Los Angeles, CASee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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An explosive new revelation from the Epstein Files makes national news,
and I've got four interviews, Roecona, Don Lemon, Dan Pfeiffer, and Mark Warner.
I'm Brian Tyler Cohen, and you're listening to No Lie.
We've got an explosive new revelation from the Epstein Files,
but first I want to set the stage because just days ago,
the Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche offered up this insane announcement
about Epstein's co-conspirators, or lack thereof.
We said in July, and it remains as true today as it was in July,
If we had information, we meeting the Department of Justice, about men who abused women, we would prosecute them, right?
We talked about the work that we're doing.
That's why I said that.
I said this earlier.
There's this built-in assumption that somehow there's this hidden trance of information of men that we know about, that we're covering up or that we're choosing not to prosecute.
That is not the case.
I don't know whether there are men out there that abuse these women.
And if we learn about information and evidence that that allows us to prosecute them, you better believe we will.
But I don't think that the public or you all are going to uncover men within the Epstein files that abuse women, unfortunately.
So that's it, apparently.
No other co-conspirators, just a sex trafficking ring where the more than thousand girls got trafficked nowhere to no one, which is convenient if you're, oh, I don't know, looking to cover for your friends who are also implicated in the Epstein files.
Well, it turns out that at least one of the documents that was released poses quite a problem for Todd Blanche and his narrative.
So that document that was released in this latest tranche reads, quote, from redacted to Jeffrey Epstein, thank you for a fun night.
your littlest girl was a little naughty.
So, I'm sorry, but if you're Todd Blanche,
how do you square your comment that no one else is involved
and we shouldn't expect any prosecutions from the DOJ
when emails like this one exist?
And why on God's green earth is that name redacted?
I'm assuming that it wasn't a victim who wrote to Jeffrey Epstein
that his littlest girl was a little naughty.
So if someone can explain to me why the DOJ is acting
as the personal criminal defense attorney for Epstein's co-conspirators,
I'm all ears.
In fact, while this one document already unto itself debunks Todd Blanche's statement,
it's not even necessary because back in December,
an email was released that explicitly mentioned the existence of co-conspirators.
So the contents of that email read, in part,
Good Morning, ASC, redacted, is requesting an update on the 10 co-conspirators by close of business today.
Can you tell us how many have been located, interviewed, served with grand jury subpoenas?
I believe the breakdown was five in New York, one in North Carolina,
one in Boston and three in Florida.
Please let me know if you need anything from us.
Thank you.
Redacted, Violent Crime Section,
Crimes Against Children, Human Trafficking Unit.
And the response email reads, quote,
of the 10 co-conspirators,
three have been located in Florida and served grand jury subpoenas,
one in Boston, one in New York,
one in Connecticut were located and served.
Four of the 10 are outstanding,
with attempts having been made.
One is a wealthy businessman in Ohio.
A lead is being sent to CV.
The remaining three are currently out of pocket.
So I'm sorry, but what are we doing here?
Why is the DOJ, under Todd Blanche, making sweeping proclamations that nobody else is involved
when there are emails by prosecutors, who, by the way, are usually circumspect enough
not to admit to the existence of co-conspirators in writing if they don't exist?
Like, if there are emails from some redacted name thanking Epstein for a good time with his littlest
girls, at some point the cover-up becomes so apparent that it's hard not to believe that
the Justice Department is just working on Epstein's behalf and spitting in the face
of the survivors who they claim to care about.
So look, if Trump's DOJ wants to continue engaging in this farce, that's their prerogative.
But they are losing their base.
They are losing their country.
And frankly, they're losing the plot.
The federal government is supposed to bring pedophiles to justice, not protect them from it.
But apparently, that's not the priority of Trump or any of his other accessories after the fact.
Next up are my interviews with Rokana, Don Lemon, Dan Pfeiffer, and Mark Warner.
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I'm joined by the author of the Epstein Transparency Act.
Rokana, Congressman, thanks for joining me.
Ryan, great to be back.
So we have a big release of the Epstein files, about 3 million documents.
Obviously, everyone's going through them right now,
and we're going to see more and more from what has been uncovered.
But something notable is that the Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanche, has come out
and basically said, sure, there were 6 million documents.
What you're getting are 3 million documents.
And so are you satisfied that it seems like the DOJ,
is basically wiping their hands of this thing
after giving half of what was ultimately promised?
No, and Massey and I are going to meet Blanche.
He said he's open to meeting us,
but here's what I want folks to put into context.
The 50% that have been released is so disturbing,
so concerning about how wealthy and powerful people
in this country acted.
Imagine what is in the files that they haven't released.
I mean, this is a scandal that basically goes to the heart of this country.
Rich and powerful people were getting away with going to Epstein's Island, with watching
the abuse of underage girls.
And so we're going to fight to get everything out, especially given that they're concealing
things.
In terms of what we have seen thus far, I think something that was especially striking for me
was Elon Musk's involvement in all of this.
Can I have any reaction from your vantage on what we saw from Elon Musk, given the fact that the first indication that Trump was even in the files was from Elon himself, only for us now to be able to see that he was negotiating helicopter rides to go back and forth.
There was one point on Christmas Day, either in 2013 or 2014, where he was trying to figure out what time he would come the following week on January 2nd or 3rd.
And so just your general reaction to the fact that Elon is so prevalent here.
Well, it's totally shocking.
I mean, because Musk said, released the files, Trump is in it.
Well, it turns out Musk is in them.
And Musk is saying that when is the party?
He's talking about visiting the island.
And look, there are so many big tech names.
Peter Thiel, Bill Gates, others were in this.
And it's like there was some fraternity.
If you were a billionaire and successful in America.
and you were a famous politician,
then somehow you were connected to Epstein
and somehow you wanted to go to these parties
on Epstein's Island, knowing he was a pedophile.
I mean, let's be very clear,
this is after he was convicted of pedophilia,
knowing that there could be underage girls there.
So this is just such a staggering scandal.
I mean, imagine the average American
thinking that all these people run the country,
leaders, politicians are showing up at a pedophiles island. Some of them engaging in gratification
with underage girls, some of them raping underage girls, some of them trafficking in these women,
and some of them just standing around in the parties knowing what's going on. It is disgusting.
Well, I think something that's almost as disgusting as that is the fact that far from that being a
disqualifying factors, you know, you're being invoked in these Epstein files, is the fact that even
now, it still seems to be completely acceptable for these people to fill the highest ranks of
power. I mean, uh, uh, uh, Warsh, who is Trump's pick to be the new Fed chair, his name was in the
Epstein files. Howard Lutnik, his name is in the Epstein files. And so it's not some, not some
bygone thing of a bygone era where we had all of the, where we had past tense, all of
these people at the highest echelons of government who were in some way involved with Jeffrey
Epstein. It's still happening. It's right in front of us. I mean, how many people in Trump's
administration or Trump's orbit from Trump himself?
to Steve Bannon, again, Lutnik, Warsh, there are so many people, even now, who are in the highest
echelons of power, who are still hiding some, you know, some association with Jeffrey Epstein.
And so recognizing that, that gives me very little confidence that these people are actually
going to be willing to release what the files actually show, or the full breadth of these files,
because it's not just that there's some nebulous blob of people that are, that Trump and his
orbit are trying to protect. The Trump orbit is the nebulous blob of people in part that they're
trying to protect. Well, Brian, you nailed it on what survivors tell me and why survivors
are so concerned. It's not that they need closure for something that happened in the past.
It's that they are seeing the people on the island who are part of this network, who may have
rape them or trafficked them on their TV sets, being lionized, celebrated, still holding power
in American society.
And their view is that the entire Epstein class needs to go.
But it is why I don't have confidence that there has been a full release.
It's why I want to see what this 50% of documents that even Blanche says hasn't been released,
what is in them.
why are they more concerned about redactions that protect some of these rich and powerful men
than they are actually protecting victims' identity?
It's going to take a new president to actually prosecute some of this.
Remember, the prosecution is statute of limitations as five years,
or to release all the files.
But we are going to continue to fight to get this done.
And the scandal is beyond Trump.
But it's just the sense that the highest, richest, wealthiest people in our society were getting
away with the most heinous thing.
And it feeds this narrative in this country that people intuitively sense, which is that the rich
and powerful have a rigged game going on.
And that ordinary Americans don't have the same sense of justice.
And they don't certainly have the same stake of success in this country.
You know, I spoke with Congressman Raskin.
And he said that that he would be.
meeting with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche to discuss the prospect of viewing the
unredacted files because we have so many redactions in these files that the DOJ did actually
deign to give over.
So notwithstanding the three million documents that haven't been handed over yet and probably
aren't going to be handed over by this DOJ, even the documents that were put forward included
a ton of redactions.
And so are you going to be involved in any way in that whole effort?
at the hands of Jamie Raskin to get some answers on what has been redacted thus far.
Absolutely.
We will coordinate with Jamie Raskin, but Thomas Maskey and I also will be meeting Blanche.
And we want to know why some of these redactions took place, what is in those files,
how can we get the maximum information to be released, and why some of the 302 forms still haven't been released,
the survivors naming these powerful men, and why survivors' names were not redacted,
while these men are still being protected.
The mine were it starts what the survivors and survivors' lawyers say,
and they are still very disappointed with the release.
They acknowledge that this is the most significant release that has taken place over decades.
They, in some sense, didn't even think that we'd get this far.
But, you know, they think this is a tactic for justice to say,
look, we did give you quite a lot.
Now, just leave us alone.
And then we don't get the most nuclear information.
the things that may prove criminal wrongdoing and that really will discuss Americans.
I want to say two things.
One is a question, but before I get to that question, you know, the fact that we have gotten
these documents thus far, the three million documents, is in large part of testament to the
work that you and Thomas Massey have done.
So I just want to put that out there for folks who are even surprised at the fact that
we've gotten these documents.
It would not have happened without the work that you guys have done.
So I just want to say thanks, you know, on behalf of...
myself and everybody watching this right now.
But the second point that I want to make is, you know, you and I have spoken in the past about,
okay, you have people like Todd Blanche saying that no one's going to be prosecuted as the result of this.
And in fact, that's been kind of the line we've heard all along from Dan Bongino and Cash Patel,
that apparently there was this whole sex trafficking ring, but nobody that the girls were sex trafficked, too.
That part is just completely nebulous.
There's just, just Jeffrey Epstein and then a black hole, thousands of girls.
I've also asked you about the fact that, like, why not just have the survivors come out and start naming names?
Like, if the DOJ isn't going to do it, if they're going to be so hellbent on protecting these people,
why not go to the primary sources and have them speak out?
And you rightfully noted that, you know, for the same reason that the DOJ feels compelled to protect these powerful and wealthy people,
the survivors are reticent to name these powerful and wealthy people.
And so is there going to come a point where that remains a possibility?
Obviously, with whatever protection or backing needs to come with it, that that is a stopgap solution
in the event the DOJ truly doesn't comply and we go three more years at the hands of Pam Bondi
where we just don't get any more documents.
The reality is that these survivors will be sued.
It's not theoretical.
We know Alan Dershowitz went after Virginia Guthrie with a vengeance and made her life miserable.
and Virginia Guthrie today isn't with us.
So they know that they would face the wrath of these powerful billionaires.
Would they just be sued because like the people who they name would just sue them for defamation for example?
That's what Alan Dershowitz did.
They would just be sued for defamation.
They'd be sewn for causing pain and suffering reputational damage.
Oh, yes.
Won't someone look out for the poor innocent?
perpetrators of these crimes. That's who would be, that's who's
who's pain, who's dealing with pain and suffering. I mean, it's, it's shocking, but the
scales of justice so far have made it easier for Dershowitz to prevail and Virginia
Guthrie is no longer with us. Yeah. And so the reality is we now know that people have been
reputationalally challenged based on already the release, right? We've seen the files of people
asking to go to the Epstein Island, people talking about wild parties, about people corresponding
in banter with Epstein, knowing he's a pedophile. But what we don't have yet is the survivors
basically statements or notes saying, this person trafficked me, this person raped me. That is in the
files. And the question is, how do we get that out? Why is it being protected? Yes, I guess we could
find other ways of getting this out. The survivors have said they may publish an anonymous list or
other things, but there's no reason that we have to go that route. We should just get these
files. And the hope is, you know, for all those people saying, oh, this is a hoax, you know,
some people are now saying, wow, they were a lot of people involved that. I didn't even think.
Some people are surprised on our side. They thought it may just be Trump and Trump's associates.
They didn't think it was that far-reaching. And so I think it's just going to build more demand
to get a total cleansing in this country, to have this Epstein class go to get the rest of the files
and to really understand how we had a rotten elite in America.
I'm going to ask you a pretty easy one here, and that is the pushback or the narrative that's
being woven on the right is this idea that, you know what, Trump is actually the hero of this
story because zero files were released during the Biden era, and now we've got three million
files released during the Trump era. So what would your reaction to that be?
I don't know if Trump still realize he signed a Democrat's law.
I mean, I don't think he understands that there's the Epstein Transperity Act that I wrote.
And then Massey did the discharge petition for, and he opposed it every step of the way.
I mean, Marjorie Taylor Green gave up her career in Congress because of Donald Trump threatening her
and endorsing someone who was going to run against her.
And so you had him step after step after step try to avoid the release.
then we forced the thing to pass the House
because he would have lost Republicans.
We forced it to go through the Senate 100 to zero.
It wasn't just us.
It was, of course, the survivors,
and he had to sign it with being pushed into that.
And then they tried to not release anything.
And you remember December 19th,
they had a total fluff release.
I mean, it was nothing.
It wasn't like this, where at least they released significant.
So they've resisted it every step of the way.
But, you know, at the end of the day,
I don't really care about the credit. What I care about is that the files are released,
that the survivors have justice, and that we start to have a truth and reconciliation almost
process in this country where people are held accountable who committed these heinous acts of
crimes or moral depravity. I mean, my view is if you said you want to go to Epstein's Island
knowing that Jeffrey Epstein's a pedophile, even if you didn't rape an underage girl,
if you were there knowing that underage girls were being raped, then there's something
seriously lacking in your moral judgment and moral court. And you should not have any part of being
celebrated in by society. Right. I mean, a lot of the emails that we saw, including the ones from
Elon Musk, were from the early 2010s. Jeffrey Epstein had already been charged in 2005 or 2006 with
sex trafficking of a minor. And so it was no secret what he was doing or who he was. And so you're
exactly right. These people have no excuse to have been even in communication with this guy recognizing
who he is or what he did.
Last question here, Congressman,
as we've gotten to this point,
which again, I think is a huge victory in and of itself,
I fear that it will just get harder and harder
because, you know, whatever,
you said it right at the top,
what has been released thus far is already bad enough,
which suggests that what hasn't been released
is exponentially worse.
Do you have confidence that in the remainder
of the Trump administration,
we will see the full files released.
It's going to be a fight.
I think this is a very deliberate strategy.
It shows how weak their hand was.
They were getting disciplined or reprimanded by Judge Engelmare.
We were filing lawsuits.
They were losing public opinion.
So I think they came up with a strategy.
Let's give them something substantial, but not give them the worst.
So now it's harder for a survivor to go to a court and say, well, they're only releasing 1%.
And a judge will say, no, they release 15%.
And they've released some pretty terrible things. And we have to say, no, but they're hiding the
worst of it. But I do believe that we will prevail on getting more. And the reason is that the courts,
Judge Engelmeyer and Judge Berman, have been pretty sympathetic to what Massey and I've said,
what survivors have said. The public opinion, I think, is going to demand it even more after
what's come out. And ultimately, the survivors who are the real heroes of this, they're saying
it's not enough. So we have got to continue to go forward. We've got to recognize this is about
something very deep, which is that rich and powerful people in America have been getting away
with things at the expense of ordinary Americans. And this is the time to restore faith in
democracy by holding the elites, a rotten elite accountable. Well, look, again, I'll repeat it as many
times as I can, that effort in large part would not have happened if it wasn't for the work that
you've been doing. So I appreciate the time, as always. We've come to kind of make this a standing
weekend thing. So I'm sure I'll be speaking to you in a few days. And hopefully we have more updates
moving forward. So Congressman, with that said, thanks again for the time.
Thank you. And thank you, Brian. I mean, the credit is, of course, first to the survivors,
but you deserve credit as well, because if it weren't for independent media, if it weren't for
the pressure and holding the bogus releases accountable, we wouldn't have gotten to this stage.
And you and others like you give me confidence that this story isn't going away and we're going to get
truth and justice.
A few days ago, Trump's DOJ continued its assault on the First Amendment by arresting journalist
Don Lemon.
Now, fortunately, he's been released, and we are lucky enough to be able to speak with him in one of
his first discussions post-arrest.
So obviously, there's a lot to talk about.
But the real question is, how are you doing? How, how has everything been in the aftermath of what I presume
has been kind of a whirlwind last 48 or 72 hours here? You know what? That's a really great question,
Ryan. And I think a fair answer, would you be surprised if I said, if I said, I don't know?
I think anything other than that would have been, you know, would have been difficult,
difficult to believe. I mean, talk about highs and lows from what happened just a few days ago to obviously,
you know there was a very viral clip of of you at the grammies and so i'm curious like what what was
what was the reception like for for you in a room with all of those people you know look not
notwithstanding the fact that that there are folks in the entertainment industry but you know these
are people who who who fight to to push back against against the excesses and abuses of this
administration on a daily basis and you are literally on the front lines yeah and you heard that i mean
look, they were not shy about their criticism of this administration at the Grammys, right?
Right? And some major artists. And usually as of late, we've seen people trying to, you know,
move away from politics and this, but they were very open to speaking about it. And usually when
I cover these things like the Grammys or something like that, you know, I'm not looking to talk to
them about politics or foreign policy or anything like that. You know, it's, you know, things that have
to relate to the industry. Like last year at the Grammys, we talked about the fires and they
were raising money for people with the fires. And of course, there were other things.
things that sometimes they bring up. But this year, people were very focused on ice.
So we're wearing, you know, the ice out buttons and just not really shying away from it.
But for me, Brian, what this is, is freedom, it's the First Amendment. And, you know,
and artists are, I think, some of the artists and obviously journalists are the true
sort of examples of the First Amendment at its finest.
what it's supposed to be, right? And I believe artists and journalists, if, you know, if journalists,
especially corporate journalists, sort of do some self-correction, they could actually save our
democracy in this moment. And so that's why I wanted to talk to, I'm glad you brought that up,
but it was a little odd, first of all, being the story, right? I don't like being the story,
but if I'm going to have to be the story, then I, you know, I want to conduct myself properly
and I want to make sure that I stand up for what is right. But that's why I wanted to talk.
to you because you're an example of journalism, of the freedom of the press, especially now that we're in this
independent space. And, you know, we are close to the ground. We don't have the corporate
filters. And I think it's important that we bring people the information without fear of favor
and without it being filtered through gatekeepers. You know, I was thinking about, I've been thinking
about this a lot. And of course, I have friends and family, as I'm sure you do, who constantly
bring up this idea of like, are you worried? What about the administration going after you?
And I think, like, we've all been asked that question, especially by our loved ones.
But I think the alternative to not speaking up and not, you know, leaning ten toes in is,
okay, you kind of take a backseat, allow this administration to censor you and silence you.
And of course, they're doing it without much pushback as far as legacy media is concerned.
And they're doing without pushback with tech CEOs and universities and law firms and other
world leaders. And so if he has kind of a glide path to just full censorship, think about what's on
the other side of that. I mean, that is what true, like, autocracy looks like. And so we're a
bulwark here. And so, you know, not saying anything is, is even worse because then we end up in an
administration or a regime, really, where Trump has achieved what he wants because he's, he successfully
quashed any dissent. And that doesn't leave us any more safe. And so while this might be a dangerous
and difficult position, you can speak to that more than anybody at this point. The alternative
is so much worse. And so there is an obligation and a duty to continue doing this work,
no matter what the dangers are. And again, you can, you know, you can attest to that better than
anybody. Yeah, but listen, not, I don't want to be selfish about this because I know that you
have a much broader answer, which you kind of touched on and what you were just saying. But when
you heard about what happened to me and to the other journalist, what did you think, Brian?
Look, I, the sad part is I, I wasn't surprised. It, it kind of feels like a matter of time. The fact that Trump is going down this list. I mean, he started with Letitia James and James Comey and, and, you know, Adam Schiff is on there. And then he moves over to like Tim Walls and Jacob Fry. And he's arrested judges. And we've seen Padilla get arrested. And so it's, you know, not to mention what I want to forget suing journalists and suing news.
Suing journalists, suing the New York Times, suing, I mean, anybody, you know, who CBS and Paramount and ABC for $16 million.
And I think he has been successful in normalizing us to this idea that this is just what happens in the United States.
And that's the part I want to push back against because like we cannot become accustomed to this idea where the president of the United States just sues people or silences people or wields his FCC against comedians for the crime.
telling jokes. And I think that what would kind of heartened me to see was like all of the pushback
left, right and center against what had happened to you. And that needs to happen every single time.
Like that cannot diminish just because, oh, we've seen this before. Was that something that surprised
you to see all of the pushback, even in a world where everybody kind of expects Trumps to go
after his enemies? Well, I got to, yes, the very simple answer, a straightforward answer,
to your question is yes. And can you imagine, though, we're so connected to our devices, right?
Especially in what we do. We're there and we're like, oh, well, we've got to report it.
This is what we do. We have some breaking news or this just happened. And imagine not having
any communications for, you know, 12 hours, right? And so I had no idea what was going on in the world,
none until I walked out. And when I saw the scrum of cameras and news people there, I was floored.
I was like, really? Are you kidding me? I had no idea. And I was very pleasantly surprised.
I mean, there were helicopters following me like I was O.J. Simpson on the interstate. It was crazy.
But I had no idea until I got to, you know, to my friend's house where I'm staying. And I looked at the news coverage and I said, holy shit.
It's the biggest story probably in the world. Yeah. At that, yeah.
But I mean, like, how bizarre that even while you're in there, you have no idea. And you could have very well walked out to, you know, one or two people.
And God knows how many other things could have happened that day that just might have, you know, taken all the attention.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I wonder, Brian, and you can answer this better than I can.
I think I'm too close to it.
Is this the thing that gets people to say, especially journalism and the media?
I'm not talking about the corporate bosses because they still want to make their money and they still want their mergers and acquisitions.
But for the journalists to say, okay, enough already.
I can't do this.
I can't have the false equivalence.
I can't do it.
And just before you answer, I say maybe it is because people who I didn't have such
great relationships with and for whatever reasons, I don't know why, you know, professional
jealousy or competition or whatever, reached out and said, you know, I know we haven't been
friendly lately, but I just want to tell you this is fucked up.
And I'm sorry this happened to you.
And I'd love to like sit down and have a drink with you soon.
So is this a thing maybe?
I would love if that would happen.
That just gets journalists to say, fuck no, we're not doing.
doing this anymore? Look, I hope so. And I think for two reasons. One, this isn't about like,
this isn't about whether somebody agrees with you or your coverage. This is about,
this is about the precedent that it establishes moving forward. And I think Republicans are starting
to realize that if Trump establishes precedents that could turn around and bite them in the ass
as we move forward. I mean, like, there, I think that that's a very pronounced
worry for them, like this idea of, of, okay, so everybody here in the right way media ecosystem
is going to just sit idly by and be silent as this happens. What can happen when we have a
Democratic president in office? And I think that's been a worry for them as they see things get,
like the abuses grow more and more. On the flip side, look, there are always going to be people
for whom Trump can do no wrong. And we've seen some of them too. And, you know, the reality is that
that those people would sacrifice their firstborn if Trump asked them to. And so I think that we're
seeing a growing dichotomy between, you know, the slavish devotees to Trump, these people on right-wing
media who are just going to be his mouthpieces no matter what, no matter what ICE agents, you know,
what crimes they commit or who they shoot or what journalists they arrest, those people are always
going to be on board. But there's a growing, there's a growing disparity between those people
and even the people they speak with, like even just any, even right wing, regular Americans.
And I think that they're recognizing, oh, that's, that shit's cultish behavior.
You know, like, that's, that's not necessarily reflective of me.
Maybe in 2024 things felt a little bit different.
I could, I could align myself with a more right wing government, right wing campaign.
But like, this is what right wing governance looks like in action.
And if that's, if that's what it looks like where you've got, you know,
Caroline Levitt basically doing her best, uh, North Korea lady impression on a daily base.
This is like, I don't know.
I'm seeing people get more and more uncomfortable with that on a daily basis.
You're very astute right on because the people I spoke to, even at the Grammys, said to me,
hey, look, I'm a Republican.
I don't like what happened to you.
That's not right.
I'm a conservative.
I voted for Donald Trump and I don't necessarily agree with everything that you say, but this is wrong.
And I'm in your corner on this one.
I'm seeing that from, I don't hear that a lot coming from.
from conservatives. Now, the MAGAFateful and, you know, the crazy people of the world,
like, God, what's is that? Like the Benny Johnson's and the Megan Kellys or whatever who just
are grifting out there on the right, they're going to keep, you know, fueling the fire and
putting gasoline on the fire because that's how they get clicks and ratings, right?
Or, well, I don't know, money. But I think for most sensible people, whether you're a conservative
or not, you realize, like, we need an independent free press.
Yeah. You know, what was so interesting, I think, about the Grammys was just a year ago.
I mean, these people wouldn't be caught dead talking about politics, but certainly not like some aligning themselves with liberal politics.
It became so out of vogue to align yourself with the left. I mean, look, I'm I'm a, I'm a, I'm a Democrat. Like, it's, it's, it's, it sucks that I have to admit it. But, but, you know, it was, it was, it was.
toxic. It was cultural suicide to align yourself with the Democrats or some Democratic or progressive
position just a year ago. And that's what gave birth to all of these Manosphere podcasts. And I mean,
the Democrats had lost culture and that which was bizarre to say because I grew up like in the
Barack Obama era and he was cool. And we had George W. Bush. It was decidedly uncool. And I think in
one fell swoop, we saw so much of that snap back.
And politics is downstream of culture, and you have all of these, you know, all of these big names and voices and popular ones.
I mean, musicians even have like a more prominent role in society than even actors do, right?
Yeah.
And for all of those people to be so unapologetically outspoken in terms of pushing back against what this administration is doing was a really, like, heartening thing to see because, again, like,
I didn't know when when culture would would swing back to the left.
And I think we saw it happen thanks to Trump way faster than anybody anticipated.
We were talking about some of those, the Manosphere.
And now I'm seeing people like, is it Andrew Schultz?
Is that his name?
Andrew Schultz.
Oh, yeah.
He's just, you just know he's like in pain right now.
And as well he should look, go on.
I want you to finish that.
But like he didn't realize that this was going to happen.
I mean, he supported him.
He had him on his show.
And they were talking him and Charlemagne.
So all of these people and the other folks on it.
And now they're surprised that Donald Trump is doing what he's doing.
Like, really?
Like, come on.
Surprised that the guy who wielded mass deportation now signs at his rallies is doing mass deportations.
I mean, like, there is no world in which you had almost 80 million people who saw this coming.
But you have like six or seven assholes who had no fucking clue that any of this.
could come about like the whole like half the country a whole half of the country was yelling about
this exact thing happening but now you've got you know Andrew shaltz and Joe Rogan who had no idea
this was coming and you can you can hear in their voices how they kind of just have their tails
between their legs now as this stuff happens and they have to talk about it because they host shows
and the subtext to everything is like well you know I was this guy was sitting across uh across
the table for me as I was you know basically fillating him for my audience.
That's vivid.
How's that for some imagery?
Is that for some imagery for you?
Thank you for that, Brian.
No, look, I'm surprised.
Here's the thing that shows you that not everybody with a microphone
should be talking about politics,
especially if you don't.
These people have no idea about politics and policy.
Why are they doing it?
Look, they're comedians.
You can talk.
Look, it's obviously freedom of speech.
But sometimes things are so important that you have to leave
the expert opinion to the expert.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
And not everybody's meant to interview a presidential candidate or a president.
And if you don't believe that you are, I don't know.
Maybe you should realize.
Maybe you should have some enough self-awareness to realize, like, maybe this is beyond,
I should leave this to the journalist.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
I mean, look, I think these people are learning that there are consequences to their actions.
And sometimes the consequences are small, you know, when you're dealing with podcasts,
but then sometimes the consequences have global implications.
And I think these people are realizing that right now.
So Don, what's next now?
Well, I wanted to.
What does this process bring you?
I will answer that.
However, I wanted to, I just saw that we have the video when you asked me about knowing or not knowing.
I think you can see like this look on my face.
This is when I walked out.
Andy, you can play and just play the sound low and I'll talk over it.
But this is when I walked out of jail.
And my husband is kind of leading the way.
And I'm looking going, what the fuck is going on here?
And I, you know, I kept, then the cameraman, right here, this cameraman, there are so many people there.
One of them falls down.
I try to help him up.
And then, you know, I had to make my way.
Do you see Matt Gutman?
There's one of the photographers who works for my team.
But once I got to that thing and I saw the helicopters, it started really to sort of hit home about how big it was.
but I'm just sort of looking around like, look at my face.
I'm like, holy shit, what is going on here?
So what is next for me?
I don't really know, Brian, but I will tell you, I don't know.
Look, I know what's next for me is that this is serious.
He's a criminal and federal charges.
So I have to take them seriously.
But they're not going to steal my joy.
I still have to live and they're not going to silence me.
I still have to report and do what I do here on my channel and everywhere, you know, public speaking or whatever.
I'm still going to do what I do.
I have to.
It's not just my livelihood.
This is my profession.
This is a mission for me to be able to tell the truth and to be closer to the people,
closer to the ground without the corporate influence.
And I have to say, people like you who've been so great in advising me, you know, just because I was like some big deal cable guy, you know, I told you coming into this,
that doesn't mean that I'm going to be a big streamer.
People don't know who I am.
what's your advice, Brian? You know, and you gave me some advice and David gave me advice and others.
And I really took that to heart. And I think the reason that I've been successful in that is that
I did not come in thinking like I was some big shot or I didn't, I don't judge it. I just do it.
And I think that's part of the reason for the success, but also because of the support we have
as independent in this independent media space. Do you disagree with that?
No, I think I think that's spot on. And I think that, you know, what we've seen over the last
few days is there's a there's a big difference between how independent media operates and legacy
media operates and i think the scarcity mindset that exists in legacy media or corporate media doesn't
exist in independent media and and there is a sense that you know we need to support each other
there is enough enough to go around um and and there is a broader mission i think that that all of us
are focused on and that's that's that's that's why we do this um look i i just want to say that that i'm
I'm grateful for your voice.
I'm grateful for the fact that you're that you're fighting as hard as you are.
I know that I speak on behalf of, you know, myself and all of all of these other folks
in independent media and saying we see, we see, you know, what could be a Tuesday for us
in what you're dealing with right now.
And so any support, any help, any amplification you need, we're all, we're all, you know,
behind you 100%.
So I just want to just want to thank you for fighting as hard as you are.
Thank you very much, Brian.
It goes the same to you as well, from me to you.
So thank you so much.
And I'll see you around these independent streets very soon.
I'm joined now by the co-host of POTSafe America, Dan Feiffer.
Dan, thanks for joining me.
Happy to see it, Brian.
So we've just watched as the Democratic candidate defeated a Republican in a district that Donald Trump won just last year by 17 points.
And they did so by 14 points, meaning it's a 32-point swing.
Already, we've seen some Republicans coming out and offering some excuses like this is, you know, a low-tebron.
turn out election because, you know, special election we're in an off year. How much of a problem
are these election results in Texas for the GOP as we head toward midterms? Look, I've said many,
many times over the years, special elections are not particularly predictive. They are things where
Democrats tend to do better because our coalition is now disproportionately made up of people
who vote all the time. And as we saw in 2024, Republicans benefit from higher turnout.
And sometimes when you get results that are shocking, it's because, you know, one party got caught
napping or, as you mentioned, it's a really low turnout election.
That's not what happened here, right?
The Trump endorsed the Republican.
The Republican Party spent money in this race.
The Republican outspent the Democrat by several fold.
The Democrats still won.
And so if you're on the ballot anywhere in Texas or, frankly, around the country, this should scare
the crap out of you.
Because not saying that we're going to get a plus 31 plus 32 Democratic environment, but this just means that a whole bunch of races that were not on the map before or on the map now.
Can you talk about the fact that, you know, this electorate was 51% Republican, 35% Democrat and 14% independent.
But the Democratic candidate, Taylor Remit, won with like 57% of the vote.
And so mathematically, the only way to have done that is to is to have gotten votes and support.
from Republican voters and independent voters.
I mean, how are you thinking about that as we as we move forward?
That's the part that should really scare Republicans because a lot of times when you see these
Democratic results, sometimes you'll see it like it's a state house race in Montana in a district
Trump won by 36, the Democrat loses by 12, and then you look at the results and you see
there's just this massively disproportionate Democratic turnout.
Just our party turned out at insane level.
It's not enough to win sometimes in districts, but to make them raise as much closer
they are. That is absolutely not what happened here. This district, this district is in Tarrant County.
It is the epicenter of the Texas Republican Party. It's sort of a power center for the MAGA movement,
the far right Christian movement. And the only, the way that the Democrat won is, yes, we had great
turnout from the Democratic base, but it's persuaded basically every independent who voted to vote for
the Democrat and a decent chunk of Republicans. And that, and notably also as well, this is important.
And I think this is, you can see this in the independent numbers, is there are a number of heavily
Latino precincts in this district.
And from the early results we've seen, and we, you know, have to get some more granular detail.
But it seems like, in math, would suggest that the Latino vote swung back hard to the Democrats.
And I think that poses a pretty serious problem for Republicans as we move forward because
they built their new map that would give them five new seats on this idea, predicated on this
idea, that Latinos swinging super heavily to the Republican.
and Trump in 2024 was a permanent move.
And that's how they built their gerrymander.
And so we could be in a world where not only do we not see five seats get handed
from Democrats to Republicans, but if those margins were drawn so thin and we see a big
blue wave election, not just where we're seeing high turnout from Democrats, but
where we're seeing Republicans and independents defect and vote for the Democratic candidates
in numbers that we saw just yesterday, we could see a world where this.
new map, it turns into a dummymander and actually Democrats net seats from Texas.
Yeah, this map still remains pretty hard because they did a pretty good job of fortifying
some of their members as they did this. But the Democrats, they're trying to vote out
along the border like Henry Quayar, Vicente Gonzalez. If the Republicans are really
suffering this much with Latinos in Texas, those races are not going to be competitive.
And some of the new districts they drew depend heavily on this. So we could draw even here,
potentially, you know, obviously if you have a plus 31 Democratic advantage, we're going to crush
everywhere across Texas, across country. We'll pick up, you know, 70, 80 seats or whatever that would be.
But the Republicans made a bet here, and that bet, you know, not only did it not last for a generation,
it didn't even last for a year. We also, I'm sure, both saw the numbers of, you know, in terms of the
expenditures in this campaign, I'm going to put right up here on the screen an image that Amanda
Littman shared, the founder of Run for something. This image right here shows like the massive
disparity that we have between what the Republicans had and what the Democrats had. And yet still,
you had a Democratic candidate flip this seat by 32 points from what we saw in 2024. What does that
suggest moving forward that even a boatload of money wasn't enough to win this race for the GOP?
Yeah, I mean, it speaks to their problem because in these special elections, this is what we saw
happen in the district in Tennessee, Tennessee 7 late last year is, though party with the
with a partisan advantage can usually hold on and win because they have enough money to tell voters
the election is happening. And this time they had that money and it did not work because it wasn't
that they told Republicans to vote. And then some of those Republicans and all those independents voted
against the Republican. The other thing I think is important here, and I think this provides
larger context for how much the politics of shift shifted over the last few months. So this was a
runoff election. The original election happened in November. And in the, in the, in the
November when you added up all the Republicans and the Democrats, the Republicans had a five-point
advantage, right, which was very good for the Democrat, meant that they were in striking
distances, why some people had this election, like, on their radar screen. And so it shifted
dramatically for a five-point Republican advantage to a 14-point Democratic advantage over the since November
to now. And that says a lot about, you know, we can't contribute this entirely to what's happening in
Minnesota, ICE, Venezuela, all of the things have been happening with Trump over the last few months.
but it does speak to how fired up Democrats have gotten over the last few weeks and how disillusioned
Republicans have gotten. It's so delusioned that they'll vote against the Republican.
What do you think that principal driver is? And by the way, I say this knowing that it may very
well not be one specific thing, but these are pretty huge numbers and especially the defection
numbers are what I'm looking at. Yeah. It is, there's nothing that would suggest that there
would be this huge increase in, and people upset with Trump over affordability from November to now.
And the thing that's really changed is just this feeling of chaos that is sort of permeating
the country because of what's been happening in Minnesota and Maine and elsewhere.
And so, you know, I really am hesitant to speculate because there's no exit polls here.
We don't know what was on top of people's minds.
But I don't think you can separate the shift from November until now from what's happening
in the larger political environment.
And that's been defined by ICE in Minnesota for, you know, almost a month now.
So I guess the question becomes, does Trump see this and kind of like,
shift gears or because it's Trump because any, any, you know, a concession to the other side is viewed
as capitulation, which is viewed as weakness, he's not, he's never going to do that. And so what do you
expect to see as far as Trump is concerned? Do you think that, that he uses this and says, like,
okay, we have to change course a little bit or just triple down? I, you know, you just, you know,
I think it's like one step forward, two steps backwards all the time of Trump. Like, maybe he'll feel,
like, maybe he'll call Tom Homan today and be like slow it down. And then the next day,
Stephen Miller will be in his ear and we'll do the opposite.
So you don't really know.
I think where it has some impact is on Republicans as we debate in Congress, what sort of
ice guardrails can be put into the spending bill.
There's a world where in a different political environment, the public has been relishing a shutdown
of the Department of Homeland Security and ICE.
And the fact that they're not and that Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House, is going
to bend over backwards to try to get this bill passed on Monday or Tuesday, speaks to, I think,
just the increasing political pressure on this issue.
What about from Democrats vantage? I'm seeing a lot of posts and statements from, you know, Hakeem Jeffries and Ken Martin and Chuck Schumer that they are, you know, look, I think if I was in their position too, I would also be taking credit for what's happening right now. And frankly, at the end of the day, they are in charge. So they can take credit. But but also I'm just curious because, you know, on one hand, there is obviously a lot of anti-Trump sentiment, if not all anti-Trump sentiment that's driving this.
And so to what extent do you think that Democrats should or could take credit here versus are just kind of coasting off of what we're seeing Trump do and reaping the benefits of that?
I think most of what has been happening, almost all of the positive things that have happened in terms of resisting Trump, of sort of setting a mess of Trump, have happened from outside of Washington, not inside of Washington, and from the bottom up, not the top down.
I think the DNC spent money here.
They should get credit for doing that.
if the Democratic legislative committee spent money here,
they should get credit for doing that.
But the reality of what's happening is happening on the ground
and it's happening in spite of not because of leadership from Washington.
And so is there some concern that we'll kind of like ping pong back and forth
that because some of the leadership in the Democratic Party is going to look at this
and say, we fixed it.
You know, the brand is fixed.
We're winning again.
We can take all this credit.
We don't have to release any autopsies.
Like we'll just keep doing what we're doing and keep on.
keeping on and, you know, kind of end up in a situation where, okay, we haven't really done anything
substantively to fix the Democratic brand, but they've seen all these wins, and so they get the
wrong message out of it. And then, you know, we're in a position where Democrats have control and all
of the things that led them to lose in 2024 reared their heads again because they were never actually
rectified. Yeah, so I think there's a couple of things that are going to happen on the interim.
I think in the short term, this election victory is going to stiff in some Democrats spines for,
to use the limited leverage they have in these negotiations over ICE guardrails.
I think it will encourage more Democrats to speak out more boldly about what's happening with ICE.
Although I think for the most part, they've been pretty good since the killings of Renee Good and Alex Freddie.
Not everyone, but for the most part, you're getting less hemming and hauling from Democrats about what is what Trump is doing and what ICE is doing.
So that's good.
So I think the stiffens and spines.
I think the big concern is if we have a very good 2026, does the,
the party make the same mistake they made after 2022 and view that as a validation of themselves
as opposed to a response to something else, right?
2020 was about Dobbs, it's not a show of support for Joe Biden.
Biden White House, a lot of Democrats read that as the wrong way.
And so I think I could go on and on and on about the medium term and long term challenges
the Democratic Party has regardless of what happens in 2026, but we have a ton of work to do.
And so the hope is you, we have a great year.
We recognize that we benefited greatly from anger against Trump, prices being high.
But once we get into an actual election where a Democrat, presidential candidate is on the ballot against Republican presidential candidate in that much larger electorate that doomed us in 2024.
We got some real work to do.
And to that end, in terms of what we can hope to accomplish as we head toward midterms, where is your head at?
Obviously, I think we're all kind of aligned on the House, but where's your head at on the Senate?
You know, I feel I am cautiously optimistic about the Senate.
I think, look, you see these results in Texas that should give you even an additional belief
that there is a path to a Senate seat in Texas with a right candidate running the right campaign.
But, you know, the political environment, if it is in our favor, we have shots.
I think we can defend all of our incumbents, not easy, right?
Like we have to win our open seat, New Hampshire,
win our open seat in Minnesota.
We have to win an open seat in Michigan,
which is the toughest of the mall.
And John Islaasov's got to get reelected.
Those are all about as good as you would expect them to be at this exact point.
We have good candidates on all those races and the Republicans aren't awesome in those races,
although in Michigan, I think Mike Rogers is going to be as hard to beat.
Not impossible, but he's, you know, you almost won in 2024.
And then we got to do well.
And we got a win in North Carolina.
We have a great candidate.
And we got a win in Maine where we, you know, we have a primary coming.
And, you know, because those are the purpleish states.
And then we got to win two of what I think is now five red states.
So you were talking about Ohio with Sherrod Brown.
We are talking about Texas.
We were talking about Alaska with Mary Pelotola.
We were talking about Iowa.
We have a bunch of candidates all interesting on paper.
We'll see how they look as we go through this primary.
And then, you know, I think there is an.
Interesting question about Florida.
Like, Florida is a very, very hard state.
You know, we now have Alexander Vidman running.
He's a candidate who raised a ton of money on the first day.
I'm always skeptical of a candidate who is, like, very famous to the resistance crowd is 100% Iowa, you know, MSNBC, Positive America, name ID.
But here's the thing I'd say.
Florida is Trump won Florida by the same amount he won Texas by.
Yeah.
And so, like, we should keep an eye on it and possibly, you know,
know, the Republican is cannot be more generic.
It's the, it's the, it's the woman who took Marco Rubio's seat.
No one has any to who she is.
She's a generic republicans, not what you want to be these days.
So like, let's keep an eye.
Like, basically, we want as many paths to 52 as we can, it's a 51 as we can get.
And that's another potential one.
And that's not even talking, we haven't even really brought up Nebraska, where you have
independent Dan Osborne running against Pete Ricketts.
Yeah.
Well, a lot to, a lot to look forward.
Look, I want to say for, for everybody who's watching, listening right now,
The best analysis online is from Dan on Messagebox, which is his newsletter.
I could not recommend highly enough that if you've not yet subscribed to MessageBox,
please go ahead and do so.
I'm going to put that link right here on the screen and also in the post description of this video.
It is the smartest analysis, the best analysis, and it is always correct.
So just go ahead and do that.
Thank you, Ryan.
Go ahead and subscribe if you're not yet subscribed.
And I'll put that link again right here on the screen and also in the post description.
Dan, as always, thanks for the time.
Always good to talk to you, buddy.
I'm joined now by the ranking member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Senator Mark Warner.
Senator, thanks for joining me.
Brian, thanks again for having me.
So we've had a lot of news pop up about this whistleblower complaint as it relates to Tulsi Gabbard,
who was apparently present while the FBI was executing a search warrant in Fulton County to take the 2020 ballots.
So first and foremost, what's being done to figure out what this whistleblower complaint that's apparently being suppressed actually says?
Well, remember, Tulsi Gabbard swore.
under oath that she would observe the rules about whistleblower complaints when she was up for confirmation.
This whistleblower complaint, which I've not seen yet, I will see shortly, was actually brought to the department, I believe, in June.
Now, if you follow the rules and this whistleblower wanted the complaint reported to Congress, you know, there's like a 21-day processing period.
So they should have reported the complaint.
Well, I'll give them the benefit of that out by the end of July.
Yeah.
We didn't even know there was a whistleblower complaint until November.
And then it's taken literally the bipartisan gang of eight to say, what the hell, send it to us.
And we're just getting it now.
I've heard rumors about the subject matter.
Once I see it, I won't be able to talk about it, the content.
But it's even if the whistleblower complaint is not.
you hair on fire. It does mean that this obligation she has, this is not just some like, you know,
why maybe I should, maybe I would. No, this is the freaking law. She should have recorded it to Congress
within 21 days. And then once we did discover it, the fact that it still took almost two and a half,
three months of negotiation. And remember, she's not just dissing me or Hakeem Jeffrey. She's
dissing Mike Johnson and John Thune and all the appropriate authorities. So it's, yeah, again,
the litany on Tulsi Gabbard and her ineptness for this job goes on and on.
So I have a bunch of questions here. First is, are we certain that the whistleblower complaint
is regarding Tulsi Gabbard? I do not know. The next question is, is there a chain of
custody that shows who's at fault for suppressing this whistleblower complaint that was
supposed to be transmitted to you this summer?
Well, we got some, you know, letter when the whole gang of eight was putting pressure,
well, somehow she didn't know she had to do this.
Well, that's why you have a lawyer.
That's why you also, when you testify and say, Senate, please confirm me, I'm going to follow the law.
And then she chooses not to.
There ought to be consequences.
So, you know, we'll see whether my right.
Republican colleagues are going to do anything or whether they'll just say, well, you know,
it took longer than it should, but we're not going to hold her accountable.
The fact that it took all eight of us almost three months within the gang of eight to kind of
get it, I would hope they would be just on plain process grounds, pretty pissed off too.
The next question I have is we have seen Tulsi Gabbard kind of come into the news because,
again, as I mentioned at the top, she's now involved in this whole effort to get those ballots
that were used in the 2020 election.
Anybody who's watched politics over the last, you know,
five years, six years knows that the only reason
Trump is interested in getting these ballots
is he wants somebody,
some, you know, stooge
to be able to come out and say,
you're right, President Trump.
There was fraud in the election.
There was some subversive, nefarious activity in the election.
That will give him a pretext to be able to say,
oh, there was fraud, just like I thought in 2020.
That means in 2026 or 28,
we have to really hunker down in a way that we
didn't do before, and I should be able to oversee the elections. We should have Republicans in
charge. We should be able to seize the voting machines. We should have access to the ballots.
We should gain visibility into the voter rolls, all this stuff. Like, this is Trump's
fever dream. Tulsi Gabbard's involvement in this seems to me, and I'm curious what your
thoughts are on this, because as D&I, she should only be able to have kind of, her, her, you know,
area of focus should just be foreign interference in elections. If she can come forward and say,
you know what, I've done my research and we have Italy and Switzerland and China and Venezuela
who conspired with Joe Biden's FBI and CIA and I as DNI can confirm there was foreign
interference in the election. And then, of course, that would give Trump the pretext that I was
talking about to be able to, you know, go ahead and meddle in the next election. Is there some
concern that that's what Tulsi Gabbard's job is in all of this?
Well, you've laid it out pretty well. I mean, let's look at this. The National Security Act
would set up this whole notion of how we have oversight of national security happened because
Nixon and Watergate. And so that was what the creation of the intelligence committees were to
do the oversight. And we made very clear in that one, our spying agencies are only supposed to look
outside the country. They're not supposed to spy on Americans. The FBI in terms of criminal stuff
is supposed to deal with that. So Tulsi Gabbard has no jurisdiction on a domestic criminal
investigation. She didn't even tell the FBI she was coming. What's the hell she was doing there
other than potentially trying to curry favor with Trump? I don't think there's any legitimate
answer. And she has yet to give any fulsome. If she says, okay, now all of a sudden, six years after the
fact, lo and behold,
I found all this foreign interference.
Well, I read my intelligence briefs pretty damn well.
And if there was any evidence of even hints of this, we would have heard about it within the normal intelligence channels.
Or if she's been cooking up this theory and then doesn't report it to the intelligence committees, which are her oversight committees, she's breaking the log in there too.
She said she would timely report to her committees on oversight.
So this is, it is wacky.
I mean, a year ago, and I was maybe slow,
because I didn't think that Trump a year ago would be this outrageous.
When people said 26, 28, are you concerned about the security elections?
You know, I said a possibility, but I wasn't as concerned.
The last six months, in the last couple of weeks,
my concern level is really, really shot off,
coming on top of the outrageous activity in Minneapolis or the potential of using ice patrols to
show up around polling stations and then Gabbards beyond kind of the belief performance and then put
it all on top of that and you don't have to speculate. Now, Donald Trump's own words that somehow
say, oh yeah, Republicans should run the election should nationalize elections. That is against
the Constitution. And every Republican state,
when we tried to put in the first level of security for our elections after the 2016 election.
And remember this is Trump won.
Anytime there was efforts to even like, for example, share cybersecurity standards with state local elections.
They said, oh, we're not sure we want that because that could be federal intervention.
So I know we live in the Allison, you know, down the rabbit hole Alice in Wonderland,
but up is down and down is up where Trump is now calling for federalization and Republicans can take control of the elections.
and Gabbard as his kind of protege in this, again, if you're not worried, you should be.
In terms of the fact that this whistleblower complaint exists, I think you and I could both agree that if the shoe is on the other foot and there was some Biden administration official for whom a whistleblower complaint was lodged against them and it was just sitting there and it wasn't being transmitted to Congress, this would be like the national outrage,
news would be talking about it 24-7, there would already be hearings about the fact that there
should be a hearing about what the whistleblower complaint itself says. And so my concern here is
that enough isn't being done given the fact that not just process, because I don't think
that people really care about process. And in fact, I think that our collective adherence to
focusing on process above all else has been a little bit of our downfall. But just the fact that
this exists and the administration is allowed to police.
itself to the point where even legitimate whistleblower complaints about themselves are being suppressed,
kind of in the same vein as how shootings done by DHS are being investigated by DHS.
I mean, this should be a much bigger story.
What is the plan among you and your Senate colleagues to get this thing out front and center
given the fact that, you know, this is a really significant issue.
And if, again, the shoe is on the other foot, it's all we'd be hearing about.
Amen.
They would be completely, their heads would be exploding.
I think this is my eighth or ninth press it today on this.
I did a big press conference trying to get this out into the bloodstream.
But remember, we still have the DHS ice hearings.
The government just got funded.
I will give Thune at least a margin of credit that he said today, well, we don't think we can nationalize elections.
But this is where if we can't get Americans upset, if we can't force our Republicans
to find a spine, we can hold what we call a shadow hearing, but it won't even get picked up by
influencers.
Well, I mean, look, if you, if you host a shadow hearing, I'm telling you right now,
I'll cover it and I'll reach out to other folks in the ecosystem to cover it.
We will see if we, I am still, we know we're going to get gathered in front of our committee.
Will that, will that be public?
Will that be public or private?
That will be public.
And, you know, unfortunately, it's not until next month.
It's not until the beginning of March, but we will have her.
We are going to do election security hearings in the Intelligence Committee.
I'm still working with cotton on how we get it done.
And I'm concerned, frankly, not only because of what they do in the fall or what they
could do in the primaries, but, you know, we could, we'll probably have a statewide voter
referendum on redistricting in Virginia in April.
So Virginia could be that let's try our new techniques here.
Yeah.
So we are going to bang the drum.
We are going to get folks as upset as possible.
I mean, the challenge, though, for example, when all of the awful stuff was happening in Minneapolis, it was, you know, it's awful, but it's true.
And Tim is good.
And then Mr. Preti were brutally killed.
we didn't get the Republicans to the floor or to the table on ice reforms, even though
there was a lot of bad stuff happening beforehand.
And I am wide open for you or any of your viewers on what else we should do because you're
right.
If it sounds like all process and when you're supposed to report a whistleblower or when not,
I mean, that I think you can get lost in.
I think the thing when President Trump says he wants to nationalize and have Republicans
take over elections and when you've got a direct.
of national intelligence, not even telling initially the FBI that she was coming and showing up
way outside her lane, people ought to get pissed. Right. I'm pissed. Well, I look forward to
hearing more about that on the issue of ICE funding itself, because now this is, you know, gone,
this bill to keep the government, you know, to reopen the government will obviously get signed,
but that includes a two-week continuing resolution just for DHS funding. There are, there seems to be
a little bit of an impasse in terms of what the Democrats are asking for and the Republicans'
willingness to accept that stuff, which includes, in part, masks for ICE agents or cameras
for ICE agents. Can you give us – I think first and foremost, I have to ask, you know,
there are a lot of people who don't have faith that even when Democrats put down their
red line issues, that the Democrats are going to abide by it. And we've seen other instances
in the past where Democrats have caved, even though they had imposed their red lines, like with
ACA funding, for example.
So is there a commitment that you can give that on certain issues that that that DHS funding
won't be given unless those those those those demands are met?
I'm not going to vote for any additional vice funding or unless we get some reforms.
It's as simple as that.
But I also would just ask, you know, for some folks to realize.
And again, I come from Virginia.
We've got a lot of federal workers.
We had a lot of, when you shut down the federal government, who you really hurting?
You're hurting federal workers who may or may not get paid at the end of the day.
And the thing that completely makes me a little crazy, when I hear from some of my call,
well, let's shut it down, shut it down, shut it down.
The very same folks who are being discriminated against in Minneapolis and elsewhere on these ice raids
are often the people who are the contractors because the people who clean,
our federal buildings, the toilets, the people who do a lot of the jobs that used to be federal
employees, they're all contractor jobs now. So you put that person out of work for a month
and a month and a half. They get no reimbursement. And I just hope as we think about, you know,
all of our threats. And, you know, listen, I stuck all the way through on the health care fight.
I thought health care was important enough. But there is sometimes a cavalier attitude.
about, well, shutting down the government,
that's not gonna harm folks,
or it's not gonna bring a burden.
When frankly, federal workers are disproportionately,
especially after Doge on our side.
So let's, we're gonna stick to it.
And do I, do I think that Republicans
gonna give on everything?
Not counting on it.
And I think we have to keep the pressure on.
But I, but again, I go back to,
we shut down DHS, let's have it.
But God forbid, we have a challenge at the airport when TSA agents aren't being paid and folks that are air traffic controllers and others.
I mean, just we got to push with all we can.
And again, this is why I get the big bucks because you got to weigh these, you got to weigh these challenges.
But it's not, there are people at the other end of a federal government shutdown that I just would ask everybody to think about.
And they are generally speaking disproportionately who support our point of view and want these reforms.
But, yeah, and that's why one of the reasons why, you know, we all realized it was going to take a couple of weeks.
That's why, thank God, you know, the other 95% of the government is going to be open.
So we're not holding, you know, the Republicans were holding the rest of the government hostage and the fact that we got that open.
I think I call that a win since we can now fight this battle entirely inside the,
the DHS entirely on the ICE issue, which I think is, again, a smarter thing for us both politically
and for the numbers of people that will be affected if we go back into even a partial shutdown.
Yeah, I agree with that. I think it is smart just to focus this narrowly on what's happening
at DHS. And I hear you on the fact that, you know, there are going to be people who are hurt.
But the reality is there are people that are going to be hurt regardless. Like if DHS has no
guardrails, who's to say that there won't be another shooting, another.
Renee Good, another Alex Preddy tomorrow. And so, you know, again, to your point, and you alluded to this,
this is, this is, you know, this is the give and take. There is no, there is no, you know,
silver bullet. There's no formula that's going to be, that's going to work perfectly for everybody.
Somebody's going to get hurt. And unfortunately, that's the situation that Republicans have put
everybody in by, by trying to fund an agency that is completely lawless and then putting all of their
weight behind getting no conditions behind DHS funding. And that's again where, and I think people get
this and they're gut. I don't want to like get you down in the weeds again, but there are so many
freaking things that have blown past any kind of norm, any kind of law. I mean, if we just talked
about the President of the United States saying we ought to nationalize elections, that in itself
would be a week-long story of old traditional front page. If we simply talked about the director
of national intelligence somehow interfering in domestic criminal investigations,
that would blow people's minds.
If we thought about, you know, obviously we were focused on the awful things that have happened in Minneapolis and elsewhere.
When you focus on the fact that in my state, 75 to 80 percent of the people who have been picked up on the ICE rates have committed no criminal infraction.
So there is this theory of they keep throwing crap at the wall.
And, you know, again, I'm not complaining.
I'm asking folks to hire me again.
So, you know, it's part of the job.
but it is a little overwhelming and I fear that that people become a most numb to it.
Yeah.
And when all of this behavior becomes quasi rationalized, that ain't good for the country.
That isn't good for, you know, legitimate political discourse or legitimate political rule,
regardless of what happens going for.
Yeah, look, and I do think the onus is on those of us in the pro-democracy ecosystem
to make sure not to normalize any of this behavior and to push back.
when there are whistleblower complaints against the DNI,
when there are efforts by the president to nationalize elections
or put Republicans unilaterally in control of elections.
And, you know, that's the work that I do.
It's the work that you do.
And, you know, it's difficult when you are contending with an opponent
whose goal is to flood the zone with shit.
But I think, you know, like you said,
that's the hard work that needs to be done.
Well, one of the things I would ask,
give me, Brian, of you and everybody in the pro-democracy,
and I'm pretty close to some of the folks,
somewhere on the legal end.
But, you know, we need to have an organized timeline, even if this goes, fades from the news for a week.
What are the key times that we got to make sure they're not pulling any more funny business through this whole process period?
In Virginia, that'll be, you know, if there is an April referendum, it won't be on April 21st, the referendum day, I think they've said, but it'll be weeks before, the primaries.
We've got to make sure we don't, because I'm not fearful.
now that they may go to subterfuge, they may try to, you know, and this again goes back to why the
whistleblowers have to be respected. They got to have a due process, even if they're not,
their claim is is not valid, but they've got to still have a process. And I've really,
part of my job is to make sure that, that the, you know, the rhythm of the election,
they don't screw things up even more. And the truth is, a lot of the, the situations that were set up
actually were set up in the first Trump administration after the Russian intervention.
So the FBI Center on Election Interference, that's been shut down.
The Director of National Intelligence, Form a Line Influence, that's by law.
She shut that down.
Cyber security, the CISA agency, a third plus of the folks who are doing trying to give local election officials the tools they need to make their election systems more secure.
That's been cut.
And that's again the part where
If this was the shoes on the other foot
And I know we can, you know, this is
A tired game.
We got to just keep fighting like hell.
We'll leave it there.
Senator Warner, thanks so much taking the time.
Thank you so much, Brian.
Thanks again to Rokana, Don Lemon, Dan Pfeiffer, and Mark Warner.
That's it for this episode.
Talk to you this weekend.
You've been listening to No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen.
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