PBD Podcast - Lee Zeldin: Jasmine Crockett's Epstein Claim, Trump Meets Mamdani + Cloud Seeding Is REAL! | PBD Podcast | Ep. 687
Episode Date: November 20, 2025Patrick Bet-David sits down with Lee Zeldin to break down Jasmine Crockett’s explosive Epstein claims, Trump’s Oval Office meeting with Zohran "Kawame" Mamdani, and whether cloud seeding... is real or a conspiracy theory.-----📕 REGISTER FOR BPW 2025 - FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12TH 2025: https://bit.ly/3IU2YWxⓂ️ CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/4kSVkso Ⓜ️ PBD PODCAST CIRCLES: https://bit.ly/4mAWQAP🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: https://bit.ly/4g57zR2🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A🥃 BOARDROOM CIGAR LOUNGE: https://bit.ly/4pzLEXj🍋 ZEST IT FORWARD: https://bit.ly/4kJ71lc 📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": https://bit.ly/41rtEV4👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/4lzQph2 📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! ABOUT US:Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
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Let's do it. Head of EPA, Representative Lee Zeldin, youngest attorney in New York at the time,
Lieutenant Colonel in the military, in a short period of time, you've done a bunch of different things.
But it's great to have you on a podcast.
You don't want to live your life filled with boredom and regret.
You know, we only get one shot at it.
Everyone out there in the audience, you know, it's the start of the day.
How are you going to spend it? Make it count.
I'm with you.
Now, I love it.
We're on the same page with that.
But right now, the name Lee Zellman.
Zeldon the last 48 hours is
everywhere. Everyone's looking at
Lee Zeldon because apparently
according to this lady, I don't know if you
know what her name is, Crockett, Jasmine Crockett.
According to her,
not only did you have one Jeffrey
Epstein donor, you had two of them. That's how
great you were doing. And I just want to
start off with reacting to this real quick and we'll get
into all the other stuff because it's
trending right now. So here is Jasmine
Crockett. Two days ago
the subcommittee
on oversight, on stage,
Talking about you, tied to Jeffrey Epstein.
Go ahead, Rob.
Folks who also took money from somebody named Jeffrey Epstein,
as I had my team dig in very quickly.
Mitt Romney, the NRC,
Lee Zeldon, George Bush,
Wynne Red, McCain-Palin, Rick Lazio.
I just want to be clear.
If this is the standard that we're going to make,
just know we're going to expose it all
and just know that the FEC filings, they are available for everybody to review.
This is absolutely ridiculous.
So now she's saying this, she called you.
The first, when you first heard this, what was your initial reaction?
I mean, I read your tweet, but what was your initial reaction when you heard this?
So the first reaction was like, I'm pretty sure that Jeffrey Epstein never donated to me.
Like I contact a couple people on the team.
And I'm like, can you just confirm this for me?
Because I'm pretty sure that that Jeffrey.
Epstein never donated to us.
And, you know, you could search it.
She said that, you know, it's a 20-minute Google search, whatever.
It comes up so fast.
And it says occupation physician.
That Jeffrey Epstein that she's talking about obviously is not a physician.
And then you look at the date and talking about, you know, like common sense, head scratching.
The date of the donation is after that Jeffrey Epstein was dead.
Stop it.
That I didn't know.
Yes.
He donated.
The donation came in after that Jeffrey Epstein wasn't even alive anymore.
Wow.
Okay, there you go.
April 2020 and August 2020, $1,000 donation from a Dr. Jeffrey Epstein in New York,
which, by the way, can you imagine if your doctor's name is Jeffrey Epstein?
People ask you, honey, where are you going today?
I want to go see Dr. Epstein.
Which doctor?
Dr. Jeffrey Epstein.
That guy has to change some part of his name to have to deal with this year, right, to give money to you.
But you've seen office space.
Yes.
Right?
And there's that scene that the one character is Michael Bolton.
And the same point was made.
It was like, okay, well, why don't you just change your name?
He's like, why should I have to change my name?
He's the one who sucks.
Michael Bolton in the 90s, he had a couple hits, right?
If you know Michael Bolton, you have to be over 40 years old.
There's no way somebody in their 20s or 30s know Michael Bolton.
Oh, yeah, no.
I think maybe 100% of your listeners, right now under 40 are like, what are they talking about?
Who is Michael Bolton?
But by the way, what I love about talented people in politics,
how great they are at spinning.
Some of them who know how to spend,
you've got to give them credit for how great of a job they're spinning.
So here's Caitlin Collins asking Crockett about the mistake she made.
And this is her answer about tying you to Epstein.
And she still is defending herself.
Go ahead, Rob.
Talk about Republicans taking money from a Jeffrey Epstein.
Here's what you said.
Cabinet Secretary, he responded and said it was actually Dr. Jeffrey Epstein, who's a doctor that doesn't have any relation to the convicted sex trafficker.
Unfortunate for that doctor, but that is who donated to a prior campaign of his.
Do you want to correct the record on the people that?
I never say that it was that Jeffrey Epstein, just so that people understand when you make a donation, your picture is not there.
And because they decided to spring this on us in real time, I wanted the Republicans to think about what could potentially happen because I knew that they didn't even try to go through the FECD.
So my team, what they did is they Googled.
And that is specifically why I said, A, Jeffrey Epstein, unlike Republicans, I at least don't go out and just tell lies.
Because it was not the same one, that's fine.
But when Lee Zeldon had something to say, all he had to say was it was a Jeffrey Epstein.
He admitted that he did receive donations from a Jeffrey Epstein.
So at least I wasn't trying to mislead people.
Now, have I dug in to find out who this doctor is?
I have not.
So I will trust and take what he says is that it.
wasn't that Jeffrey Epstein, but I was not attempting to lead anybody. I literally had maybe
20 minutes before I had to do that debate. Yeah, but people might see that and say, well,
you're trying to make it sound like he took money from a registered sex offender. No, but I
literally did not know. When you search FEC files, and that's what I had my team to do,
I text them, and I say, listen, we're going up. They're saying that she took donations. Right, but
somebody might say, well, your team should have done the homework to make sure it wasn't the convicted
sex. Not it. Within 20 minutes, you could not find.
that out, not from just doing a quick
search on FEC. So
number one, I made sure that I
was clear that it was a Jeffrey
Epstein, but I never said that it was
specifically that Jeffrey Epstein.
Because I knew that we would need more time
to really dig in. How do you react?
The occupation is, like
you said we just go to FEC and it says
Jeffrey Epstein. Yeah, it says occupation
physician, we were talking about the dates a second
ago, and if you don't know yet,
then you do more
research before you go to the floor of the House of Representatives. Now, I mean, I feel like as far
as your audience, medical disclaimer, I mean, if you feel inclined to watch that video more than
once, I would cost you not to watch that video more than like four or five times, because I
actually think that that could do brain damage. You could maybe do three, four tops. Don't watch it
more than that. She may be their leading candidate for 2028, if not one of them. Can you imagine
like the Democratic Party chooses her as their candidate for 28.
I know with the whole redistricting thing,
she's probably going to end up losing her job,
and we were talking about earlier,
she may run for Senate.
But maybe before we even move on with this topic,
you were in New York.
What did you know about what Epstein was doing in New York?
There's a bunch of things right now.
The Epstein, you know, they voted for it, I think, Tuesday,
427 to 1, Senate, majority out.
It's going to be out there.
Who was Epstein to you when you were in New York?
because you almost beat Hockel as a governor.
First person to get that close as a Republican
to being a governor of the state of Florida, less than 6%.
That's how close it was.
They never thought you would be that close.
So you're someone that's a strong power player in New York.
Who was Jeffrey Epstein to you?
I mean, the moment the story popped,
it was, and that was it, like game over as far as this guy goes.
I mean, yeah, I guess he gets his day in court.
You're innocent until proven guilty.
We have a criminal justice process.
but you know there was i i mean i didn't have people around me all like i don't know i think
he's innocent i mean it was just you have people around the no no no no no the opposite like i can't
think of anyone at any point around me in new york saying uh you know like defending this guy i mean
it was the guy guy went down pretty fast yeah he did and and now you know releasing the information
you're seeing what larry somers is doing just out of curiosity i mean i think i think
thought Bill and Hillary Clinton were going to be, weren't they supposed to do something in
September or October that they kept delaying it?
Did you hear, were you aware of this, that they were supposed to, they were subpoenaed,
and there's even a clip of James Comer saying, hey, what are you going to do?
Are these guys eventually going to testify?
Is it going to happen?
Is it not going to happen?
Yeah, right there, Clinton subpoenaed to testify in congressional Epstein investigation.
Are you aware if anything's eventually going to happen with these guys?
Are we going to see them having to answer questions about Epstein?
I would have to completely defer to the congressional committees, the chairs, to be able to answer that question.
I don't have any inside scoop on that one.
Got it.
Okay.
So let's talk about your job, which is the administrator of EPA.
There's a few things I want to talk to you about.
One is governorship in New York because polls just came out with Hockel against Stefanik.
I think it's a Siena poll that shows Hockel is ahead by 20 points.
I don't know if you saw that or not.
I'd like to see that for, you know, governor of New York.
Two, Mamdani, I think Mamdani is coming to visit the White House with the president
and the president's incredible, noble, general's tweet about him inviting him.
I don't know if you saw the tweet out, how he coined it.
It's very interesting.
I want to talk about that.
And then with EPA, you know, a lot of things are tied to you.
So fires.
I think wildfires are under you.
I think you've got a bunch of different elements that are with.
you, right? So even right now with what's going on with Iran, me being from Iran, Iran tested
cloud seating like Dubai did, and now they got flooding going on all over Iran, Abadan, all these
other cities. We got a lot to talk about it. We got a lot to talk about it. Yeah, exactly. So that's
what I'm interested in seeing what we're at with us. So let's start off with New York. So
Mamdani wins the mayoral seat. Okay, so he's the mayor of New York. He's in there, takes out
Sliwa, takes out Andrew Cuomo. And the moment he's in,
President Trump now tweets this, I think, yesterday on his truth social.
Communist mayor of New York City, Zoran Kwame, very important to put that middle name in there.
Mamdani has asked for a meeting.
We have agreed that this meeting will take place at the Oval Office on Friday, November 21st.
Further details to follow.
What do you think that meeting is going to look like?
So I have spent a lot of time with President Trump where the topic of New York City
comes up, and this is personal. This is his life history, his business, his family, his
upbringing. If you ask President Trump about what he wants for the future of New York City,
he genuinely, deeply wants to see safer streets. He wants to see economic prosperity. He wants
New York to succeed and thrive. His concern over the issues that will come up at that table,
it's not like this is some business meeting, you know, a professional.
meeting that that lacks that strong personal connection that the president has like he wants
to help and he is concerned with the direction of the city as we all are i mean i i saw it during
eight years of de blasio and it was amazing that the city survived those eight years especially
what we experienced there in 2020 when i was wondering for governor in 2022 inside of new york city
There were so many Democrats and the Pence people who are not Republicans who were supporting our campaign because they wanted to be able to get to their job without fear of getting attacked.
They wanted to ride a subway.
They wanted to be able to afford to survive.
Now they're adding this like congestion pricing, this taxed in order to be able to get into the city.
And it's hitting people who are struggling to make ends meet.
It's like one more thing that gets them closer to that final last straw where they leave.
When I'm running New York State at that time, 22, it's 22% Republican.
Three and a half million more Democrats than Republicans.
New York State.
New York State.
And we, you have so many people who have gone to Florida, Texas, the Carolinas, Tennessee,
because they feel like their money will go further.
They'll live life freer and safer.
and this isn't about putting New York City in time out.
They're gone permanently, not looking back.
And what so many people are worried about in this moment with Mamdani coming in and wanting to increase taxes on people who, shockingly, are still there after all of it, is that it will be that breaking point for more people.
And like when that billionaire leaves, like, oh, the billionaire can afford to pay taxes.
Yeah, but the billionaire, would you rather have the billionaire give you whatever he's giving you today or she's giving you today?
Or zero, because they're leaving down to Florida and elsewhere so easily.
The business, the jobs, and you just, you're not going to be able to get back.
So I think for the president, the meeting is personal in a very positive way.
Like, he's the president of the United States, and you have his full focus and attention, and he genuinely wants to help.
But I'll tell you what, like don't expect this president to play.
along with the destruction of the city.
Like if you come in and like,
this is going to be some kind of negotiation.
We're going to talk to the president
into playing along with something
that's going to set the city back.
Don't try to go down,
you know, try to open up that door with this guy
because that isn't a door.
Yeah, I agree.
And by the way, what gave me that feeling is this tweet.
He doesn't say the mayor of New York City,
Mount Dani, is coming for a meeting.
He said the communist mayor.
So this tweet isn't for us.
This isn't for you.
this isn't for the voters.
This is only for one person
that he voted the way that he did.
It's to Mamdani.
He wants Mamdani to know
you're not coming here
in a friendly place
for us to sit down,
come and see what you're going to be doing.
How much does Mamdani need him?
Because, you know, when he got elected,
he said, you know,
we're going to raise taxes
by 2% on billionaires
and that's going to give us this much.
And we're going to raise the corporate taxes
and match what it is in New Jersey
because it's going to be an increase
of 4.2, 4.3%.
And that's going to give us our
$6 billion or $5 billion that he needs, I don't know the exact numbers,
but to be able to fund the free buses, the this, the that, the this, right?
And then Hockel, while he's running, she's not saying anything,
and then he wins, then she says, no, we're not raising taxes on billionaires on the city.
Now, three days ago, four days ago, they had a meeting.
Now she's saying she's willing to entertain raising taxes, corporate taxes,
on businesses in New York City, she's willing to entertain it, right there.
considering raising corporate taxes, sources as of November 14 after the meeting.
So, but how much does Mamdani?
Obviously, he needs Hocul, but how much does he need President Trump?
So here's the first threshold question.
What's more important to Memdani?
Is it to get re-elected in four years?
Is it to win a Democratic primary for New York City mayor or something else in the future?
Or is his priority right now the future of New York City?
is he prioritizing his job?
Like he cares about the city he was just elected to be mayor of.
Because if it's the latter, then he needs President Trump a lot.
If he's only focused on trying to win a Democratic primary,
then Mandani's coming into this meeting and he's thinking,
okay, I don't really care what happens behind closed doors.
But as soon as it's over, I can't wait to get to the media cameras.
This is like the Senator Schumer play.
This is what you see.
I was inside of the West Wing when Senator Schumer came into the White House.
And like he was sprinting past me to get out with and Hakeem Jeffries was right behind him.
He was sprinting out to get to the cameras right outside of the West Wing.
And then after he does his talk with the journalist, the reporters, whatever, he comes back in and he's like at a third to speed.
And he's, like, catching his breath.
If Mamdani's focus going into that meeting is just to sprint out to the cameras afterwards,
then, you know, maybe it doesn't matter in his mind what happens inside,
because all he cares about is speaking to that base.
But what's most important?
I mean, like, there's time for government and there's time for politics.
You know, if it's the day before Democratic primary and you're messaging to those Democratic voters,
we all get it, we expect it.
The election is over.
Now it's time to lead the city.
And as it relates to the money that the federal government ends up sending towards the state,
if it's about the partnership, it's safety.
I mean, President Trump is securing big cities.
I've seen it inside of Washington, D.C.
When President Trump sent in the National Guard in August, like overnight, all of a sudden,
things just started to immediately get safer.
And he's doing that in other cities as well.
Like, the president doesn't want to bring these resources to New York City for the purpose of, you know, setting a city back.
He's not doing it to, you know, for a bad intention.
Like, he wants to clean up the city that he loves.
And there's so many federal resources, even beyond money, where, you know, having this support, building those bridges, shows that you're a real leader.
I mean, whether you're a Republican or a Democrat, whether you're elected to become a
mayor, a governor, or a president, having the ability to reach out across party lines and
build a coalition, you know, President Trump, you know, I've seen it so often, when a member
of Congress calls, I remember there was this, there was this member of Congress comes in in the
first term. And he says, can you introduce me to President Trump? I said, you're a member of
Congress. Just call the White House. I gave him the number. I said, just say, just say,
you're, it's Congressman so-and-so, and I'd like to speak to the president. I said he'll probably
either come right on the phone immediately or he's busy with something. He is actually busy with
something. And he'll call you right back. You're a member of Congress. And sure enough, I mean,
it was that easy. And this member of Congress who's never spoken to, never met President
Trump, is instantly on the phone having a conversation with the President of the United States.
The president, like, he is so accessible and he's a great listener. Like, there's a
a great opportunity for him. Donning to come in to state a case on anything and everything
where there can be common ground and bridges built. And then this president who wants to see
New York City successful, this guy is a, he's a man of his word, the president will come
through and help New York City thrive. So the important question is, what do you need?
Well, I mean, what he needs? I don't think the president agrees with it because you said something.
It's what does he want to do, right? So after he won, remember then when he gave that divisive
speech. I know there's one person listening right now, and that's President Trump. I got four
words for you. Turn up to volume. And then, boom, whatever he said about volume, and they start
raising it. And then afterwards, like, I said we didn't need any more money. We need money. And
now he's talking about $65 million dollars he wants to raise for his transgender, you know, gender
affirming surgeries, whatever he's talking about. This was a couple days ago. So what can he ask
for that the president's going to say yes to?
is not going to agree to raising taxes on the city.
I mean, he can't be involved in that because that's the state.
That's Hockel.
What can he agree with?
What could there be something that they have a commonality with?
I mean, if I had to guess, Mamdani comes in wanting to talk about supportive congestion
pricing, wanting to talk about infrastructure projects, stuff like rebuilding Penn Station,
the 2nd Avenue subway.
I imagine there'll be some type.
of a conversation about law enforcement, whether or not they, you know, Mamdani wants to get into it where it's divisive and, you know, and he's not trying to agree on anything and just wanting to have a debate and just wants to, you know, trash talk the great, amazing ICE officers and others in law enforcement. I mean, that would be nonproductive. But if he, if he wants to broach some of these other topics and find common ground, I mean, right now there's investment, the president of the United States is bringing in trillions of dollars.
investment all throughout the entire country.
Since I was confirmed in February, I've been to all 50 states.
And I'm, whether I'm in, Idaho Falls, Idaho, where a new nuclear facility just broke ground.
And Chey in Wyoming with a new data center.
West Memphis, Arkansas, with a new data center.
I'm going to these locations, not where it's like, hey, in three years, we're planning
on spending $4 billion.
I was just in West Virginia where multiple businesses I was visiting are all ramping up.
They're all scaling up.
And I was with the president in Pittsburgh for an AI summit, and they were announcing $93 billion coming to the Keystone State that day.
And I'm sitting there as a New Yorker for a moment, putting that hat on.
And I'm thinking, man, none of this money is getting announced to go to New York.
Why is that?
It's not a coincidence.
The reason why the money is going in Pennsylvania and not New York is because of the policies.
In New York, where you don't allow the extraction of natural gas, you're not approving enough of these pipelines.
you're banning gas hiccups on new construction.
You want to ban the sale of gas-powered vehicles.
You set climate goals that you will not achieve,
and in the attempt to achieve it,
you will cause a lot of economic pain
on the people who can least afford it.
Maybe Mamdani is smart enough to come in and say,
hey, I see you're bringing in trillions of dollars
to the United States of America.
What do we need to do in New York City to be part of it?
Because I don't want to be pushing out
people and businesses
and jobs. I want to bring them into
the city and just
and then Mendani should just
shut up for the moment and listen to the president
because the president has a lot
of ideas and experience
and ways he can help. So then
the question becomes but if he
let you say he knows
the optics as well
if it seems that they are too
friendly and he is agreeable
that's not a good look for
aOC. That's not a good look for
for the crew that wants to paint him as the enemy.
Because they can't, to risk their lives,
and he's aware of this,
because to me, Mamdani gives me vibes of R. Zelensky,
where Zelensky came the first time around,
and he said, well, you know, you, you, you yourself,
and you don't have the cards.
I'm not playing cards, Mr. President, right?
That meeting, the first one.
And then second one, he came he wore a suit.
I think Mamdani is a Zelensky type of a guy that it's optics.
And between the loyalty of the people that elected them, that want free things,
versus also the people that kind of AOC kept retweeting his stuff.
So AOC is a major kingmaker of New York in a strange way she is.
She's got a lot of power and a lot of Jews.
He can't lose that.
He can't lose them.
He sold Trump as the enemy.
If all of a sudden now they're seeing mushy-mushy friendly,
they're going to be like, wait a minute, you're a traitor.
So the likelihood of me seeing this going that way,
I also think if he comes in trying to push too hard,
would he want a face off with Trump to say,
I'm not afraid.
I went to the White House and I told him to his face
that if you don't do this to the great state of New York,
I see that.
I see optics.
I don't see diplomacy with him wanting to work with the president.
Am I wrong?
I mean, there's a massive range of possibilities of how this can go.
And I don't know Mamdani well enough to know, like, when he wakes up tomorrow morning,
like, who's, like, which shoulder?
By the way, I don't know if it's like a dark voice speaking to him on both shoulders.
Or if, you know, there's a part of him somewhere, like there's a voice, there's counsel,
somebody he listens to who would provide him good advice.
Like, okay, the election's over.
You now have to be the mayor of New York City.
The best thing that you could do, if you're thinking about your future, years down the road,
is to be able to put together big successes, like real big successes.
And if over the course of four years that you are the mayor, the city becomes less safe,
you have massive more budget issues.
You know, people are fleeing and, you know, you raise taxes and people are leaving because of it.
this is an opportunity for you to show
X, Y, and Z, like if he's got that voice
that maybe he wants to listen to tomorrow,
I mean, then there's a totally different path
and opportunity from, but I don't know him well enough
to know what side of the bet he's going to wake up on.
So for me, Rob, can you check one thing?
Because this is a big thing.
Has AOC ever met with Trump?
Has AOC and Trump ever met in person?
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
I'm not sure, but I don't think so.
I don't think so either, but maybe I'm wrong.
So let's see here.
Let's see if they've ever met in person.
So there's no credible records.
I've never in person documented here's what we know that they have engaged in substantial conflict, public, including back and forth.
Oh, thank you so much.
Tweets and commentary, AOC referenced a meeting between Trump and Ted Cruz, but not herself.
News, okay.
So this is very big, because if you would ask me who's going to meet with Trump first, AOC or Mamdani?
Mamdani is meeting with, you know, Trump first.
Okay, Hockel has obviously met with Trump many times as the governor of New York.
And it makes me also go to the next step with Mamdani.
I think his last phone calls are going to be AOC is going to be one of them.
I think if he's asking about what do you think, what do you think, what do you think, one of them is going to be AOC.
But when you're saying long term with Mamdani, what is his long term?
He can't run for president.
If you think about mayors of New York City typically run for president.
De Blasio, ran for president.
Bloomberg, ran for president.
Giuliani, ran for president.
I don't think Adams is going to run for president,
but I wouldn't be surprised at this point.
If he just goes in there and says, I'm going to run for president,
guess is one point.
Wikipedia says presidential candidate,
and he's off to the races, right?
We don't know that.
So I don't know what his role is going to be long term.
I just don't see him being that willing to work with the president
because it changes the brand that he has.
If I have to put a split,
it'd be a 70-30 split of him coming in
to try to do more showmanship
than anything else, and then go back and say,
I met with the president, and I told him to his face,
I see something like that that he tries to do.
And if he does, we'll see what happened.
Let's talk about New York State.
So you go up against Governor Hockel.
I think she wins by 5.7%.
I don't know what the number is.
5.7, 5.8.
She spent $60 million.
She got 3 million votes.
That's 20 bucks a vote.
If I'm not mistaken, give or take the numbers.
And then every day when we were watching
We're like, whoa, Lee is coming up
And then every time you're like, oh, this is getting closer
This is getting closer until the day
People were sitting there saying
There could be a massive surprise today
Of you beating her
And it would have been a historic victory
For that to have taken place
So respect you for your fight
Because you kept fighting and you came out of nowhere
But now today, a lot of people would say,
Well, you know, if that was the case
It should be a lot closer
and the name we keep hearing about it, Stefanik, Stefanik. She's a fighter. She's tough.
You know, she probably went viral. One of the first times was she went and called out the president
of one of the universities. I don't know if it was Columbia or Harvard, but it was one of them that
she went stronger. Like, I like this girl's fight. And she's young. She's attractive. She's
well-spoken. But the polls are saying, Stefanik is behind by 20 points. And this is Sienna.
With Sienna is a 50-50 poll. It's not like it's some of the polls that you trust a little bit more.
but still what is the likelihood that new york state could flip and be a republican so two things
one is uh being in my current position because of the the hatch act there's certain certain very
candid thoughts uh that i i'm not able to share that there's one other point is that i can't ever
and i won't ever get ahead of the president while in this position you know if the if the president
hasn't endorsed in the race or he hasn't said or have gotten particular guidance um i i can't
I'm following his lead on all political races everywhere.
With all that being said,
even though I'd said earlier that the state was 22% Republican,
you just pointed out what you got just under 50% of the vote.
That doesn't happen unless there are a whole lot of people
who are not Republican who have decided enough is enough.
They've hit their breaking point and they want to save the state.
I mean, that's something that I was talking about a lot then,
and that's a lot that you're hearing now.
and you need
I mean basically you have over 60 counties in this state
what we did was we had a vocal in every single county
broken down by party
and we knew that we couldn't get any less than 30%
in New York City if we get less than 30%
we have no shot of winning
if we get more than 35% of the vote in New York City
depending on how far above 35%
the math starts flipping the other way
it starts to become really difficult or impossible to lose
we ended up spending a very disproportionate amount of our time
for the general election inside of New York City
to get to the 30%.
And I think that it would have been a lot better
if we were able to get to 35
and I could have spent a lot more time
throughout the rest of the state.
What we found in 2022 was that upstate,
the number one issue was the economy,
the number two issue was crime and public safety.
Downstate, the number one issue was crime and public safety.
The number two issue was the economy.
and across the entire state messaging cashless bail and every time there was a crim like there was
some kind of crazy criminal incident which was like every day inside of New York City you can
count on the next morning I was going to be there at that particular location talking about how
our policies would have prevented it if we implemented this is how things would get better
and then we weighed in on other issues as well the money is also important to raise
name recognition. Like if you know, you see some polls come out now, like, Hockel is the governor.
She's been the governor now for four years. More people know who she is. By the way, I feel like
more people who know her, the more they dislike her. So the disapproval number has risen as well.
So it cuts both ways. More name ID, but also more disapproval. Over the course of a campaign,
you know, it starts with structure. At the beginning, you put together the right team,
you set the right vocals, you raise the funds that you need. You figure.
out what your messaging is going to be.
I remember the start of my campaign in April of 2021.
I would get asked on my announcement day, I did a lot of media interviews.
They say, what's the top three issues?
And I was talking about these top three issues at that moment based off of what the voters were saying are their top three issues.
If you asked me at the end of the campaign, what are the top three issues of the campaign?
I would have said, and I did say, whatever the top three issues are of the people.
And what happens too often, and, you know, Hockel was doing this during the campaign in 22,
she was saying that the top three issues were whatever she wanted the top three issues to be based on her polling.
So while she was talking about abortion and Trump, I'm talking about crime in the economy.
And I'm talking about what is the number one issue for 75% of the voters, and for many of them, the number one and number two issue.
And not only are we winning on those issues, she's seating them.
to me she's not even talking about them so we get to a debate uh in october late october
and we're having this back and forth over crime and you probably remember this she's like i don't
understand why why this is so important to you and like the audience heard that i didn't even have
to respond i'm like wow okay that speaks for itself and then they moved on to another topic and
and she got hit for it so message is important and substance and having policy and ideas
and your style on the trail and hard work.
There's a saying in New York, by the way, to Schumer's credit,
there's something called the Full Schumer.
You go to every county in New York State in one year.
And it's something that he's pride himself for a very long time.
Well, in the first six months of the campaign,
I went to every county twice.
So I'll tell Schumer, give him a hard time,
rib him, I'll tell him that's called the Full Zeldon,
which is twice as much and half the time.
And that, but that pays.
off. So you also have to work real hard. So I think that there's a lot in, you know, in answering
the question as far as like, where is this going to go looking forward? I think it's very
informative also to analyze what happened in 22, the lay the land, how voters reacted, what the
issues were. I think, I think there are a lot of lessons learned there. Yeah. Is this the
clip rob where it says, I don't know why locking up criminals are so important to you. Is this
it? Yep. I'd love to see it. Go for it.
a crime emergency and suspend
Castles Bail and these other pro-criminal laws
because there is a crime emergency.
My opponent thinks that right now
there's a polio emergency going on,
but there's not a crime emergency.
Different priorities that I'm hearing from people right now,
they're not being represented from this governor,
who still, to this moment,
what are we halfway through the debate,
she still hasn't talked about locking up
anyone committing any crimes.
Okay.
Anyone who commits a crime under our laws,
especially with the changes he made to bail has consequences.
I don't know why that's so important.
All I know is that we could do more.
Well, when I say that we should do more, excuse me, I'm speaking.
Sure, go ahead.
We could do so much more if there was a nationwide ban,
but certainly a state ban on teenagers being able to get guns, assault weapons.
I mean, that's what happened in Buffalo.
A teenager walked into a shop and was able to buy an assault weapon,
the kind you use on military battlefields.
It happened just yesterday in St. Louis.
when I'm going to start talking about the crimes that are the most frightening,
and that's murders and shootings, which across this country are down about 2%.
New York State, because he worked so hard on this since I became governor,
they're down 14%, down 18% on Long Island.
I don't know why it's just so hard to articulate what needs to get done.
When you have a district attorney refusing to inform...
That's pretty wild to say.
I don't know why locking up criminals are so important to you.
So it's interesting to me because you said,
issues, right? So whatever is the issues of the people instead of whatever is the issue of the
individual, which is her. To me, she is slightly a better candidate than Kamala Harris, because she can
actually deliver her message, unlike Kamala. Kamala doesn't know how to deliver the message,
but she's not a very likable candidate. It's not like people like her. You were very liked
when you were coming up, and that was the way on a national stage, because governor of New York
is a national thing. It's not like it's governor of Arkansas, or governor
Oklahoma, nothing wrong with these states, but there's certain states that when you compete,
everybody's paying attention. And I get the fact that you can't give commentary on
Stefanica and get ahead of it with the president. I fully agree. But this takes me to the next
issue. What we're learning right now with what happened with the election a month ago,
six weeks ago, whatever the timeline was, now just a couple weeks ago, is the concept of
affordability, and that's becoming something that across the board everybody's talking about.
You know, last month, data came out showing, we just talked about it yesterday with Tom Ellsworth,
the rejection of new loans, refinance.
It's the highest it's ever been since they started tracking this number.
Rob, I think they sent you an image of it.
Brandon did.
You can just show it because you have it in your file.
It's the highest it's ever been, okay?
The amount of loans that are being rejected right there.
I don't know if you've seen this.
So zoom in a little bit.
So application rate, rejection rate, rejection rate.
among applicants for loans and application rate.
So obviously if you go to 2021,
the blue is the application rate.
It starts declining because that's when we start raising interest rates.
Makes sense.
And in 2024, you notice the application rate goes up a little bit, the blue,
because we start lowering the rates a little bit.
2024 go a little bit, one more right there.
But look at the rejection rate.
Banks are simply not giving loans out.
So now we have to get creative.
And if FDR came up with the 30 year, we're talking about the 50 year.
Now, we're talking about there's a word they're using that people are not even used to yet.
It's called mortgage.
It's like a mortgage transfer where if I have a three and a half portable mortgage,
I can transfer my three and a half percent mortgage to a new loan that I'm getting.
Going into 2026 midterms, Calci has Democrats winning at 72 percent rate, 73 percent rate, midterms.
That doesn't mean anything.
A couple years ago, they said it's going to be a bloodbath and Republicans were going to win.
They didn't win, right?
it was a complete different scenario.
Right here, Calci, 73% Democrats are favored to win midterms.
And then you have 2028, Trump won't be running.
So it's not like Republicans are scored away because, yeah, Trump's going to go out there.
No, no.
And it's, well, you know, with JD, but Marubio, they're great candidates.
They're no Trump to be able to fight the fight that he fights.
How are Republicans going to win the argument on affordability moving forward?
Well, the update as of fall of 26 is going to be the biggest.
variable. You know, we obviously we have the conversation now 10 months out from that moment. You get
post-labor day and how people feel about the economy as it impacts them in September and October.
And the economy is an interesting topic where when things are going well, people aren't talking
as much about the economy as their top issue. It usually pops more of their top issue when they're
upset with their ability to afford what they want in order to be able to survive.
But no matter what, the economy is always like a top two or three issue.
So you can rely on it being up there towards the top, like how much it plays towards
November 26 is where we're at just before.
When people actually have to vote at that moment, how do they feel about their life then?
understanding the American dream
I mean it's it's different for for a lot of people
but you know you're getting into home ownership
and if you ask people okay like what's one thing
that is most important to you
about achieving the American dream
it's well I I want my family
you know with my wife my husband or two kids
to be able to get the keys to move into our own
you know first home that that's ours
now when you owe you
the bank a lot of money. You can make a debate as to whether or not it's really yours. But for a lot of
people, when they get those keys, they sign those papers. Like that is the biggest thing to
achieve the American dream. Having a job. Unemployment is one thing. Underemployment is another
making enough in order to make ends meet. And then all sorts of other aspects of the cost of
living. And the economy is also a very difficult issue to gaslight someone on to convince them that
their status is that their position is something other than what it actually is crime is is like
that as well i would say um on the economic issue it's very important to for whoever's campaigning
a particular house race or senate race that you're talking honestly incredibly with that with that person
understanding what it is that they're they're going through um as far as trajectory goes i mean like i
just said there's a lot of groundbreaking that's going on i could tell you that there are a whole lot
of this country where there are a lot of jobs that are coming online. I think that there's a lot
of states where things are going very much in the right direction. The states where I feel like
things are going in the reverse direction happen to be the bluest states in the country.
I think there's a reason for that. I think where the energy policies are the smartest,
what I'm experiencing in my travels, it is the red states where manufacturing is going
the right direction. Permitting reform is going well. It's in the red states. It's in the red
States. So where are these battleground Senate seats and House seats? And I think you look at the
Senate map, every two years, it's not the same seats that come up. And who's up? I think that there's
a different calculation than if you look over at the House. Having gone through serving in the
House of Representatives during the last two years of President Trump's first term, and having spent a lot
my time in shift smelly skiff in the basement of the Capitol doing all this impeachment stuff
at sketchy skiff it is something that is so counterproductive for this country i want to see
our country heading in the right direction i think a lot of voters when they show up to vote
november of 26 uh they they're going to have memories for better or for worse you know if
you're a democrat you want to like relive you're trying to impeach resist oppose obstruct everything and
anything? Well, you know where to vote, where to go for Republicans who maybe sat it out in
2018. Maybe they remember the consequences. The president was more on the ballot for Democrats
in 2018 than he was for his supporters. A lot of his supporters in 2018, they kind of sat back
because you go to vote, you don't see Donald Trump as a candidate on the ballot. But for all
the Democrats showing up, they feel like Donald Trump was on the ballot.
In 26, I think that that's another aspect for voters when they come out is not just, I mean,
you can expect that the people who don't like President Trump are going to show up to vote
as if his name was on the ballot.
I think for President Trump supporters, the message will be relayed to them very strongly
early and often how important it is with not just a hypothetical, like, here are the consequences
don't impeach me a thousand times.
Now it's like really believable.
And you add a couple of assassination attempts as well.
You know, and what they did to Charlie Kirk two months ago, I mean, shit.
It's one of those moments where you just can't sit on the sidelines,
and I think, I hope that people are realizing it.
No, I'm with you there.
The question I got is, you know, 28, there's not going to be a Trump.
You know, unless if it's Eric running or Don running, which I don't know if either one of them will be running then,
but maybe Eric will.
But there's not going to be a Trump.
Donald Trump, Jr., that's going out, Donald Trump, that he's going out there driving the way that he is.
And there's this notion that, you know, you'll see the meme going around, you know, Trump this many years, Trump this many years, then it's going to be JD, then it's going to be this, then it's going to be that.
And we're going to have it for the next 25 years, which, by the way, there's nothing wrong with being confident and playing offense and being aggressive and assertive.
You should be.
You should have that mindset that we're winners.
We're going to keep winning, and this is the winner's mindset.
But, you know, the enemy is sitting there and asking themselves, say if there's not a July, you know, the assassination attempt that took place at Butler.
Because that speech he gave, R&C, the energy, the way it was, it was magical, something happened to it, must came in.
I'm in, the day, I've never seen anything like this before, right?
And then Rogan came in and did the podcast at the end.
And then he went on all these other podcasts and did what he did.
did, the president. He worked his tail off to win. But say that doesn't happen. You know,
say Biden stays in. Say, you know, they mix it up. Say, so to me, 2028 is a little bit weird.
And the reason why I'm asking this concern is because even on MAGA, there is Republicans in
D.C. Then there's online Republicans. Then there is MAGA, Twitter. Then there's those that
are now going against it, there is a little bit of a, you know, challenge going on with these
different opinions and factions that you have politically. And some of it has to do with Israel,
you know, Israel became a very, very divisive topic. You know, you're bought, your APEC,
you're this, you're that, and then let's come out. Yeah, those guys are APEC support.
No, the Usta is it's, so that's created a little bit of the division between them.
Netanyahu is really making a decision, and they're getting bigger and bigger, louder online social.
Some of it is, you know, tempered, you know, gone a little bit lower, but what do you foresee happening with this little civil war that's going on with the social media influencers of MAGA, which, by the way, they may say it's not mainstream, it's not a big deal, these are nobodies, they're just social media guys.
I don't think that's true, I think they're getting millions on top of millions of people that are,
paying attention to them.
And I think it's going to matter more in 28 than it did in 2024.
How do you manage that relationship two sides that are completely on the opposing side to say,
guys, why don't we find a way to come together and win this thing?
How do you see that happening?
Well, I certainly think it's very important the message towards the people who are listening
and like the younger generation trying to figure things out.
I mean, I remember being 18, 20, 22, having questions on different issues that were important
to me.
I have the answers to everything.
and have it all figured out.
And if you're trying to figure it out and you are looking up to these voices with
followings, maybe you're listening to different opinions and you're trying to form
your own judgment, I mean, like, we need to lean into speaking to young conservatives.
There are a whole lot of that younger generation who, like, they're very interested in the
government, like they care about the country, they care about service, they're, they're
raised with great values. They want to participate in the process. They're proud of being
conservatives, but they don't have it all figured out yet. And we should know and should expect
them to have it figured out. We need to be speaking to them. And it's not, there isn't just
any one way to get to this audience. Um, you know, like I, I remember not that long ago, I mean,
dating us like, I had a, you know, 13 inch TV that had a knob of, you know, 13,
channels and like with the the antenna above my black and white TV, you try to maybe get reception
for like seven or eight of them. I remember when all of a sudden there was a 24 hour news cycle,
that was crazy. Like every day the news would change. There's a seven hour news cycle. Now we'll
spend this time together. While we're sitting here, there'll be all sorts of different news that's
popping. And with social media and with podcasts and with people who, I guess, you know, they go to
cable news they go to radio they go to uh to newspapers like it's it's so diluted though uh and
podcasts are rising uh and social media platforms have amazing reach um it's important to be meeting
this audience everywhere meeting them where they are you know like there was a time like first
got into politics i mean i ran for congress in 2008 you do you do a poll like where do you get
your news from and it was a multiple choice question and i would have to go back and look at the
pole. I'm pretty sure I didn't say
podcasts.
Twitter wasn't a thing
back then.
It's very important
for us to be getting into all of those
mediums. And to have those conversations, this is one thing I love
about Charlie Kirk. Charlie would show
up at these universities.
He was a dear friend
and it's maddening
that he is not with us right now.
He would go to these university campuses
and encourage people to
up. If you agree with him on 19 topics out of 20, he would want you to come up on the one
topic you don't agree on. This is actually the guy who spoke just before he was assassinated
was somebody who agrees with Charlie on like everything except religion. Apparently, I was
watching some interview and he wanted to then approach Charlie on religion and engage.
Charlie, Kirk, was meeting these young conservatives where they were at on their college
campuses on podcasts, on on radio, TV, on social media.
We really need to do a better job of that between now and 2028 and answer these questions.
Because what happens is if you leave the vacuum, then some of these voices with the wrong
answers only, and they might do it with an incredible amount of, they might be filled with
charisma. They might have a sense of humor. They might be young as well. And if they're the only
voice answering the question and they're making enough sense, then they're moving people towards
thinking, all right, well, maybe that wrong thing is actually the right answer. And then they end up
adopting it as their own. So I think that's the biggest thing between now in 2028. There are many
places that you're not going to find conservative leaders and voices, people who do have the right
answers on these questions these young conservatives have, but there's this disconnect and those
sound voices in the movement have not yet made it to that young 18-year-old, or maybe it's a 15-year-old
right now who will be registered to vote by 28. Yeah, I agree. I think you've got to talk to them.
I think you've got to be aware of them, and I think you've got to, if you sit there and think
these guys are not going to be formidable, they're just getting bigger. I don't think they're going
to get any smaller. I think the momentum is here. And I think 2020,
28, 2032, 2036, some of them are going to be on the ballot competing against others.
We're playing a very different game.
Politics is a sport today.
It's always been a sport, but it's a contact sport like never before.
And it's getting interest of younger kids that once were never interested.
Like, why would I care about this?
I was like, wait a minute, do you see the competition?
I want to be able to out-debat this person.
There's a certain level of excitement with it.
But, you know, transitioning into you being ahead of EPA, kid.
You're the 17th, I believe, if I'm not mistaken, the administrative EPA.
And you have a lot of things that fall under your jurisdiction.
If you don't mind, you know, maybe share a minute.
What are some things that fall under the jurisdictions of being ahead of EPA?
So there are these landmark laws that have been on the books for a long time.
Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Tosca chemicals, CERCLA, RICRA, solid waste management.
There's these laws that create these statutory obligations that require EPA to
do a bunch of different things.
President Trump wants us to advance cooperative federalism, to improve our relationships with
the states, to grant what's called primacy, to approve applications, requests from states
to be in charge of their land, air, and water, as opposed to unelected, faceless bureaucrats
sitting in some office in Washington, D.C., deciding what is best to resolve some very local
issue that the state is more than capable to do a better job of taking care of themselves.
So we have all these obligations. We are trying to partner with states as much as possible,
improve state implementation plans, their requests on primacy to take over everything from
coal combustion residuals if they're in, you know, in that part of the country with coal,
with underground different aspects of regulation related to water,
where they'll request that primacy as well.
So that's a key fundamental principle.
Now, the core mission of EPA is protecting human health and the environment.
Under President Trump, we call it Powering the Great American Comeback,
where the first pillar is what President Trump has spoken about often,
clean air, land and water for all Americans.
Conservatives care about protecting our environment.
and, but that's not the end of it.
We at the Trump EPA are different than the Biden EPA because at the Trump EPA, we choose
to both protect the environment and grow the economy.
We choose both.
What's different between conservatives and liberals?
We don't view this is a binary choice.
We don't say that in order to protect the environment, we have to strangulate out of
existence entire sectors of our economy.
So we have four other pillars of powering the great American comeback.
Again, pillar one, clean air land and water for all Americans.
Number two, unleash energy.
dominance. U.S. energy dominance. Pillar three, permitting reform and cooperative federalism.
Four, make America the AI capital world. Pillar five, protect and bring back American auto jobs.
This fulfills a lot of presidential priorities that the president campaigned on.
All the stuff that we're doing at EPA to fix everything, it's not like President Trump hasn't
campaigned on all of it. Now, it's, if I had to do the math, it's possible that at least half of the president's
deregulatory agenda is at our agency at EPA.
We will do more deregulation in one year than entire federal governments in the past have done
across all federal agencies combined across entire presidencies.
One agency, one year, more deregulation than you've ever seen.
One proposed act of deregulation alone.
A proposed rescission of the 2009 Obama EPA endangerment finding and all the greenhouse gas emissions
a light, medium, and heavy-duty vehicles,
and the off-cycle credits on the annoying things
like the start-stop feature of vehicles,
which...
Very annoying.
It's not even good for the cars, by the way.
So dumb.
If finalized, that proposal
will be the largest act of deregulation
in the history of the United States of America.
Now, if anyone was only listening
to the last 45 seconds of what I said,
I'm like, oh, my gosh, you're talking about all this deregulation,
yeah, we never lose sight
of our core mission of protecting human health
in the environment.
We just put out a, these are the three best press releases that we put out this year.
On the 100th day of President Trump's term in office, our top 100 environmental actions from those first 100 days on President Trump's 200 day in office, the next top 100 environmental accomplishments from the next 100 days.
And just this past week on the 300 day of President Trump's term in office, our next top 100 environmental accomplishments.
300 environmental accomplishments, 300 days, we're never going to lose sight of it.
And the last piece of this is on the operational front.
The budget, the operating budget EPA is about $10 billion a year.
I have canceled about $30 billion a year, $30 billion a year of savings from our effort this year.
So you're very much getting what the taxpayers are paying for in 2025, not so much before that.
Because when the Democrats had one party rule, they had the Inflation Reduction Act.
They came up with this creative name.
They're good with coming up with names, by the way.
They're very deceiving.
Getting back to Jasmine Crockett's point earlier about misleading,
they're very good at that, although Crockett didn't do a great job misleading on this one.
She got busted.
Even CNN had to call her out.
They appropriated so much money that the EPA, you know, has spent it.
In 2024, EPA obligated and spent over $60 billion.
That number is, like, completely getting,
reverse this year. I've canceled the entire greenhouse gas reduction fund. That's three different
pots of money totaling $27 billion. Over $2 billion worth of environmental justice grants on top of it,
$750 million in staff efficiencies, a million dollars. Something about 15,000 employees are
going to go get rid of a third of them by the end of the year to be a 10,000. We had over 16,000 when
we came in at the end of 2025, we'll have 12 and a half. So it's about a quarter of the agency that
saves about $750 million a year.
That's the $750, got it.
Over $20 million saved so far in real estate consolidations, and that's an annual
savings.
That number is going to continue to go up.
A million dollars in canceled media subscriptions.
I shut down an EPA museum that I'm sure none of your listeners knew even existed or
ever visited.
It costs $4 million to build $600,000 a year to operate.
We closed down the EPA Museum.
Added up, all told.
We're talking about $30 billion.
of savings. So on the operational side, we have a zero tolerance policy for any waste and
abuse. On the environmental side, we are prioritizing our statutory obligations. We will do more
with less. We will get more done with 12,500 employees than they did previously with over 16,000,
and on top of it, we're going to do the largest deregulation that anyone has ever seen in
the history of the United States of America. I love that. That you're doing that. So now there's
two angles I want to go with this. But let's first go with California. So California, I
I lived there for 20-some years, 24 years, and these fires that keep happening.
We saw the palisades.
We saw the fires, you know, all over the place, the tens of thousands of acres,
people's family, stories, memories, homes that they grew up in that's been past generation
to generation, completely gone, right?
You're right on the water.
This is environmental.
You're in a state that this guy had a $24 billion surplus.
us, now he's at $17 billion deficit that he has the governor who wants to run for president
2028. What can the EPA do? Because it doesn't seem like California is doing it. It doesn't
seem like Newsom is ahead of it. What can the EPA do to help the Californians who live there,
who love their state, who don't want to leave, to not have to go to sleep at night, wondering
what the hell is going to happen with my house if another fire happens this summer, if another
idiot goes out there and drops a match or
a cigarette and then boom, we're being negatively
impacted by it. What
role can you play as a head of EPA
to help at California? Yeah, there's a lot
and we've been doing it. And President Trump
when we talk, he often
speaks about California and
specific ways to be able to assist
from getting water
to those
areas that need it. Many
conversations about water,
many conversations about
prescribed fires, forest
management planning for the future and the way that the rebuild is done when president so president
trump got inaugurated as as you remember just a few days after the wildfires he comes in he
signs an executive order right away and he says EPA you have 30 days to complete your hazardous
material removal phase one so that the army corps can come in for their phase two debris removal the
immediate response was that is impossible you'll be lucky to be able to complete this by the
summer. There was over 13,000 properties that were destroyed. But President Trump signed an executive
order declaring that you're going to use Trump speed and you're going to get it done. We figured
it out, got it done in just under 30 days. The Army Corps came in. They have since completed their
phase two debris removal. The federal government has done everything that is needed to be done in order
to allow all these residents and businesses to be able to rebuild. The slow rolling of
all of the permits that are coming,
the lack of green light that so many of these property owners are waiting for
from the city, the county, the state, it's bullshit.
It is so frustrating to watch.
I can't even imagine what it's like for the people who actually live there.
Because I was there, the week after I was confirmed,
I was in the Palisades.
I was like right away.
It was days later.
and I was visiting houses where the contractor was already at the house.
The contractor is ready to rebuild the house.
This is like three weeks after the fires.
And now we're having this conversation.
It's the middle of November and people are still waiting for their permits.
I mean, there's all sorts of words that, you know, I'll keep my head.
so I'm not insulting those who don't want to hear me dropping F-bombs,
but I'm telling you, it really gets your blood pressure up
when you think about it.
And then, you know, you hear Gavin Newsom go after President Trump
saying that, like, the federal government hasn't done anything.
You look at everything that the EPA did
to complete the hazardous material removal
and all the lithium ion batteries and, you know, all of that work.
All the debris removal that the Army Corps did,
Everything the President Trump does rallying the Army Corps, EPA, Bureau of Reclamation to make sure that water is moving from dams, that reservoirs are full, that you have water to be able to fight fires.
EPA has done, has been working on deregulation on what's called exceptional events rulemaking, on state implementation plans, on what's called PM2.5, like there's technical rulemaking that we've been working on.
to allow these Western states to be able to lean into forest management.
They shouldn't be forced to put an area into non-attainment
because you're doing a prescribed fire.
We should encourage the prescribed fire to prevent the larger wildfires.
Something else frustrating in Canada this summer,
there were these massive wildfires.
And, you know, I was happy that Canada was engaged in good communication with EPA.
We'd ask questions.
They'd provide updates.
But strategy was just to let the whole thing burn.
And they were just monitoring their critical assets.
And as long as it wasn't going to touch a critical asset, just let it burn.
So they let so much of their country just burned.
And then I'm at the G7 two weeks ago, Energy and Environment and Ministers Conference in Canada.
And by the way, Canada, they were very good hosts, and we had a very, a great conference.
And there was a lot that was done there.
That was amazing.
it's just it's a very different approach
where you let your entire you let so much of your country burn
and then you go into this international setting
and you're telling the world we just had our second largest wildfire
in the history of the country
it's like yeah because you didn't you didn't put it out early enough
what can you do to overlap those permits though
because these guys are losing their minds they don't want to leave the state
there are some people that are like you don't want to take
care of me, I'm going to go somewhere else and they're done with it, right? And they'll go to
Texas or they'll go to Nevada or they'll go to Arizona, but they want to leave California.
But the other 95% don't want to leave. They want to stay there and make it work. What can you do?
What can we do to overlap and say, hey, here's what's going on with the permit? Is there a way to say
this is a crisis that we had because of that the government's stepping in and they're accelerating
the number of permits and here's what we're doing with this? I was with a Goldman Sachs event two days
ago in Dallas. And the governor of Oklahoma was there. What's his name? Stitt. Stitt. Yeah, very, very
impressive guy. I think he's got one more year left as a governor of the state. He was there and he said
something. They had a rule that if in the state of Oklahoma, if the permit isn't given within 30 days,
you can't get paid for it. So he created an, and maybe, you know, I'm paraphrasing what he said
is. So you're not given a permit. You're not going to get paid for it. So you got 30 days to get
paid $600, $800, $500.
If you take longer than 30 days from the day the person asked for it, boom, we're gone.
You can't accept payment from it.
But what can we do from the top to make the situation better for Californians that were
directly impacted by fire and prevent future fires?
These are two questions I want to ask.
Yeah, sure.
So the first part is the federal government has given a total green light.
Like there's nothing that anyone is waiting for from the federal government.
the roadblock is is at that local level and i mean first off um there's just there's ways to go
to the courts you know to try to get judges involved you have elections you know if somebody
is not doing a good job you could boot them out but you know the EPA does not do
um zoning permits for you know a house on a corner of the palisades now we will do our part
to help make sure that every single possible roadblock that can ever be in front of you
that the federal government is responsible for, can help with is cleared.
And it's been cleared.
Everything has been clear totally as far as everything that's required of the federal government.
But I as the EPA administrator, like I don't have the power to say, okay, your, your mayor is not giving you your
permit, but this EPA permit to rebuild your house.
The White House can't overlap.
So let you say, does that mean locally I have so much power to abuse my constituents and
my voters and my citizen and destroy their lives?
The problem is the flip side.
So when Obama was in office, he got so heavily engaged in local zoning issues and getting
into, you know, all sorts of, you know, minority requirements.
and in New York, Westchester ended up in, Westchester County ended up in the courts,
got overturned.
It is a very dangerous road to go down to allow the federal government to get involved in
these zoning decisions because when you have a President Obama and his housing and urban
development, when you have a President Biden or, you know, God forbid a President AOC,
like what it means to say that the president of the United States has the ability to engage
in those zoning decisions it well I mean the courts have already weighed in and said no
because of what they did in the past now if there is any way maybe like where you're not getting
stronger with the zoning you're getting looser in some type of an emergency that's
that's a question that I can ask and instead of trying to shoot from the hip on something that
that I don't have the answer to you, I can ask.
Yeah, the percentages of permits, if you see how long it's taken.
The stats are.
It's insane.
It's insane when you're seeing that.
Yeah, and these are not people.
It's like a taking of property.
If I'm running the state or the city, I'm like, you want to get back in a state,
you're not wanting to leave you.
Dude, accelerate it.
Accelerate it.
Give them the permit.
Let him go do what they're building.
Why are you lagging it?
You have a customer that wants to do business with you.
They don't want to leave you.
Why don't you make their life better instead of them finally saying,
Screw it. I'm going to take this money that I have
and I'm going to go build it elsewhere. I don't
understand the speed process of
what they're doing there. Lastly on this
fire. Okay, one other point, by the way, is that
you're on the flip side. So let's say there's
a president Obama who is in
there's a fire that hits.
The power is given to
the president to be in charge
of like these zoning and permitting decisions.
They
will then claim power
to take, okay, we have a single family home
and a community of single family homes,
which is basically what we're dealing with in L.A.
And they could say, okay, with the power invested in me,
like using that as an opportunity to rebuild
where you can't be rebuilding as a single family.
So I think one of the important questions,
taking what you and I are talking about to the next level
to research whether or not a power would ever exist,
it would be important that you couldn't change the zoning
where you're stripping away a property,
right i think it would be very important how you do it because if democrats were in charge and
you set the wrong precedent and they had the power to uh to change that zoning um they would be
rebuilding local communities how they see fit uh in a way that would strip up uh strip away private property
rights this is this is catastrophic if you're running estate and you don't want to lose your job
business owners your job creators they'll leave they'll go to a different place yeah and they are
definitely they are so let's go let's go to the next thing that that uh uh uh
Is there anything, when you drive in L.A., you'll see the downtown black clouds.
You'll go over the, you know, not even the four or five freeway.
It's not the five, but one of the freeways you go down, two freeway.
And you'll see the cloud.
You're like, whoa, look at the cloud in L.A.
Black, dark, nasty, right?
Okay.
The preventing of future fires, what can the EPA do?
Because this isn't good for the environment anyways, right?
So this kind of falls under the APA.
what can we do a sort of technology maybe incentivizing
and saying any entrepreneur that comes out with a technology
because look we're going to talk about what's going on with Iran right now
with geo with cloud seeding and what they're doing
similar to what they did with Dubai and we used to say no that's conspiracy theory
there is no such thing as cloud seeding that's BS Dubai did it
California did it I mean Iran did it Iran's and floods we'll get into that
can't we create a technology that incentivizes entrepreneurs and say if you're able to find
a solution for fires we are willing to give XYZ to accelerate the process of eliminating fire
because you know anticipation is one and then prevention is better than while you're in it
let me go get helicopters coming back and forth what is what can the EPA do to prevent
more of these big fires from happening?
So we've been working on it this year,
working primarily with the Western governors,
and I've met with them multiple times in D.C.
They had a gathering in New Mexico and meet with them individually
as I've traveled to their states.
The way the system was set up under the Biden EPA
is that they are discouraged,
they are disincentivized from engaging in control burns,
prescribed fires.
They are punished for doing it,
because when they do the prescribed,
fire, it releases particulate matter into the air. And then that community, that state will end up in
non-attainment. And if they end up in non-attainment, then the consequences include loss of federal
funding and more. So they are discouraged and they are disincentivized. What we're working on doing
is reversing that. We want to incentivize these states to engage in forest management, these
prescribed fires, these exceptional events. So on March 12th, I announced so much deregulation in one day
was, you know, if you were to energy and environment reporter in Washington, D.C., you got a
press release for me once every five minutes for two hours, just announcing different
deregulatory actions. And multiple press releases that were included in that day's announcement
included different aspects of what I'm talking about here
to encourage and incentivize states
to lean into prescribed burns and forest management.
I don't want them to be punished at all for engaging this.
Because if they don't do it, the consequences are worse.
You end up with a wildfire and then people lose their homes,
their businesses, their lives,
and the cost ends up becoming even greater.
Now, another piece of this, which you got into in your question,
you mentioned cloud seeding.
I want to say as strongly as I possibly can
that I do not agree at all
with the idea that humans should be playing God with the weather.
I don't feel comfortable with it at all.
I don't feel like it's studied enough.
And by the way, when it is studied,
I don't like the idea at all of it being studied outdoors
as opposed to being studied somehow indoors.
Now, I would say for the, now, some states have legalized cloud seating.
Some U.S. states have legalized cloud seeding.
They believe in it.
Which ones are these?
Like the list might be, maybe there's like, would it be more nine?
Or red or would it be a combination of both?
It would be a mix.
Would it be interesting?
And what's the argument?
What's the reasoning behind it?
Because I know, I think the Sanchez came out and said there's none of that going on in Florida.
Okay, so there you go.
So we're going on, so you've got Colorado or 10 on that list, right?
Interesting, the fact that Texas is on there, Nevada's on there, and California's on there.
Yeah, it's a mix, right?
And, you know, I've heard, I've heard some from like an agricultural standpoint.
Like if you're in a drought, if you engage in cloud seeding, you can add precipitation over, you help with the harvest.
So you don't lose season, you don't lose that season.
I've heard it be mentioned in the respect of ski slopes
and being able to produce precipitation
so you have a natural powder going on to the ski slope.
I've heard it mentioned from that respect.
But I just, I'm just not the right person to be able to defend the practice.
Now, as far as federal agencies go, this is primarily,
Noah as the lead. I mean, some people will look at EPA, they'll look at FAA, look at some of the
other agencies. There's different types of geoengineering and solar radiation modification
and stratospheric aerosol injection and marine cloud brightening. And it's like there's all different
kinds of ways to engage in geoengineering. I would say for the people who are out there who
care about the topic, it is very, very important to communicate about it accurately. And I think
that one of the things that have undermined people who have been active in the spaces, they'll say
things that just aren't true. Like if you walked outside and you saw a line come out of the back
of an aircraft and you're like, oh my gosh, we really need to stop this stratospheric aerosol
injection that I'm showing you on my X page. Like that is just, that's not stratospheric
aerosol injection.
Now, there is an entity that we know of that puts sulfur dioxide into the upper
atmosphere, and they do it, they do it a very low quantity.
Like, it really doesn't even accomplish anything.
It's more of fundraising operation to raise money.
Maybe they could scale up.
But you kind of wonder whether or not these are people who are, like, far left or, or, like,
they're just punking everybody because it's like how do you in the name of combat and climate
change put sulfur dioxide into the the upper atmosphere the only requirement that they have is
to notify Noah that they're doing it it's not they don't have to ask for permission they just
tell Noah I'm going to put sulfur dioxide one entity I'm talking about it's called make sunsets
they put sulfur dioxide into the upper atmosphere and all they have to do is notify Noah
So something that Congress can take a look at is statutory obligations to tell an agency that they want an agency to regulate, that they're telling these entities that they want these entities to obtain permission, that these agency, that any agency or agencies would have the ability to be able to regulate it more than just receive a notice.
But getting back to the way that we communicate it publicly.
one of the most controversial
one to like step on a third rail
and make people happy or sad
to hear me say it
that line that's coming out of the back of an aircraft
there are a lot of people out there
who think that this is the United States government
engaging in population control
like they think that the federal government
like you look up you see all these lines
and all these different agencies
are just poisoning the population.
That is not what you are looking at.
And you have, the way that these engines work,
you have what is almost 100% water vapor
coming off of the end of a hot engine exhaust
that comes in contact with lower temperature
and higher humidity.
The higher the humidity,
the more persistent that trail is
that you see following the aircraft.
Now, if we want to talk about what that is
that you're looking at as far as the line in this sky,
let's just be accurate about it. And one last thing I'll mention too. It's also important that
you're amplifying real pictures, real videos. And there's a lot of real pictures and real videos out
there. I'm not saying that everyone who's posting on it, that they're putting, you know, fake
stuff out. But there's also in this world of AI, I see on social media people rallying behind,
sometimes it's an account with following, a video or a picture that is just not accurate. So,
communicating accurately, speaking truth, using the right terms, I think can advance this
conversation and this debate much further. And no, the United States government is not
engaging in population control. I've asked all the questions, by the way. I've, I actually came in
and I told, with all the meetings that I had earlier this year, I said, I have a whole lot of
questions. These are questions from the American public. Everything that you tell me, I'm going to be
putting on my website. There's nothing that you're going to tell me, and you're going to be like,
Oh, well, that's just our little secret.
Like, I am going to, there's nothing I will know as EPA administrator
that I'm not going to communicate publicly on.
But I had a lot of questions on behalf of people,
and I will continue to ask those questions
and know the EPA does not engage in those activities.
And no, a dozen, an FAA doesn't, and the others don't,
the U.S. government does not engage in this.
But doesn't this make you be concerned that if,
A candidate in the future, if an enemy, China, Iran, if they really wanted to flirt with, you know, messing with our elections, you know, in certain states for voting, because it's so close and it's coming down to one state, they can create things like this to happen to disrupt an election in America and cause a massive, you know, chaotic situation here.
how do you fight against, like how do you fight against the enemy
creating this year for us?
Yeah, so this is a really important question.
And you brought up this point earlier.
There are, there's all sorts of international activity
in a geoengineering space.
There's a lot of it.
I mean, you referenced a bunch of countries.
By the way, China as well.
Here in the United States, in the past,
and by the way, they're not too distant past.
Like during the Biden administration,
there was U.S. government funding and support
that propped up geoengineering.
I'm speaking in, as of November of 2025,
but you could go back years and decades,
and there has been U.S. government activity
in this particular space in the past,
and there have been congressional appropriations.
Like, this isn't even a secret.
You can go pull language, and I put this on my website,
EPA.gov slash geoengineering,
references to
and anyone out there
in the audience can go check it out
references to past government
support of this activity
going forward into the future
you know maybe you end up
with some kind of an administration
that feels like we should be playing
God with the weather
maybe they feel like
in the name of combating
global warming and climate change
what we should be doing is
you know pumping
stratospheric aerosol injection
to be changing the temperature,
that maybe we should be putting clouds
into the sky for the purpose of
deflecting sun rays off so that they don't hit the earth.
Like trying to decide what the weather impact should be,
what the temperature impact should be.
And, I mean, you mentioned in the context of an election.
You could say it, you know,
in the context of a thousand things,
you know, impacting the economy, way of life.
And if you try to ramp it up very quickly,
and it hasn't been properly tested
and you start studying it outdoors,
I have a problem just with the outdoor experiments,
let alone the actual putting it into practice.
And while we can have the right policy here in the United States,
this is very much an international topic
because there's a whole lot of money
that we see getting invested to this overseas.
Yeah, and not only that,
I see the investment into overseas,
but I see more the election interference,
the gamification, the manipulation.
There's so much you can do with this.
right if you think about the last six weeks
look at how many these cloud companies have had issues
not one it's not just a WS
it's not just quite a few of them that have had these issues
just I think Uber was down two days ago
was it two days ago Rob I think Uber was down
I want to say Twitter was down for a few hours
and why is this happening
is it a new way of
you know who was a cloud fire yes
they restore services after outage
but how many these cloud companies have had
this. It's not just them. You know, Amazon had it. Quite a few them had it. So then it gets me to
wonder and say, let me think like the enemy. If the enemy wanted to disrupt and create the next
COVID, what would that look like? Would it be more an environmental thing you do? Would it be more
of a cloud? You know, you take our service out so now we can't log in and day-to-day activity.
Would it be a banking way of doing it? You know, you have to play preventative. It's just a wiring
I lived in Iran for a long time, so you know, you're always tempted to sit there and be concerned about what somebody can do to destroy your life, especially country like ours, the greatest country in the world.
They're going to want to come and target a place like this.
So that's why I was asking a question of the enemy using that against us.
If you show the video of what's going on in Iran right now while they're messing with this, this is Iran.
This isn't a place called Abadan, if you want to press play.
This is from cloud seeding.
Okay.
Drought turns into flooding in Iran after cloud seeding efforts.
Iranian authorities issued flood warnings
for six western provinces
on November 17th
country has been suffering from severe drought
for more than now five years
so this was their way of making up
so if you can create
this type of flooding
in Iran
and say I'm an evil leader
who hates this country
I mean this is a great opportunity
for me
that I can use these types of events
at unique times
to disrupt an election, no?
Yeah, and cloud seeding is an actual real thing
that has been around for decades.
For a long time, they used to say it was a conspiracy theory,
but it's a real thing.
It is not a conspiracy theory.
Cloud seeding is real.
It's been legalized in a bunch of United States.
States, and for people who are out there
who aren't familiar with what cloud seating is,
the idea of just, you know, saying,
thinking that, you know, this is some crazy idea. It's a crazy topic. It couldn't possibly be
real. This is actually a thing that other countries are doing, and we actually have it taking
place here inside the United States. Having more of a conversation, here's one of the problems
is that a lot of people who, you know, earlier on I was talking about the people who care about
these issues and the way they communicate. And my best advice is just making sure you're always
communicating accurately and honestly with truth because if you if you slip up at all it will
undermine like if if 10% of your argument or 5% of your argument is not accurate you will undermine
the other 90 to 95% of your argument just just don't do that as far as everybody else goes
like if you think that everything that we're talking about here is just like one big conspiracy
theory and nothing that we just said in the last 10 minutes is true and you're just going to
insult everybody else, that doesn't make it go away. It's going to make it worse. And I would say
for leaders in government, if like if you're in Congress and you listen to the last 10 minutes of
this conversation and you're like, for whatever reason, somehow you're miraculously like hearing
it for the first time where you're actually listening for the first time, like don't just move on
with your day and then, uh, and ignore this topic because you all have constituents who care about
it. And it's important to respect people.
who are your constituents, who have questions,
and if you don't give them answers,
then you're forcing them to go online,
to go on social media,
to try to put the pieces together themselves.
You, the elected official,
are in the best possible position
on behalf of these constituents
to find out the truth.
The same thing with, you know,
like what we see Secretary Kennedy leading
with the Maha movement,
the Make America Healthy Again Commission,
is that there are these Maha moms and dads,
they have questions. And instead of them being treated as outcasts and you're disrespecting
these parents who want to make the right decisions and be great parents, I think it's a responsibility
to follow sound science, gold standard of science, to be transparent with it, to answer these
questions for the public, and have policies that meet the moment. So these are just two
examples where I feel like in the past before President Trump, for too long, you have these people
who are just who are ignored and the people in government are like, well, there's only, there's only
a few million of them. And that's not a lot because we have this massive country of hundreds of
millions of people. I sit down with President Trump and he'll talk to me about the flow of
a shower, a faucet, a toilet, the flow of a gas can, the light bulb,
You know, earlier we're talking about start-stop feature on vehicles.
Each of these topics, let's say there, maybe there are only a few million people who care about them.
The fact is the president respects that he has so many different Americans who care about these issues and they might seem small.
And there are a lot of people out there who care about geoengineering.
And the middle finger that they've gotten from the government on their questions for years has actually made this moment worse.
better. Good point. Next question in regards to nuclear, okay, because what we're noticing
right now is whether it's Bitcoin, whether it's crypto, whether it's AI, whether it's, you know,
you're noticing Microsoft. Some of these companies are realizing we need nuclear energy. That's
going to be cleaner to deal with. So one, and then we see how many facilities China's been building
and they're playing office in this. We've fallen behind for decades, not even like a decade,
four decades. I think it was in the 70s, 80s, when we stopped completely Chernobyl. A couple of these
happens were like, listen, we're pumping a break. We're not building these facilities anymore. And even if
you, Rob, go to the images to show how we're building versus others nuclear facilities, you'll see we
haven't done any in a long time. There's a couple charts. They can go to it. There's a better one than this one.
But how do you repackage that? You know, like you said earlier, inflation reductionary act or whatever
the names that they give to it, right?
What do you do to bring confidence to others that,
guys, we kind of do need to build these nuclear generators,
nuclear facilities, because we need this energy long term.
Maybe you do, maybe you don't.
Where do you stand with that?
Yeah, we need a lot more base load power in this country.
And we need more nuclear.
We need more gas pipelines.
We need to make sure that coal plants all across the country
aren't just getting closed down.
The people who are talking about wind,
is an intermittent source as if it is a substitute for base load power are just so out of touch
with the reality of the moment.
We need not only more energy production from within our own country, but we also need to do
it at cheaper costs.
And with this push for AI, there's a lot of people out there who are kind of spooked about
AI and the uncertainties and we'll take jobs and all the information power that will
exist. I get all of it. I understand. But the idea that we just hit the brakes and allow
China to win it, it's going to be a lot harder for us to catch up later if we don't just win this
race for AI right now. In order to win this race for AI, need more base load power. And I mentioned
earlier on in this discussion we were having about all the groundbreakings that we visited. I was in
I mentioned I was West Memphis, Arkansas. There was a $4 billion Google project that broke
around just a couple weeks before I had gotten there.
They entered into an agreement with the state of Arkansas and energy.
That's the energy company in the area.
Arkansas relies on nuclear in a big way.
And they're able to come up with this project that is a net benefit for the energy rate payer of just over a billion dollars.
So when we do it, we can also do it smartly.
It's also important to talk about water reuse.
There are other aspects of running these operations that we can have maximum efficiency, so that's great for the environment.
It would be good.
It's best for our own economy, for our national security, and for our environment,
because we tap into these energy supplies so much better than so many other countries do elsewhere around the world.
The president has been advancing Nessie pipeline to get natural gas into New York.
That just got its approvals from New York and New Jersey.
There's a push for a pipeline called Constitution Pipeline to deliver natural gas into New England.
There's talk about liquid natural gas pipeline in Alaska along the Trans-Alaska pipeline route.
the trans-western
pipeline. They're doing an expansion of
$5.3 billion to deliver natural
gas from New Mexico into
Arizona. And the other thing that
I want to mention, too, is the need to
tap into our rare earth's
materials and to
also build out the entire supply chain
because we are relying on countries
like China way too much. From
both the original extraction
and especially with the way China's
done the expansion with the Belt and Road initiative,
but then not just with the
extraction out of the ground, but also the whole process of putting together that battery, that
chip until that point where you get the final product. We start to finish, need to work on this
here in the U.S. magnets, batteries, chips, the list goes on. Getting that investment here is important.
I mentioned Idaho Falls, Idaho. That was a nuclear facility that O'KLO just broke ground on,
and they want to build a bunch of others. So these small modular reactors, SMRs,
something that is becoming a reality,
not as a hypothetical for a few years from now,
but stuff that's actually getting built at this point today.
And the efficiencies are so much better.
Like the innovation, like you care about the environment,
we have come along so far with stationary sources,
we just mentioned a whole bunch,
and as well with mobile sources,
like medium and heavy-duty vehicles.
And one other thing I wanted to mention
is something that's really interesting to me,
advanced recycling. I was in Texas and this place called Baytown. And I think it's maybe owned
by Exxon Mobil. It's a lot of partnerships with a lot of different companies. And there's so much
concern about recycling plastics. And you'll hear like many in the left talk about plastics in the
ocean and you get bipartisan support for some of these bills that have passed Congress in the past
like Save Our Seas, the Save Our Seas Act or Save Our Cs 2.0. Advanced Recycling
isn't just breaking down plastic
into smaller plastic
it is like breaking it down
to its original compound
it's amazing how
far innovation
has gone right now
and it's just
it's incredible
like on the environment
yeah right
on the environmental front
the opportunities that are in front of us
so like for all the Americans out there
who you want to
go rally behind some environmental
NGO to
to boycott, you know, Keystone Pipeline or whatever's next.
You want some litigation to stop all this innovation and investment in the country.
All you're doing is empowering countries like China.
You're weakening the United States, and you're out of touch, really,
with how far these advancements have come right here in America.
I think this is good that you guys are focused on this.
I think we need to win the energy, you know, war as well, long term.
It's going to cause all this.
What number was it yesterday?
Was it $15 trillion that the president's gotten commitment of,
maybe even $18 trillion of commitment of people,
of companies and countries investing here?
You saw he talked to MBS,
and just on a five-minute conversation,
got him from $600 billion to a trillion dollars.
Those folks that are going to be investing here,
you need the resources to be able to make the investment,
knowing I'm going to get a rate of return,
and energy is going to be a big part of it.
So it's great.
American jobs, they pay taxes.
And by the way, like, the people out there are like,
oh, that's not true that trillions of dollars are coming into the United States.
When President Trump was talking about this,
you know, I was at the White House for this dinner with MBS this week,
and the president's saying it sitting next to MBS for a $1 trillion Saudi commitment,
and then you look a few people down and you see Tim Cook from Apple,
and they've pledged, you know, $5,600 billion.
you know you look a few more seats down the table and you see jensen from the video they've pledged
five six hundred million dollars and like and there was so many other people inside that room
i mean you might have been it for all i know if you added up the amount of pledged investments
from just inside of that that the east room of the white house that night you are way above all
of the left wing fact checkers who are trying to claim that this money isn't coming in now if
If this continues, and you guys get the results in the right person campaigns in 28,
this could be, because in order to really build on this momentum, you guys need 12 years.
You can't, you know, you need more than four years.
So a big part of the concern for me is, you know, who's going to come afterwards?
We know he's a doer.
Who's going to be a doer at his level to continue to trust for voters to say, I got somebody in there that's going to continue.
Now, by the way, what's your best Trump story?
Do you have a Trump story of, you know, spending time?
I'm sure you spend many.
I'll give you a good one from a recent memory.
He calls me up to late at night.
I am laying down in bed.
Lights are out.
I'm ready to go to sleep.
Fortunately, he didn't call me a little bit later
because I actually was about to be asleep.
I wasn't asleep yet.
Phone rings.
He's talking about an issue that he's pretty fired up over.
He wants me to call another cabinet member and one other person
and then get back to him.
So, you know, Mr. President's getting kind of.
kind of late at night. If I reach them right away, I'll definitely call you back. But let's say it's
hard for me to reach one or both of them. And it gets really late. Do you want me to just call you
back in the morning? He says, no, whatever time it is, I'll be up. So I call the first person up
and he answers the phone. It's a five-minute conversation. Boxes checked. I had what I needed.
Hung up the phone. All good. Call the second person can't reach them. I'm calling over and over and over
again. I'm texting. I'm using different
messaging apps. I'm using different
devices. I cannot
reach this other person who is a member of the
cabinet. Eventually, I do hear back from
the person. We have a call.
Got the information I need. Boxes
check. We hang up. Looking at time,
it is extremely, it's the middle of the night.
The president said, whatever
time it was, I'll be up. So I call
him. He is
wide awake. I mean,
he is, you would think, like, for a normal
person, you're like, dude, you just drank like seven
Celsius. And he's talking India. He's talking China trade. He's talking all these other issues
aside from what, on top of what we were talking about. And he's fired up over this topic
that he had called me about. He was passionate about it. And he was really engaged. And if you
were listening to the conversation, you might say the president was emotional about it, like
maybe almost in a bad way. And if you said that, you would have been wrong.
because right when maybe that thought would have crossed your mind and you could tell he was
smiling on his end of the phone he says don't you love this aren't you having fun and I'm
like absolutely mr. president I'm like we and you know the conversation immediately became
lighthearted and even though he is passionate about what he is doing and he gets fired up over
these topics that are really important to him in this country he is really enjoying
being able to do this in like a very positive way.
It's one thing to have four years in the White House,
to have four more years to reflect on it,
the two assassination attempts,
you win all the battleground states,
you win the popular vote,
you have these four years and you want to make it count
after all of his experience in life,
all of his experience as president,
the team he puts together with the great chemistry,
we work together,
there's no competition and friction and conflict.
We all want to make sure
that these four years are as successful as possible,
And its president does not sleep.
He does not stop working for the American public.
And we're coming off of a president who would wake up at like 105 and they'd call a lid by 1.30.
And now we have a president who he just doesn't stop.
And that's just one of so many stories.
But it really goes to show you the type of president we have right now who's fighting so hard for all of us.
Yeah, Corrine Jean-Pier said one time, yeah, you're not going to get a hold of Biden after 9 p.m.
You remember that, Rob?
Was it after 9 p.m.?
I think it was eight.
Yeah, 8 p.m.
You're not going to get a hold of them.
Oh, it was, you can't get a hold of them before 9 a.m.
You can't get a hold them after 8 p.m.
And that's Corrine Jean-Pier.
What would you...
She rounded up, like, five hours, by the way.
She rounded up five hours.
What works with the president when you're negotiating with him?
What does it not work?
When you're trying to do a deal with them from what you've witnessed, what works, what doesn't work?
Well, I mean, the president's an amazing listener.
If you have a good idea, I mean, he's going to hear you out.
And if it's a good, if it's a great idea,
like, hey, mister, you know, if it was, if it was someone who rolled in like, hey, I have an idea of how to solve the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, like, President's listening. By the way, if it's, if it's a terrible idea, he's going to let you know. So, um, if you're going to pull that card, you better come up with, uh, with something good. Um, but, but the president, like, he wants to be surrounded with smart, intelligent, substantive feedback, people, ideas. And he wants to be decisive.
in making the right call to help this country succeed and thrive.
As far as engaging with the president,
it's good to, you know, like earlier on,
we're towards the beginning of this conversation.
We're talking about Memdani.
Like, how is Memdani going to start the conversation?
Is Memdani going to sit down inside of the Oval Office
on the other side of the Resolute desk
and his initial tone, substance, body language
is going to be about, hey, I want confrontation?
because President Trump will give you confrontation.
He's not backing down from anyone.
He's the alpha male in every room.
He's the alpha dog in every room.
And that is on an international stage of world leaders,
or it's with communist mayor elects in cities here in the United States.
But if you sit down at that table,
despite the fact that there's all the Mamdani history anti-Trump,
he rolls in there as the mayor,
elect of New York City, and he has the tone, the substance, the body language, the demeanor,
and he's engaging this president saying, Mr. President, I want to work with you to be able
to make New York City successful. This president, without any convincing needed, is ready in the
next sentence to get substantive and deep to make it happen. So, yeah, best advice, you know,
be real, make a connection. Don't try to challenge him to a fight because he'll kill you.
And just know that he's a guy, like, in his heart, he wants to make it count.
Hopefully, Kwamey is listening to this.
Middle name Kwami.
Mammani is listening to this on the approach.
Last question before we wrap up.
You're Jewish, your wife's Mormon.
Is that true?
True.
Okay.
Have you watched truth and treason?
I haven't.
You're joking.
You're giving me an assignment, though, for next time?
You don't know the story?
I haven't watched it.
Okay.
So you have to watch it.
I haven't been able to watch much of enough TV.
Let me just tell you.
Where am I going to find it?
I don't know where you're going to find it.
I'm sure they're going to, they'll find a way to, I'm sure the guy's going to reach out to you, find a way to bring the movie to you.
But it's a story about a Mormon kid in Germany.
Okay.
During the true story, by the way, this is a 16, 17-year-old kid who is fighting for his Jewish friend because they know what they're about to do to him.
And I don't even want to tell you what ends up happening to the story at the end.
I just think you need to watch it.
This just came out two weeks ago.
When I looked at the profile, I said, wait a minute, he's married to a more.
You and your wife and the kids have to watch this together.
The history of it is absolutely amazing.
What this young boy, Mormon boy, I used to work with a lot of Mormons before.
And I know about Gordon B. Hinkley, the virtues, and all this other.
We work with a lot of the stake presidents that were very, very good people.
people. Some of the best people I've worked with in my life, there were Mormons. A lot of good people.
And I think you'll enjoy this book. So if there's anything a recommendation for you and your family,
it's done by Angel Studios, which Angel Studios also did Sound of Freedom. So just so you know
where the background of who is putting it up, and you're not going to know a single actor in it,
and they all crushed it. All the actors in this movie did such a great job. I recommend everybody
to go watch that movie. I'm going to watch it. I thought it was appropriate to tell you.
Love it. This was a blast, having you on.
I appreciate you for coming out.
And all the best to you.
You guys got three more years to go get things in order.
So everybody in America wants you guys to continue.
And I know you're just getting started.
You're a young guy.
Your future looks very, very bright for you.
And we're the same age.
But in politics, you're a very young guy when it comes on to this.
And you're a fighter, formidable.
So excited that you're on the team doing your work.
Oh, man.
Great to be on with you.
And to all of your listeners, they're out there,
loyally. I come across them all the time. They're all across America. They're tuning in every
time, every word, every show. I could tell you behind the scenes, getting a chance to spend some
time with you that you're the real deal. And there are a lot of people who are following you for
a voice of reason and they're getting it. I appreciate it. Thank you so much. Appreciate you for having
on. Guys, take everybody. God bless. We're doing it tomorrow. Bye-bye, bye-bye.
