Pod Save America - Billionaires' Bet on Trump Pays Off
Episode Date: December 13, 2024America's corporate titans seem pretty happy about Donald Trump's election—even pitching in to his inaugural bash—and it's no big mystery why: he's promising yet again to slash their taxes. Meanwh...ile, in his TIME Person of the Year interview, Trump admits that he may not be able lower grocery prices after all. Oh, well! Jon and Dan dive into all the latest, including FBI Director Christopher Wray's resignation, Biden’s historic pardons, Nancy Mace's latest theatrics, and why Democrats are suddenly cozying up to Elon Musk.
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Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, everyone seems to be doing the Trump dance.
As FBI Director Christopher Wray goes down without a fight,
Democrats start flattering Elon Musk
and Mark Zuckerberg sponsors the inauguration.
Trump, meanwhile, admits he might not be able
to bring down prices after all
during his big time Man of the Year interview,
an honor he celebrated at the New York Stock Exchange
on Thursday by telling Wall Street he'd cut their taxes.
Welcome to your populist realignment, Dan.
But first, we have some actual good news.
No, stop.
It's real.
I'm not, not a joke.
It's December, 2024, right?
It is.
Okay.
All right.
Cool. Cool. It's been a joke. It's December, 2024, right? It is. Okay, all right, cool, cool. It's been a while.
The White House announced on Thursday
that President Biden made history
by granting clemency to nearly 1,500 people
and pardoning 39 others,
the largest single day clemency action in modern history.
The 1,500 number is people who had largely been living out
lengthy sentences in home confinement
because of the pandemic
and already had been reintegrated in their communities.
Those sentences were commuted.
The 39 pardons went mostly to people convicted
of nonviolent drug offenses when they were younger
and who have since turned their lives around.
What do you think of the move?
Pretty good, huh?
Love it, it's great.
I saw that this morning when I woke up
way too early as usual and it was great news.
And it's sort of what we've been waiting for.
Like every time you have a transition
from the president of one party
to the president of the next,
the outgoing president furiously spends
that last two months trying to get as much
of the essay as possible,
fireproof their accomplishments,
use the powers they have and pardons is a big part of it.
And it had felt for the last couple of weeks
like that was not happening.
I'm sure it was happening internally
because they didn't just come up with these pardons
yesterday like they'd been working on this for a long time.
But it was good to see sort of that outgoing use of power
in a way that was consistent with the president's values
and protecting people
from a dangerous thing that's gonna happen
when Trump takes over.
In the statement, White House also said
that there would be further action in the days to come.
The office of the pardon attorney,
part of the justice department,
has received nearly 12,000 requests for clemency
during Mr. Biden's term.
In 2022 and 2023, he pardoned anyone in federal
prison for marijuana possession. He can also and has been urged to pardon or commute sentences of
others convicted of nonviolent drug offenses who are in federal prison. Some people have urged him
to commute sentences for the 40 people who were on death row in federal prison and reduce those
sentences to life without parole so that they don't get the death penalty. So altogether,
he has issued, I think, 26 individual pardons and 135 commutations. So what do you think? What do
you think is going to be next? What do you think should be next? I hope it's the 40 death row
inmates. Joe Biden, this has kind of been lost to history, but Joe Biden was the first modern president
elected who was at an opponent of the death penalty.
The upside of his Catholicism.
And a, but it's just, I say that because I say that because he was obviously not as
pro-choice as he is now for most of his life, largely due to him being raised a Catholic.
Obviously there are only 40 inmates on federal on death row row in federal pentatree's. There's,
you know, huge numbers of them in state prisons, but it would send a powerful signal to do that
on his way out the door. So I certainly hope that that is something that is on the list of things
they're actively considering over the last month here.
And it seems like from all kinds of reporting now, since last time we talked about it,
that he's still considering preemptive blanket pardons for some folks on Trump's enemies list.
And, uh, and Trump has now talked about the January 6th committee, talked about
Jack Smith, um, so I guess we'll wait and see if he does that.
Do you see that Benny Thompson said he'd take one?
I did see Benny Thompson say he'll take one.
You know what, which I respect,
all these people playing coy, you know,
Adam Schiff being like, oh, I don't think it's a good idea.
Yeah, Adam Schiff's gonna take it if you get it.
Don't give me a pardon.
That's me winking for those listening to it
on their phones.
I mean, not to dwell on this again, but you know,
it crossed my mind since we were talking about pardons
and commutations today. Why do you think he didn't wait to do the Hunter pardon until after a move like this?
You know, we talked about this on a Tuesday show and Tommy mentioned that he wanted to
do the Hunter pardon before Hunter was sentenced.
Though I guess I understand that though you could also make an argument that after Hunter
was sentenced, perhaps commuting the sentence altogether would have been received
better. Our old pal Anita Dunn, who was one of the closest aides to Joe Biden
for not just his presidency, but like much of his career. She said recently at
a New York Times Dealbook event when she was asked about the Hunter Biden pardon,
I don't agree with the way it was done. I don't agree with the way it was
done. I don't agree with the timing and I don't agree frankly with the attack on our judicial
system. The argument is one I think that many observers are concerned about. A president who
ran to restore the rule of law, who has upheld the rule of law, who has really defended the rule of
law kind of saying, well, maybe not right now. I thought a lot about how and why the White House
did it this way. And I think it's pretty simple. We know all the about how and why the White House did it this way.
And I think it's pretty simple.
We know all the people who work at the White House.
They are very smart.
They know exactly how shooting out the Hunter Biden pardon
on its own before you pardon anyone else on a Sunday night
at the end of Thanksgiving weekend is going to,
before you jet off to Angola is going to look.
Which is why I think most of them weren't involved.
Well, I mean, he called the White House and said, this is what we're doing. That's what weren't involved. Well, I mean, he called the White House
and said, this is what we're doing.
That's what I'm saying.
No, I mean, most of the very smart White House staff
that we knew did not know until it was happening.
They didn't know he had made the decision to do it,
but I'm sure there's a conversation on rollout, right?
And the president came back from Thanksgiving
with his family, where they had a family meeting about this.
Hunter was at that meeting.
Hunter is staring down the barrel of going to prison
soon and the president makes a decision. He calls back and says, I've made this decision.
And then they have a choice. Do they just do it right away before it leaks or do they allow it
to leak out there that he is thinking about it and then face a bunch of pressure? And so
this is not how anyone would design. I think it's just, it's a very, this is how the process
works. And it takes a long time to get 1300 commutations
and pardons together.
And that process was ongoing and not yet finished
when he made this decision at Thanksgiving.
Yeah.
So there's no plan that had it this way.
It's just like, this is how life unfolded
and this was a family issue.
And the one thing you always read in the reporting
is on family stuff, no one argues, Biden calls
the shots and that's how this was.
And I mean, I won't criticize it all over again.
I already did.
Um, I will say that these pardons and commutations, they do make me feel better about the whole
thing.
Yeah, of course.
Uh, I also think that if he, like I said, issues these preemptive pardons and blanket pardons
and makes them about sort of protecting people
from political vengeance and retribution by Donald Trump
and the Hunter pardon sort of fits into that bucket,
then I feel even better, even though I'm, you know,
disappointed that he lied to us.
All right, elsewhere in the justice system,
there is less reason for celebration.
FBI director-
We got that happiness out of the way.
Let's get into the shit now.
FBI director Chris Ray announced Wednesday
that he would step down at some point
before Trump's inauguration on January 20th,
paving the way for Trump hatchet man, Cash Patel,
to take over as head of the world's
premier investigative agency.
Ray said in his statement, quote, In my view, this is the best way to avoid dragging the bureau
deeper into the fray while reinforcing the values and principles that are so important
to how we do our work. A lot of folks aren't happy to say the least. Jonathan Shade at the
Atlantic in a piece called A Scandalous Resignation summed it up this way, quote, the president-elect had been facing the unpleasant task of firing
a lifelong Republican whom he had selected himself, inviting the national media to raise
ugly questions about his oft-confessed desire to turn the federal criminal justice apparatus
into a weapon of political vengeance.
Instead, Ray, like so many Republicans who couldn't stomach Trump's demands, decided to go gentle into that good night.
Nobody except Ray will remember where they were
when Christopher Ray resigned.
Ouch.
I mean, you can sympathize with Ray
not wanting to just sit around
and wait for Trump to fire him,
but I don't know, what do you think?
Was this the right move?
Absolutely not.
I mean, just the FBI, position of FBI director is one of the most powerful
in this country.
You have an army of investigators
and law enforcement officers who work for you.
It is so powerful that unlike the Department of Defense,
the director of the CIA,
Congress gave the FBI director 10 year nonconsecutive terms.
So you can't amass too much power
and you are insulated from the influence
of individual presidents and members of Congress.
And Donald Trump for the second time now
is firing an FBI director.
And in this case, he is doing it
and he wants to install a loyalist
who has published an actual list of the enemies
who he wants to prosecute.
And that should be a big giant deal.
And it's not gonna be because Chris Ray
just slouched off into retirement.
And so instead you have to pick up the alternative scenario
where Joe Biden leaves, Donald Trump is sworn in,
he walks in the White House
and then he fires the FBI director
who has years left on his term
that was confirmed by the Senate
to replace him with Cash Patel.
But because Ray resigned,
when he was trying to appoint Cash Patel,
it's just going to seem like he's filling any other cabinet,
empty cabinet vacancy, like all the rest of them.
And it just, you can't,
this is, it is a big deal what he is doing with the FBI
and Chris Ray made it seem like a lot less big deal.
So he did not uphold any of those values
and principles that he talks about.
He actually undermined them by giving into Trump.
Pure cowardice in my opinion, pure cowardice.
I think I agree just for the sake of argument.
Oh, let's hear it.
No, I guess what benefit to the country or politically for those who oppose Trump
would have come from Ray waiting, getting fired, and then Cash Patel gets the job
anyway, just a little bit later than he would have.
And Donald Trump gets a couple days worth
of very critical stories and commentary by all of us
for firing the FBI director.
In the end, if Cash Patel is gonna be the FBI director
in either way, it's not gonna make a huge difference
to the Benny Thompson's, Adam Schiff's,
Anthony Fauci's of the world who are gonna be investigated.
But it is a chance to grab the nation's attention
for just a moment to show how dangerous this is.
Because as we're gonna talk about on this podcast,
we all ran around for a year and a half saying
that Donald Trump was an existential threat to democracy.
One of the reasons he was an existential threat to democracy
is because every fucking morning before breakfast,
he announced on True Social that he was gonna investigate
all of his political opponents,
which we said was fascist and authoritarian and dangerous. And now he's doing that exact thing.
And so many people, Chris Ray included, are sort of like, eh, maybe not that big a deal. And so if
it is as big a deal as we think it is, and I imagine Chris Ray probably thinks it is, then you
have to at least try to tell that story. And it makes it harder to tell that story if you're just
going to hand the keys of the FBI
to Cash Patel as opposed to making Donald Trump
take them from you and do it.
Like this is what Preet did as US attorney in New York.
He made Trump fire him and that was a big deal
and firing the FBI director is a huge deal
and it should get that attention
and it won't because of Chris Ray.
My first reaction was like sort of the way he left,
less about I'm quitting, you're firing me
and the difference between that and more about like,
Chris Ray, I think has an obligation,
whether he does it after he leaves or now,
or if he had waited and got fired,
but he has an obligation, I think,
to let people know
that he did a good job.
And the reason he's being fired is because he carried out
his duties to investigate the President of the United States
for stealing classified information.
And that's why they went to Mar-a-Lago.
And he, by the way, retrieved classified information that the
president had stole, the ex-president at that point had
stolen and refused to give back and obstructed justice.
Like I do think that a little bit, a defense of the Bureau and the
Bureau's actions over the last several years, and just making sure people know
that they played it pretty fucking straight over the last several years
after he was appointed by Donald Trump
and is a Republican himself.
I do think he has an obligation just for the public
to know that and if people don't care,
then they're free not to care.
But might as well tell that story.
I'm sure we'll get to read it in a book
coming out in October, 2025.
Maybe he can, maybe he can do a press
conference with Jim Comey.
I'll send him an invite link to Substack, see if
he can get started early.
Also, I think there, and JVL made this point, uh,
in his newsletter today at the Bulwark that
people who oppose Trump, or at least the people
who want to defend our democratic institutions,
anything they do to sort of delay Trump and his minions from doing what they want to do
is a good thing. And so, Cash Patel getting in earlier than he would have if we had to go through
Chris Wray getting fired, you know, it would have been nice. It would have been nice.
Any delay tactics here are probably helpful. So that's...
I have not heard a really good argument for Chris Ray doing it the way he did, but maybe
he'll speak up soon.
One factor that seems to be making the Ray News tougher to swallow is that it's not just
Ray.
Obviously, you and Melissa talked about Wednesday.
Jack Smith also made the decision to resign rather than get fired.
And in general, it seems like a lot of big players,
corporations, media outlets, even some elected Democrats,
are employing a kinder, gentler approach
to Trump's second term so far.
Here's an incomplete accounting from just the last few days.
Metta gave a million dollars to Trump's inauguration
after Mark Zuckerberg had dinner with Trump.
Amazon giving a million dollars too.
Thanks, Jeff Bezos.
The CEO of Time, the magazine which just named Trump
Person of the Year, accompanied him
to the New York Stock Exchange
and started clapping and chanting USA, USA
when Trump rang the bell.
The fuck?
Democratic Senator John Fetterman joined
Truth Social and said that not only was
the Hunter Biden pardon correct, but that
Trump deserves a pardon too for his
conviction in the Manhattan case. And
other Democrats like Congressman Richie
Torres and Senator Richard Blumenthal
have been praising Elon Musk with Blumenthal calling him the tech industry's quote, champion of free speech.
Ro Khanna has said he's been trading techs with Elon and called him an extraordinary entrepreneur,
though said he also was clear with him where he disagreed.
Fetterman compared Elon to Tony Stark.
So, a lot of cliches you could reach for here. If you can't beat
them, join them. Discretion is the better part of valor. Better to be at the table
than on the menu. What do you think is going on here? And obviously all the
different people I just mentioned there, they could all have different motivations.
There could be different degrees of kissing Donald Trump's ass
and Elon Musk's ass, but what do you think's going on here?
So let's probably try to separate this out
into a couple of groups.
There are corporations which are staring down
the prospect of an all you can eat buffet
of corporate greed under Donald Trump.
Less taxes, which we'll get to.
We'll get to that. Less regulation, we'll get to that. We'll get to that.
Less regulation, just fucking pay to play left and right.
And they are chomping at the bit.
A lot of these are tech companies who,
like this probably somebody with Metta,
who have felt like they could not acquire other companies
under Lena Con's FTC because of Biden's very good
anti-trust policies. So the corporations are, they're gonna be Donald Trump'sTC because of Biden's very good antitrust policies.
So the corporations are, they're going to be Donald Trump's friend because Donald Trump's
going to do what they want.
And I think if they think, and they know if you're friends with Donald Trump, he is like
an old school corrupt politician.
If you're friends with him, he will hook you up with some government contracts, some other
stuff.
Then you have Democrats who are trying to figure out how to deal with Elon Musk as a public figure.
Someone who is quite popular with a group of voters
that we lost, right, namely young men.
And that he, in understanding that he is a world famous,
very successful business person,
and he has taken on a task.
And I think that they are, and I think Rokana in particular,
probably pretty smart about this.
And he has a relationship with Elon from long time in California,
but I mean, he was a commerce department appointee in the Obama administration
when Elon was hoovering down solar tax credits for Tesla.
But he's a huge fan of the recovery act that Elon Musk.
I think the way we navigate the Doge commission
requires some deafness because what they want to do
at the service level is quite popular.
Get rid of waste and fraud and abuse in government,
like everyone agrees with that.
And so you wanna be in the situation
where you're agreeing to work with them
and then when they come back with all their
social security cuts and their elimination
of the Department of Education, then you hammer them.
And so I think that's the appropriate way there.
I don't know what,
I can't speak to what John Fetterman's doing.
I don't really understand the,
going on true social, that is fine.
Gavin Newsom did that a long time ago.
Like that.
That doesn't bother me.
Offering, suggesting Trump get a pardon,
that seems primarily like trolling.
I don't really get that, but.
And then I think there is this other thing that I think we all have to remind ourselves
as we think about the next four years.
We are never running at Donald Trump again.
Yeah.
He is not our opponent.
The first four years of Trump was about every single day
trying to increase the likelihood that we could beat him
in the 2020 election.
And we succeeded.
Not as well as we would like,
but we did succeed because he's back.
But this time we have a different set of tasks.
So we don't necessarily have to,
if we agree with Trump on something that is popular,
it is okay to agree with him
and then take that issue off the table.
We don't have to oppose him on every single thing
if it is an area of potential agreement.
We also don't have to chase them down every rabbit hole.
Right?
Our task is not to beat Trump.
It is to rebuild our brand
and then separate the new Trump coalition
from the Republican party that comes after Trump.
And so we have to think with that mentality.
And that does mean,
it's just a very different approach than resistance 1.0.
My critique is with none of that.
And I don't think that what you just said is necessarily reflective of what any of these fucking characters
are doing or saying right now.
I think Roe is my exception to this.
Right.
I, Roe is the exception, but I even think that you don't
need to call Elon Musk anything nice at all to be willing to play ball with the Doge
thing and putting out a list of reforms that you want. I mean, I was saying this, but I think the
Democrats should put out their own list before Elon and Vivek have their own list and make it about
the corporate subsidies we want to get rid of, the tax breaks we want to get rid of,
other waste and abuse that we're comfortable getting rid of.
Like, let's do our own thing.
And then when they don't agree to it, then we can hit them over it, right?
Like, let's be constructive on policy and governing when we agree.
And let's be really tough on policy and governing when we disagree.
But like, we don't have to say nice fucking things about these people. We don't have to kiss Trump's like we don't have to say nice fucking things
about these people.
We don't have to kiss Trump's, we don't have to,
we shouldn't, we shouldn't chase Trump down every rabbit
hole for sure.
We also don't need to fucking kiss his ass.
And also-
Like do you think Democrats are kissing his ass?
No, no, no, no, not Trump, Elon Musk stuff is like,
did Blumenthal?
That's crazy.
What the fuck are you saying?
That's crazy, I don't understand that.
He's a champion of free speech?
He's not a champion of free speech?
There is a moment, when you lose an election,
everyone loses their fucking mind for like 90 days.
And they do dumb shit, right?
You do, they overreact.
Mark Zuckerberg, like-
That's a, that's different.
There are few humans more full of shit than Mark Zuckerberg
for like all of the values he professed that Facebook had
and that his company has and all this bullshit.
It's like Donald Trump attempted a coup.
He attempted a coup.
He incited a violent insurrection.
All these people, how many companies after January 6th
were like, never again, we're not gonna donate to,
some of them said they were gonna donate
to Republicans after that.
Anyone who believes the big lie, yeah.
People who voted against their future election, yeah.
Everyone who believes the big lie.
And here's the, I would not have even been this annoyed
if over the fact that Zuckerberg sat down with Trump
and had dinner.
It's like, okay, you wanna have dinner,
he's the president of the United States,
you run one of the biggest companies in the world,
like, fine, make peace, whatever.
Donate a million dollars to inauguration
when Metta has not donated money to any other inauguration?
Now you're like in the Trump business.
Now you're just giving him money.
You're not just like not saying mean things about him
or even saying nice things, you're giving him money?
A million dollars.
I mean, it just-
It's so fucking fucking it's disgusting.
Like obviously the thing that Mark Zuckerberg
cares about most in the world is power and money.
But if there was anything else he cared about,
it was immigration reform.
He started the group forward.us.
He has given money to this.
He's talked about it.
And now he just gave a million dollars to someone
who was on TV over the weekend, talking about
deporting millions of people from this country.
It is. It's out, it's so, it's like, it's just what is wrong with you? You have no self-respect,
no self-respect. It's just gross. And also the Elon Musk thing too, like Tony Stark,
he's successful. Like the thing that bothers me about that is like, yes,
Elon Musk is rich. He's worth $400 billion.
Congratulations, I guess.
But like, do we not remember, it wasn't that long ago that he pushed a conspiracy
online, said that he agreed with a conspiracy that Jewish communities push
hatred against white people, like just said, so much truth.
Yes, truth.
When someone tweeted that the conspiracy that then led a bunch of advertisers
to stop advertising on Twitter
because it was the same conspiracy
that led the Tree of Life shooter
to massacre a bunch of people.
And now we're gonna be like, oh yeah, but you know what?
He's like Tony Stark, he's like a really smart guy,
really smart guy, really successful.
Anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, really successful.
Again, it's just as easy to be like,
Elon Musk wants to cut government.
You don't have to say anything about him.
I got a list of things for him to cut.
And if he puts something on the table that's worth cutting,
yeah, I'm right there with him.
He wants, like Bernie, he wants to cut defense spending?
Yeah, I'm there for cutting defense spending too.
I'll work with him on that.
You don't have to say nice things about him.
It's just, I really, I want to just emphasize this point.
Everyone loses their fucking mind,
they lose an election.
It's like a period of time, go back
and look what all the Republicans did
after Obama won reelection.
John Bannon went out the next day and said,
Obama cares the law of the land.
And then Sean Hannity endorsed immigration reform.
They lose their minds and the Democrats are, and said, Obamacare is the law of the land. And then Sean Hannigan endorsed immigration reform.
They lose their minds and the Democrats are,
we, they, we, everyone is reeling
and making a bunch of dumb decisions.
And these manifest themselves
in some of the examples you just gave.
We do have one pretty good clue as to why the corporate types
We do have one pretty good clue as to why the corporate types seem to be coming around so quickly.
You mentioned this.
It came at 930 a.m. Eastern Time on Thursday as Trump opened trading at the stock exchange.
Let's listen.
We're cutting your taxes.
We're going to cut them very substantially.
We got them down to 21 percent from probably 42 or 44 percent, depending on where you are. We got them down to 21% from probably 42 or 44%,
depending on where you are,
and we got them down to 21.
Everyone said that was a miracle.
Now we're getting them down to 15,
but only if you make your product here.
Now, I didn't see this footage,
but was the audience of people he was saying that to
at the New York Stock Exchange,
was that a group of working class voters
who were upset with high grocery prices?
Is that who he was talking to?
No, it was a collection of CEOs and stock traders.
Oh, those are the taxes he wants to cut.
Those are the taxes he wants to cut.
So Trump lowered the corporate rate to 21% from 35%
in the 2017 tax cuts.
Now he wants to lower it to 15%.
He says he wants to do it 15%.
There was a new twist on it with like,
if you invest in America, if you do business here,
I don't know how that works,
but in general, a 15% corporate tax rate
would give the largest 10 companies in America a $23 billion tax
cut for 10 companies that reported more than $520 billion in profits. This was a
cap analysis over the summer. Metta, his new pal Mark Zuckerberg, would get $1.4
billion just for Metta from Trump's plan. United Health, have you
heard about United Health lately? United Health would get 1.3 billion dollars a
tax cut and five largest grocery companies because of obviously Trump has
elected to lower prices for people that's what he told us but he doesn't
want to give the five largest grocery companies $1.7 billion in tax cuts.
These are five grocery companies that made $29 billion
in profits as a bunch of people could not
afford their groceries.
And now he wants to give them another $1.7 billion.
You think they're going to use that $1.7 billion tax cut
to lower the cost of food so people can buy their groceries?
Probably, right?
Isn't that what happened when they did this exact same thing in 2017
and cut the corporate tax cut before it warrants?
Yeah, they passed the savings onto their consumers
and their employees. And they hired lots of people.
No, no, wait, wait.
CEO bonuses and stock buybacks.
That's right, that's right.
So that is what Trump promised.
Now, we knew this during the campaign.
I think Kamala hit Trump on this a few times.
The corporate tax cut obviously did not work, or at least it did not work well enough.
What is your advice here to Democrats on how to make it stick in the next year in
a way that we did not do as successfully as we could have during the campaign?
She did mention, you said the operative word here was she hit him on it a few times.
And there were a lot of ads on it.
There wasn't the most, the ad that Future Forward,
the super PAC spent the most money on was on this very topic.
It was called the buddy ad and it had a guy watching
an iPad of Trump saying to the people at,
the donors at Mar-a-Lago, you're rich as hell
and I'm gonna cut your taxes.
And then went on to say what Kamala Harris was gonna do
to raise taxes on billionaires.
But it was never a centerpiece of the campaign. It never was a defining issue. We can never make
it stick. And that I think has more to do with the short runway the Harris campaign had, maybe
just the dominance of inflation as an issue that it didn't stick. I do not take the fact that
Trump won as evidence that all of a sudden tax cuts for corporations are popular.
Far from it.
And I think this is our best bet to really begin
to make some cracks in the Trump coalition, right?
People elected Trump to lower their costs.
And so our message is pretty clear.
Trump is not lowering your costs.
He's cutting taxes for the wealthy and corporations.
The very companies who are making billions of dollars
by jacking up prices on your groceries and your gas,
he's gonna give them a tax cut and you're not gonna get,
and he's not trying to help you, he's trying to help them.
Then there's a second element of this
which I think is important,
which is we have to make this all seem like, as it is,
giant fucking corruption.
You have him promising it to his donors,
you have a bunch of billionaires who are gonna benefit
from these working in the government,
you have Trump himself working in it,
you have companies given a million dollars
to the inauguration who are gonna get huge benefits.
We have to show that this is the exact corruption
that people, Trump said he was gonna fix
and now he is not fixing it, he's exacerbating it
to help the rich at your expense.
And then the last piece of this is,
how is this all gonna get paid for in the end?
It's gonna add trillions of dollars to deficit,
and Elon Musk and Vivek are gonna wanna pay for it
by cutting Social Security Medicare
and getting rid of the Affordable Care Act.
Is that what we're gonna do?
And so I think those are sort of the three steps there.
I totally agree with all that.
I also think we've gotta be able to make this real
for people and tell stories about it that are not just
sort of the typical, he's given tax cuts to the rich
and not you, you know, like that's the message,
but we've got to sort of add some color to the message
so that it breaks through.
I think a fair lot of critiques from the left about Kamala Harris and the
campaign and all this, we've heard them all, we're not going to do it all here.
I think one that is fair is I don't think she is someone who like feels the,
the populist anger towards like companies that are price gouging and taking advantage of
people and making record profits while people can barely get by.
She doesn't really feel that in her bones.
At least that doesn't come across during the campaign.
I realize it was a short campaign.
To be fair, you don't get that from a lot of Democrats.
I don't know which podcast I said this on, but I've been complaining about the glorification
of the hero status awarded to Luigi Mangione.
But I also think there is a large space between that
and saying, eh, whatever, rich people are rich people,
healthcare companies make profits, that's what they do.
Right? Like, I do think that people should be going out,
Democrats should be going out there every day,
talking about these companies that are going to get a huge
fucking windfall for nothing, who have been gouging consumers,
raising prices in a country where people are really struggling
to get by with their costs and like, tell a story about it
every single day, make it the message over and over and over again and you've got to be
creative and you've got to figure out ways to break through and you can't just
be saying the same fucking words over and over again that seem like they came
from a poll that tested really well like you've got to really you know make it
make it real for folks and so that's what I'm kind of hoping Democrats do in
this fight like it's not enough to just do the same old same old one simple way
to do that is to juxtapose the tax rates
of these corporations with the tax rates of people, right?
That Walmart's gonna pay a lower tax rate
than people who work at Walmart or shop at Walmart.
And I know I could already hear our fucking
econ policy buddies saying it's totally unfair
to compare individual and corporate tax rates,
but I do not care.
Go on another podcast and complain about that, all right?
People think it's like, oh, it's the corporate money
that's doing this and it's the donors
that have captured the Democrats.
It's like, no, it's like the fucking wonks.
No, that's not the reason.
We know, we know all the reasons,
we know that corporate greed is not the only reason
that people are struggling to get by.
We know that we know that corporate greed is not the only reason that people are struggling to get by we know that
But it is disgusting that people are getting tax breaks CEOs executives
Shareholders when so many people are struggling and we're still dealing with high prices that it's fucking it's it's crazy
So it but like it should feel crazy
to the Democrats going out there and talking about it.
And it should feel like it is a mission and that they are like offended on behalf of the
American people by it. And that's the kind of energy I think we need in this fight.
The people who get, who decided this election for Trump did not send him to Washington to cut
taxes for corporations. They're gonna be fucking shocked
that that's one of the first things he does.
Well, look, I've seen the polling on this, right?
Like tax cuts for the 1% for billionaires,
like they are less popular sometimes than corporate tax cuts
because what they try to do
when they talk about corporate tax cuts is say,
well, it's a lot of small businesses.
And when you give them tax cuts, then they create jobs.
And so if, if corporations are doing well, then they hire more people and then wages
go up and like, they do this whole fucking song and dance.
I really think you got to hammer the fact that like, we're talking about some of the
most profitable corporations in the country who last time they got this tax cut, used
it to enrich their executives and their shareholders and did not do anything about prices and did not hire more people and did not raise wages.
One of the things, we can do 17 podcasts and we will do 17 podcasts on the corporate tax
fight, on the larger tax fight coming up.
One thing Democrats can do is you pick an income level by which you agree to extend
them, but anything below X you're going to extend.
And then you make the, which is what eventually happened
with Obama and the Bush tax cuts.
And then the fight becomes about anything above that number.
And so like we'd say, we'd pass it tomorrow
that everyone who makes under $300,000 a year,
I'm just picking a number out of the sky,
that there's tax cut we send it,
but anything above that, that they're fighting over that.
And so you gotta isolate the fight
for the very, very wealthy in the corporations.
Yeah, I agree.
Well, speaking of that,
so part of the time person of the year routine
is you sit down for a lengthy interview with the magazine,
which Trump did at Mar-a-Lago in late November.
It just was released on Thursday,
so it's a little dated, but interviews very long.
Most of it wasn't very newsy,
but few notable things we hadn't heard before.
At one point, the reporters asked Trump quote, if the prices of groceries don't
come down, will your presidency be a failure?
And his answer, I don't think so.
Look, they got them up.
I'd like to bring them down.
It's hard to bring things down once they're up, you know, it's very hard.
And then he goes on to talk about his solutions,
which are just fixing the supply chain,
which Joe Biden has been doing for the last four years,
and lowering energy costs,
which involves drilling more for oil
that won't do anything to lower gas prices for years,
if they start drilling now,
because also we're producing more oil
than any time in history.
Kind of a wow moment there, Trump's saying,
I don't know if prices will actually go down.
We find out on the day that he goes to the stock exchange
and is like, but your taxes are going down, Wall Street.
That's the juxtaposition right there, right?
Which is he's not going to lower, he's not going to lower your costs,
but he's going to lower the taxes for the wealthy and the corporations.
Like that's sort of where you sit there.
It's like, it's not a wow moment for people who took like
two semesters of econ, but it is, it runs,
but we should make absolute hay of it
because it's what he promised.
He promised he would lower costs
and we have to hammer him when costs do not go down.
They will continue to go up.
They always do.
And we get like make that point, make them own it, right?
Yeah.
And I think we need to come out with some plans of our own
to lower costs for people and do so in a way that is,
achievable, real, that are paid for,
that isn't just government spending money,
but also sort of regulating companies
and making companies actually like do well
by their workers, right?
Like I think that there's like a good
progressive populist agenda here
that also like makes sense to most Americans
that we should be pushing here.
But I don't know, what do you think?
I don't know what the answer,
yeah, we should have plans, sure.
We should have plans, But we need a simple idea
that would also probably anger the econ nerds,
but that, I think it's something that's that we,
we don't understand the power of symbolism in our ideas
and we're more focused on the substance.
It's like, yes, we're gonna have a 12 point plan
and it's gonna do all these things.
It's just like, you know, like Trump building the wall
in Canary Mexico to pay for it.
Like the voters know that that was an absurd thing, but it sent a signal about
them.
And so what, like the, the wealth tax was an example of an idea that is.
Tells a story about who you are more than the specifics of the policy.
And so I think we need some things like that.
I mean, common heiress Kamala Harris is enforcing the law
against companies that price gouge,
which I know she sort of backed away from
for parts of the campaign, was one of those things, right?
Where it's like, it's not gonna pass your Brookings test
over is it gonna solve all the problems, blah, blah, blah.
But it sent a signal about who she is
and what she would fight for.
And I think we need to sort of think in some big picture,
less white papery ideas on how to do this.
Well, I think they need, I think part of it is
these ideas need to be paired with
like who we're holding accountable.
Because I think that sometimes it's just like,
it's a positive agenda, which is great.
But I think it feels more urgent
and is more appealing to people
when you also talk about how, you
know, these big companies and CEOs and everyone are like making money hand over fist and are
more profitable than ever before.
And you're still struggling.
And so we're going to help you blah, blah, blah, and make sure that they're paying their
fair share.
You know, we need we need an enemy.
Reporters asked Trump whether it's a conflict of interest to let Elon Musk oversee the budgets of agencies
that could grant huge contracts to his businesses.
Trump said, I don't think so, and added,
I think that Elon puts the country long before his company.
I mean, he's in a lot of companies,
but he really is, and I've seen it.
Okay.
You think this matters to people?
Elon's getting to regulate his own businesses
and some of his budget cuts might affect
his biggest competitor, NASA?
Like what?
I think there is a chance that people think
Elon is so rich that he doesn't care about money.
They sort of felt that way about Trump in some ways.
But I think that, I don't think we should accept
that premise of that argument. And I believe that our best argument against Trump and Republicans is corruption.
It's all corrupt. This is so fucking corrupt that the richest man in the world spent over
$100 million to get Donald Trump, $200 million to get Trump elected and is now going to get
billions of dollars in tax cuts and gets to pick the people who regulate his companies.
Like tell that story. And you can go down the line with all of Trump's appointees,
the people who are in and out of government,
David Sachs who invests in a whole kinds of companies
being the AI and cryptos are,
all of these things that tell that like,
this really is, you know,
I don't know if you listened to Rom,
Emanuel on Ezra's podcast.
It's, I'm almost at the end.
You're taking this fall though,
since it's been out for weeks. You're just doing it. I think you told me you were starting.
I've been busy.
I've been doing a lot of stuff.
Yeah.
I think you just like, I can only take Rom in seven minute doses at a time, so it's going
to take me ten days to get through.
Basically, yeah.
Rom, you just like-
I'm at the part where Rom is talking about the Bill Clinton, 1992 New Hampshire.
The hits I've taken are nothing like the hits your family's taking.
I'm like, oh man, we're here now? You're about three minutes away from a- Bill Clinton, 1992, New Hampshire. The hits I've taken are nothing like the hits your family's
taking.
Like, oh, man, we're here now?
You're about three minutes away from a Obama reference
that's going to feel equally dated to a lot of people
listening to this podcast.
Cool, cool, cool.
But Rom used a term that the Oval Office is eBay.
Now, that is not the term I would use.
Also, so Rom.
That's such a Rom.
It's like a 90s term.
Yeah.
But that is the-
The golem gave him that line.
Right, that is the image.
He might have given him that line in 1998,
but the image that we want to do,
that we wanna sell is that these people
are all fucking corrupt.
That they are all making money,
hand over fist at your expense.
You got all these rich people in there doing it, they're getting tax cuts from self,
they're picking the regulators,
they're getting away with stuff
you could never get away with.
And we can tell that story vividly,
I think we really do have a chance to reverse the politics
on a lot of this.
I think there's something that we need to add
to the corruption message,
because I think if you told most Americans
that Trump and all of his
goons in the White House are using it to enrich themselves, but also you're
getting richer too, and your costs are going down or you're getting a tax cut
or you're getting something, then people would be like, yeah, it's not great that
they're doing that.
But honestly, kind of figured that was the case when we elected him.
And, and I'm getting my, like, it almost goes back
to the famous ad, you know,
Kamala's for they, them, and Donald Trump's for you.
Like, we've gotta make it seem,
which is gonna be the reality,
that Donald Trump and Elon Musk and all these idiots,
they're just there for themselves.
They are just there to take care of themselves,
their businesses, their people,
and everyone else is getting screwed.
Like that's the corruption I think
that really gets people pissed.
And not just the like, yeah, we're making a lot of money,
but so are you, everyone's making money, it's great.
Well, I mean, that's where the prices matter, right?
If the corruption message is gonna matter more,
just like people turn against the wealthy,
like in Occupy Wall Street, they turn against,
the poor and people on government assistance
in times of economic strife.
And if the prices really don't go down and people
continue to be angry to say about the economy,
they're going to have much less tolerance for these
guys fucking throwing parties for themselves in
the, in the Oval Office with just lighting money on fire.
Yeah.
Okay, we're gonna take a quick break.
Couple things before we do that though.
You've heard us talk about Crooked's Limited Empire City,
the untold origin story of the NYPD.
It's been getting some really amazing year-end reviews.
If you haven't started it, now's a perfect time.
In just eight episodes, Empire City takes you back
to the origins of the NYPD and completely
reframes the way we think about policing today.
You can listen to the series now wherever you get your podcasts, or you can binge all
episodes ad-free on Wondry Plus and the Wondry app or on Apple podcasts.
Also Tommy recently joined Brian Tyler Cohen on his show No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen
to talk about Trump's cabinet picks, Democrats' path forward, and lots more. Plus, exciting update,
No Lie is now an official partner of the Crooked Network.
How great is that?
That's exciting.
Love BTC. I know, we love BTC.
You can hear Tommy and Brian's conversation
in all episodes, wherever you get your podcasts. One of the exchanges that got the most attention was a question about trans rights and so-called
bathroom bills.
The reporters reminded Trump that he said in 2016 that trans people should be able to
use whatever bathroom they want and asked whether he still felt that way.
And Trump said, quote, I don't want to get into the bathroom issue
because it's a very small number of people
we're talking about and it's ripped apart our country.
And he added, we're talking about a very small number
of people and we're talking about it
and it gets massive coverage and it's not a lot of people.
Reporters then brought up the House bill
to ban Sarah McBride from women's bathrooms.
But instead of asking whether he supported that bill,
they asked whether he agreed with Sarah
that we should focus on bigger issues.
And he said, yes.
And then they asked about the anti-trans ad
that the campaign ran, and he didn't take the bait there
either.
What did you think about his answers on this?
Do you remember in the primary when Trump would go to rallies
and he would be like, every time I bring up the trans issue,
you guys all applaud.
So I keep bringing it up.
He was sort of mystified by the power of it.
Um, well, I just, so I think it is something that he has followed the,
unlike immigration, this is not an issue that has been a long cause of his.
He just is sort of following the applause in the room.
I think it's fucking gross to say, Oh, it doesn't matter.
Oh, it's not a big issue after you mentioned it all the fucking time on the campaign trail
in the grossest, most bigoted way possible.
I generally think he also was probably surprised
to be reminded that he said that about bathrooms in 2016
or whenever he said that.
And so he's just now trying to square all the circles
in his little head that I was right then, I'm right now.
And then they gave him an obvious out
by the way they asked the question about the Sarah McBride
statement so he could just push it, push him both aside
and not really have to answer.
I will say like, even if Donald Trump himself
does not want to spend a lot of time focusing on trans rights
and not a lot of time, you know, beating up on trans
people like he did during the campaign, cynically.
I do think this is an issue that's going to come to him and Democrats are going to have
to still deal with.
It's not just a, oh, we're going to argue about it past the campaign.
We're going to argue about it in the context of the campaign kind of thing.
I spoke to a Rolling Stone reporter, Jal Holzman, who wrote a really great piece that everyone
should, and it's an important piece that everyone should read about how this is going to come up
in Congress, which is that Republicans want to do a hide-like amendment that will withhold government funding
from any healthcare provider that gets money from the federal government to make sure that
they do not provide any gender-affirming care.
So just like now, the hide amendment is, you know, federal money cannot go to any provider,
any hospital that performs abortions.
That's why a lot of hospitals do not perform abortions,
why there are abortion clinics, because of the Hyde Amendment.
And they want to do something like that, um, for gender affirming care.
And the question will be like, do enough Democrats stand up and stop this?
And I think it could not just be done through reconciliation. I think you would need to overcome a filibuster in the Senate to actually get this done because
that's the same thing with the Hyde Amendment.
You can't get rid of that through reconciliation either.
So you can't just do 51 votes in a budget bill.
So I think we would have those to stop it, but you could imagine the argument from Republicans
and then you can see what Trump will do, which would be, you know, well, no, taxpayers shouldn't
fund gender affirming care. Taxpayers should do it. the argument from Republicans and then you can see what Trump will do, which would be, you know,
well, no, taxpayers shouldn't fund gender affirming care, taxpayers shouldn't do this.
And what do you think? Like, how do you think Democrats respond to that? Because I think this
is one where, fuck the polls on this. Like, we just, that is, you got to stand up for it. And I
think what we have to do is figure out a way to message it so that it is as popular as possible,
even knowing that it may not be a majority position
and that they might think that this is a wedge issue
that does, that helps them politically.
I think, and this goes to one of the lessons
of how trans issues played out in the campaign,
which is you have to engage.
You can't ignore them.
And you have to engage by going bigger.
Because when you get to the bigger issues
of human rights and civil rights
and treating people with tolerance,
we have a high side of the argument,
both morally, obviously, but also politically.
And when Republicans are able to narrow focus it
around sports teams, bathrooms,
taxpayer-funded surgeries and the infamous ad, then they often
win that. And so we should absolutely take it on. It would be so demoralizing to people in our party
if Senate Democrats were unwilling to use the filibuster to stand up to protect us.
So we absolutely cannot do it. And I will say for, you know, in the piece,
Holzman, you know, was expressing the concern
of a lot of activists and groups that like,
maybe, you know, there's not enough Democrats
to stand up on this.
I do think the one silver lining of the Democratic caucus
right now in the Senate, which is-
It's quite safe.
It's quite safe, I was gonna say.
It is, we lost mansion, we lost cinema.
We also lost the majority, but the people left
are like mainstream to progressive, you know?
Like we don't have a lot of centrists
and center-right folks in the caucus anymore.
And so I do expect that the senators will stand for it.
But it's something that's coming
and people should prepare for it
so that they don't just, it doesn't surprise everyone.
And then just, I understand that I do,
maybe this is naive on my part,
but I do believe that Senate Democrats would stop this.
The other thing is what Donald Trump says on trans issues
is also not that important
because what you have to really watch
is what's gonna happen in his administration.
Yes. With Project 2025, which basically compared
being trans to pornography and, uh, just a series
of very dangerous policies are likely to be
implemented, whether Trump wants to have the issue
or have the conversation or not.
And we're going to have to fight every single one
of those that we can politically at the ballot
box, legally, et cetera.
Well, and this is an issue that's come up right now, even before Trump takes office,
because the defense authorization bill, Mike Johnson slipped in a provision that says the
children of service members are not allowed to get gender affirming care through the coverage
that their parents get by being in the military.
Most Democrats in the House revolted against this.
Obviously we didn't have the votes
because the Republicans controlled the House.
So now that goes to the Senate
and I don't know what's gonna happen there,
but these are the kind of things
that they're gonna try to do.
They're gonna try to chip away at trans rights
and gender affirming care bit by bit.
And then I think test Democrats
to see if they stand up for it.
And if they do, then say,
oh, see, they're still obsessed with the trans issue.
They lost on it and they're still obsessed with it.
Like that's what they're going to do.
So this is one of the things, there aren't a lot of benefits to being in the minority,
but one of them is that you can just do the right thing sometime.
Yeah, that is correct.
That is correct.
Speaking of the house bathroom bill and its sponsor,
Congresswoman Nancy Mace of South Carolina,
Mace has now set on making sure everyone knows she's the real victim here.
On Tuesday, she spoke at an event
for foster care providers and alumni
in one of the house office buildings.
This is a wild story.
A foster care advocate apparently came up to her
after she spoke and said something about how trans kids
need advocacy too.
What happened next is disputed,
but a police report says that this person quote,
began to aggressively and in an exaggerated manner shake her arm up and down in a handshaking motion.
The police report was filed by Nancy Mason, her staff. So this is their side of the story.
The advocate has pleaded not guilty to misdemeanor assault.
Some of the people in the room say they didn't see anything out of the ordinary, just a handshake. Regardless, Mace is now wearing her arm in a sling
and making a big thing of it,
publicly reassuring her many fans
about her odds of survival and so on.
She went on Benny Johnson's show,
sling in full effect,
to accuse trans people of having a mental illness.
If I didn't have a medical degree,
I don't know if I would be accusing other people
of having a mental illness if I was Nancy know if I would be accusing other people of
having a mental illness if I was Nancy Mace, but that's just me.
What do you think's going on here?
This just like, I mean, I guess reporters have requested the security footage.
So like, we're going to find out what the handshake was like at some point.
And you know, maybe Nancy Mace, famous truth teller,
is just telling the truth about being assaulted
with a violent handshake.
It's totally possible, Nancy Mace,
but it's possible that it's also possible
that maybe she was looking for attention, who knows?
Nancy Mace looking for attention?
I, it's crazy. No, no, no.
I am not accusing her of that.
I just want you to know.
I'm saying it is a possibility
that that could be one of the outcomes.
It is also possible that she,
that someone came up and asked her a question
and violently assaulted her hand.
That is a common technique for injury is
the old handshake switcheroo, yes.
If I've seen it once, I've seen it a hundred times.
I would just say, look, I, as a person who waits
for the facts, I will anxiously await the security footage
to be released probably directly to Benny Johnson
or Tucker Carlson or someone like that.
It'll be January 6th footage that Mike Johnson
has been sitting on.
That Nancy Mace has a long history
of stunts to get attention.
And so this would not be out of line.
One of her former staffers posted on Twitter,
this is the same woman who told staff,
myself included, during January 6th,
that she wanted to get punched in the face by a rioter
so she could get on TV and be the face
of the anti-Trump movement.
That's back when she wanted to be part
of the anti-Trump movement and was so mad at him
for the riot on January 6th,
she wanted to get punched in the face.
That story was first reported in the Washington Post
and that's now her former staffer confirming it on Twitter.
So that's Nancy Mace.
One last thing in the time interview before we go,
they asked Trump all about his thoughts
on his campaign strategy, the campaign in general, why he won, why Harris lost. He said his campaign
was flawless. He didn't take any days off in the last 72 days. He called it, he's
got a name for it, he said. It's called the 72 Days of Fury. He said that he thinks
the issue of immigration was a bigger factor in his victory than the economy
and that he won because the Republican Party has become the party of common sense.
He also said Kamala Harris's worst mistakes were,
one, taking the assignment
because you have to know what you're good at,
and two, not doing enough interviews.
So that's his assessment.
What do you think?
Were we missing anything?
Did you read that and think,
maybe I was missing something there?
Maybe he's got a point?
No, I did not.
I read that whole interview top to bottom and at no point.
Boy, was that a long interview.
And at no point was, when I read that I was like,
you know what, I know why magazines have fallen down.
Like.
Yeah, let me just tell, everyone who's listening,
we're doing it for you here.
You do not have to go read this interview.
We are basically just an AI bot reading these
and telling you the best parts.
It, and so, but I read that whole interview
and at no point was that like, man,
he's kind of got a point there.
That did not happen.
It's particularly not in this part.
I was trying to figure out what the 72 days were
because Kamel Harris got in with 107.
Oh, maybe it was post-
Post debate maybe?
Or post DNC? Maybe. I don't know. Or it was post debate maybe. Or post DNC?
Maybe.
I don't know.
Or it's a fucking number.
Maybe he doesn't know what the fuck he's talking about
because he just picked him up from the top of the air.
I'm gonna go with that one.
I'm gonna go with that one.
Yeah.
The thing, this is now the second time I think
that he has said that immigration was a bigger issue
than the economy.
And I just think that is something to keep in mind
because his actions suggest he does not understand
why he was elected.
And it had a lot more to do with inflation
than with immigration.
Immigration was a big issue.
I'm not gonna take that.
I'm not gonna suggest it wasn't.
But particularly for a lot of the voters
who picked him over Kamala Harris
or who moved to him, who would vote for Biden 20,
inflation was their top issue.
And if you focus on things other than inflation,
you will pay a price for that before too long.
Yeah, I do that.
There's something to the people
came to believe that the Republican Party
was the party of common sense.
I don't think they think that
about the Republican Party necessarily,
but they thought that somehow the Trump
and what he was selling was a little more common sense.
And I think it's hard to square, right?
Because you're like, common sense, he seemed fucking nuts.
And look, in exit polls, more voters said that he was more extreme than
Kamala Harris, so there's that.
But when he was saying common sense, he was talking about the economy.
He was talking, you know, he's like, people realize that they shouldn't be
paying so much for groceries and people think, and on immigration, right?
Like, I do think people probably saw his view on immigration as more common sense than where the
Democrats were, even though I think I could make
an argument that were much more common sense on
immigration, but I don't think that came through
to people.
We could spend a lot of pods and we will talking
about why, but I do think there's probably some
truth to that.
I think the Democrats became the party to some voters
of out of touch extremism.
And that is a process that began long before Kamala Harris
was the nominee.
It was exacerbated by probably our,
above all the party sticking with Joe Biden for a long time.
It was exacerbated by that, the trans ad we talked about
exacerbated by Kamala Harris trans ad we talked about exacerbated
by Kamala Harris saying on the view
that there was, you couldn't think of any place to stop.
She had nothing would come to mind in terms of
where she would differ from Biden.
But it also has been going on since COVID
where we have been sort of relentlessly defined
out of the mainstream as a party.
And that doesn't mean that people are fully on board
with Trump or think he is the party of common sense.
But I think we seemed a little less in touch
with working class people that may a lot less in touch
with working class people and that's why he won.
Yeah, I think it would be fair to say that people
perceived us as no longer or less of a party of common sense
than he was more of a, you know, like,
I don't think they did anything to help themselves.
No one was a party of common sense.
Right, yeah, but we seemed like less
of a party of common sense than maybe we had in the past.
So that is, and look, again, it's not all Democrats' fault,
but we have control over what we say and how we act
and how we approach politics, so something to keep in mind.
All right, that's our show for today.
Tommy Love it and I will be back with a new show on Tuesday.
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