Pod Save America - Rachel Maddow on Surviving Trump 2.0
Episode Date: January 26, 2025MSNBC's Rachel Maddow joins Jon to talk about Trump's breathtaking first week in office, how she decides what to cover—and what to ignore—in an an ultra-chaotic news environment, and the power of ...embarrassment as a political tool. Then, Maddow shares her strategies for staying sane in crazy-making times. Hint: it involves ice fishing. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
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the first 100 days bills are passed executive orders are signed and
Presidencies are defined and for Donald Trump's first 100 days Rachel Mano is on MSNBC
defined and for Donald Trump's first 100 days, Rachel Maddow is on MSNBC five nights a week. Now is the time so we're gonna do it.
Providing her unique insight and analysis during this critical time.
How do we strategically align ourselves to this moment of information, this moment of
transition in our country?
The Rachel Maddow Show, weeknights at 9 p.m. Eastern on MSNBC. Welcome to Pod Save America.
I'm Jon Favreau.
So this is our first Sunday show of the new year.
We are going to be doing one of these every other Sunday for 2025.
Exciting.
On each of these shows, we're going to talk to someone really smart in politics or media.
And the idea is to step away from the churn and the breaking news and to have interesting,
thoughtful conversations about the big ideas and forces and trends shaping the news, shaping politics
that we are all scrambling to digest every day
as I'm sure all of you are as well.
I am thrilled that our first Sunday guest is Rachel Maddow,
host of the Rachel Maddow show on MSNBC.
Rachel is back to anchoring the 9 p.m. hour
every weeknight for the first hundred days
of the second Trump administration. They
somehow got her to come back and do five nights a week. Poor Rachel, but lucky us.
On day three of the administration on Wednesday, I sat down with Rachel here at
the Sirius XM studios in New York across from MSNBC's offices at 30 Rock. No doubt
by the time you're hearing this on Sunday, a ton of crazy new shit will have
happened.
But already, by Wednesday, things were feeling not great.
Pretty surreal.
Here's a sampling of some of what's happened this week.
You intend to continue selling products that benefit yourself personally while you're president?
Well, I don't know if it benefited.
I don't know where it is.
I don't know much about it other than I launched it.
I heard it was very successful.
I haven't checked it.
Where is it today?
You made a lot of money, sir.
How much?
Several billion dollars, it seems like,
in the last several days.
Several billion?
That's peanuts for these guys.
By pardoning not some of the rioters, but all of them, political violence in this country
just became mainstream.
It is now a fact of life in America.
This was a political hoax.
And you know what?
Those people, and I'm not saying in every single case, but there was a lot of patriotism with those people.
There are gay, lesbian, and transgender children in democratic, republican, and independent families.
Some who fear for their lives.
She should never be allowed to preach the message of Jesus in her life because she's not even talking about Jesus.
This is why no one's going to these.
Yeah, this is why these denominations are dying.
Well, that's just, you know, Elon's thing to grab your heart
with one hand and then shoot it out in the sky.
You're just you're asking for it.
You're asking for it.
Maybe he's just not very well coordinated.
I don't know.
FEMA is going to be a whole big discussion very shortly because
I'd rather see the states take care of their own problem.
A lot of my friends on the other side of the IR are sitting by idly while Donald Trump
proposes by executive order to destroy section one of the 14th amendment which establishes that
everybody born in the United States is a citizen of the United States.
That's the difference in leadership a citizen of the United States.
That's the difference in leadership style.
So masculinity is back.
How many genders are there, Tommy?
How many genders are there, Tommy?
The honest answer, Jesse, I don't care.
I'm libertarian, I don't care.
You can be what you want to be, Jesse.
I won youth by 36 points.
Now maybe that's because I won on TikTok, I don't know.
These people are disgusting. They say that they're for women. Turns out MAGA and conservatives
are the feminists now. We are the ones like Donald Trump who are protecting women and
children. They're not doing it.
I wanted to talk to Rachel for this first Sunday show. Not just because, like us, it's
her job to cover this day in and day out, but because as listeners of this show know really well,
she thinks about things and talks about things
and crystallizes things in a way that no one else does.
Here's my conversation with Rachel Maddow.
RACHEL MADDOW
Rachel Maddow, welcome back to Pod Save America.
Hi, John.
Nice to see you.
You too.
I used to work here.
Yeah, we're in Sirius XM in New York City.
I forgot about that.
In the New York, and I was thinking,
oh, I remember where this address is ringing a bell
and then I got out of the elevator and I thought, ah,
this is where I did my gay love song,
call in late night show.
Really?
As a fill in host, I wasn't the main host. You get a lot of callers?
Oh yeah, yes, all men.
That was weird.
But yeah, that was a little known,
like sort of grace note on my resume.
Most requested songs?
It was a lot of disco.
A lot of disco.
See, I thought it was love songs,
and so the Collins were gonna be like heart to heart,
like, oh, he left me, and I wanna win him back,
and everything, but it was really like,
love songs like, I remember we met at the club,
and played that, you know, Diana Ross, whatever.
That works too.
Thank you so much for taking the time
during an especially busy week for you,
now that they have pulled you back in, into doing five nights a week for Trump's first hundred days.
I'm happy to do it.
This is our inaugural Sunday show.
The idea is to have a weekly conversation with smart people in politics and media.
Let's us sort of step back from the breaking news coverage, focus on the big picture.
Love to start with how you are processing the return of Donald Trump.
I think we've all learned in the Trump era
that it's possible to be shocked
even when we aren't surprised.
There's a difference between fully expecting
what will happen and then experiencing it as it happens.
So what's been going through your mind this week?
I feel like, oh yeah, that's what these muscles are for.
Yeah.
This is what we train for.
Being back five days a week is its own experience for me.
It's been a few years since I've been doing
Monday to Friday shows.
And so that's got its own vibe and its own feeling.
But there is a cadence to the Trump chaos news cycle or a lack of cadence
rather.
Yeah.
The 24 hours a day, turning on a dime, internal incoherence, shocking for shock value, shocking
for incompetence.
All of that stuff is just kind of flooding back in terms of how to do it. And you can despair over that
because the first Trump term was broadly speaking,
bad times for America.
But I also think, well, you know what?
We know a little bit about how to cover this.
We know a little bit about what to expect.
We know a little bit about what he's like.
And so it is our responsibility and our privilege
to cover it as best as we possibly can.
And I know how to do that and I'm here, I'm ready to go.
Put me in coach, I'm ready to play.
I feel the same way from the perspective
of like me covering politics
and talking about it on Pod Save America.
Has there been a moment where it's like hit you personally
where you're just watching it and you're like, oh yeah,
we're gonna be doing this for four more years now.
You know what it was?
It was the, in the flurry of first couple days of actions,
there was the stuff about water in California
that, and Trump started sort of elaborating on it.
There was an executive action about it,
but then he also started talking about it,
about how we need, we need to turn the valve.
Yeah, there is a valve in Northern California
that if you just turn it,
we will get water in Los Angeles.
He thinks, I think that North is also up
and that up there's a water tower,
like it's a New York building.
And if you just turn the valve,
then down gets the water. And in the campaign you might
remember him riffing a lot on the difficulty of washing his hair and how many times he has to
flush the toilet to make what's in the toilet go down the toilet. And I was realizing like oh
we're gonna get the plumbing stuff again. Yeah, playing the hits.
It's one thing to think about the truly radical designs
he has for the country and for the democracy.
But it's another thing just to remember
like the personal pathology that's gonna be played out loud,
ad nauseum and just repeated until other Republicans
start articulating it as a value too.
And that the reminder of the nonsense of it,
the human nonsense of it is a visceral thing for me.
Also, I also think like, wow,
how could history have been different
had he been able to realize his dream of being a plumber?
Maybe we as a country wouldn't be going through
all of this stuff.
Yeah, he was a plumber, a hug from dad, something like that. We're recording this on Wednesday, Maybe we as a country wouldn't be going through all this stuff.
Yeah, he was a plumber, a hug from dad, something like that.
We're recording this on Wednesday, so who knows what else will happen over the next
few days.
I haven't been able to get past him pardoning supporters of his who were convicted of violent
crime on January 6th because of the message it sends to other Trump supporters who also
want to commit political violence because only around 20% of Americans support the pardons and because somehow it's not the only
thing or even the main thing that everyone's talking about. Why do you think that is and
what has your thoughts been on the pardons? Well, the flood the zone idea is real and they,
we not only lived through that before, but they articulate that strategically. People like Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller and others.
They don't want us to be able to focus on any one
bad nominee because there are so many bad nominees.
They don't want us to be able to focus on any one
outrageous action or policy because there are so many
outrageous actions and policies.
And that's a strategy.
And so that's part of the reason
why we find it hard to focus.
I do think that the pardons thing
is gonna be something that they regret,
and I think it's gonna be something
for which they have to pay a political cost,
because we've already seen it
just in the immediate aftermath of the pardons,
that just about every Republican elected official
who is asked about it has to say,
I haven't seen the details.
I haven't, Tommy Tuberville,
I haven't watched the videos of the police being assaulted.
So therefore I can't comment on it.
But of course, anybody who assaults police officers
shouldn't be pardoned.
Seeing Republican elected officials,
including the Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson,
including all of these Republican senators
who now have to, for example, vote on Trump nominees,
seeing them unable to articulate a justification for it,
seeing them uncomfortable,
wanting not to be asked about it,
knowing that it is indefensible,
and nevertheless being asked to defend it,
that is constructive.
Yeah.
Because Trump may have his own,
I don't know what's going on inside his head,
and I don't know exactly what he wants in the world,
and I don't like to think about his brain.
So I don't, but I do know a little bit
about how politics works,
and I do know that while he may want to be a one man
sort of tyrannical monarch-style ruler,
he for now exists in a democracy
that has other elements of authority and governance.
And to the extent that Republicans are personally repulsed
by what he's doing and asked about it constantly
and can't defend it and essentially are being forced
into a corner where they either have to hide from questions
or say they disagree with them, that's probably good
in terms of slowing down the worst things he wants to do.
And I think it's a good sign that so many Republicans had a terrible,
terrible first full day of Trump's second term.
It's wild because I thought your monologue about this and about sort of the
use of shame as a tool for elected Republicans who have to defend this was wonderful.
From time to time we enter into a period where people in public office very frequently
do lots of terrible things.
What turns them around?
What stops them from doing terrible things?
What makes them correct course and start doing
the right thing instead?
One thing that sometimes works is shame and embarrassment.
Being confronted with the wrongness of what they are doing,
feeling shame or embarrassment,
or at least the possibility of public rebuke
and the awkwardness of being unable to explain
their actions in a way that satisfies anyone.
Sometimes you can't turn public officials around,
but sometimes you can.
Sometimes that sort of thing can cause public officials
who are otherwise behaving in ways that are weak and wrong
to find their spine
and to change their minds. I noticed right before we started recording today, Mike Johnson got up
and was asked about the pardons. And he said, well, look, it's, you know, Donald Trump, he has the
authority. And all along, the case has been that people who protest peacefully shouldn't be punished.
And then announced that they're gonna investigate
Joe Biden's pardons.
Yeah.
Without even commenting on the people
who are convicted of violence.
And then it's incumbent upon anybody
who next encounters him to ask him the follow-up questions.
Right.
So like the peaceful protest is not something
that has been criminalized in this country,
in this environment around January 6th.
January 6th was not a peaceful protest.
Among the people who Donald Trump deliberately pardoned,
even though he had the option not to,
were people who explicitly pled guilty,
not to peacefully protesting,
but rather to attacking police officers
and trying to kill them with baseball bats and two-by-fours.
So I mean, it just means that this should follow
Mike Johnson around like a smell.
Yeah.
Apparently, according to reporting from Axios and Notice,
JD Vance saying on the Sunday shows
before Donald Trump was inaugurated
that obviously we shouldn't pardon
people who committed violence.
It was the response to that that finally led Trump to say,
apparently, according to a source, according to Axios,
fuck it, let's let them all out.
Because the Trump base people were mad
that JD Vance thought that they were gonna go one by one.
So that was basically a trial balloon.
Yeah.
And think about what that means for the dynamic
between Trump and JD Vance.
In the same way with the Matt Gaetz nomination, right?
I mean, they nominated somebody for attorney general,
reportedly at the behest of Boris,
who they later said were shaking people down for bribes
in order for him to suggest them to the president
as potential appointees.
I don't know, maybe somebody should follow up on that.
But reportedly at the behest of Boris Epstein,
they named a guy who was actively under investigation
for statutory rape, drug use, and prostitution
to be attorney general of the United States.
And you can question Donald Trump's judgment in doing that.
Sure, that's a discussion.
What's in Trump's head?
What are his aims?
Fine.
I'm politically more interested in the fact And doing that, sure, that's a discussion. What's in Trump's head? What are his aims? Fine.
I'm politically more interested in the fact that they then had the vice president-elect
J.D. Vance personally grab Matt Gaetz by the arm and walk him into the offices of all of
these Republican senators who they then leveraged into endorsing Matt Gaetz for attorney general
and saying, yes, they would vote for
him. Give Matt a chance to have humiliated JD Vance that way and cost those Republican
senators forever. Those Republican senators will have it on their record that they thought
Matt Gaetz was a great choice for attorney general before they then pulled him and wasted
all that political capital. That's just political malpractice within the Republican Party
and between the president and vice president.
And if that's how they're going to act, they should pay for it politically
and they should be asked about that stuff constantly.
J.D. Vance has been now twice publicly humiliated on core issues
that he purports to be principled on.
Law and order with Matt Gaetz and the pardons thing
where he said anybody who attacked a police officer
or was violent shouldn't be pardoned.
And then they were.
He should be asked about that every time
he pops his head above ground.
Sean Hannity did this event last night
where he's interviewing Mike Johnson,
but he's got all the other Republican House members
sitting there.
And he basically talks to them like they're kindergartners.
And he was like, now you all know,
you're not gonna get everything you want
out of these bills in the first year.
Could you imagine you doing a show
where you're like interviewing Hakeem Jeffries
and then like all the other House Democrats are there
and you're just like wagging your finger at them
and telling them like, this is what you can expect.
This is what you can expect. And if you have a problem, take it up with daddy and telling them like, this is what you can expect. This is what you can expect.
And if you have a problem, take it up with daddy.
You're like, what are you talking about?
I just think they've all decided to like
become supplicants to Donald.
Like they don't, I don't know that,
I hope that shame works,
but I don't know if there's any of them left
that have shame.
I think being a supplicant
and doing this sort of dear leader,
yes, sir, whatever you say sir,
yes I'm going to turn in my mother, yes two plus two equals five, yes Matt Gates
is a good attorney general choice, yes people who who hit police officers with
baseball bats should be sprung from prison, yes the January 6th defense
attorney should be the US attorney, the acting US attorney
in the district of DC.
All of these things are humiliations
to every Republican who lines up with them.
And there's no such thing as humiliation for Donald Trump.
He doesn't, I think, experience shame or embarrassment.
And again, I don't care to investigate why,
but other Republicans do.
And Donald Trump isn't going to live forever.
And the MAGA movement is maybe at its apex right now,
but it won't be forever.
All of these guys are gonna have to run for something
and they're all gonna have to look at themselves
in the mirror.
And they all have, you know, mothers,
many of them children,
and they have to live with themselves.
And I do think that I'm not counting on human decency,
but I am counting on human embarrassment and shame
and awkwardness, difficulty of answering questions
about these things to be a moderating force
in terms of what he can get from his own party.
And I think what he can get from his own party
for the foreseeable future is going to be
the only de facto limiting constraint in terms of what he can get from his own party for the foreseeable future is going to be the only de facto limiting
Constraint in terms of what he can get away with
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You're a student of history,
especially as it relates to authoritarian movements
in other countries and in our own. If you're listening and you haven't already, you should go listen to
Rachel's podcast, Ultra, or read a prequel, both of which tell the story of a fascist movement in
1930s America. Excellent. Both excellent. What are you seeing right now that feels like
history is repeating itself? What feels new, and any lessons from all your research
that could be useful to us right now?
The thing that feels new in modern America,
like in the past century, I'd say, in the United States,
that is something that we do see in other countries.
And this is something where even contemporary
other countries I think offer a good lesson
in terms of what this means,
is the attempt to integrate loyal,
lawless paramilitary force with the state.
So we have these executive orders that direct
people within the Justice Department and the intelligence agencies and even like the SEC and the FTC to investigate past actions by those agencies basically to see if there's anything that they can use as a pretext to bring prosecutions against government officials and former Biden administration officials. Like that's the use of the government to essentially terrorize the opposition and to terrorize the previous administration.
At the same time, you've also got, you know,
flinging open the doors of the federal penitentiary
and letting out over 200 people
who were actively incarcerated for federal crimes,
most of which involved violence on January 6th.
And you've got pro-MAGA members of Congress,
like Lauren Boebert,
offering to give them guided tours of the Capitol
now that they're out.
I highlighted on the show on Tuesday night,
one of those guys who she was offering a tour of the Capitol
flashing the white power sign behind her
while she was saying it.
Those sort of twin threats
that we're gonna use the government to destroy opposition,
but we're also going to use lawless, loyal, paramilitary, immunized force to physically
menace people and to create an environment in the civic space that makes regular people
afraid to enter, regular people afraid to participate.
That is something that we've seen
in lots of other authoritarian countries.
We've seen that, for example, in Turkey in modern times.
We've seen that a little bit in Hungary.
We've seen that in some other,
we've seen it in the Philippines.
Seeing that in the United States,
those things happening at once feels new.
And it's worth remembering that paramilitary violence
and militias are illegal in every state in the country.
And even if they are gonna be immunized federally,
this may be a place for state law enforcement.
Yeah.
I'm interested in how you're thinking
about covering Trump 2.0.
I saw you say that you're trying to follow a,
watch what he does and not what he says mantra,
which we're trying to do on this show as well.
It's hard.
Yeah.
It's hard to know when he's being serious, when he's trolling.
It's hard to know what matters, what matters less.
It's hard to know like where to focus people's attention.
How are you thinking about navigating all that?
How are you thinking about it?
I'm still, I'm still working it out right now.
I'm trying to, I'm trying to focus like, what the effects of his policies on people.
Because I'm thinking just from a political perspective
that we need to persuade people that,
maybe people who voted for Trump for the first time,
or people who didn't vote at all,
that he's not, what he promised is not gonna happen, right?
He's not gonna make their lives better.
And I don't think that just means sort of
kitchen table issues, though it does.
I think it also means making sure people know that now there are these violent criminals
who are convicted of assaulting police officers out on the streets.
And that's what he's doing too.
So I think that I'm trying to do less of what was the salute that Elon Musk gave, right?
Because it's like, okay, who wins that fight?
We can have that debate, and then maybe everyone in the country can say,
oh yeah, no, it was a bad salute.
And then what happens?
Well, we didn't vanquish Elon Musk, he's still around.
He still bought his speech now.
Right.
He could put a new label on it,
but he's still doing all the things he does.
He gets to do all the things he does.
So I'm trying to focus on like what actually affects people
that Donald Trump is doing
and making sure that we're clear about it.
And also making sure that, you know,
I'm trying not to make, I feel like if you turn the dial,
the outrage dial to 11 all the time,
then it sort of numbs people.
And then when something's really serious,
they'll be like, ah, you said that before
and it's, you know and it didn't come true.
So.
How does that apply to like the Greenland and Panama stuff?
Like how are you thinking about that?
I'm thinking that he seems pretty serious about Panama.
I mean, you put something in an inaugural address
and he seems pretty serious about Greenland too.
So I think you gotta watch it.
Like I don't subscribe to that's just a distraction
and we can't talk about Greenland and Panama,
especially because it involves,
potentially involves military force, right?
Anything that involves like, again,
this is affecting people's lives, right?
People in the military here, people at home,
our safety, our security, the alliances that we have,
like that does affect people.
I would love to talk about it and cover it in a way
that people can say, all right,
this is how it matters to me.
But I don't think you can just wave it away
as a distraction.
The thing that is interesting about it to me
is that it is invented out of whole cloth
for the purpose of this Trump term.
Like there was no pressure on the issue of Panama
that anybody was agitating about.
There was no, I mean, yeah, like competition for the Arctic.
Sure, like that's, you know, Russia has a lot of icebreakers.
Okay, like, yeah, I've been covering that for 15 years. Yeah. But this is something, this is a place they've decided
to plant a flag and to put a lot of rhetorical energy to put it in the inaugural, as you say.
And I feel like it's a, it's like a good test case for us to figure out the doing versus saying
line. One of the things that's interesting now that he's president
is that Panama's response was to go to the UN
and to lodge a complaint with the United Nations saying,
hey, one of the rules here of us all in the United Nations
is we're not supposed to threaten
and menace other countries.
He's doing that.
He said in his inaugural, we're taking it. And when asked ahead of his inaugural, are you, will you rule out military
forces? He said, no, I won't. Well, that actually, we actually aren't supposed to do that within the
United Nations. He probably knows that that's probably part of this. Similarly with Greenland,
there's a lot of, I think, very elementary level understanding about what
it means to be a NATO, which is that if any NATO country gets menaced or attacked, all
the other NATO countries are treaty bound to defend them and respond to it.
Very little discussion though about what happens when one NATO country threatens another.
That's not a thing that we usually have, but we really can't do that within NATO.
And threatening to take Greenland is threatening,
and to do so potentially via military force
is threatening to make war on our NATO ally, Denmark.
So it seems to me that maybe the important thing here
is why did Trump have one of his executive orders
be taking us out of the World Health Organization?
Yeah, that just sort of slipped by yesterday.
Yeah, it's because he doesn't want us to be
in any organizations of any kind
that represent the post-World War II
international legal order.
So take us out of the World Health Organization,
thereby effectively, probably,
collapsing the World Health Organization,
really screw up NATO by threatening war on a NATO ally,
potentially forcing the question of whether or not
the United States is rightfully within NATO,
within the United Nations start menacing another.
I mean, Panama does not have a military.
So us proposing military force against Panama
isn't actually even threatening a war,
it's just threatening an invasion.
But it does so in a way that is already calling question
as to whether or not we are a member
in good standing of the United Nations.
So if all of this is about blowing up
not just our international standing,
but blowing up the post-war international order
and all of the international institutions that we bolster
that make up the post-World War II international landscape,
well then, you know, maybe these things have some logic.
And it's also, it also means that Trump's second term
in office will be the greatest
pinnacle of achievement of Vladimir Putin, who more than anything wants to destroy the post-war
liberal order and have a supposedly multipolar world where big countries just take what they want.
Yeah. And that's again, back to that's something that people should care about or because if the,
you know, at a time when we have Putin and China and Iran and
North Korea cooperating more it is a dangerous world and for us to stand alone or are we going
to stand with them? Yeah and it's a and it's a question that that Americans should should get
the answer to from Donald Trump right like this is a dangerous time what are you planning to do
to keep us safe? Is it just to just to take Greenland and Panama is that do to keep us safe? Is it just to take Greenland and Panama?
Is that gonna keep us safe?
Are we gonna be an Axis power now?
Are we the bad guys this time?
Because if it's China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea,
which is the Axis that's like, for example, waging war in Ukraine right now,
and that's the model that Trump likes in terms of how countries should not be constrained
and how they behave. Is he proposing that, you know, he talks about his love letters from Kim
Jong-un. He says, I know I said that I would end the Russia-Ukraine war in 24 hours within one day
of me being elected, let alone sworn in. But he actually said, but I need to talk to Putin
than one day of me being elected, let alone sworn in. But he actually said, but I need to talk to Putin
in order to see how that's gonna go.
I mean, the way that he's easing up
all of his big talk on China,
everything that he had threatened against China,
all of a sudden China's good.
China doesn't have to worry about anything.
I mean, we'll see how it goes with Iran.
Apparently the last warning
that the Biden administration gave
to Trump's incoming national security team
before they walked out of the White House was,
watch out, Iran wants to kill US government officials
and former US government officials,
whereupon Trump immediately withdrew
the Secret Service protection detail from John Bolton,
which had been put in place
because of the Iranian hitman who tried to kill him,
the Axis powers, to the extent that there is one,
are
the people and the entities that Trump is
acting most inexplicably positive toward. And if we're gonna join that kind of an Axis,
I don't think that's the way Americans think of ourselves. Podsave America is brought to you by Stamps.com.
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2018?
No, no, 27.
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crooked. When you look back at how you covered the first four years of Trump,
anything you would have done differently? I would have hydrated more systematically.
systematically. That's good, that's fair.
Rather than relying on individual little paper cups of water that I filled up and then drank
while coming back from the water cooler.
Yeah, I want to take, honestly, I would have taken better care of myself.
I do think that that chaotic cadence of there being no normal day of, you know, the president's, what is it, he sleeps
in until 10 or 11 in the morning and then watches some TV and rolls in around noon and
then just pounds Diet Cokes until four in the morning and makes up policy based on whoever
he last spoke to and posts it on his social media.
I mean, that environment for people who are trying to, you know, cover the most important country in the world
and its workings is trying, it's physically trying.
And so we, I think we need to,
we need to do more tag team relay stuff.
We need to take better care of ourselves.
We need to, as you say,
sort of calibrate to understand what the biggest threats are
and what's just gross.
Yeah, that is hard.
I mean, I struggled with, and I heard this from people
during the course of the campaign, people I know,
who were like, look, I don't love Trump,
but we survived the first Trump term and everyone,
you know, everyone was hair on fire
and saying it was gonna be the end of democracy
and here we are, we survived.
There were bad things that happened, you know,
there were some bad things that happened.
These are people who are like January 6th, awful,
he's a bad person, but like, how bad can it be?
We survived the first time.
Wow. I know.
And it's hard because I'm trying to like,
I'm trying to figure out how to calibrate,
like, because I do think that this time,
this time it's actually much more serious.
And I'm like, and I think the threat is much more dangerous
than it was in the first term.
And I'm trying, it doesn't seem like most,
well, clearly because they voted for him,
but it doesn't seem like most people
in the country believe that.
Yeah, I think there is a bias toward thinking
that the institutions that we have are durable
and that they'll always exist
and that no work had to happen to get them
and they'll defend themselves.
But just look at elections.
One of the things that Pam Bondi talked about
after the Matt Gaetz Attorney General nomination
fell apart and Pam Bondi got in there,
one of the things that is expected
from the Justice Department under Bondi
is that they're going to do some sort of examination
of the 2020 election.
Because of this predicate lie that the election
was somehow stolen from him.
Now, I don't think that's just for Trump's ego.
And I don't think that's because he's embarrassed
that he hasn't ever provided any evidence
that demonstrated that the 2020 election was stolen
and he wants to show that evidence
because he wants to be, you know,
wants everybody to know he's not a liar.
I don't think that's what's motivating that.
I think what's motivating that is an effort
to try to make elections seem suspect,
dangerous, wrong, and something that we shouldn't depend on in the future.
And it's really, really, really important
that we have a 2026 midterm.
It's also very important
that we have a 2028 presidential election.
But I don't think in 2025,
you assign your justice department
to proclaim the falsity of a previous election because you're interested
in holding normal elections going forward.
You do that in order to discredit elections as a system in this country so that we don't
have them anymore.
And maybe that sounds like hair on fire.
Maybe that sounds like I'm being alarmist because we did in fact just have an election.
But I don't think we should assume
that that threat is resolved.
I really don't think it is.
And I think if you watch what he's doing,
you can see the real danger there.
I mean, you can just tell yourself a story,
put out a hypothetical about how this could work, right?
Which is we have the 2026 midterms
and Democrats maybe take back the house. We get to
2028, let's say Democrat wins in 2028 and Donald Trump's still in the White House and he's leaving
or he's supposed to leave and he says no, JD Vance actually won. This was fraud and now he
controls the whole government and he has lessons that he's learned from failing to, you know,
stay in power forcefully in 2020.
And you know, when you say,
oh, this could lead to the end of democracy,
we'd be like, oh, you're exaggerating,
but like what I just laid out,
couldn't we see that happening?
Do we see Donald Trump?
And now that he already did that once,
do we see him just saying, oh no, JD Vance lost,
he's a loser, that's fine, I'll let the next Democrat in.
Right.
And what else?
Or maybe I'll stay, or maybe I'll stay until we settle this.
Yeah, prop me up in the corner.
I'll be fine.
There was some fraud.
And I know the Constitution says, but you know what?
It's instability right now.
I'll leave eventually, but I'm just
going to stay for a little bit.
It could happen like that.
And there's other factors at work here.
I mean, what are the other constituent parts of democracy
that we need to be worried about?
One of them is the fourth estate.
We need to worry about having an actually free press
and not having state TV.
And the press is under incredible pressure from without,
but also demonstrating all of the wrong instincts, I think, broadly speaking,
in terms of supplicating themselves to the new power in Washington. And that is something that
is not a fait accompli. It's not done. It's an iterative process. I think the public should react
to that. I think that people should vote with their feet and people should support
independent and free-spirited press that isn't cowed and that isn't afraid and that isn't
intimidated. But that is something that we need to fight for too. And public opinion
and public behavior there really matters. It's not a done deal. All of this stuff is,
nothing's inevitable. All of this stuff is live. I mean, one of the wild cards here is,
and this is something that's been surprising to me,
I think one of the sort of caustic
and maybe slightly mean-spirited observations
that was also true about the first Trump term
is that while every president after a term
looks about 25 years older than he did
at the start of his term,
that didn't really happen to Trump.
Like at the end of his four years,
he kind of looked the same.
Still looks the same.
And maybe that happens when you only roll in
in the middle of the afternoon.
Maybe that says something about his work ethic as president.
But as he is now sworn in for his second term,
he looks old and unfit and frail.
And he is the oldest person ever
to take the oath of office as president.
And we've obviously just been through a version of this
with President Biden and his age issue
being so determinative and important in terms of what
happened in the last electoral cycle.
But Trump doesn't look good and JD Vance is like 15
and ready to go.
But that is gonna, those dynamics I think are gonna be
a real wild card in terms of what happens
between these two men, between what happens in terms of how together Trump is.
You don't get to age infinitely and poorly without it ultimately affecting the way that
you behave and speak.
His second inaugural address for whatever you can say about its content was also delivered
in a low slurring mumble.
Real workman-like.
But also kind of...
Well, he hates giving speeches that are written for him
because he likes, he just wants to be a host
and just do his thing.
His real speech was the speech he gave after,
that was like a 33 minute speech to the Republicans
where he just got to do all of his stuff.
He got to do all of his stuff,
but it was also very poorly done.
Yeah, well, I mean, he doesn't care.
He's not an orator.
He's just trying to like, you know,
he's just doing his show.
He's a host.
He's never been like a, you know,
he's not Churchill, right?
There's nothing, that's never happened.
But he's also not himself.
He's also just not as good as he was
even a couple of years ago,
even at the start of the campaign.
And to see him physically decline,
if he's gonna fall apart mentally and or physically
in this term, that's really going to be a wild moment
within this crazy and humiliated,
magnified Trump Republican supplicant party.
Yeah.
And, uh,
I'm sure they'll handle it well.
Yeah.
You were talking about the press and obviously, you know, Trump's suing everyone
now, poor Ann Seltzer and the Des Moines register and, and, and ABC settled.
Are you afraid?
Do you worry?
Oh, I'm not afraid, but, um, I do expect that there'll be, you know, that Elon Musk and all of
the other, you know, who, who paid Rudy's
settlement with the, uh, uh, Ruby Freeman and
Seamus.
I, I'm assuming that all of the, the money
people, um, who are doing Trump's bidding in
order to get their own, uh, interests catered to
by the U S government.
I'm assuming that they will all fund a gazillion
defamation lawsuits that are designed to ruin not only individual critics in the press and
individual reporters, but also whole news organizations.
I am hopeful that news organizations writ large will understand this as a threat to
them all and they will band together and make sure that there aren't, for example,
meaningful attacks on the Sullivan decision that defends the freedom of the press in terms
of libel and defamation protections.
So I'm not afraid.
I am eyes wide open and expecting that the courts will be used to try to destroy the
press.
But again, I think the public should have something to say about that when it happens.
And I think that again, there should be some unity
within the news business to recognize
that we are all in this together.
It's not that they're gonna protect their favorites.
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for five dollars off. There's a larger challenge with media that I think about
a lot which is that most Americans aren't paying attention to anything we
say and aren't following much news at all. And Kamala Harris does really well among people
who don't just tune into MSNBC and Pod Save America,
but just follow the news.
In any venue.
Right, in any venue.
Trump did well with people who don't follow the news
or who follow some news on social media.
And those people care a lot more about cost of living,
safety of their communities than they do, you know,
the threat Trump poses to democracy, right?
They feel like that's sort of esoteric.
And it makes me wonder if we're all just like sitting here
talking to ourselves into an audience
that's already been convinced.
And I wonder how we break out of that
so that, you know, more Americans know what's going on.
What do you think?
I mean, it sounds like you're worried that we are just talking to ourselves.
I am.
I am.
And I think that a lot of this is the way technology has changed the way that we talk
and communicate and interact.
And if this is all going to be done on social media, I don't know.
I mean, it's one of the reasons I'm still hanging around on X because I don't know, I don't love it.
Not a great platform.
It was never a great platform.
Now it's a really bad platform.
But you know, there's part of me that I'm like,
oh, we're all gonna go to Blue Sky
and then we're all just gonna talk to each other
on Blue Sky and then we're gonna talk to each other
on Pod Save America and we're gonna talk to each other
on MSNBC and it's like, we all got it.
I mean, maybe we're like,
are we coming up with a plan altogether?
Like how are we gonna get outside that bubble?
And I don't
know. I don't know. But I think that like that is maybe the central challenge that the
Democratic Party faces from a political perspective, but also the media faces, traditional media
faces from a perspective of getting people to trust the information that they're getting
and making sure that the information gets out there.
Right. I also think that it's one thing to think about it
from a sort of 30,000 foot
like academic structural perspective.
It's another thing to think about it
in terms of like, what are you John going to do every day?
What are your skills?
What are you going to expend calories on today?
And you do what you can.
I mean, I'm very happy that MSNBC is actually
very highly performing on TikTok and on YouTube.
We're among the most sort of, volume-wise,
we're among the most widely viewed news organizations
on both of those platforms.
That's good.
During the transition, I did a series of segments
on that were for YouTube only
that weren't for TV that were looking at the backgrounds of a number of the Trump nominees.
Those got huge traffic on YouTube. I was really happy for that. I am at blue sky and at matto.msnbc.com
at blue sky and encourage you to be there,
because maybe right now it feels like Blue Sky
is people who already listen to Pod Save America,
talking to each other about what they saw on MSNBC,
but if it gets bigger, it won't all be that.
Yeah, well, community is important too.
Yeah.
Building community is also important.
And when you're on an iterative social media platform,
meaning it's a place where you don't just receive stuff,
you interact with people, and that's an important part
of what you're doing there.
I think it's important to not be in a place
where the interaction is rigged to favor MAGA outcomes.
And that's explicitly happening at Twitter.
And I think there's a reason that everybody
has jumped ship from threads, which was a Twitter knockoff that
terrible seemed like it might be better. But now it's essentially going through the same process that Twitter went through because Mark Zuckerberg's politics have also followed Elon Musk's down that particular hole. So if you're in an iterative environment where your interactions are going to be,
are going to be gamed in order to favor Donald Trump
and Elon Musk's desired outcomes, like don't do that.
Don't, don't provide, don't spend your one precious life
providing free content to those gentlemen.
Do you ever think about like going into the lion's den,
going on some of these other right leaning shows,
some of these other right leaning podcasts,
not necessarily like go on Hannity
and have a debate kind of thing,
but like the Joe Rogan's of the world,
that's shorthand for all of those
because I don't wanna get into another debate
about Joe Rogan.
But do you ever think about that?
Like that that's one way to start.
How do you think about persuading people?
I mean, what I do is talk about the news.
So I read all day and do reporting
and fact checking and research,
and then try to observe what's happening in the world,
try to make some sense of it,
try to present it truthfully
and explain what's important about it
and why it matters and what might happen next.
And I'm doing that instead of one day a week on MSNBC,
I'm now doing that five days a week on MSNBC.
And I'll do that for the whole first 100 days.
I'm trying to do as much of that as I can
on social media as well.
I'm trying to keep the pots that I've got boiling,
boiling in terms of my next podcast and my next book
and the other, there's a scripted TV show and three different movies
and a documentary that I'm doing interviews for right now
and trying to do all that stuff.
And I just feel like, you know what?
I'm gonna wake up every day.
I'm gonna do my thing.
I'm gonna do my thing.
And I'm gonna do it in a way that I'm proud of
and that I hope is persuasive.
And I can't make people who don't want to hear it from me, want to
hear it from me. But if you are persuaded to hear from me, I hope that
I'm always speaking in a way that is fair and persuasive and you can take it
to the bank in terms of its factual spine.
You're a, I know you're not a democratic strategist, you're a compensator, but you
you are a close observer of democratic politics.
Excellent caveat, that was very well done.
Also someone who is very studied
in how pro-democracy movements and parties
have succeeded in the past.
When you look at the Democratic Party right now,
what do you think it has to change going forward
in order to defeat or at least marginalize
the anti-democratic
faction in this country.
And so it really isn't a question beyond just the Democratic Party, though that is, we have
two parties and that's the party right now that is the pro-democracy party.
But what do you think needs to be different?
Well, I mean, I think that there isn't much magic to it.
You have to be excellent opposition.
The Republican party under Trump
has consolidated power in Washington
in all three branches of government, undoubtedly.
It's a very narrow margin in the house.
It's not that huge a margin in the Senate,
but they've got everything.
Therefore, when you're in opposition from that position,
I think the obvious thing to do is to stick a wedge in every awkward division
among the party that has consolidated power.
I mean, there's hugely incompatible forces at work
within the MAGA universe, literally even
between the president and vice president.
And so let's start there.
The tech billionaires and the base of the party.
Yeah.
So, I mean, yes on H1B visas, right?
Should we have immigration controlled by corporations
for that purpose in the way that we have or not?
Yeah, on that stuff, but on everything.
I mean, they can't even decide what they're gonna do
about salt, about the state and local taxes deduction.
They're at like a trillion dollar impasse
within their party on that issue alone.
Okay, let's just, let's start there.
You do have the palpable, self-loathing, humiliation,
and escape-hunting fear of every Republican senator
who was asked about the pardons of those violent felons.
You do have, I think, legit law and order minded Republicans
in elected office, including some of whom had to run for their lives
on January 6th.
One of their number, an elected Republican
in the House of Representatives is offering guided tours
of the scene of the crime of January 6th
to some of the people who were there with baseball bats
and two by fours beating police officers
and threatening to kill members of Congress not that long ago. of the people who were there with baseball bats and two-by-fours beating police officers and
threatening to kill members of Congress not that long ago. So that's a divide there.
You either think that's cool or you don't. Yeah. And that party, the ruling power in Washington,
which is that's it. I mean, they are in complete control. They own everything that happens.
Yeah. I think that's a big happens. They've got those divides among themselves
and just go with those hammer and tongs
and make them figure out who they are.
And I think that the American people
are not gonna like it.
But just, I don't think there's more magic
to it than that right now.
We've talked a lot about what we're doing.
What's one habit or tip that you'd give to anyone
for maintaining their sanity through these next four years?
And we started off, you saying that maybe, you know,
hydrate better, take better care of yourself.
Is there anything you do?
I mean, you're working all the time, so I can't imagine.
What do you do?
I gotta figure that out.
I mean, I'm playing with my kids now, you know?
I have a four year old and a one year old. So I am-
That's a full time job itself.
It is a full time job.
I'm better now about when I'm with them to like,
I put the phone in another room and I'm like,
I don't need to, I can't do the news all weekend long.
Yeah.
You know, so I'm trying to do that, but I don't know.
I think that's, I mean, again, not magic, but that's real.
And you can tell day to day that has an effect on you.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
I believe in compartmentalization.
Absolutely.
That's cool.
Just do it.
I mean, and everybody has to calibrate it differently,
right, if you're caring for an elderly parent
and also caring for your kids and working full time
and trying to do something at school,
like that you're already compartmentalizing
in order to get to a meal once a day. I mean, so everybody has different levels and sort of
different imperatives about how they need to do that. But I think as a principal, that's good.
There are, there should be certain times of day when you are not doing things that you were
otherwise doing in other parts of the day. And so for me, that means, you know, starting looking at
the news at a specific time and trying to stop looking at the news at a specific time and trying to
stop looking at the news at a specific time. It
means spending time outdoors. Um, I'm a person who
likes being outdoors when it's cold. I, ice fish is
my, is my winter recreation of choice. And so far
it's been an excellent ice season. And so I try to
just make myself do that. Conveniently, there is no
cell surface anywhere.
There's also available ice fishing at least where I live.
Which is really good.
I mean, all of that stuff matters to me.
For me personally, it's important to read fiction.
It's important to exercise.
It's important to spend time outdoors
and with animals and family and loved ones.
So it's just-
That's great.
That's good advice.
Yeah, take vitamins, drink a lot of water, drink less.
It's okay.
You'll be all right.
Rachel Maddow, thank you so much for joining
Pots A of America and we are so glad you're back.
Me too.
Five nights a week.
Me too.
I know you tried.
You tried to escape.
You just couldn't do it.
I will escape again on April 30th,
which makes it very doable.
I will believe you. I believe you. Thanks, John. Take care't do it. I will escape again on April 30th, which makes it very doable. I will believe you. I believe you.
Thanks, John.
Take care.
Appreciate it.
That's our show for today, but two things before we go.
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