Pod Save America - Texas Democrats Working Remote
Episode Date: August 5, 2025Texas Democrats, in an attempt to block Trump's redistricting effort, shut down a special legislative session by fleeing the state. Texas State Rep. James Talarico joins the show to explain what happe...ns now and why he and his Democratic colleagues believe that getting out of town is the best way to serve their constituents in this moment. Then, Jon, Lovett, and Tommy discuss Trump's decision to fire the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Ghislaine Maxwell's transfer to a cushy minimum-security prison, new reporting about who's sending all those annoying fundraising texts, and, of course, Trump's comments on the most important story of the moment: Sydney Sweeney's jeans.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.
Transcript
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That's simply safe.com slash crooked. There's no safe like simply safe. Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
On today's show we'll talk about Texas Democrats fleeing the state to stop a Republican gerrymander,
and one of those Democrats, State Representative James Tellerico, talked to Lovett about what
their plan is.
We'll also talk about the firm behind all those spam fundraising texts, Trump backing off his campaign promise to cover IVF,
his decision to transfer Ghislaine Maxwell to a minimum security facility, and his new favorite actress, Sydney Sweeney.
But let's start with the fact that the economic data released by the US government will no longer be as trustworthy because Donald Trump fired the economist who ran the Bureau of Labor Statistics after we got a bad jobs report
on Friday. The report showed that the economy added an estimated 73,000 jobs in July, about half of
what economists expected, and worse, the report showed that the economy created 258,000 fewer
jobs in May and June than originally estimated.
On top of that, we've had fairly anemic economic growth in the first half of the year,
and inflation has started ticking up again. The reason for all of this is not a huge mystery.
As the AP put it, quote, U.S. hiring is slowing sharply as President Donald Trump's
erratic and radical trade policies paraly paralyze businesses, and raise doubts about the outlook
for the world's largest economy.
This undoubtedly led to some self-reflection
on Trump's part, who promptly decided to shoot the messenger.
Dr. Erica McIntarfer was confirmed by the Senate
to lead the BLS in 2024 by a vote of 86 to eight.
Two of those yes votes were from Marco Rubio and JD Vance. But
sadly she had to go because she and all the nonpartisan economists who work for
her didn't count up the number of jobs in a way that made Trump look good. Here
he is Sunday offering his trademark non-factual explanation. We'll be
announcing a new statistician sometime over the next three four days. We had no
confidence. I mean the numbers were, which she announced. If you remember, just before the election, this woman came out with these phenomenal numbers on Biden's economy. Phenomenal numbers.
And then, right after the election, they announced that those numbers were wrong.
And that's what they did the other day.
So it's a scam, in my opinion.
But I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is.
And I think that's the way it is. And I think that's the way it is. And I think that's the way it is. And I think that's the way it is. And I think that's the way it is. And then right after the election, they announced that those numbers were wrong.
And that's what they did the other day. So it's a scam in my opinion.
My opinion is just, it's just additional scam.
Was he speaking to a giant swarm of bees?
What was that?
Did he say additional scam?
Additional, it's an additional scam.
Additional, is that like,
addition like person subtraction kind of thing? I don't know.
I don't know.
I think it's just, just, hey, new scam just dropped.
Also what he said there was completely inaccurate.
They announced the revision in August of 2024,
which is well before the presidential election.
So he's just not just talking about anything
that's real there.
Kevin Hassett, the ostensibly qualified economist
who runs Trump's National Economic Council. He's taken a few talking about anything that's real there. Kevin Hassett, the ostensibly qualified economist who runs Trump's National Economic Council,
he's taken a few swings at explaining the situation over the last few days.
Here he is on the Sunday shows, and then on Monday, apparently forgot his talking points.
Let's listen.
Does the administration have any evidence that it was rigged, as the president said?
Will you be presenting that to the american public there it will be evidence is that there
have been a bunch of revisions that could have heard that it is
well i mean the revisions are hard evidence market seemed to believe the
revisions in in the numbers more than they believe the original numbers that's
why you saw bond yields humble on friday
uh... are you in agreement with that Do you think we are starting to see a
real slowdown in the jobs market? Yeah, I think that the jobs numbers were slower than we expected.
I think that like one of the explanations for revisions is they have more complete data.
And so I think it is likely that the revisions are a better read of the data if the data are
not being manipulated. And so. So I've lost track.
Uh, were the jobs numbers rigged or were they bad?
It's strange to have someone just forget himself
and actually kind of answer the questions
if Mitt Romney were president.
Within the span of 24 hours.
Kevin has to get trotted out to defend
the most hilariously stupid shit.
Like he was also on ABC News when Trump slapped tariffs
on Brazil because they were
mad that Brazil was prosecuting the former
president for leading their own version on January
6th.
Ugh.
You guys want to take a crack at explaining why
this is such a big deal?
So.
Crack away.
So.
Crack away, cracker.
Okay.
Ha!
That's inappropriate.
I don't, listen, maybe you're too hooked on woke Jaguar,
but we're not saying that kind of thing.
We will get to woke Jaguar.
So in June of 2020, come back with me,
take a trip down memory lane with me.
I didn't like it then.
In June of 2020, the job numbers come out for May
and they're surprisingly good, right?
They're not good, they're terrible, but they're not as bad as they thought.
And the report said that firms had added 2.5 million jobs back, that the unemployment rate
was only 13%.
But even in the moment, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said, hey, we think we're having
a problem collecting data.
We think that our Census Bureau takers are putting the wrong numbers in.
The actual employment rate is probably higher than 16%.
Trump didn't threaten to fire the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
He didn't say, hey, everybody, be careful.
Some of this data may be exaggerated.
He was ecstatic.
He said the economy is roaring back.
Larry Kudlow said that there was a boom, right?
And Republicans at the time used this error to slow down any hope of doing more stimulus.
Democrats had passed a stimulus bill.
A lot of unemployment aid was running out.
A lot of emergency measures running out.
Democrats were like, we need to help.
And Trump was like, no, the numbers are amazing.
So we don't need to do this anymore.
It delayed aid for another six months, even though people were in crisis.
We make decisions based on this data.
If people are losing jobs, they're losing jobs whether or not the data shows it or not.
They are being hurt whether or not, you know,
climate change is real, whether you believe in it or not.
And Trump doesn't care about how to respond
to the actual facts of what's happening on the ground.
What he can do to make the economy better,
what he can do to bring costs down,
what he can do to increase the number of jobs.
He just wants the numbers to be better.
And he's doing that across the board.
It's extremely dangerous to no longer be able
to rely on economic data because we can't trust
that this administration will release any information
that puts Trump in a bad light.
Yeah, I mean, this is supposed to be pretty wonky stuff,
like unemployment, wages, inflation, like boring data.
And everyone relies on this, the Fed, the Treasury Unemployment, wages, inflation, like boring data. And everyone relies
on this. The Fed, the Treasury Department, the White House, Congress, financial markets, banks,
small businesses. And so they don't expect the BLS to be perfect, but they expect the process
and the data itself to be nonpartisan and independent. And if you undercut that independence,
that's a huge problem going forward because there have been people that have called the process into question.
Like Steve Bannon has been on this beat for a long time.
He's always had the BLS as partisan and it's rigged.
But the experts usually understand that this is good data and it's real.
If the experts start to question the data underpinning the US economy, that's a huge
problem because the world could decide, I don't know, man, like maybe does the BLS have the courage
to put out data that President Trump doesn't like in the future?
And like if you're, like the world could look at our economy and say,
there is just too much political risk baked in.
It's the tariffs, it's the BLS data,
it's Trump's interference with the Fed,
what if he fires Jerome Powell?
And they could decide like, I don't know, man,
like, should we buy treasuries?
Should we put money in the stock market?
Like, let's just move on, let's go invest somewhere else.
And historically speaking, like, that ends very badly.
We could talk about the Greek example,
we could talk about Argentina,
but the long story short is,
when you mess with economic data,
it leads to enormous pain,
both within your country, but also systemically.
And just in case people don't know how this all works, Bureau of Labor Statistics, obviously
the head of it is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.
That is the person that Donald Trump fired.
But the rest of the Bureau is just a bunch of nonpartisan economists and they follow
very strict statistical methodological standards.
They are reviewed by outside experts.
They are transparent, the standards they use.
So none of this is like a black box.
And what they do is for the jobs numbers, they do a survey of businesses
all across the country.
And then for the unemployment rate, they do a survey of households,
of who's working in the household.
And the reason that sometimes you get revisions in the data is because a lot of companies and some
households don't answer the survey until after the survey is closed. So sometimes people are just
late getting their survey responses. So we've had revisions dating back to 1979 when this whole
system was first set up. So it's like not unusual at all. It's a much bigger revision over the last two months
than at any time since COVID.
But also we have had a shock to the economy with tariffs.
We have immigration raids reducing the workforce.
We've had massive government job cuts
because of Doge and other Trump actions.
So there's been a lot going on that wouldn't make two months
of fairly large revisions, like totally out of the ordinary.
But to your point, Tommy, like the reason this is so
important, like you said, you've got people who want to
maybe invest in the United States, who might want to buy
treasury bonds.
Also, Jerome Powell and the Fed, they're gonna set the,
they're gonna decide whether they're gonna to set the, they're going to decide
whether they're going to do a rate cut, what the interest rates are going to be. If they can't make
that decision based on the data and trust the data, then that's going to be a huge problem. Also,
by the way, cost of living adjustment for social security is based on this economic data and
unemployment insurance benefits too. So if because as you mentioned
love it it's not just jobs numbers it's also inflation that comes out of the bureau of labor
statistics inflation numbers. So if Trump gets someone in there who gives him an inflation number
that's lower than it really is people are the government's not going to adjust people social
security benefits to keep up with the cost of living, nor are they gonna adjust unemployment benefits
to keep up with the cost of living.
So people are gonna get fucked
with unemployment benefits and social security
if the inflation numbers are wrong.
If this were a one-off,
if Donald Trump was a calm, rational actor
who had long believed there was a problem
with the data collection,
and this was a culmination of his longstanding beef
in no particular direction with the way the government measures statistics, fine.
That's not what's going on here.
A lot of people pretending that that might be what's going on here, that Trump has always
felt as though the Bureau of Labor Statistics was making mistakes.
We know what's going on.
Donald Trump has launched a war on how the government collects and disseminates information.
In March, Trump's Commerce Secretary disbanded the Federal Economic Statistics Advisory Committee
along with another outside group.
Very wonky stuff.
That group exists as a panel of outside experts.
It exists for one purpose, to meet to talk about how the government can do a better job
of accurately measuring economic information.
Lutnick told them that their mission had been, quote, fulfilled.
Alex McGillis at ProPublica reported on all the ways in which Doge targeted data collection,
specifically data on drug use, pregnancy, maternal mortality, adoption, accidental
deaths, HIV, other sexually transmitted diseases, educational outcomes, even just weather balloons
not going up as frequently, something that came up when there were those terrible floods
in Texas.
In Trump's first term, researchers at the USDA reported that Trump's trade war with
China was devastating farmers, among other reports that embarrassed the administration.
What do they do?
They take the USDA economic researchers, they move their office under the political wing
of the agency, and then they go further.
They announced that they're physically moving the researchers offices to Kansas City. And so they told a bunch of economists in DC, oh, we don't like
your reports. You can quit or you can move your whole family to Kansas City. And a lot
of them quit as a result. But the reality was the reality. We now know how devastating
Trump's trade war was for farmers. Bankruptcies went up. Calls to suicide hotlines went up.
He gets angry because the headlines are bad,
but the actual facts remain the facts.
The damage is the damage.
He doesn't care about the outcome.
He cares about the story.
And all these people are now going around
trying to claim that Donald Trump is just trying
to clean up our economic reports,
when meanwhile, we're gonna end up in a situation
where every week we're getting a new story
about how our chocolate rations are up,
and yet no chocolate.
Yeah.
I mean, so he's on one hand by doing this, he's
going to cause a lot of damage.
On the other hand, he's not going to fix his
problem because people are still, people are still
going to be feeling pain if the economy takes a turn.
Right.
Well, that's what doesn't make sense about this.
I, why, why freak out now?
The midterms are a long ways away.
You just passed your big economic package. Like the stock is ripping. I don't understand why. I guess maybe
just take out the trash now, make your structural reform now because you watched Steve Bannon on
the war room rant about this and it inspired you to make a move, but it's just petulant.
It also came right after he, I believe, tweeted that he was repositioning two nuclear subs
because he got in a Twitter fight with Dmitry Medvedev,
the former president of Russia.
Yeah, and today he's watching CNBC
and he's tweeting about or truthen about Elizabeth Warren.
He's yelling at her.
He's just, I think the obscene thing
is really shaking him.
Now he's just, and the, look, look,
when you look at the last two months of economic data that was
revised, the jobs numbers were revised, I think he is thinking.
And so probably his administration too, like, oh, maybe the economy is softening here.
There's a narrative thing there.
That's a problem.
So it's like, you might as well, might as well fire the BLS person now so we can start
cooking the jobs numbers as things get bad.
Better to do it now than next year, right?
As you're getting closer to the elections.
By the way, why they disbanded those panels.
They don't want anyone from the outside looking in
and seeing what they're doing, right?
It's part of a plan.
They're doing this across the board.
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All right, and another sign that democracy in America isn't exactly alive and well.
The Republican governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, has threatened to arrest and or remove from
office more than 50 Democratic legislators unless they let Abbott fulfill Trump's request
to squeeze five more Republican House seats out of Texas just in time for the 2026 midterms.
Abbott has called a special session so the Republican majority can redraw the already
gerrymandered maps, but the Democrats fled the state in
order to prevent the session from taking place, since the Texas Constitution says that two
thirds of the legislature must be present to do business.
Abbott then released a letter claiming that if Democrats weren't back by the time the
session began on Monday, they could be removed from office.
He also claims Democrats could face felony charges if they tried to fundraise in order
to pay the $500 a day fine that comes with missing a session.
Most of the quorum busters went to Illinois where they were welcomed by Governor J.B.
Pritzker.
Just before we recorded this, Love It spoke with one of those Democrats, State Representative
James Tellerico, about his decision to leave and what happens next.
Here's that interview. Welcome to Pond Save America, Representative James Talrico of Texas.
First of all, what can you tell us about where you are?
Well I'm in a nondescript hotel conference room, that's all I can tell you.
We are in Illinois and it's appropriate because this is the land of Lincoln and Abraham Lincoln
actually broke quorum back in 1840
when he was a state senator by jumping out of the window
of the Illinois state Capitol.
Thankfully, I didn't have to jump out of any windows
in Texas, but we are joining a long tradition in America
of standing up to bullies, of speaking truth to power,
of causing good trouble.
And I know my colleagues and I are proud to do this work
regardless of what consequences may come.
So let's talk about that.
Your governor says you forfeited your office, have you?
No, I'm still doing my job
even though I'm not in the state of Texas.
I was actually doing constituent services this morning
with my team from this hotel room.
And we're also trying to shine a national spotlight
on this Trump redistricting power grab
that's happening in Texas.
Because it doesn't just affect Texans,
it literally affects every American.
Trump is trying to insulate himself
from the will of the public.
He's trying to shield himself from the voters
and from accountability.
And if we allow that to happen,
if we let power go unchecked in this country,
I am worried about where it will lead.
And so that's why my colleagues and I felt needed
to take this dramatic step of leaving the state
and breaking quorum.
So as you noted, there's a proud tradition
of this in our country and in Texas.
This has happened before.
As far as I can tell, this is the first
time a governor, and this has happened to Republican governors in the past as well,
has asserted that somehow he has the power to remove legislators from office. Now,
the Attorney General, Ken Paxton, said that that would be challenging. What do you make of that threat? It's very consistent because the whole point of these rigged maps is to rob Texans of their
ability to elect the candidates of their choice.
And so now Greg Abbott is literally trying to remove the people's elected official from
their office.
This is a page right outside of Trump's authoritarian playbook.
And he does it with, you know, less charm and less humor
and less charisma than Trump,
but it is still just as dangerous and we should reject it.
Now, again, this is not a Democrat thing.
All of us should reject it, whether you're a Democrat,
an independent or a Republican.
Yeah, like presumably if your voters are unhappy
with your decision to do this on their behalf,
even though you're doing it for the right reasons,
they have many, there's an opportunity
for you to be removed from office in an election.
Exactly, and that's how people change their government,
is they elect new people to represent them.
And that's what these maps threaten.
And again, it doesn't just threaten it for Democrats, it threatens it for everyone.
And so it's why we've got to push back
against this power grab.
I should say that gerrymandering happens across the country
and it does happen in blue states, just like red states,
but this is a whole nother level.
Usually we adjust district boundaries
at the beginning of a decade,
right after a census comes out, because you have to adjust lines based on population. a whole nother level. Usually we adjust district boundaries at the beginning of a decade,
right after a census comes out
because you have to adjust lines based on population.
But Trump has asked Texas Republicans
to redraw the maps they just drew in 2021
so that he can get five more seats.
And it's a little reminiscent
of when he called the Georgia Secretary of State
and asked him to find 11,000 votes.
Thankfully, Georgia Republicans said no,
Texas Republicans said, how about Thursday?
And it's why my colleagues and I felt the need
to leave our beloved state, break quorum
and stop this power grab from going through.
So, you're being threatened by the governor,
a map would have to be in place
or be picked by December to be in place for 2026.
How does this play out?
What happens now?
Well, we're taking this one special session at a time and the special session in Texas
is going to last two more weeks.
So all of my colleagues, there's 57 of us in total, we have all agreed to stay out of
the state Capitol for the next two weeks to kill these
maps and stop them from going through.
Now, the governor can call another special session.
He may, and if he does, we will assess our options.
But I am hopeful that some of the threats from blue state governors, some threats of
retaliation, I'm hoping that can convince Texas Republicans,
maybe even Donald Trump, to walk back from the brink
because they see that the gains they could make in Texas
could be wiped out in a state like California.
Again, the goal is not for every state to be gerrymandered.
The goal is ultimately to take politics out of this process
because it is the rot
at the core of our broken political system.
But Democrats can't unilaterally disarm.
We have to stand up to bullies.
We got to look them in the eye and not blink.
So I wanted to ask you about that because there has been this push for fair maps.
A lot of prominent Democrats got behind it.
Some of them are sticking with that and saying, no, no, we can't play this game the way Republicans
do.
Others are saying we have to fight fire with fire.
Were Democrats who embraced a nonpartisan redistricting, were they
fighting with a hand tied behind their back?
That's what governor Kathy Hochul said today.
Well, I just want to say, I am proud to be a part of a political party that
still has principles, that still has a positive vision for what this
democracy could be, how we could fix this democracy so it can
actually work for regular people.
I am proud of that.
But we can't let that vision get in the way of the current
reality.
And right now, one party is attempting to cheat by redrawing
the maps in the middle of a decade.
They are cheating.
It's like two football teams coming out of the locker room at halftime, and the team
that's ahead says they want to change the rules for the second
half so they can win the game. All of us would recognize that
as blatant cheating. And if they're going to cheat, we're not
going to play. And if they're going to cheat, all rules are
off the table. And that means blue states are free to respond
with retaliation.
But this is not the vision.
Having a descending spiral of partisanship
is not what we want.
We ultimately want fair maps and fair elections
for every state and for every American.
So you're apparently gonna be fined $500 per missed day
of the session.
Abbott says he'll bring felony charges
if anyone fund raises to cover that.
What are we going to do?
What are we doing about this expense here?
Well, my colleagues and I are going to pay these fines ourselves.
And I should say, state representatives in Texas, we're part time.
We earn $600 a month before taxes for our work in the legislature, which means we have
to have day jobs to make ends meet and to pay our bills.
We're leaving those day jobs to break quorum.
We also have colleagues who are leaving young children,
some that are leaving aging parents.
So this is not a decision we made lightly.
And we knew there were gonna be consequences,
financial, political, possibly even legal consequences,
but we're willing to pay those
because we believe so strongly
that this power grab in Texas
is a threat to the future of our Republic.
So obviously you hope that Abbott
and the Republicans back down, but they may not.
Like what kind of arrangements did you make,
did some of your colleagues make
for this to potentially
last for not days, not weeks, but potentially months?
We recognize that.
And we know going in that this could be longer
than two weeks.
We're trying not to get too lost in the hypotheticals
because who knows what will happen in two weeks.
Who knows what Texas Republicans are gonna do,
what Donald Trump's gonna do,
what blue state governors are gonna do, what blue state governors are gonna do,
what the American people are gonna do.
Part of the goal of this quorum break
was to inspire action across the country.
I do think that courage is contagious.
And I think once people see someone standing up,
it makes it easier for them to stand up.
Whether that is them volunteering,
whether it's them protesting, whether it's them protesting, whether it's
them donating to this quorum break to help us fund the food and the travel and the lodgings.
That is a form of action that can, I think, push back against this kind of power grab.
And we're going to have to see that action multiplied a lot in the next election if we're
going to protect the democratic process and fix this democracy going forward.
Representative Talerico, thanks for stopping by.
I appreciate it.
Good luck wherever you are.
Thanks for having me.
Thanks for having me.
That was representative James Talerico.
What do you guys think about this whole situation, Tommy?
I think we're in a tough spot.
I mean, the ball is firmly rolling in Texas,
even if it doesn't get done in this special session
because these guys are out of town.
Abbott can just call another one.
Republicans in Texas have pulled the ship before.
They didn't really face any political consequences.
Five seats is a huge deal in the midterms.
So I wish we lived in a world where Texas voters,
like across the political spectrum,
were outraged by the fact that Republicans
are more focused on,
they called a special session to do two things, flood relief and redistricting. across the political spectrum were outraged by the fact that Republicans are more focused on,
they called a special session to do two things,
flood relief and redistricting.
They put redistricting first.
They're not prioritizing the actual needs of their
states, but I just don't think we live in that
world and have it as a leverage and these lawmakers
have day jobs and the, you know, families and
obligations, they can't be on the run forever.
Like, I don't know.
It feels like we're in a bad spot.
They just have to hold out till December.
They can't.
December, it's August 4th.
It's, look.
Three months.
It's very like, it's.
They get to have day jobs.
These are human beings.
It's such a like old school and practical.
It's like, you know, we got rid of the real filibusters.
We have these virtual filibusters.
So everything is sort of a game theory and gamesmanship.
But this is a real,
why don't they do this for other votes they're gonna lose?
Because it's really hard to do.
You have to physically leave the state.
You may not be able to come back
until the special session is over,
and Abbott can just call another special session.
There's a lot of ways these have ended.
These have happened in Texas in the past.
They've happened in other states in the past.
Sometimes you get concessions and people come back.
Sometimes your bluff is called and they just wait you out.
And eventually people have to get home because that's where they keep things like,
you know, their families and jobs and life.
The jobs thing is the tough one because it's a part-time job, Texas, the legislature.
And also now you're paying $500 a day, which they say they're going to pay out of their
pockets because, you know, he's threatening that any kind of money they take is for bribery.
And that's how they could probably get the, the feds involved right now.
They can't get the feds involved. Um, and being in the other state right now,
until Donald Trump's like makes a call to ice or his buddy cash Patel at the FBI,
like I wouldn't surprise me.
What does hella Rico say about what they're, he's basically like, they're taking
it, they're paying it themselves.
They're all trying not to think past this special session.
They're putting a lot of hope on the fact
that this is creating public pressure.
They're putting a lot of hope on the fact
that blue state governors are stepping up
to threaten retaliation.
But a lot of it is just hoping that Abbott will back down,
which doesn't seem particularly likely,
and not thinking more.
I asked him specifically,
are you prepared to do this through December?
And he just wouldn't go beyond saying they're doing it through this
special session and not trying to be in hypotheticals. And I should say the
reason I mentioned December, the reason December is getting thrown around is
they would have to redraw the maps by December in order to get it done in time
for the midterms in 26 for the ballots and everything else. So if they could
hold out to December, but you're right, it's three months.
So that's the tough part.
And then I think, look, the hope is that,
this OnlyFans are all starting,
it's gonna generate the revenue.
Cause there's no crime against that.
To be clear, like Abbott-
I guess they could take, yeah,
I guess they could take other jobs.
They could take other jobs.
Or they could work remote.
Yeah, some of them I'm sure can work remote.
You have to have a hybrid work model,
whatever their real day jobs are.
But like Abbott's threat here,
Democrats did this in Texas, Rick Perry was the governor
and there are all kinds of threats
and people say they're gonna be punished
when they return to the legislature.
But no one said that they could suddenly forfeit their jobs
or that the governor could usurp the power of the voters
and suddenly remove people from office.
That wasn't an option in the past
that they suddenly discovered
because of some non-binding opinion
by Attorney General Ken Paxton
that even Ken Paxton says the governor's reading,
who's a lunatic, who even Ken Paxton says
the governor's reading too much into.
And it does seem like that threat,
the remove them from office threat, is a bluff.
Yeah. Like that is not,
I mean, I think that the best for this is not going to work is they
have to get home at some point.
But not only is there no binding legal opinion that he can remove them from office, but they
would have to file that in all 50 districts, some of which are very democratic districts.
And then they would have to hold special elections to, you know, replace them and all of this
has to get funded by December. so I think that's pretty bullshit.
The whole like we're gonna remove you from office thing.
And then the felony thing for the bribes, who knows?
That's where you get into the feds.
But this is where Paxton is going further, right?
Are you going further by doing this mid decade redistricting?
But he's also going further by trying to make this illegal
when it is not illegal to break quorum.
What they're doing is not a crime.
Texas Supreme Court has already decided that.
And so he's frustrated by the fact that what they're doing
has been not just historically justified,
but also just not breaking the law.
So he's looking for any excuse he can find
to try to prosecute these people.
Yeah.
So it seems like the most likely way for Democrats
to fight back is Democrats in other states
to do this themselves.
We have talked about this a little bit.
Newsome, obviously Tommy and I talked to Newsome
about this and sort of laid out his plan here,
which is, you know, maybe calling a special election
to change the constitution.
Kathy Hochul is now saying that she might try
to do something, though it appears she can't really
do anything until 2027.
No, yeah, it doesn't sound like they can do anything through their,
to get changes through their process would take till 2027,
which doesn't help us in the midterms.
Yeah, so she's talking a lot, talking a big game, Kathy Hokel.
And look, maybe, I mean, she could be right about,
yeah, if she can't get it done in the midterms,
but they do this, she's gonna go ahead and try to do it for the future,
but it's not gonna help with the midterms. Right they do this, she's going to go ahead and try to do it for the future, but it's not going to help with the midterms.
Right.
And then JB Pritzker.
Yeah.
That's a tough one.
I think our real options are Gavin Newsom.
We talked about the options he has to go on offense.
There's a chance to pick up some seats in Illinois.
There's maybe one seat in Maryland.
I think governor Westmore is deciding whether to go
to his legislature to talk to them about trying to
change the maps and get us another seat, but there's
a long-term problem that could be even bigger.
Like our buddy, Brian Tyler Cohen,
interviewed a Democratic lawyer named Mark Elias
a couple days ago where he kind of laid this all out.
And the gist though is the Supreme Court is reviewing
whether section two of the Voting Rights Act
violates the Constitution.
And if it does, if it gets struck down,
Republicans could redraw dozens of congressional districts
and get rid of like all of these black majority districts,
especially in the South, which means you have a state
like Alabama that could go from having five Republicans
to Democrats to just seven Republican districts.
So there's this massive, scary, scary threat looming down
the pike here if the Supreme Court goes the wrong way.
Yeah, the long-term challenge here
is that Democrats just don't control as many state legislatures
as Republicans do.
And look, I mean, what's happening in Texas
is kind of enabled by Donald Trump's recent success
with Latino voters and their ability to rethink
how to draw those districts based on that success.
And now that might be a reason for optimism
or that they have miscalculated. I think Dan and I
were talking about this. I can't remember who I talked to about anything anymore. But, you know,
these are like Trump plus 10, Trump plus 15 districts, but that is in the presidential
election and in the midterms, even in the midterms. Dan was pointing this out that Beto lost to Abbott
in 2022, Beto O'Rourke. He still one little Latino vote by like 15, 20 points more
than Kamala Harris did in 2024.
So, you know, it could screw them for the midterms,
but either way, if you're starting to go nationwide,
it's pretty bad.
Yeah, I mean, look, also more broadly,
they can redraw the maps.
They can also accidentally draw Republicans
out of their seat.
Is if they try to over-gerrymander,
try to make too many seats for themselves
based on a projection of 2024,
or just not understanding the electorate,
all of a sudden in a wave election,
which hopefully we can generate in the midterms,
all of a sudden they got a little too cocky
and a little too greedy,
thought they could draw themselves a couple extra seats,
and then those Republican plus three, plus five, plus seven seats,
all of a sudden swing and they've lost some races.
I mean, the deeper problem here is Democrats live
in too few places too.
We have really big, big majorities
in these concentrated areas and Republicans have
still large but slimmer majorities in tons of rural places.
And that gives Republicans more of an ability
to draw these favorable maps.
But in Texas specifically,
I think the new proposed districts make 30 districts,
places where Trump won by 10 points,
which is up from 25.
So that's a lot.
And also just in Texas,
Biden won Latinos by 17 points in 2020,
Trump won by 10 in 2024.
So it's a big swing.
Probably will not swing like that
without Donald Trump at the top of the ballot. I totally agree with that. Probably will not swing like that without Donald Trump
at the top of the ballot.
I totally agree with that.
But I do think in Texas, it feels
like they're pretty well protected
with this version of the gerrymander.
And it's tough.
I don't know.
We'll see.
We'll see.
For midterms, it's much different.
But we'll see.
Trump plus 10 is tough.
Trump, yeah.
Well, two, yeah.
Three or Trump plus 10.
Two or Trump plus 15.
Or it might be the other way.
The 15s seem pretty tough.
But the 10s, 10 in a midterm.
Dan was saying he thinks that could be over.
All right.
I'll take, I'll take hopeful Dan.
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In other Democratic campaign news, it turns out that all those fundraising texts and emails we
love to complain about aren't just incredibly annoying They also may be incredibly ineffective unless you're a big consulting firm that takes a huge cut of the money
Over the weekend an investigation from independent data journalist Adam Bonica at the on data and democracy
Substack found that a single firm mothership strategies founded by former digital staffers for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is
Behind most of these spam packs according to Adams review of FEC filings, Mothership has taken in
678 million dollars from individual donors since 2018 and they've pocketed
at least 159 million of that, reporting it as quote consulting fees. Even more
depressing of that 678 million dollars, only 11 million has gone to actual
campaigns, candidates, or Democratic committees.
That's two cents on the dollar.
We reached out to Mothership to ask about this and got the following quote.
"'This sub-stack is completely inaccurate and contains numerous false and misleading
claims about Mothership and our clients.
The truth is that Mothership supports Democratic campaigns, PACs, issue advocacy organizations,
and more in raising critical funds. We have directly raised over 400 million dollars
for dozens of campaigns and member-connected PAC clients. Further, a
majority of the funds that are reported by the FEC is going to Mothership or
pass-through funds the company actually pays to our clients other vendors,
including advertising partners, to support their programmatic work." So just
reading the statement now, but doesn't seem to conflict with anything in the actual
substack piece?
I mean, I think what they're probably quibbling with is how much goes to the company as profits
versus what is paid through the company.
But look, the broader point is that like all this money just goes to perpetuate the fundraising
cycle and that is the problem.
It's like I did a, just stepping back,
I did a episode on this a few weeks back
and why it's impossible to get the fundraising text
to stop when you text stop every,
I've text stop five times today.
Have you guys gotten a flood today?
I've gotten like 10 fundraising solicitations.
It's relentless.
I just got one that said John, I'm trans.
I got one that said John, John, I'm trans.
Okay, so the reason it never stops when you press stop
is because that removes your number from that campaign
or super packs the list.
There's no like do not spam registry
or like universal do not spam list.
And so if you've donated even to like one candidate
in your life, that can go into a list that gets sold
to consultants or data brokers and they can sell your list and your information
over and over and over again in perpetuity,
which is why it is, can feel like,
and maybe is impossible to get off these lists.
And I think the problem is like when you press party leaders
about how annoying and damaging these fundraising tactics are,
they just kind of shrug their shoulders and say,
well, they work, but what this article suggests
is that they don't work. They're incredibly inefficient. An enormous amount of money goes in, but very
little goes out to the causes. And obviously the people of mothership strategies can quibble
about how much is going to them versus other vendors, but all of this money is going to
do more fundraising, right? It's like not a lot of it is going towards the actual political
causes.
And they're not saying that in the statement, by the way,
that they're not trying to argue
that actually more is going.
They're just saying, it's not all going to us,
it's all going to some vendors as well.
Or at least that's what the statement says.
Or maybe some share of it is going to advertising
and it's being counted in the wrong way.
Who knows?
We'll get, you know, they're claiming
this is largely inaccurate, we'll see.
But like stepping back,
this is a stupid way to run a fucking party, right?
Like let's say more of it is going out
than this article claims or some way in which
he's over counting something, right?
First of all, I don't think you're gonna land at the end
and be like, wow, it's actually really good.
But put that aside, there was this report that came out
that Democrats send a far greater share
of their fundraising dollars to safe seats
than Republicans do.
And one reason is that fundraising has become this sort of
scorched earth kind of hammering Democrats over and over
and over and over again with requests.
And in that kind of environment, more charismatic figures,
more sensational opponents, right?
Less strategic decisions are going to be made about money.
And yes, I am sure that sending out a blast of fundraising text, you get a report back
saying like, we sent out texts and $100,000 came in or $40,000 came in.
And you do that again and again and again, it starts to become real money.
But the cost is that this big group of hyper-engaged Democrats who have been funding
the resistance for almost a decade now
are exhausted and angry and mistrustful
of this entire process.
And these are the people you want
not just to donate to you,
but to advocate for you on their social media,
to believe in you, to believe in the process.
And all of this is just so cynical.
Yeah, I mean, I think the problem is with direct mail,
like the old school way, there would be literal costs.
You'd have stamps, you'd have envelopes,
you'd have paper, right?
And with just hammering like a file full of text numbers
and emails or cell phone addresses,
like there's zero cost to that.
And so you can just go after these people
over and over and over again.
And again, we don't know about the top line numbers
in this story, but there's one example
that seemed pretty egregious to me, just that
got at the, the waste and the self-dealing here,
which is, um, there is a super pack called
end citizens united, which I've definitely gotten.
Tom's gonna say.
Right.
So apparently that pack was created by two
principles from mothership strategies.
So of course, and citizens united then hires
mothership strategies to do their texts and
email and fundraising.
So in the end of the day, like, and Citizens United PAC raises a ton of money
from like well-meaning people that largely goes
to pay the guys who started the PAC for the services.
And so that doesn't really benefit anyone.
And it's also, like you said, you are,
it's not just that you're annoying people
and harming the Democratic Party brand,
you're hurting the people who care enough,
or care the most, who are willing to give money.
You're also raising, just it made me think of this
because of the name, you're raising expectations
for people who have no, like end Citizens United,
you're not gonna end Citizens United,
change the Supreme Court.
Right.
That's what's gonna happen.
You're gonna wait around and we're gonna have to get
a whole new court to have a chance to end Citizens United.
So like this, that one, all of the ones that they listed,
all the packs they listed in the sub stack are all,
like I recognize most of them.
They're all in our phones.
They're all constantly.
And they're all ridiculous.
And the fundraising pitches all sound ridiculous.
The emails sound ridiculous.
It's like, it's crazy.
And by the way, like I am sure in the deluge of texts
we're getting, there are legitimate requests from campaigns
I'll either want to or will ultimately donate to,
but I have to ignore all of these messages
Because first of all, you don't know if they're reliable or not
You don't know if they're true, right?
like for every dollar that's going to mothership strategies who knows how many fake tests are going to kind of
guileless senior citizens who have been horrified by Trump and and want to help and are watching MSNBC and are super engaged and and
Just donating on their phone to random numbers.
It's a stupid and ridiculous system
and more democratic politicians need to stop participating
in this process.
And maybe it requires a little bit of,
there is like a little bit of like a network effect
and sort of like a sort of collective action problem,
but there has to be some alternative,
including Democrats working together
to figure out some other way of reaching voters
that's less of a deluge and less of a kind of like,
winner takes all, everyone going after everybody
all the time.
Yeah, and I talked a little bit with Ken Martin about this,
the chairman of the DNC when I interviewed him for YouTube, check it out, Pod Save America YouTube.
And he does seem like, he seemed,
and this was before the story came out,
but he seemed like he wants to do more to call them out.
And remember the Harris campaign.
I've heard he's pissed about this.
He's pissed about it.
He was very pissed when I talked to him about it.
And also I think the Harris campaign in 2024
did call out some of these spam packs as well.
Yeah, I mean, there's spam packs
that are like horribly spammy, right?
Like whenever someone's running its Marjorie Taylor Greene,
there's always some candidate that'll raise like $20 million
and it'll all go to consulting services
that somehow benefit them.
Then there's also packs that will send out texts and emails
that include photos of politicians
that are in no way connected to the pack.
Like that's really predatory.
There are people that get locked into recurring donations
in really deceptive ways.
Like what's sad about this is it's even worse
on the Republican side.
Like what they do to their donors is disgusting.
This is everything Trump does,
everything that Trump does.
But I do think the candidates working with firms
that do abusive practices need to cut ties with them.
And they also need to recognize that you end up feeding
your online donors into this ecosystem and churn of fraud and self-dealing,
and you're harming your own people.
Totally.
And I also think like the article,
this article claims that this firm,
Mothership Strategies, is kind of insulated
by its connections with senior elected officials
in the Democratic Party.
And those officials say, you know,
basically it's no big deal because the tactics work
and we need the money and everyone benefits at the end.
And like, I've been in meetings with you guys
where we've heard that directly from top officials
in the party, they're off the record conversations,
so we're not gonna name names,
but it's sort of like a shrug, like, well, it works.
And you know, if an annoying text is the worst thing
in your life, like, you know, you got bigger problems.
And I just think like, that is bad.
We need to take this seriously and not brush it off.
And like my advice-
It sounds like it doesn't work.
Well, right.
And my advice to listeners is like,
never give to someone that texts you or emails you.
Ever, ever, ever.
If you care about a cause or a candidate,
research it, go to their website, give directly.
Make these texts so inefficient that they go away.
Yes, for sure.
Yeah, I can't imagine, yeah.
Is anybody, that's what's also hard to,
like I don't know anybody that's donating via these texts.
Because it's old senior citizens.
It's old people, like I don't know anybody that's donating via these texts. It's it's old senior people. It's yeah
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So at this point, Trump has broken so many campaign promises. It's hard to keep track,
but there's one in particular we want it to flag. You might remember Trump saying a lot of things
like this during the 2024 campaign. I'm announcing today in a major statement
that under the Trump administration,
your government will pay for,
or your insurance company will be mandated to pay for
all costs associated with IVF treatment,
fertilization for women.
We are going to be paying for that treatment.
So we are paying for that treatment.
Or we're going... All Americans who want it?
All Americans that get it. All Americans that need it.
Oh, I want to talk about IVF. I'm the father of IVF, so I want to hear this question.
That was always so weird. So strange.
The father of IVF thing. I remember that. Didn't make any sense.
So on Sunday, the Washington Post reported that the Trump administration does not plan
to require health insurance to cover fertility treatments
in IVF, nor have it mandated in Obamacare,
nor provide government subsidies
to make the procedures more affordable.
A White House spokesperson told the Post
that the Trump administration is, quote,
committed like none before it to using its authorities
to deliver on this pledge.
So one survey from last year, one in eight women
or their partner said they needed some form
of fertility treatments in order to get pregnant,
but only one in 10 had received it.
And about 2% of all babies born in the US
are a result of IVF specifically.
You think Trump ignores this promise at his own peril?
Yeah, I do.
I think a lot of people care deeply about this.
And I think the political cost is cumulative.
Like most critical mass of lies like this.
For those who don't know, IVF is insanely expensive.
The average cost of a cycle is $14,000 to $25,000 depending on where you live in this
country.
Many patients have to do multiple cycles, so you could be talking $30,000, $50,000,
$75,000.
That is just way out of reach for a lot of people.
But it's not a small thing you're trying to get, right?
Like this is about having a child, right?
This is like deeply painful and important to people.
And I think a lot of folks in the political world
were skeptical of this promise because the timing
and how cynical it was and how expensive it was.
But for a lot of people, like a lot of voters heard this
and this was their only hope of ever being able
to afford IVF
and potentially having a baby.
And this is a life-changing, massive broken promise
that is not a small thing.
It's not something you'll forget.
It's not insignificant to someone's life.
And I think it is outraging a lot of people.
And we saw like Andrew Schultz,
the host of the Flagrant podcast,
like he has talked about how he and his wife went through
IVF, how this was, he was sort of like a single issue voter
in some ways, and this was really important to him.
He was posting about this over the weekend.
Like a lot of people are profoundly hurt and betrayed.
It's also like extremely cynical.
It's not like it's a broken promise where a lot of
politicians broken promises like, well, we tried and we sent
a bill to Congress and it didn't work out.
Or we tried to do some executive action.
Like back in February, they released, you know,
an executive order and action or a proclamation
or something that was, it was directing all of
the federal agencies to come back in 50 or 60
days and, and let the president know what they
could do to make IVF more affordable.
But those days have come and gone,
nothing, we haven't heard anything about it.
It was basically just in, it was done in February
just to get a headline that the Trump administration
was gonna do something about it.
And then until the Washington Post called them up
and asked them about it, we heard nothing.
Yeah, look, it was cynical at the time, right?
And it was sort of along the lines of the promise
on no tax on tips.
It was on the line of sort of some of the other promises
he was making, trying to appeal to a broader,
beyond the sort of Republican coalition that had existed.
But this was like a,
like a such a kind of half-baked promise, right?
IVF is incredibly expensive.
It would be a big deal if you mandated
that insurance companies cover it.
It is also controversial on the right.
There are a lot of anti-abortion Republicans
who are opposed to IVF.
This story was kicked off because of a ruling in Alabama
that suddenly called the possibility of IVF into question
in that state and jeopardized the ability of women to access IVF
if they wanted it.
And it was extremely unpopular.
It was extremely damaging.
It was the natural consequence
of the court's abortion ruling.
And all of a sudden,
Trump faced this terrible news cycle.
And he says, I'm the dad of IVF,
whatever the fuck that means.
And I'm gonna make sure anybody who wants IVF can get IVF.
Even like for policymakers,
it's a difficult question.
How many cycles do you cover?
How do you mandate this?
Like it's expensive and like it's important
and it's a hard policy, right?
And he just sort of went off half cocked
to win these votes and they had no intention
of following through on it.
And this is the end result.
And it's this, it's a whole bunch of other issues
where he's done the exact same thing.
By the way, I think like part of it is the promise
to release the Epstein files.
He's not gonna release the Epstein files.
Like all these promises that he made,
he had no intention to solve,
but I do think that to Tommy's point,
like for a lot of people,
this was something that was gonna change their lives
and it's just not happening.
In that last clip we played, I remember watching that.
It was a Fox News town hall in Georgia. They built it as like a women's town hall.
You could hear Harris Faulkner think her name there.
It was just like so unbelievably credulous.
Everyone knew that that announcement was bullshit.
The math didn't add up.
There was no way they could afford to pay for it.
It was not part of any of his plans.
Calling himself the father of the IVF.
It's just like, it just was a reminder of how
terribly Fox News treats its own viewers and voters.
They treat them like idiots.
What do you guys think is gonna happen
if he gets the question on this?
Do you think he's gonna say,
we're looking into it, couple more weeks?
Yeah, we're gonna have a plan on that in two weeks.
Why are you asking me that question?
How dare you?
That's a terrible question.
That's a hateful question.
Yeah, maybe he won't get the question
because it's just all Marjorie Taylor Greene's boyfriend.
Yeah, who's the, by the way,
you're talking with the next head of Bureau Labor Statistics.
Speaking of Trump's broken promises, the one that's been getting the most attention
these last few weeks was his promise to release the Epstein files. Instead,
Trump's DOJ has just released Epstein's convicted co-conspirator, Galeen Maxwell,
from a federal prison in Florida to a minimum security facility in Texas known as Club Fed. Sounds nice.
According to Bureau of Prisons regulations, sex offenders like Maxwell
are supposed to be held in facilities like the one in Florida, not the minimum
security camp in Texas. Naturally, when Trump took questions for the first time
since the transfer was announced, he got some probing questions on the
controversy that everyone's talking about.
After Sydney Sweeney and who nots the speaker
that she was a registered Republican,
any thoughts on that?
That who else?
Sydney Sweeney, she's a very hot actress right now.
She's a registered Republican?
Oh, now I love her ad.
If Sydney Sweeney is a registered Republican,
I think her ad is fantastic.
Okay, thank you very much everybody.
Great question, great shotted question.
Glad we got him on the record there.
No Ghislaine Maxwell question.
Trump followed that up with a Monday morning
post praising Sweeney,
attacking the car company Jaguar
for a new supposedly woke ad.
Wasn't that like a year ago?
I have no idea.
So old, it's so old.
I need to look into that one.
Yeah, it was a while ago.
I remember that a while ago.
And he also claimed once again
that Taylor Swift
has stopped being popular since she endorsed Kamala.
She did a $2 billion grossing tour.
It changed the economy of Sweden.
They were like, we're seeing a bump.
This Taylor Swift bump in the Swedish economy
can't be counted on next year.
So stupid.
Before we get to Sydney Sweeney,
thoughts on the latest in the Epstein case?
We got Maxwell, just no explanation.
It's worth just repeating that
Ghislaine Maxwell is not a good person.
She groomed these 14-year-old girls,
she abused them herself,
she sought out girls who had been abused themselves
or confided in her.
One Epstein victim, Virginia Jufray,
said about Ghislaine Maxwell, I think this is on CBS,
she's a monster, she's worse than Epstein,
she was vicious, she was evil.
I know that woman.
Virginia Jufray died by suicide in April of this year.
So this is fucked up.
So there was a report from other prisoners at Club Fed
who were there for theft and other nonviolent
offensives who are personally disgusted to have to be with Galeen Maxwell and I'm
sorry we have to look to these people for their moral leadership but Galeen
Maxwell is not a nonviolent offender because she participated in sexual
abuse. That is a violent act. She is a violent offender. She should not be in a
place for white-collar criminals. Just because it was a rich person
and took place on a fancy island
doesn't make it a white collar crime.
She is a violent criminal offender.
And where we're at now is,
we know Trump was in the Epstein files.
That's what his attorney general told him.
We know that he dispatched his former personal attorney
to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell for,
what was it, eight and a half hours, some term?
Over two days. Over two days.
We know that Trump has been asked
about whether he will pardon Ghislaine Maxwell.
He won't say he won't, he won't address it.
And then we find out with that explanation
she's being transferred from a less pleasant facility
to what's known as Club Fed.
A previous controversy years ago
was when Trump said that he wished Ghislaine Maxwell well, right?
And so what conclusion are you meant to draw
other than Donald Trump's lawyers are currying favor
with Ghislaine Maxwell dangling a pardon
in the hopes that she'll absolve him of any culpability
given that his name appears in the files
and he had a long-term relationship, whichever he has to.
Again, we're recording this Monday afternoon.
We got this news on Friday about the transfer,
and no one, no responses from the administration on this,
from the DOJ, from the Bureau of Prisons,
from the White House.
We have no idea why she was transferred.
We have no idea what Todd Blanch talked to
Ghislaine Maxwell about over the course of two days.
So we just don't get these questions answered. We have no idea what Todd Blanch talked to Ghislaine Maxwell about over the course of two days.
So, we just don't get these questions answered.
But the DOJ did have time to leak to Fox News that they're going to a grand jury to conduct
an investigation into the Obama administration for this Russiagate bullshit that you can't
even figure out what the crime might be or what law might be broken.
So, they were able to let Fox know that they are conducting this investigation,
but no answer on Glane Maxwell.
And we also know that a thousand FBI staffers worked 24 seven
to review something like a hundred thousand documents
in the Epstein files.
And we know that they spend a bunch of time
redacting Donald Trump's name.
And now we're not gonna get to see those files
according to Donald Trump.
So nothing shady there.
No answers on that either.
Nope. No questions on that, no answers on that.
We're just all flying blind here. Whatever the Trump administration wants
to tell us about what they're doing with Galeen Maxwell or the Obama
administration or Russiagate or the jobs numbers, that's what we have to
deal with. And then they just fucking trolled us all with that.
I don't know if you guys saw the post today from the White House that said,
most transparent administration in history.
That's just, they know they're not.
And they're just like, there's just a fuck you to everything.
How about it?
It's just a big fuck you.
To their base too, by the way, to like-
Mostly, yeah.
Right, well, they spent a lot of,
they put a lot of attention on sort of trying to win
the kind of crank vote and appeal to a bunch
of conspiracy theorists.
And they put Cash Patel and Dan Bongino
in these positions of authority
to people that espouse some version of conspiracy theories,
which at this point I think are true,
about Epstein and about QAnon,
claiming there's a vast global pedophilia ring
run by the powerful and the elite.
And the next thing we know, Donald Trump is president
and they are laying out the red carpet
for one of the most notorious sex traffickers
in American history at this point,
who participated in terrible crimes for a very long time.
And there's just no,
there's just no accountability for it.
All these Republicans are silent in the face of it
and it's disgusting.
More importantly, would you guys like to weigh in
on the Sidney Sweeney discourse
now that we know she is a registered Republican reportedly
and now that the president of the United States
has weighed in on this multiple times?
So it is just a pun on the word jeans.
Yep, it is just a pun.
Just a pun on the word jeans, good jeans, but it's not, it could be jeans,
inherited or it could be jeans that she's wearing.
See, it's funny.
It is a very dumb, annoying story.
There's also something to be said about the fact that
the White House is able to kick this stuff up
whenever it wants.
It can be like six people commenting on a TikTok.
It doesn't have to be a TikTok creator.
It's like that genre of
really annoying internet story.
It's like the internet is furious about this new
Sydney Sweeney ad.
It's like some people commenting over on blue
sky and suddenly it's an article and suddenly all
of the MAGA media ecosystem is talking about it.
And then the white house is releasing statements.
Like, what do we get to do that?
Yeah, it's also, there's a stopover though, with,
you know, random, uh, style writers opinion, like it was,
there was a Washington Post piece about it.
Yeah, there was a couple of things.
There was a whole bunch of things.
So it's like, that's where it starts
and then it goes from there to the, to Fox, right?
And then they're all talking about on the five
and then it goes to Donald Trump.
It's like a whole thing.
Well, we made a commenter president.
I mean, that's the problem.
He is one of the commenters beneath the story,
but he also happens.
He's the commenter.
Yeah, he's America's chief commenter.
I will say the woke Jaguar ads.
So why are they woke and what are they?
Well, so first of all, I just would point out
that Jaguar is a British company.
It's not really, I don't think it's been really affected
by America's woke problem, according to Trump,
but they redid their logo and it's very ugly.
And that's for non-woke reasons.
The new Jaguar logo was very bad.
This happened in late 2024, by the way.
Yeah, it's quite old.
It's quite old. It's so old.
And everyone was like, hey, you did a bad job on your logo.
This is the other problem with Trump is like,
we've lost all sense of time,
whether we've done this thing before,
have we already seen this episode?
Are we back to the episode?
When did the Jaguar thing happen?
He's talking about Taylor Swift again.
What is happening?
Do you think the person who just say like,
you know, that Dylan Mulvaney, what a brave person.
I find what she's doing really interesting and I like her.
I'm gonna send her a six pack of Bud Light.
Do you think that person knew that two and a half years later
the President of the United States was gonna be like,
that fucking Bud Light's gotta be stopped.
Yeah, and like there's gonna be kid rock,
like machine gunning Bud Light cans or something.
Anyway, that's Sydney Sweeney.
That's what we're dealing with now.
This is day 13 or 14 of the discourse.
Let's see how long we can do.
And she was pardoned for her involvement in January 6th.
Is that right?
Sure.
That's one of the reasons this is so controversial,
or is it just the ad?
I can't remember.
She is in the Epstein file, so.
Yeah.
All right, two quick things before we go to break.
After unsuccessfully seeking asylum in Canada,
Lovett is back with new shows at Dynasty Typewriter
this Thursday, August 7th,
along with you got a special guest.
Oh, you have Ken Jennings?
Ken Jennings and Amy Schneider, two Jeopardy legends,
plus Tim Heidecker.
That's awesome.
I didn't realize he said yes, I'm finding out from this.
We had a great show out this weekend
with Patton Oswald and Alice Wetterlin and Peppermint
and Ashley Nicole Black.
I also, we put the monologue from Love Relieve It
on the Pond Save America feed.
We just call it mono now?
Is that just like a industry term?
It's our internal term for it, I'm sorry, now I'm embarrassed.
I couldn't name it after a disease that puts you out.
The kissing disease, Tommy?
The kissing disease.
Has the kissing disease come for you?
It gives you like a six month nap.
Do you remember when we both got mono at the same time?
That was weird.
I have never had mono.
Okay, all right, all right, calm down, calm down.
We never had mono.
You got it, you got it, buddy. Mics are on We never had mono. You got it, you got it buddy.
Mikes are on, never had mono.
You were both just down for the cat.
Incredible.
Just two weeks off, very tired, pre-COVID.
Anyway, but I was really proud of the monologue
we did this week, because we talked about Epstein,
and we talked about Gaza,
and talked about all the conspiracy theories,
which is on the Ponce of America feed,
if you want to check it out.
Krigga.com slash events if you want to go see love it in person at dynasty typewriter. Also a reminder,
speaking of events, we announced our first ever Crooked Con last week and tickets are already
going fast. Crooked Con is a chance to hear from smart people inside and outside the Crooked
universe about how to galvanize the pro-democracy movement as if it needs galvanizing. We'll be in
Washington DC for two days.
Uh, we're gonna kick things off with Pod Save America live
at the Warner Theater on Thursday, November 6th.
Then on Friday, November 7th, we'll be at the Wharf.
The Wharf.
Anyway, it's gonna be really fun.
We're gonna have organizers, strategists,
politicians that aren't annoying.
James Talreca's gonna show up with his clothes on a bindle
because he's been on the road.
LAUGHS
Riding the rail to DC.
Oh man, if they can make it till then,
we will give them, well, we won't pay them.
We'll pay them.
We don't want to do any of the felony stuff.
But you know, we'll give them food and water maybe.
We'll give them, yeah.
I think legally it has to be finger food.
We'll give them commodities.
Anyway, hold on till then, guys.
Lobbying wise, I think you can sit, you can eat,
but if you're standing, it's a snack.
We'll invite their families so they
can say hi to their families.
I haven't seen them in a couple months.
Everybody gets one phone call.
Tickets are on sale now.
Head to cricketcon.com for tickets,
lineup announcements in the coming weeks,
and more, that's C-R-O-O-K-E-D-C-O-N.com.
We've also got a limited amount of discounted tickets.
When you use the code FREEDOMANDCONTENT,
again, that's one word all caps, freedom and
content. So get your tickets soon and we'll see you there. That's our show for today.
Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday. Talk to everybody then.
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