Pod Save America - Trump and Pod Save America Agree: JD Is Lame
Episode Date: June 2, 2026Donald Trump thinks JD Vance is a bit of a loser and he's worried he may not be presidential enough to be the 2028 Republican nominee, according to The New York Times. After a series of court losses, ...the White House signals that it's about to ditch its $1.8 billion "Anti-Weaponization Fund." Trump is reportedly "getting very bored" with the Iran negotiations. Democratic voters head to the polls to decide a series of contentious primaries in California and Iowa. Then, Senator Andy Kim talks to Jon about the atrocious conditions at Newark's Delaney Hall Detention Center.
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Welcome to POTSafe America.
I'm John Favro.
I'm John Lovett.
Tommy Vitor.
On today's show, we'll talk about the news that Trump appears to be giving up on his $1.8 billion insurrectionist slush fund.
He also seems quite uninterested in ending the Iran war, saying he, quote, couldn't care.
less whether talks break down.
We're also going to talk about Tuesday's big primaries this week in Iowa and here in California,
as well as more turbulence in Maine for Graham Platner and more turbulence for J.D. Vance
in his quest to become Donald Trump's number one boy chosen successor.
Then New Jersey Senator Andy Kim talks to me about the horrifying conditions he witnessed at the ICE Detention Center in Newark,
where the senator was pepper sprayed by federal agents.
before we start, you guys see that CBS's Scott Pelly
accused Barry Weiss of murdering 60 Minutes.
That sounds like a really fun meeting to have attended.
It was an all-staff meeting convened by Weiss's new hand-picked executive producer Nick Bilton.
No Weiss at the meeting.
It's your first day at the office.
You're trying to find the bathrooms.
You're seeing where your badge works and where your badge doesn't work.
Scott Pelley is saying, you piece of shit, I will fucking rake your dead corpse.
over the bones of Don Hewitt.
And obviously,
Lovitz was hyperbole,
but not as much as you might think.
Honestly, it was pretty close.
Yeah.
Reading Oliver Darcy's status
has the whole transcript of the meeting.
It was something.
Anyway,
just bring that up because if all of you
want to support the growth
of an independent pro-democracy media company
that Barry Weiss can't murder,
at least not yet.
No, yeah.
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All right, let's get to the news.
With the Middle East still a mess and gas prices still high,
the president is once again working hard to communicate
to the American people how little he cares about these things.
Here he is during a hard-hitting Fox interview with his daughter-in-law,
Lara Trump,
focused like a laser on his true passion, interior,
This will be the entrance into the ballroom. The ballroom will be right here. No, the ballroom is a gift
to America from me and from Apple and from lots of great people. How often are you coming out
here to check the progress? Well, a lot. We're going to have the inauguration here.
This stone can last a million years. Most people would put grass on top of a piece of wood.
It would be called laminated, and then in about two years you'll see the grass falling on the floor.
You know, we'll delaminate. This is, look, solid brass. Same thing with this.
This is all solid, beautiful solid.
Actually, it's, it's, it's, the pudding, look,
we've suffered a lot under this guy.
The putting labels on the rooms outside the rooms.
The Oval Office, like, we know.
The whole point of it, man, is we know it's a cool room.
It's actually a great thing.
You don't need to label it.
Did you guys read Ashley Parker story
about Trump as a gay icon in the Atlantic?
I didn't see it.
You will love it.
It's so funny.
It's so good.
They're having the inauguration out there?
No, they're not, by the way.
Congress decides what the inauguration is.
I'm sure he means like the balls and some of the, you know, the balls that would have it around the, you know,
I mean, says him.
He's not there anymore.
Right.
He won't be, he shouldn't be that involved in the planning of it, you know, one would hope.
Does he just, he's just going to stay on as like physical plant director?
Maybe it should be chaperone for JD.
J.D. You're going home.
No, so that was on Fox over the weekend for Fox viewers who wanted just a little more on what the government is doing about this terrible economy.
On Sunday morning, they get to hear this from top White House Economic Advisor.
slash a Democratic Party plant, Kevin Hassett.
People are spending more on gas, but they're also spending more on everything else,
not just groceries, but restaurants and so on.
And I think that that's a sign that you would see when people are optimistic about the future.
Now, Tommy, you put this in Slack yesterday, I think, on Sunday.
And I was like, isn't that the clip from last month when Kevin Hasett said this?
And then I had to click on it and realize that he basically said the same thing again,
but maybe worse this time.
No, they just keep putting MAGA Dennis and Menace on TV to say stupid shit.
I mean, they just like they could not seem more out of touch if they tried.
Spending more on gas and groceries does not suggest that you're optimistic about the future.
It suggests that you need gas and groceries and those are non-negotiable items.
They're not taking out loans to start a business.
Like, what are you talking about?
It doesn't like, oh, you know, hey man, like most people are just, they're just not really paying
that close attention to aggregate consumer spending.
Right.
Like, that matters to you and your morning meeting.
Yes.
But then like the Laura Trump interview.
I mean, Trump clearly wanted to talk about the brass thing he put on the wall.
Like, he could, he could write Laura Trump's questions for her if he wanted.
It's his daughter-in-law doing the interview.
And he, like, they clearly went out and they pitched this.
Like, he just, he wants to tell us, I don't give a shit about anyone or anything about in the world, except for myself, my arch.
And, like, he seems annoyed almost that we don't believe him at this point.
It's so funny because we also, on Friday's pod, covered Besson in the briefing room when some reporter asked him about,
like people's savings being,
well, people dipping into their savings,
and he's like, well,
according to the economic literature,
that could be two things.
One, the Dumer view that you just took,
which is that people aren't confident,
or they're spending so much because they are confident.
That's why they're dipping into their savings.
Yes, people are racking up credit card debt
because they're betting on themselves.
That's what's going on.
That's what's going on.
Just thought of it, thought of it too late.
Phantom of the Ballroom.
That's what he's sort of aiming for.
Phantma of the ballroom.
Something like that.
Imagine I said it earlier.
The University of Michigan, imagine I made this joke earlier.
The University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment Index is at a record low of 44.8 in May of 2026.
That's lower than- Fucking Doomers.
COVID.
Doomers.
So the biggest concern, by the way, is cost of living and gas prices.
Yeah, well, you know what the solution is?
Turn that frown upside down, all you domers.
Believe, believe in Donald Trump and his.
Look, if a man can do that with brass, imagine what he can do for your savings.
Besson going out there with the $250 bill too.
Like the whole thing, it is crazy.
It is, he wants to lose the midter.
Do you see him holding up the story being like,
whoever edited this, who did a terrible job,
the pissy cadaver?
He looks so, he has such a terrible, like,
kind of his whole facial expression.
Just like just, it's so unlikeable.
Just the holding up the story with the money on it.
So obviously none of this is going too well politically for Trump,
but unfortunately for him,
even his renovations and corruption,
are running into some stiff headwinds.
On Friday, a federal judge blocked Trump's plan
to close the Kennedy Center for renovations
and also ruled that he can't just rename it for himself.
There was a very long truth social post
where he was ranting about that
that I have to tell you, I honestly couldn't get through it all.
He was very upset.
But basically, he's like, I'm giving up on the Kennedy Center.
That's it. Forget it.
It's like, all right, cool.
Yeah. Hey, man.
Leave her alone.
The same day, another federal federal.
judge in Florida reopened Trump's IRS settlement with his own DOJ because of what she called,
quote, grievous allegations that the $1.8 billion insurrectionist slush fund was, quote,
premised on deception. Then another federal judge in Virginia temporarily blocked the transfer of money
in or out of the fund while she waits to hear arguments in a lawsuit challenging it. Finally,
after all these reports that both Republicans in Congress and White House aides were pushing Trump
to just give up on the slush fund altogether, it appears as if he's done just that. Two senior
administration officials told Axios that Trump will drop the slush fund with one saying, quote,
it's dead for now. DoJ also posted a statement saying it'll quote, abide by the court ruling,
blocking it, even though that block is only temporary. Do you guys, we haven't heard from Trump as of this
recording. Yeah, we got to hear from the big boy. Before it's done, it's not done until the big boy speaks.
Yeah. And even then, who knows. Even then, right. But do you think you backs down this easily?
And I think more importantly, do you guys think this is still a political issue for Republicans?
So for also Senate Republicans actually were pretty bothered by this in a closed door meeting,
of course.
John Thune was actually out there saying he didn't like this very much, which is impressive
for him.
Of course, the only thing Senate Republicans could manage to do is quietly oppose it.
And then bravely leave town.
That was their way of protesting it.
It was we're not going to give him more money for immigration that we don't need.
And we're going to leave town to signal our unhappiness with it.
I assume and hope that we'll still have.
have votes on it this week. I think there's no, given that it's only temporarily on hold,
and Trump clearly wants to do this. I think Democrats need to get Republicans on record that they would
oppose having this kind of a slush fund be legal now or in the future. And so let's get them
voting on that because even if they're privately saying it, they'll have to publicly do something.
Yeah, the for now bothered me. For now, part of that report bothered me. I'm hopeful that, you know,
when you're primaring John Cornyn, you're primarying Bill Cassidy and when Tom Tillis hates you,
all Republicans in the Senate. Maybe they will prevent this from ever passing or coming to be. I don't
know. I don't know if you guys read the big New York Times piece from over the weekend about how the
slush fund came together. But it read like the blueprint for a future RICO case. It was like Boris
Epstein on the outside, like coordinating things. The Trump kids want immunity for like all IRS
audits for their tax returns in the future. The professional staff at DOJ are either horrified or
quitting. And then the White House political staff was just cut out of the process because they probably
clearly that it was toxic and it's like the most corrupt sounding shit imaginable and so i don't know
knowing trump it's probably not the end of it yeah schumer um is going ahead with or he said he's
going ahead with making sure they have to vote on it and do it the vote is going to be on you know
originally i think the first time we talked about um democrats potentially proposing amendments on this
it was like to restrict the fund or whatever there was a couple proposals out there to just
ban the fund completely forever and that's what schumer is going with reportedly and
he said today. And I think that's great because, like, what Republican now is going to vote
against the ban now that Trump has said, or at least the White House has signaled that they're
giving up on it. So Trump doesn't say anything between now and the vote. Like, if you're a Republican
voting on this, you can either vote against the ban and really fuck yourself in the midterms
because now the White House has abandoned it, but now you're on record supporting it. Or
you can vote for the ban and then the ban becomes law. And then it's a lot. And then it's
doesn't matter if Trump backs off because now it's against the law.
Well, right.
There's a pretty good position that.
Oh, Democrats are a great.
This is ridiculous.
There's no good vote for the Republicans.
They have in the past chosen this is a political ploy because there is no fun.
So I'm voting against this because Democrats are playing politics.
Just giving them an option to be.
Of course.
Just giving them.
It's another.
It's another craven pat.
The Republicans have said this is not necessary or it is too late.
Those have been two positions they've taken in the past and trying to stop Trump.
The other part of this too is like in in fairness to Trump, he must be surprised that there's any pushback whatsoever.
It sort of, I think must have caught him off guard that Senate Republicans have found a line because they've tolerated so much brazen corruption, the pardons and all the rest that led to this moment.
Even as we're speaking, DOJ is trying to vacate the convictions of the oathkeepers that Trump only commuted but didn't pardon.
And so they still are kind of just going full speed ahead without having to work.
about the Republicans of Congress.
I love that Mike Pence was on the Sunday shows being like,
please don't pay the people that tried to hang me.
Come on.
You know what's my Donald?
I watch.
I watched.
They tried to hang me.
They set up stocks and a news.
I watched part of that Mike Pence on Meet the Press.
I don't know why.
This doesn't sound like me.
But it was he's.
Sure, it was served to you by accident.
His book is about,
his book is about like the need to take on the right wing populist while he's like
up there just like praising Donald Trump and how on so many things he's doing such a great
job and then he's like now I do have to say I am a big critical of his continuing to support the
people that tried to kill me but nobody's perfect it's unbelievable that he saw out here out there
like doing this thing I think that there's a very small but non-zero chance that the other option
for Donald Trump is saying fine I'll just pocket the cash then well he's remember remember he had that
pissy post last week when there was a lot of political blowback on the slush fund and he was like
I could have just kept the money.
Well, that's why he's annoyed, right?
Because he thought, I'm going to do a $10 billion lawsuit.
And then I'm actually going to do something really cool, which is going to be beloved by all because I'm not going to keep the money.
I'm going to be generous.
He thought it was like too clever by half.
Yes, yes.
And you can feel that this is the White House staff being annoyed at Todd Blanche for running this drug deal behind their backs.
So good.
Amazing.
All right.
Let's talk about Iran where Trump can't even seem to get a bad deal, let alone one that would
justify the insane amount of money and lives the war has already cost.
Military strikes have started again around state media, said it was pausing negotiations.
Trump told CNBC on Monday morning that he, quote, couldn't care less if the negotiations
collapsed that they, quote, took too much time and started to get very boring.
This was after he complained on truth social about how negative, quote, chirping about the war from
political hacks is making his job tougher and that we should all just sit back and relax because
it will all work out well in the end, it always does.
Trump then reversed course again and said that talks between the U.S. and Iran were, quote,
continuing at a rapid pace.
Taking too long and getting kind of boring is also what he said, the one and only time he went down on Ivana.
Never going to make that mistake.
Oh, Ivana.
That's a, that's a, where that came from.
I'm sorry, everybody.
God rest her soul.
On the golf course, off course.
On the ninth green be a blessing.
Four.
Sorry.
My goodness.
It occurred to me.
Catching strays from the grave.
Okay.
Tommy.
We were reliably told by Scott Jennings last Thursday.
That Trump had reached a deal with Iran that got us, quote, everything we want.
What happened?
Is it possible that Scott let us astray?
Yeah.
Before I get to Jennings, I want to just read a little more of the transcript of the CNBC interview.
Is this what Trump told Amin Jabbers from CNBC about the peace talks?
I don't care if they're over.
honestly. I really don't care. I couldn't care less. If they're over, they're over. If they're not,
you know, I think they took too much time. Frankly, I thought they started to get very boring.
Again, 13 service members dead, hundreds more wounded, entire global economy is on the brink of
collapse. Gas prices are up 50 percent, so he's bored. It's just hard to wrap your head
around a politician saying that, a president saying that, and not being a career-ending moment,
kind of like on-site, but here we are. Fox News will never air it. This will never have happened in
the MAGA media world. Now, Scott Jennings, uh, fuck don't know him from
CNN. You know him. You hate him. He's a hack. He's a fool. He mindlessly regurgitates,
uh, whatever talking points he gets sent from the White House, including blatant disinformation.
So I expect nothing better from him. Um, but I, like, I do hope that this disaster makes
the axiose and some of other news outlets, um, that kind of cut and pace whatever to some
senior administration official told them, whether it's Jared Kushner or the press office for
whom ever, uh, just help, like, rethink how you're doing your job because I get the journalism is
very competitive. I get that reporters are battling for every mini scoop these days. But at best,
you look silly. At worst, you are a pawn in oil market manipulations, right? This happens
every Sunday. And then ultimately, you're pumping out disinformation to the entire world.
Like, remember, economies in Southeast Asia have stopped because they have no oil and gas.
And so on the question of where do we stand on a deal? I don't know. Like, one, the deal was off,
the deal was on. We're on the cusp of a deal. Then we're bombing the Iranian.
means again. Trump just said he talked directly with the Hezbollah representative. You guys see that
today? That's new. That's interesting. And then said and said that that Hezboa and Israel,
they're cool. There's a ceasefire in Lebanon now. The Iran talks are proceeding quickly.
Then then I was like, no, they're not. What are you talking about? So who knows? I also, I mean,
you tell me, Tommy, but like, I don't think that all the pre-spinning of what the deal is going to
include from the White House is actually helping the negotiations that much and in fact may be
hurting them because every time they get close to a deal, then Iran's probably thinking, okay,
like, we're going to do this, maybe, you know, and then Trump goes out and is like, we
destroyed them. We got the best deal ever. We got everything we ever wanted. And then the Iranians
are probably like, well, fuck, no, I'm not going to do this now. Trump is going to have to give on something,
whether it's, you know, the duration of the deal, like sanctions, relief, unfrozen assets,
something. But he refuses to look weak. He doesn't want to look like he gave a JCPOA-like agreement
to the Iranians. So you're right. I mean, he, it sounds like. It sounds like, it sounds like, it sounds like,
like his staff are kind of giving and then he goes out and says actually no we're going to take the dust
to we're going to not give him any money like all the reports are bullshit and you're running it's okay okay
fuck you then yeah i feel like there's two things happening one is what an actual deal will ultimately look like
if there is one and then there's how trump how the trump administration talks about the deal and then what's
reported this has been this has been sort of the media has been getting led around by trump from when
Vance went to Pakistan because Vance goes to Pakistan and then within twain, within, you know,
eight hours, 12 hours, the reports are stalemate, talk at an, it talks at an impasse, talks are
falling apart. There haven't really been talks. And we've spent in the next last several weeks
having deal falls apart, verge of a deal. Deal falls apart, verge of a deal when what would be
happening in the normal administration is the long grinding negotiation of a complicated deal in
which there gives and takes and like, you know, and puts and whatever. And instead, it's the kind of
through the Trump prism. And so all these outlets are hearing, I guess, from the administration officials,
from who knows, saying we're on the verge of a deal. They report that out faithfully. And then it
falls apart the very next day. The reality of there will be, hopefully, there will be a deal.
It will look something like the JCPOA. And then Trump will declare it the best, the best deal in
history. Like, one hopes that that's what will eventually get to. And then this, all this up and down
shit will have just been sort of like silly Trump chaos on the way there.
I guess.
I think what's triggering the hell out of me, though, is like, ultimately, like,
there will be reporting on that we'll evaluate the merits of any deal.
But that deal could have been gotten without a disastrous war that led to the deaths of
thousands of Iranians and dozens of service members in the entire economy.
And it's like, I'm not worried about this table losing that context.
I am worried about the broader media, like helping Trump sell a deal by like doing this constant
incremental reporting by retweeting, you know, Scott Jennings saying this is a win for the Trump
administration, et cetera. It's like, no, this is a disaster no matter what happens next. Yeah, because the
honest thing to report on this, or if you were some kind of a conservative pundit, the honest
thing to even say is, glad it's over now, but that wasn't worth it. And not in exactly those
words, but like that is the tenor of whatever deal we're going to get is that like there's no way
we came out better than we started. Right, because even like just on the, on uranium and
What I saw over the weekend or early today was what was on the table was a 20-year moratorium,
which is what up from the 10-year moratorium.
So that you claim this was the worst deal in history.
Your deal is just a slightly longer timeline on one piece of it with other concessions along the way.
That was their starting position and they worked down to 15 maybe.
So who even knows?
Who knows?
But it's just like obvious like that he is just there will be a hard.
If there's a deal, it will be a deal that isn't some amazing victory for Donald Trump.
He'll call it that.
He'll get his 24 hours to say that, and then we'll live with the consequences of having fought this stupid fucking war.
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hat, I will punch you in a place. As you're listening to this, voters in Iowa and California
are voting in some very consequential elections. Let's start with Iowa where state representative
Josh Turrick and state senator Zach Walls are in a tough primary fight for the state's open
Senate seat, which will be hugely important. This one has become yet another meta commentary on Chuck Schumer and the DSCC trying to influence key primaries. In this case, in favor of Turek. Schumer hasn't publicly endorsed Turek, but his aligned pack has contributed. So his jillabrands, he's reported that he was sort of a Schumer recruit, much to Turek's dismay.
Yeah, he should endorse Wals. Tommy, you interviewed both Turek and Wals on the show.
For people just catching up, what are each of them bringing to the table?
What were your general impressions?
Yeah, I mean, so Josh Turk is a, he's a state rep in Western Iowa and Council Bluffs.
He was born with Spina Bifida, he uses a wheelchair.
He's a two-time Paralympic gold medal winner in wheelchair basketball.
And he's just like, his life story is just an incredibly gritty, determined guy.
Like, he got cut from the men's team six times before he actually won the gold medal.
He just kept coming back and come back and competing.
And, like, there's videos of him.
He literally, like, climbs out of his wheelchair, climbs up the stage.
stairs with his hand, drags a wheelchair up after him and then knocks on doors. Like, that's how he
goes door to door. So like gritty dude, clearly benefiting from being Schumer's pick and an associated
$9 million vote vets add by that has drastically increased his name ID because no one knew who any of these
guys were. And then Zach is a member, Zach Wall is a member of the Iowa State Senate. He's from Iowa
City. He was sent a minority leader for a couple of years. Our listeners probably saw him speak in
2011, even though they don't remember it, or knew it was him at the time. He was a 19-year-old.
He delivered a speech asking Iowa legislators not to pass a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage and civil unions that went super viral back in 2011.
And it was a great speech, really powerful speech, like supercharged his career.
So I interviewed both.
I liked them both a lot.
Everyone seems to think that Josh is likely to win.
A lot of the people I know who work in Iowa politics think he is more electable because he's won and more conservative parts of the state.
But what is going to take on Congresswoman Ashley Hinton for Joni Ernst's seat because she's resigning.
And no matter who wins, Iowa is like ground zero.
for politics this next cycle.
You got Rob Sand, who could be the next governor.
You have this open Senate seat.
And then there's like three competitive House races, a bunch of other statewide things.
So like Iowa is absolutely crucial.
So this was one we're going to be watching going forward.
I will say that I've been impressed by both of them, by both Josh Turk and Zach Walls.
And I know some of these Senate primary fights are particularly intense.
And I know this one is too.
I do know, like I was kind of joking about Josh Turr, probably wishing that Schumer didn't spend
some pack money on him or necessarily recruit him. But like I think that I understand why Walls is,
you know, Walls has tried to make this a race about sort of an outsider versus the establishment
as Turk as the establishment. I kind of think that like, you know, Turich being picked by Chuck Schumer
is not quite the same as Turk being part of the establishment or the establishment spending
money on him. Like a lot of the money that spent on him is vote vets. So it's like it's not,
at least for me, it doesn't worry me that he's some establishment.
establishment pick necessarily. I feel like the case for that isn't as strong as in some of these other cases. But I also like, you know, Zach Walls was in here too. I thought he was very compelling as well. So I like both of them. Love it? Anything? No. Yeah. I think there's some races where being seen as like the Schumer guy, the DC guy, I think has been a real
cross to bear. I think that was that happened in Maine, which we'll talk about in a second. I just don't think it's been that in Iowa as much this time in part because this vote that's by has been so big and so. So,
significant in helping push push Josh forward. Also, he's a known quantity in Western Iowa. I think
he's ever been worked in D.C. Yeah, so I think it's harder to lay that on him, but we'll see.
We should also say that for people wondering, the reason that Votes, vote vets is spending money
on him is not because he's a veteran, but his father was in Vietnam and potentially exposed to
Agent Orange. And that's why they think Josh has spined a bit. But also, I think Votes is
seen as doing Schumer's political getting here. Also true. Also true. All right, let's turn to California.
The big race, of course, is the jungle primary for governor.
We have covered the campaign a lot.
In between us, we've interviewed Tom Steyer, Katie Porter, and Matt Mayhan.
We also reached out over a dozen times to the apparent frontrunner, Javier Bacera.
And even though they expressed interest, they unfortunately wouldn't commit to a time.
Okay, same question for each of you.
Who'd you end up supporting and why?
And who else did you like?
If this were a ranked choice voting, who might you support after that?
Well, my ballot still hasn't been filled down.
So I'm still getable.
I'm still getable.
I'm still getable.
I am going to vote for Tom Steyer because I would like to see if Bacera, if the polls are to be believed and they've been pretty consistent,
Bacera is going to move on one other will.
There's a chance Tom Steyer can be that second person.
I would much rather have two Democrats battling it out for the future of the Democratic Party
in this state than I would have Bacera versus a Republican who has not passed the threshold question
of opposing Donald Trump.
election lines. Like that to me is a threshold question. You could be frustrated with Democrats in
the state. You can believe that Democrats have have have fucked up in California. But if you can't say
that that Donald Trump lost that election, if you can't stand up to him, then that is so fucking
dangerous. And he's a nut for that. So that's where I'm at. I also really like my conversation
with Tom Steyer. I think he had good answers for some of the questions about where Democrats have
gone wrong in California and some of the criticisms. I also really like Katie Porter, but she just
hasn't risen to the top of the polls.
Like she was, she kind of slowly fell behind.
And I think it's, it sucks because I really like her.
But I'm trying to be pragmatic with my vote.
Yeah.
If I could wave a magic wand and make someone,
make someone governor, it would be Katie Porter.
But she is down in the polls.
And I, I'm having the same, I have the same rationale.
I want to vote strategically.
Because I think Steyer and Becerra going to a runoff would be great.
It would kind of be annoying if we had to deal with, you know,
running in Steve Hilton, who's a random,
British short king who's like deep in the tech community.
I don't think his height's a problem.
But the, uh, I do love that that triggers you of all the, all the criticism.
But like, but I also love that Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco are calling on each other
to drop out still, even though Hilton is like crushing Bianco and Trump has endorsed Hilton,
but that, that's where I was.
Yeah, I would, if I were doing ranked choice, I would be Katie number one, no question,
because that, that's, that's who I go for, but that's not the world we live in.
I, um, I had a real hard time with this. And I voted a couple days ago.
I
California is a big state
with a it's hard to govern
a lot of problems
I don't really feel
I thought about Picera
but like I don't feel confident
giving the top job to someone who's had
he's had 35 years in elected office
to prove himself
but has received mainly bad reviews
from his colleagues
and the one executive
especially in the one executive job
that he's had which was
HHS secretary under Biden
and, you know, just an exhibit, like I think his housing policy, which was also, like, he's very late to introduce any kind of housing policy whatsoever until after ballots dropped.
And then, even then it was, like, more nimbie than Steyer or Porter or anything else.
And now, like, I hope I'm wrong.
And if he wins, then, like, great, maybe he'll be a great governor.
But I was like, I just, it prevented me from voting Bacera.
Steyer, like, I'm more confident in Steyer.
But even then, like, on the experience question, there is just something.
For me, it was like the combination of he's never had any experience in elected office or governing anything and is a billionaire who basically like, you know, ran for president first, flamed out there, then spent just the GDP of a small country on this race.
And like, I think he had, like, I like his positions better than Bacera and a lot of the other candidates, but I'm just like, there's just something a little icky to me about it.
And I am not as worried if it's Steve Hilton versus Becerra or Steyer because the state's
registration is going to take care of itself.
And it's just, I just, it's not a concern I have that Steve Hilton's going to become governor.
So I just voted for Katie Porter because I like her.
And it's like, I realize that she has, it is the least strategic thing.
It is the least strategic thing I could do.
But Katie to me is like, like, I've known her a while.
The temperament with her staff stuff is obviously, like, it bothered me a lot because
like we've known her forever.
And I actually didn't know that until those stories came up.
And I also don't think she's going to win at this point.
But I'm like, who do I want to be governor?
She's thought about the job a lot.
She has like a really well-fied-out policy platform.
She's actually worked on passing legislation and getting things done when she was in Congress.
And I feel like she's just like done the work for the job more than anyone else.
But if you would rather, Tom, I feel the same way.
But I would rather, like, as of right now, and I want to talk to Javier Bissera if he's willing.
I think Javier Bissera has said he wants to come on the show, but he's hoping that he and Hilton get through the other side, right?
And then, of course, we're doing an interview about a Democrat versus a Republican, which is very different than a conversation about a Democrat versus a Democrat.
But as of right now, I think Tom Steyer has answered some of the harder questions better than Javier.
Becerra. And if it's Bacera, I'm voting for him. And if I'm trying to get the best, because I believe you, I don't think, I don't think Hilton's going to be the governor of the state.
I want the best person to be the governor of California. And right now, if there's, I want to see. And maybe also, Bacera having to beat Tom Steyer would make him a stronger candidate too. So that's, that's my kind of hope that we can get Tom Steyer through this thing so that we have a better debate and on having.
or Bacera has to be put through his paces if he is going to win.
Yeah.
I do feel like, you know, as sort of bleh as this race has been for governor, I am very open
and hopeful that both like, that either Steyer or Bacera will, like, prove me wrong and become
a great governor.
And you're right.
Maybe if it's Bacera and Steyer in a runoff, then there's even more time for them to duke
it out and show that they're ready for the job.
We also got a mayoral race going on here in L.A.
Lovett interviewed Challenger Nithia Raman for the.
the show, who we all know.
And I supported Nithia, donated to her, I've known her a long time.
We also reached out to Karen Bass, who has come on the show before, but she opted not to
come on before the primary.
Nithia and Bass are in a close race with reality TV personality turned mayoral candidate,
Spencer Pratt, a registered Republican quasi-endorsed by Trump, who said, I like him.
I hear he's MAGA.
I like him.
And Pratt was in New York over the weekend, closing the campaign like this.
That even testing your drugs on a dog is the least of the worst of what these demons are doing to these poor animals.
They're lighting them on fire.
They're raping these dogs.
They're abusing them.
They're breeding them to the point that they die because they've been so overbred.
Sir, this is a Wendy's.
Yeah, I don't doubt that there's horrible things happening to animals in some of these places.
But it's very weird that he decided to go to New York for several days.
I think dropped $34,000 on his hotel rooms.
and left the state the week before the election?
Yeah, there's billboards all around, or at least I saw, I think I saw these two in downtown L.A.
of him saying, like, if you're, you know, dogs vote for Spencer Pratt.
So he's trying to make this, like, the closing thing, the, for whatever reason,
they think this is something that's going to break through for them.
I don't know.
What do you guys think of this race?
What do you think of the?
Apparently, Spencer Pratt's already sold the rights to do a reality show if he becomes the mayor.
Here's my, here's, I think this applies to both the governor's race and to the L.A.
mayor's race, which is when you watch the debate,
It's there is a, like Steve Hilton, Bianco, Pet Pratt, they are capturing what is a very real
frustration with democratic governance in this state, with mismanagement, with a kind of
fecklessness and lack of emotion and passion for good government and making shit work, work
better, work faster, answer people's concerns.
I don't think the answers that these Republicans are offering or that Spencer Pratt are
offering are what we need, but the fact that there's an opening,
speaks to the failure of Democrats, both on policy, but also just as candidates to rise to the,
to meet what is like real and deep frustration with people in Los Angeles. These are all
Democratic voters for almost all Democratic voters. And they have real like anger about, about what
they feel is the decline in Los Angeles. Now, I, like, I think Nithia, uh, cares deeply about
the city. I think that she is thinking hard about how to actually address these issues. I think
what has been a challenge both in that debate, I think with her on the campaign trail, is,
you know, when I talked to her, she made this point, which I really resonated with me,
that there's this feeling when you talk about Karen Bass like, where's the energy, where's the
hunger, where's like the speed, where's the sense of urgency, right? That was about the fires,
but everything else. And I wanted to see more of that from Nithia. And to be honest, I feel like
as a candidate, she hasn't shown the same kind of spirit that she's promising to bring if she
becomes mayor, but I do think that she has thought a lot about how to address her housing issues.
She thought a lot about what is, has allowed production to leave Los Angeles.
I am voting for Nithia, and my hope is that Bass and Nithia make it out of the primary so that the
two of them can go head to head, and then I think that'll be like a great contest.
Yeah, so I'm full disclosure. I'm a Nithia donor, mostly because your wife asked me to be.
But I voted for Nithia, too. The reason I'm mad about the status quo, too.
I share a lot of Spencer's rage about the fires, especially the communications issues after the fires or during the fires.
I don't think he's the answer to those problems, but I share his anger at the frustration.
And the problem, it wasn't just that Mayor Bass was out of the country when the fire started, although that was extremely bad and kind of, in my view, was hard to forgive.
But it's, I think, hard to overstate how bad the communication was from the city during that period and how scary it was to live here when the sun would go down and the winds would pick up and you'd lie in bed being like, am I endangering my children by sticking around the city?
that's where people's heads were and there was just like the communication wasn't just bad.
Remember that night when there was like four mistaken like fake amber alerts telling people
to evacuate when they didn't need to, right?
Like that shit is unforgivable.
So that is why I voted for change.
But if we were being honest, like I do think Nithia has struggled in this race.
She has struggled to articulate like clearly what she would do.
She seems to struggle to connect with voters on the campaign trail.
And then the debate was quite bad.
Like Spencer Pratt, I think defined her as like a co-incumphant at the debate.
and she didn't seem like a challenger.
And so if she makes the runoff, and I really hope she does,
she's got a lot of work to do to get things back on track
and to run a lot harder against whoever her opponent is
and take back that kind of like insurgent,
like I'm not the status quo message.
It has seemed to me like in this race,
we've ended up with three archetypes of candidates
that we see across the country
and have for the last decade now,
which in Bass, you have someone who is very much establishment,
along with all of the lack of energy that comes with that.
And she's kind of just, you know,
like, you know, running around bragging that, like,
we've reduced homelessness by 17%.
And everyone's, like, walking around,
and you can see, like, 17%.
And it doesn't look like 17%.
And is that a big number?
And has also been more nimbian housing,
has sort of gutted a lot of the housing reforms
or hasn't pursued them, hasn't been a great communicator.
And, you know, it's just kind of in the job and doesn't communicate well or a lot.
And then in Nithia, you have someone who was like, she, this is like what I was just saying about
Katie Porter, right, who has really thought about these issues who I think is a wonderful
public servant and I think could be a really good public servant, but like has not met the sort
of performance related requirements of a candidate.
Yeah.
And it is unfortunate that you can't just be ready to be good at the job and be really smart and into the policy and stuff like that and that you also need to perform.
But we've said this a million times on the show forever.
Like that's what you need.
And we also have like a lot of Democrats like that across the country.
And then in Pratt, you have someone who, when there is Democratic governance and a person in power does not fix the problems that an area is facing.
It is fairly easy for a right wing populist who's good at getting attention and no one's better at getting attention than a reality TV star to come in and tell everyone, yes, you are,
I'm pissed too. And if you elect me, then you can like stick it to the people in charge,
even though his plans are not just cruel. They're just stupid. And that he can't do them. They're against
the law. Like he doesn't have the power to do a lot of the shit he's talking about. He's just making
a bunch of fucking, you know, empty promises that he's not going to be able to fulfill if he wins.
But no one cares about that. People care about like, okay, he's angry and I'm angry and
that's enough. It was so cool when Nithia just like, you know what, fuck it. And drove down
and said, I'm going to run for mayor. And that was, it was so excited.
because it was like, you know what?
She's, nobody else is stepping up.
People, no one, everyone is frustrated with Karen Bass.
There's a collective judgment that Karen Bass just like, just didn't bring like the, the energy
and, and direction that the city needs.
And she's going to jump in and be the one to do it.
And I've wanted that same energy in the campaign, but just hasn't been there.
Like with Bass, like, you know, she, when I talked to her in love or leave it, a couple,
it was right before she came out.
She ran claiming she was not going to be an NB.
She put out some housing policies that were pretty good, but then they got watered down through consensus.
Also sounds like what Bacera did.
Right. And then she comes out against SB 79 because that's what the city council is doing.
It took her years to put to put in charge somebody to make someone the czar of filming in L.A.
Right? Like she's just been. No deputy mayor for housing.
And so like that to me. And, you know, part of why I think the campaigning does matter and why we, why I think I want to see Nithia be a stronger candidate and stronger campaigner is because,
in this moment, in our, in politics today,
how you campaign showing that you can do it,
that's a big part of what it is to be a mayor.
Like someone who's going to be out there every day,
like hitting the message.
Someone's going to be like making news all the time,
showing people what you're doing,
showing people what matters, right?
Like, like it's not just about the kind of performance.
It's not just a show.
Yeah.
Now I will say there's been a ton of, you know,
commentary on this race and analysis,
people talking about it.
I have no fucking idea what's going to happen.
God knows what this electorate.
looks like. I know. It's just, and for people who don't know L.A., it is 15% registered Republican,
right? And so even if, you know, Spencer Pratt and some of these polls is getting like 20%
anywhere between 20 and even as high as 30%. That's still, like, nowhere what you'd need to win a
general election, certainly, and maybe not even to advance in the primary. Also, the way L.A. is
set up, Santa Monica has its own, like, if you're in Santa Monica or West Hollywood or Beverly Hills
or Pasadena, like you're not voting for mayor of L.A.
A lot of people think they're Pratt voters,
and then they're going to get to the polls
and figure out that they're not eligible.
Exactly.
Because they're in L.A. County.
It could end up, so he could either surprise us
and do really well,
or it could be this election where just a bunch of people
who don't pay attention to politics at all
in other parts of L.A.,
just like dutifully vote for Karen Bass.
Or Nithia.
Like, we just, I don't know.
So pretending that I know what's going to happen
is just crazy.
It is an interesting window into just sort of the zeitgeist
of the electorate.
I mean, where there is a,
anti-incumbent rage across the country right now, but we're in California state where there's all
democratic governance. And so Spencer Pratt is from channeling that in a different direction. It's
interesting to see. It's also interesting the way he's kind of exposing the incoherence of the
MAGA and the MAHA agenda. Like, I remember when they were very mad about the COVID vaccine.
And now Spencer Pratt is like, I will take all the drug addicts and I will lock them up for five days
or whatever and force them into treatment. It's like, oh, okay. Well, that's different than the
freedom agenda that we were talking about under Robert F. Kennedy, but okay. Well, they don't,
well, the way it works, it's a freedom for me. Not for them. Not for them. I don't know if you guys
are excited or looking into any other races in California, but Michael Tubbs for Lieutenant Governor.
Remember, Crooked contributor and former crooked guest is running for the lieutenant governor.
Love Michael. And our buddy, Jake Levine, is running against Brad Sherman, Congressman Brad
Sherman in the California 32nd, which is palisades and upwards towards Encino in that area.
Yeah, and that's one where the-
Jake's giving him a good challenge.
And the hope there, right, is that he can keep Sherman, because Sherman is well-known
in that district and is expected to, like, sort of lead to polls.
And old, he's old.
But if Jake can get it to keep him under 50 and then they can go on to a runoff.
Oh, one other thing for people watching the returns.
A lot of Democrats, including John Lovett here, have held onto their ballots to the very end.
And California is always notoriously late in counting ballots.
And so it's a high probability that this will have a red mirage in the voting as the returns come in, especially this year.
Someone did a party breakdown, I think it was Galen Druk, that in 2022, the final party breakdown was 50% D, 29.5% are 19.9% other.
Right now, the party breakdown and the ballots that have come in, and this is like election day basically,
45.9%, 33.5%, 20.6%.
So it's already like, it's off.
And so the first ballots that are going to be counted are the ones that are already in.
And so now the electric could also be more red, but I am already worried about the Spencer
Pratt and who knows Donald Trump could jump into and be like, we won.
And then suddenly we're being overtaken as the ballots are counted later in the week.
So everyone should prepare for that.
One possibility, I think is pretty high on the list of possibilities is on election
you have Bacera 1, Hilton, 2.
And then within actually a couple days, it goes Bacera, Steyer,
and then all of a sudden, Hilton is saying,
I was locked out by the Democratic machine.
The good news is, yeah, that message I think
will resonate nationally.
I think California voters are pretty well conditioned
to how stupid and long it takes us to count ballot.
I wish it was faster.
But see, this is what I don't really get why it's faster?
This is like the whole thing.
It's like, that's how it is in California.
We do it the stupidest way fucking possible.
Why?
Why?
Other states can count balance in a couple of days.
Why does it take care of to weeks fucking stupid?
I think it's all the mail, right?
Because if you can drop it in a mailbox on June 2nd on the day of the primary,
then it takes at least a couple days for the mail to get it.
Yes, but then that is not the...
There's still long.
It's still keeps going.
But there's some built in just because of the mail.
Of course.
It's why you've got to get rid of those mail-in ballots, like Trump says.
Thank God we have mail-in ballots.
Our ballot is very long.
It's complicated.
There's lots of things needed to research.
There's lots of positions you've never heard of.
It's very, thank God, for that, but mail-in-doubt.
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We also had more news over the weekend in the main Senate race, where Graham Platner is likely to win
the nomination in next week's primary. Stories in the New York Times in the Wall Street Journal
reported that as his campaign began last year, Platter's wife, Amy Gertner, told a campaign
staffer that Plattner had exchanged sexual messages with several women, and this was after
Plattner and Gertner were married in late 2023, but that they had stopped before the campaign
began, and Plattner had gone through therapy. The entire situation is very messy. The staffer
that Plattner's wife told, Genevieve McDonald, has since left the campaign.
and she was the one who originally talked to the Wall Street Journal,
and she's talked to the New York Times,
and she's become a public critic of Platner.
Platner said that at least some of what McDonald told the New York Times wasn't true,
but both he and his wife, Amy Gertner,
and the campaign have all confirmed the existence of the messages.
And then Janet Mills, who suspended her campaign in April,
said in an interview on Sunday that actually she's still on the ballot,
and she also just posted the first two.
tweet from her campaign account since the tweet where she suspended her campaign and it was a happy
Pride Month tweet. Well, that's a sort of neither here nor there. Just try, try or don't. Yeah,
you know what I mean? Yeah, you can't half run for office. Come on. What are you doing here?
Well, you could make the argument that she kind of half ran in the first point. The continuation of the
status quo. All right. What do you guys think about this latest development and how it might impact
the race? I mean, I think the main risk for Platiner is the cumulative impact of these stories and
scandals along with the Reddit stuff because I think main voters were have shown to be quite willing
to give them the benefit of the doubt for the past Reddit posts and accept his explanation that
I was in a bad place. This happened in the past. I've grown. I've changed and moved on. You know,
I think voters are like, okay, we get that. This latest, what are we calling it, sexting scandal.
Like, this stuff was very recent. We're talking like 2023. And so I think these days,
sexual allegations of where it's just infidelity.
or infidelity adjacent, like don't tend to be campaign ending, especially when Amy Gertner said,
this is a private matter, we worked through it, I love him, I have a great marriage, et cetera.
But I do worry that the cumulative nature of this stuff might make voters think, one, like,
is this guy a good guy? And two, what else do we not know about him? And so I think Plattner's campaign
can weather this. They will likely weather this. I would recommend less criticism of the media,
for covering the story. I think it's a valid story to cover.
And the New York Times and Wall Street Journal ultimately got the story right.
Right. And I would just say, you know, I think you have to own it. You have to own that this was
shitty behavior. It was a mistake that we've moved, that the two of them have worked through
privately. And then in a few days from now, that's when you sort of pivot to the message about
getting back to issues, because that's right. That is what voters want to talk about. But there's
going to be a period of time where folks talk about this because it just broke. And I think
you can't scold the press for covering a thing.
that was valid enough that your spouse brought it forward to your campaign staff to talk to them about.
So, you know, like, it's fair game, obviously.
If Susan Collins was slinging nudes on Snapchat, like, we'd be talking about it.
You know what I'm saying?
So.
By the fall, we might be.
Sorry.
All that said, like, I do think what Platts is got that hammer and sickle tattoo to it.
Yeah.
What Genevieve McDonald, the former Plattener staffer did here, is really shitty on a human level.
It's unethical.
If I were Amy Gertner, I would be furious.
And so, you know, that part of it's pretty gross.
Yeah, like, if a candidate just had the Reddit story.
I was going through a really tough time in my life and I posted some heinous shit.
It was like, and I regret it.
But I've been through a lot of therapy.
It had to do with my PTSD.
And I'm on the other side of it.
You'd be like, okay, like people grow and they change.
The tattoo, you'd say, this was a stupid tattoo.
I didn't understand what it meant at the time.
I'm covered it.
up. Okay. Early in my marriage, I was in a really shitty place and I was having these, I was,
I don't know what he was doing, sexting, whatever, but my wife and I have worked through it and it's a
private matter. She's with, we're together because we love each other and that's all that should
really count. You'd say, okay, I feel like you add them all up together and then there's all these
insinuations that there's more coming, more coming, more coming, more coming. You see why people would be
concerned, what I find like sort of hard to wrap my mind around this is that like,
why do we care about red flags, right?
Like all of these are not, what kind of center is he going to be?
Is he a good person?
Does he have our values?
Does he, does he have a good character at root?
Or is he a flawed person who's made terrible mistakes who's trying to become a better
person?
Or is the insinuation that all this adds up to evidence that he will be a bad senator who's
actually not going to do the things he is claiming he's going to do, that he's going to
be a fetterman, right? That he's going to disappoint us in some way, that he has, like,
fundamental flaws. And I don't know the answer to that. What I'm amazed by is how many kind of
active, hyper-engaged Democrats online who do shape how we talk about these things claim to know
with such certainty about this, right? Like, they know, they know, and they're so shocked that other
people don't agree with them. And I, look, I'm not a main voter. But a lot of this is, do you think
he's a bad person? Do you think that he's going to lose because of these stories, which is just another way
of saying you think the voters of Maine will think he's a person of bad character. I don't know,
but I just, I find that it's a lot of people kind of fighting over not whether or not Graham Platner
is going to do the things he says he's going to do and as the person he claims to be now,
more kind of relitigating their arguments and anger at the factions of the party that they're
always in dispute with. Yeah, I was in thinking about this, I was trying to separate out like my
personal feelings about this with like my political analysis of what it means. And personally,
it's like, you know, I think infidelity is a mistake and it shows poor judgment. I also,
for me, it's like it's not a deal breaker if a candidate with past infidelity issues has worked
through those with their spouse to their spouse's satisfaction, which is the case here. It's like still
not great, but it's not a deal breaker. If it's a deal breaker for other people, I don't judge that either.
Like you make your own determinations. I think in the in terms of like the time,
when everything happened. It is very clear to me, I think it's probably clear to everyone now,
that Graham Platner did not think he was going to be a candidate for office up until the minute he
was a candidate for office and lived his life accordingly. And probably, you know, other people will say,
well, I didn't make mistakes like he did and I didn't get that kind of tattoos. Correct. Right.
Like he lived his life, not thinking he would ever be a candidate for public office. And then he ran for
office. And then they were like, all right, what's in the past? And all the stuff's coming out,
including at the time he decided to run for office, these messages, which his wife brought up to the campaign.
So, again, all of the accusations and all the stories about Platner have been about behavior and things he did before he started running for office.
Right. And so for me, I think, okay, the whole like, I've changed and I've grown, it's not about like I was a kid and did crazy things.
It was, I was never going to run for office and now I'm running for office and I'm trying to be your senator.
So what kind of senator are you going to be?
right um politically the my analysis of this is you're right that like these things start stacking on
top of each other and i think that the larger issue for people becomes trust right because and this
is where the is more going to come out or why didn't the campaign like first of all some people
like why didn't the campaign tell us this if they knew this i don't think campaigns are necessarily
in the business of dumping all of the opposition research they do on their own candidates into
incredibly personal, painful stuff.
Right, into the public.
Like, that doesn't usually happen.
Absolutely not on this one.
She came, hey, just so you know, this is something that happened in our past, but we're good.
It's not an issue.
We're together.
We're happy.
That is never, of course they don't come up.
That's a private matter.
Right.
But I think that, look, Andrew Kaczynski on the tattoo story, like who's reporting, I trust a lot
and as a very good reporter, has the, you know, the story that maybe Platner knew what the
tattoo signified sometime after he got up, but before he ran and, you know,
Platterner's been a little sort of sketchy on explaining that.
And now this one, it was like, well, I think that she told the, you know, she lied to the Times and the time story wasn't right, but it was.
So there is this, what I worry about and what I think about if I was them is like, there is a trust issue now that could become a bigger trust issue.
And I do think that the campaign and Platterner might think these issues don't matter or they're private or whatever.
But he has to now work to build people's trust and keep people's trust between now and November because people, even people who like him, are going to start to question, well, is he telling the full truth about everything?
Is there more?
Are they transparent?
You know, like, and that to me does bear on what kind of senator you are.
So I think the most important thing for them is to like go and do the work and like earn people's trust and take all the tough questions and and give all the explanations you need until people are bored, bored asking the questions.
Yeah, I think you've got to probably be a little more transparent on this one.
I hear what you're saying on how you're sort of thinking about this.
I don't think most people, though, draw a line when you decided to run to office for kind of like when they judge your decision making or the morality of those decisions.
I think if like the tattoos are bridged too far to you, I understand that.
I'm not going to tell you otherwise.
I mean, what I, you know, when I talk to him about this, when we sort of, they showed us the video, the thing that I always stuck with me was he took his shirt.
off and sang that song at his, was it brother's wedding and his sister-in-law is Jewish. So like,
you have to be a real asshole to do that and display that tattoo kind of knowing full well and being
fully cognizant of what it meant at that wedding. That to me was a convincing explanation, but I've
read Andrews reporting to that maybe there's some questions about the timeline. I think that's a fully
totally reasonable thing to wonder about. I think the threshold question is, are there other
things in this guy's past that suggest he ascribes a Nazi or fascist ideology? And that's where
the Reddit archive is actually quite useful.
Yes.
Because what it shows is the exact opposite.
I know.
Right?
And that's where I think people kind of refuse to kind of engage with this broader body of
factual information that we have when we want to assess what this man believes.
And I will say this is why I personally, and people have seen me do this online, but this is
why I get more frustrated with people, people being upset at the tattoo thing more than if
you're upset with all the old Reddit stuff and you feel like he's apologized for that, but
the apology not accepted, then like, that's your decision and I understand that. If you're
upset about this, the sexting scandal, then like, I understand that. But you're right,
the tattoo thing, the guy just posted on Reddit, again, like he was never running for office
anonymously, has all these things that he said that he's now regretting that are some of
offense or whatever else. None of them even hinted that he has, as subscribes to any of this
kind of ideology. Sounds like a commie. And everyone's like not to.
I saw it when we, yeah, when we were, when you were about to interview him, Tommy, and we saw the video, I was like, what's the problem? It's a skull and crossbones. Now everyone now can be like, you didn't know it was a fucking blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Toton cock. We knew it was a to Token Crosbones. And I'm sure maybe if Andrew's story is correct,
then at some point, someone said to Platner, hey, that skull and crossbones you've got,
did you know that's a Nazi tattoo? And he's probably like, well, I've been screened for the army twice.
And they screened tattoos for this and no one ever said anything. And I have a Jewish family.
No one never said anything. So maybe he then Googled it and was like, oh, yeah, it is. But again,
was probably like, well, what do I? Like, I'm going to go cover it up. I'm not. And then he didn't.
Clearly something changed in their thinking between when I talked to him and a couple days later.
Because when I talked to him, he was like, no, I did this.
This was a deal.
It was a stupid tattoo.
I was an infantryman.
I was in Croatia.
I was a dumb kid, whatever.
And a couple days later, he got it covered up.
Right.
So like something occurred to him that, oh, actually this is a real problem that I should fix.
This is where it's like, people just sort of call him a Nazi.
And it's like, and then it's like you say, well, hold on a second.
Like no one, you don't have to listen to anyone.
You don't have to believe anyone.
You don't have to take more information in.
You don't have to have a nuanced view.
You can just call somebody a Nazi if you want.
The reason symbols matter is because they're supposed to symbolize something.
Right? Like we battle about symbols on social media because that's what the medium is for. It's for taking little tokens of something and drawing a conclusion about it. It's very small space. So we do it with symbols. But the symbol has to mean something. It has to be a red flag of something. Like, do you think he's a Nazi? Of course you don't. Of course you don't. You think maybe he's a stupid tattoo. Maybe he didn't care enough about it being a Nazi tattoo. That's a fair argument. Maybe he was pointed out and didn't take it seriously enough. That's okay. All of it's like just, but like, can we just have an honest conversation about it rather than.
like it's a no for me because of the the tattoo.
It's like, okay, you're free to do that.
We're just going to have the rest of the conversation,
even if you don't want to have it.
Also, the other thing, and I think ultimately here,
this is up to the people of Maine and this is up to the voters of Maine.
And if this whole time he was going down and down and down and down in the polls and people
were not buying this, I'm going to like, okay, then he shouldn't be the nominee.
Or the, and like, even Mills stayed in the race because she wanted to fight it out.
Well, so even Mills now saying, like, I'm technically still in the race and whatever.
Like, that's fine.
If she wants to campaign for the last week and if she's on the ballot, we're going to be talking
about this race on June 9th.
If the people of Maine now decide that they want Janet Mills instead of Graham Platner
because of this last scandal and everything else, then like they should do that.
And then the national party should get behind Janet Mills and we'll be off to November.
Probably she quit.
Because she saw the writing on the wall because she didn't want to go down in her last race,
which is fine.
But if Platner gets a ton of votes.
in the primary and still does really well, then, like, that's what the people of Maine wanted.
And they met him. And they didn't, you know, it wasn't just online discourse like they met him.
So we got to kind of take the lead of the people in Maine.
Yeah. So there's a lot of like a, I know we're all used to losing and being fucking losers.
And we come about a loser mentality. And like a loser mentality is like, um, I like, this is bad.
We have to do something else. I'm scared. I don't like this. This is bad. I'm done with this.
We can't do this. We have to do something else. And it's like, guys, he's, if there,
if there was someone else running, you could have a debate and maybe vote for somebody else.
He's right now the only person that's kind of putting up a fight for this race.
If you want to say that Janet Mills should get back in, if you want to say that he should drop out, whatever, say what you want.
Say what you're saying is I'm worried he's going to lose.
Well, people are also comparing it to like that, well, people push Biden out when they thought that Biden did sit there.
I'm like, but that was the opposite because in that scenario, the whole country didn't want Biden.
And Biden and his campaign were saying, yes, yes, you will get him no matter what.
Well, that was.
This is a, this is a flip thing where the voters of Maine are like, no, no, no.
no, we like him and then other people are worried about it.
You know, it's just a different.
The Biden thing is so.
It could come to that.
When,
when nobody was challenging Biden and Biden was the nominee and it still seemed like there's
a chance he could win, that was actually when we were talk about how we were concerned,
he wasn't addressing his age issues, but he's going to be the person.
So we've got to do everything we can to help him win because he's the only person that
we're going to have.
Then he eats shit in that debate.
Joe Biden thought he was having a stroke.
Didn't tell us at the time.
Okay, babe.
But then it was now clear that he could not win.
And so it was time to do something in an emergency because it was pragmatic.
It was crazy.
It was risky, but it was actually pragmatic because it was the only hope of winning the election.
Nobody can make that argument right now based on the polls around Grand Planet.
They just can't.
Yeah.
All right.
So that's that.
I'm sure we won't talk about that anymore between now and November.
One more thing we couldn't resist.
Over the weekend, the New York Times published a brutal and hilarious report titled,
Is J.D. Vance, the 2028 frontrunner.
Trump has questions.
According to the Times, Trump is, quote, not so sure about Vance.
Trump has pointed out that Vance's political success has largely depended on Trump's support,
that Vance takes too many vacations, that Vance opposed the war in Iran,
and that Vance, frankly, sometimes doesn't look or act very presidential.
We, of course, didn't want to be unfair to J.D., so we thought we'd check the tape of some of the moments in question.
Let's play.
J.D. buds into conversations.
I want to have that for at least a couple of days, okay, Jay.
Okay, yeah, it's a murder for my wife's president.
Okay.
My wife has the right to skydye.
But she doesn't jump out of an airplane because she and I have an agreement that she's not going to do that because I don't want my wife jumping out of an airplane.
Well, they say it's racist to do anything.
I had a diet mountain dew yesterday and one today.
I'm sure they're going to call that racist too.
But what is this?
What is Zach?
You're going to have to help me out with her name here.
I lost my page here.
Okay.
All right.
Now you can't boo me.
I'm the Vice Press of the United States.
It's couch fucker.
You're going to fuck a couch.
J.D. Vance.
Go fuck,
Cops!
Oh, it's just again.
Great.
Oh, my God.
That's so funny.
What did you guys think of the story?
I love the story so much.
J.D. Vance is just the gimp from Pulp Fiction.
Trump wheels them out.
That little box humiliates him, puts him back in.
The details are so funny.
Like, the man who spends one third of his time at Mar-a-Lago thinks J.D.
Vance takes.
too many vacations.
Delicious.
I love that Trump thought the,
the trophy incident that we just watched there twice
was as embarrassing as we all did.
And that it's just, like, exposed J.D.
It's just like a phony, non-sports fan loser.
I love that Susie Wiles took away J.D.'s phone privileges
And they didn't stop texting or tweeting.
Like he's some, you know,
like her teenage son got in trouble.
That clip of Trump scolding J.D.
for talking in meetings and not acting like some, like,
CCP comments.
is beautiful.
Like they set him up.
They went through his failure tour.
It was the Iran talks.
The Victor Orban campaign stop.
Indiana.
Indiana Republicans trying to jawbone them into redistricting failure, failure, failure.
He killed Pope Francis.
People forget about that.
But J.D. Vance was so annoying to Pope Francis.
Got us an American pope, though.
Yeah, he did get us a better Pope.
Which, who he then.
Now he attacks him.
Like, yeah, don't be a, be careful.
Shut up and dribbles.
Yeah.
Shut up.
Pope.
And like, ultimately, like,
This is a win-win for Trump, right?
Because if whoever comes next, if is JD or Rubio or whoever, if they win, Trump will say, that's because of me.
If they lose, he'll say, can't win without Trump, right?
So he's pumped no matter what.
But it is so fun watching him just fuck with these guys.
One other thing that jumped out to is the article just states it as a fact that I didn't real,
wouldn't have it occurred to me as a fact that Trump is just spending more time with Rubio than he is with J.D.
Vance because Rubio is, of course, not just secretary of state.
He's his national security advisor.
And J.D. Vance can't ride on the plane with Trump because he's vice president.
Vice president can't go on Air Force from him with the president.
It just doesn't happen.
And so he's a little bit outside of things.
I will say that the like the.
JD Vance's whole life just having FOMO.
Yeah.
The Vance probably has more power in the Trump administration than Kamala Harris did in the Biden administration, I would say.
He has more actively involved.
He's in the room for big decisions.
I think I've given him almost as annoying jobs.
for sure for sure but I think they actually listen when he says stuff I'm on a run that's true
well yeah fair enough but I mean even the thing though he was by the end Vince was saying he was in favor of
doing if we're going to go big go big or go home so even he tried to stay on the right side of that but
anyway I think like what Trump sees is what we see is like vans can't help but reveal his nature
he can't help it he can't help it he can't go into a donut shop and be normal he doesn't know how
to talk to people because he's putting on a show but they're like that that like ambitious
little nerd that kind of like that that thing inside of him it just can't stop from coming out and it
makes everyone including Trump uncomfortable and I love it I just I just want to zoom in again on the
the social media part with my my Twitter pen pal J.D. Vance this is what the time says in meetings
Mr. Vance frequently scrolls his phone and he uses social media to fight with his critics the
president frequently post a truth social but he does not spend time replying to people online
as Mr. Vance does.
I just love that they have separated out the kind of poster.
Reply guy.
Trump's out there.
He's posting like 30 times a night in the middle of the night.
Yeah, he's a producer, really.
He's just putting it out.
And Mr. Vance is there just replying to people online.
How do you, sir?
Susie Wiles and the other staff have all gotten together to tell him to have an intervention
and say that the fighting was beneath his office.
The idea that anyone in that fucking building is going to tell anyone what's beneath the office.
Right.
It's insane.
And yet they do. I know that I believe it.
I know.
I absolutely believe it.
But they made him say it was for Lent.
Yeah.
I know.
It's like such a cover.
He's like,
I liked it so much.
I just kept it off my phone.
Uh-huh.
Giving up for Lent.
I love that.
I love that.
Keep it out.
I took it off my phone finally.
You did?
This weekend.
I'm proud of you.
Yeah.
It was the Planner stuff that did it.
I was like,
yeah,
that discourse is real fun.
I started,
I saw it starting blowing up.
It's like, I'm going to save my thoughts for Monday.
I was like,
I can't have a grand planar thing and then and then two fights going on.
Dave Portnoy tweets at me and then Nira with like five tweets.
I was like I'm done.
Yeah, you need like it's like the quadrenial, the quadrenial tweet review where like you can't be fight.
You have to be able to hold one front and also win on another front at the same time.
I said this more as like the J.D. Vance thing.
Yeah, I'll fight with J.D. Vance.
No, this is what I did this week.
It was not good.
Okay.
Not good.
Yeah, it's not fun.
Nice to admit that.
When we come back, New Jersey Senator Andy Kim will talk to me about the conditions at an iced detention.
Center in Newark, where he was also pepper sprayed by federal agents.
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Senator Andy Kim, welcome back to Pod Save America.
Yeah, thanks for having me back.
So for anyone who hasn't been following the story, there's a privately run iced detention.
Center in Newark called Delaney Hall. Around 300 people are being held inside. Some have started a
hunger strike over the conditions. You tried to visit last Sunday, were turned away, got in on Monday
Memorial Day, and then by the end of the day, you got pepper sprayed by federal agents.
Can you just walk us through that whole experience and what you saw? Yeah, absolutely. Well,
thanks for shining a light on this, because this is a problem, not just for us in New Jersey,
but all over this country. This is a facility that has about 800 right now.
several hundred of them participating in hunger strike and the broader protests.
But I was being able to go there a couple times and look, you know, some of the things that I've heard most recently, you know, these are people that are, for instance, a man telling me that he's got stage three lung cancer, doesn't want to be there anymore willing to go back to his home country, but not being allowed to do so, not getting the medical care that he needs.
You know, there's a pregnant woman there telling me that she's not getting the medical.
care that she needs as she's gearing up to have a baby and she's literally looking me in the eye and
she's saying like do i need to be prepared to have a baby here in delaney hall uh you know they they
she has no movement on her case you know no understanding what's happened next on the courts
um you know the woman that was translating this for me you know turned out to be an 18 year old
high school senior who's in there by herself i actually talked to her mom outside of delaney hall
and she's worried sick you can imagine you know having your your your
daughter, an 18-year-old high school senior in a detention facility by herself.
You know, this is a young woman who was telling me, all she wanted to do is go to the prom and
graduate from high school this year. And so, like, when Trump's telling you, these are the
worst of the worst, telling you that he's going after the violent criminals, you know, I wanted
the people across this country to just hear what I'm hearing inside that facility. And sure,
They're complaining and raising the concerns about the medical care or the lack of medical care about the horrible problems where they're having with food.
Like one man ran up to me with a milk carton and showed me what was inside and it was just congealed solid on the inside.
I mean it's disgusting.
And, you know, they're raising concerns about the extreme heat that they're feeling.
And I felt it too as I'm sweating there in their room.
And it wasn't even a particularly hot day.
But what they were also flagging is just like the lack of any movement on their cases.
I mean, some of them in there for eight months, some of them in there for over a year,
not having any movement forward in any credible way.
You know, one man ran to the hallway and grabbed a piece of paper off the bulletin board
and, you know, showed it to me.
And it showed me that, like, on one day, you know, when the courts came back in the session
after the Memorial Day weekend, on one day, on that Tuesday, this one judge had 74 cases before her
in, you know, in just one day.
And like, you know, like I did the back of the napkin, Matt.
That's like about five minutes per case.
I mean, it's a farce of a legal process that's just, you know, keeping them there while, you know,
while these conditions are terrible, not moving anything for it.
And who's paying the bill?
It's us.
It's the taxpayer dollars that are, that are paying, you know, geo-group, you know, millions
of millions of dollars to run these facilities.
So that's, you know, that's at least.
what I saw inside. First of all, that is just horrific. And it seems like the delay in hearing these
cases is both a function of how many people they are detaining. Clearly not the worst of the
worst, but a whole bunch of other immigrants, some of whom I imagine could be here legally,
as well as just the sort of failure to properly resource the immigration courts with
enough judges and to properly resource these facilities. Is that what you took away from it as well?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, look, some of this is absolutely just a lack of investment. I mean,
as they're surging up ICE and CBP through the reconciliation bill, and I'm down here at the
capital now because they're about to try to push another, you know, 60, 70 billion dollars
towards the enforcement side. But where's the energy towards the courts? You know, we already had
millions of cases of backlog that was going to take a decade or so just to be able to get through.
We all know that we need to invest in the courts, that we can have a judicial process that can
hopefully take on these cases in a matter of days and weeks rather than years or even longer.
And that should, you know, that backlog is what is putting so much strain on our system and
it's costing us so much. So that's part of it. But like, look, you can't help but think through.
I mean, like, this is geo-group, you know, for those that.
don't, may not be following this. Geo Group's a for-profit company that runs this facility,
runs 19 other facility, about 20 facilities around this country, in charge of detaining over 20,000
people for ICE. You know, this is a group that, you know, it's just making money off of this
all. Like, they're just printing money off of this all. You know, they're getting paid by the
bed by the day, you know, so they're not certainly complaining about this process. And like, when you
You can't help but think, like, look, when Tom Holman comes from Geo Group into the White House,
they run this process, when they just chose, actually, today is the first day of the new head of ice that they just picked.
And it came, again, straight from Geo Group.
You know, like, you can't help but think, like, this revolving door of just profiting off of this, you know, human misery.
You can't help but think, like, this is the point that they are trying to make things so bad for the detainees there.
that the detainees just give up and sign whatever papers that they want or whatnot.
And I felt it there.
Like there was just so little accountability.
As you said, I tried to get into the facility on Monday, early in the day, I tried to get him.
I actually even let them know ahead of time and got approval to be able to go into the facility that day.
I show up the gates and the geo-group guards are just like, nope.
Like, you're not allowed in.
And you're like, I'm a U.S. senator and I've had authorization to do this.
I have authorization by law as well as the permission to come.
I literally had to call secretary Mark Wayne Mullen.
I talked to him and told him, like, let me inside.
Like, I have a right to be inside.
And so finally, they let me inside.
And I go inside.
And I talked to the head of geo group in the facility.
And I told him, by the way, your guards just told me that I can't come inside.
And he just looked at me.
He said, you're a liar.
He's just literally to my face
called me a liar. I mean, like
I give you that not because it was insulting to me,
but I give you that because I want you to understand
like the kinds of dynamics
that there are.
Like that situation was very indicative
to me of
just a lack of care about any
accountability or transparency.
Like they don't feel,
Geo group doesn't feel beholden to the
American people. Certainly doesn't
feel beholden to Congress.
And that is, you know, that is because of just this dynamic between ICE and groups like
geo-group and Core Civic and these other companies.
Like, they're just in a world and a league of their own.
They're just like operating off on their own.
And because, you know, Speaker Johnson and others are just giving them that kind of carb-blanche.
So they were just in some, you know, in some world of their own and feel nothing.
You know, and then so when I came out, and then when I came out,
out from that facility and was alerted by my team and the people on the ground that there
was now like a standoff of people outside.
So not only is there chaos inside Delaney All, but now I come out and emerge outside and
see that there's a standoff between ice agents.
You know, they have a row of ice agents that are armed.
They have an armored vehicle.
They, and they're, you know, just on a standoff with the protesters there.
I mean, look, you know, like my immediate.
concern was like, this cannot become Minnesota. We saw what happened to Renee Good and Alex
Preti. I was terrified that we're going to see that type of violence and potentially bloodshed
in the streets. So I was trying to figure out, like, is there any way to be able to off-ramp
this? Is there any way we can be able to lower the temperature? And I was talking to the head
of ice outside there. And at some point he just told me, like, look, we're going to just drive these
vehicles, our vehicles out. And I looked across the field there, and I said, like, you cannot just
simply plow your vehicles through a crowd of civilians. Like, you have to try to figure out, you know,
how we can try to do this without the violence. And look, I was trying to see if there's any
arrangement. But, like, again, like, it shouldn't be just on me. Like, when it comes to de-escalation,
like, what role are their officers supposed to play?
And that's what I think was so alarming, John, is like there was just like at some point just a feeling of inevitable violence.
And it was just so jarring to me.
Like the ease with which ICE just went out and drove their vehicles literally through a crowd, just not even like not even putting effort to try to avoid that circumstance, it shouldn't be that easy to have violence in the streets of America.
Like, it shouldn't be that easy for federal agents that are supposed to swear the same oath that I swear about protecting and defending the Constitution and supporting the American people to find themselves in a circumstance.
So it's just like, you know, I saw this unfold.
And immediately, you know, my instinct was to run into it and try to put myself between the ICE agents and the crowd.
I was trying to keep that physical separation because that is where we saw so much of the.
of the violence escalate in Minnesota, if I could at least keep them physically separated,
you know, perhaps we could avoid the worst. But it was, it was, it was, it was so jarring.
It was, it was really scary just to see that type of violence in my state, frankly, anywhere in the country.
And to know that, you know, this is still, could very well be, you know, a problem that we see continue in my state and elsewhere.
And so because you put your body in between the protesters and the ICE agents, the federal agents, eventually they started shooting pepper balls. I believe that there was one that struck by your feet and, you know, you inhaled it as well.
Secretary Mullen and DHS are saying just a number of things that don't seem to be true and certainly are not your account, that there is no hunger strike, that the complaints are about certain inmates not getting or certain people that are being held by the facility, not getting their ethnic food of choice, that the conditions aren't bad, that nobody was directly struck by pepper balls, which about you.
what do you make of just the what they're saying about all of this well first of all just again
like i saw what i saw like i talked to the people like there is a hunger strike going on inside
and a larger protest and there are certainly people that are not getting basic care you know
like like again they're not they're not asking for the moon they're they're asking for just
a certain baseline of human dignity
as we're going, especially as we're, again,
keeping them there for indefinite amounts of time.
I mean, I was in the medical isolation area,
and there was a man there in a wheelchair.
He hadn't left that room in four months
because that facility is just not meant to handle someone with a wheelchair.
So they're like, you're stuck in this room now.
Like, you know, and not able to go and leave.
He was like, can I at least be at a hospital?
And frankly, look, there was actually someone
who was sent to a hospital, a woman that was sent to a hospital for quite a number of days.
By the time I got there, it was like day 12 or 14, the family didn't even know where this woman was.
Because ICE wouldn't tell her what hospital that she was at because of security concerns.
So you can't tell them which hospital you're at.
They couldn't tell them the nature of the, you know, the severity of the problem that she had to be at a hospital.
I mean, she was there for like 12 to 14 days.
that's a significant amount of time in the hospital.
And the family has no idea.
They can't visit them.
And so I asked, like, what can the family do to learn about this?
And literally, like, it breaks my brain thinking about this.
Like, ICE looked me in the eye and said, oh, the family can FOIA this information.
I mean, just like thinking to myself, like, what?
Like, their family member could be in some life-threatening situation at a hospital.
And you want them to foyer this information about their love.
one like that's like the just the the craziness of this so like when you know when when secretary
mullin or others say this you know they're just in like damage control mode they saw what
happened in minnesota when the american people actually saw what was happening and and the american
people they're smart about this they understand that there are just lines like should not be crossed
yeah and whether that's for american citizens or anybody in this country and frankly look a lot of
the people I met with at Delaney Hall, they are married to American citizens and parents of
kids that are American citizens. That's what I think they're afraid of. They're afraid that
the American people will understand and learn the truth about what is happening in our name,
with our money, but without our say and without our approval. And that's just wrong.
And that's what needs to be changed here.
You know, we have the capacity to do so.
It's just a matter of political will that this administration refuses to put towards this.
I know that Governor Cheryl sent in state police to help set up protest zones and sort of
ask demonstrators to lower the temperature.
Some of the activists outside Delaney heard that as her policing them instead of the
feds.
Where do you come down on some of the tension between trying to conduct over?
oversight, give people a safe space to protest while also trying to maintain safety in, you know,
the general area. Yeah, I mean, first of all, look, I mean, this is chaos that is inherited from
ice, that they have been foment. And then, look, they've been threatening to bring many,
many, many more ice agents to New Jersey, you know, basically threatening, you know, a surge
similar to Minnesota. So I understand, look, like, you know, we're going to try to avoid that.
scenario. But look, there are legitimate concerns at Delaney Hall. And as a result, there are
legitimate reasons to be able to protest that. And I want to make sure that we are
trying to address that. Like, we are allowing that kind of space. I get it. Like, you know,
we can't have this unrest continue on. In fact, I'm hearing it from the families of the detainees
saying that it's been preventing them from being able to visit their loved ones, that
attorneys are not able to get access because, you know, because of some of the roads have been
shut down and other things. So like, look, like, we want to make sure we're not getting in the
way and losing sight of what we're really trying to address, which is the detainees and their
conditions. But, like, there's got to be a way that we can do this, you know, while we're
also making sure that, you know, people have the rights afforded to them in the Constitution,
especially for free speech. So, like, I'm trying to work on this, trying to
to address this. I talked with not only the governor's team, but also Mayor Baraka from Newark
to try to think through like, what other steps, what other ways can we do this that isn't going to
just further inflame what is already this horrible situation that ICE has thrown our state into.
But it is difficult, but I'm trying my best to be able to push forward in a way that is going
to make sure that, again, we're keeping the needs and the plight of the detainees front and
center here. As you mentioned, you know, one opportunity to sort of make some change here is,
you know, the Senate's schedule to consider this $72 billion budget bill funding for ICE that would
fund ICE through the end of Trump's term. Obviously, it doesn't seem like Democrats have the
votes to stop it in the Senate because it would only require 51 votes. But are you and or other
Democrats planning to offer any amendments that you think might actually be able to pass with some
Republican support that might rein in some of the abuses we're talking about or,
or, you know, make any kind of corrections to some of the things that you saw.
Well, look, here's what I lay out for you.
I mean, there are a whole slew of problems that are facing Delaney.
And I want people to know, like, it's not that Delaney.
Delaney is not some bad apple that is just, you know, we just have to address that.
This is a system-wide failure.
Yeah.
And problem.
As I said, you know, geo-groups got nothing.
19 other facilities, you know, core civic and other.
I mean, like, and then now, you know, ICE is trying to build these warehouse detention
facilities and hopefully we can push back and stop this.
But there's a broader problem, systemic, not just in the culture, but just in the broader
process.
And that's what I'm trying to expose.
You know, and so there's three things in particular I'm trying to push towards, both
through the legislation as through other means.
You know, like, first, like, let's get, let's surge some medical support to Delaney,
and these other facilities.
Like, there are clearly people who are not getting the care that they need.
And Secretary Molling can dispute that.
But, again, it's not what I'm hearing.
It's not what I'm seeing.
And I just don't see why anyone's going to stand in the way and say, like, look, let's just try to see.
I mean, the DHS has a medical unit.
You know, we can be able to surge up there in that kind of capacity right away.
Like, right now they have one doctor for one full-time.
doctor for about 800 detainees, you know, that many of them have significant medical concerns.
So like, that's what I'm trying to do initially. Like, let's surge up there. Let's have,
you know, number two, like, let's have like a real investigation into these different claims
that are about there, whether it's about the food or the other conditions. And number three,
the detainees were very clear with me that it's not just about the conditions. It's just,
it's about having that movement forward on their cases. So I'm trying to, you know,
to, again, take what I'm hearing and figure out how to put it in action. I've been talking to
Secretary Mullen this week, telling him what I'm hearing on the ground, trying to see what we can
move forward, because they could do this on their own if they want it to you right now. They could
demand, you know, additional doctors. They could demand, you know, efforts to be able to surge
this. And that's what I hope people understand. Like, GEO Group got a nearly billion dollar
contract for Delaney Hall. So they could hire more doctors tomorrow.
today, but that's going to be less profit for them, right? Like, they could have better quality
food or fix the extreme heat that I'm hearing, but then again, that's cutting into their
profits, right? So we can change that. So I have been and will continue to be pushing for amendments
along these lines are just saying, like, let's have a baseline of medical resources available.
I hope we can all agree that regardless of the circumstances that someone's in there,
we want to make sure that they're getting some semblance of medical care for key needs.
I'm trying to push forward on something that is about de-escalation trade.
I literally submitted that amendment before I even went back to Delaney Hall about how we can
ensure that there's de-escalation training for ICE and CBP after what we saw in Minnesota
and every single Republican on the Homeland Security Committee voted against my amendment.
And then I went back to the lady and saw and experienced what I did.
So I'm pushing for it.
But again, this is something where we really need the American people to kind of come behind us on this.
The only times we've seen this administration back down or pullback has been when there's a wide public outrage.
We saw that with Minnesota.
We see that.
Actually, just today, it looks like we're seeing it when the Trump administration seems to be backed off that $1.8 billion.
slush fund for January 6, rioters.
I hope that's true, that they're backing off of that.
But, like, you know, that's what we really need is for us to say, like, you know,
this cannot be what is happening in our country and to be able to try to stop it.
And I know, you know, reconciliation and voteramas in the Senate, this is not like must watch TV.
Like, this is not something that's going to necessarily, like, you know, have people tuning in
at whatever, God awful hour in the middle of the night that the Republicans forced us to vote on these.
But, like, I ask people, please, like, for my state, for our country, like, please tune in to what is happening,
because what they're trying to do is give upwards of $70 billion more for ICE and CBP.
Not only is there no reforms and accountability in there, like what Americans have been demanding since Minnesota,
But there's not a dollar in there for you to help you with your health care.
There's not a dollar in there for you to help you with your groceries or for the rising gas prices.
There's nothing in it for you.
It's just more money that's going straight into geo-groups pockets to just continue this lawlessness that we see.
This cannot stand.
And this is something that we have to do everything we can to let people know and try to push back against this in Congress.
Senator, I know you have to run because you're working on this issue,
but I just wanted to say thank you for joining us
and thank you for everything you're doing to highlight this issue,
including literally putting your body in the way at Delaney.
So please let us know how we can help and thank you again.
Yeah, thanks so much for shining a light on this.
It's so important.
Thanks to Andy Kim for coming on.
Alex Wagner and I will be back with a new show on Friday.
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