Pod Save America - Trump Heals Grieving Nation
Episode Date: January 31, 2025Finally, a president willing to blame a devastating air crash on diversity hiring and two of his predecessors! Nearly two weeks into his second term, Trump continues to sow bitterness, fear, and chaos... everywhere he turns: issuing a spending freeze so drastic and haphazard that his team has to rescind it after three days, demanding that more than two million federal workers resign or face loyalty tests, and vowing to send 30,000 immigrants to Guantanamo Bay. Meanwhile, three of his most extreme cabinet picks face tough questions in their confirmation hearings—but will it matter? Jon and Dan reflect on a dismal week, what's next, and signs of life in the opposition party. Then, Jon checks in with Senator Chris Murphy about the threats that Democratic leaders are getting, and why it's so important to fight back anyway.
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Uplift Desk. Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, three of Donald Trump's most extreme cabinet nominees were peppered
with questions at their confirmation hearings this week.
We'll talk about the nuttiest moments and whether any of it will matter in the end.
We'll also get into the nationwide chaos caused by Trump's spending freeze, which the White
House backed away from after a judge blocked the order.
But even as Trump cut bait on that dangerous and terrible idea, he moved ahead with many more, including forcing every federal employee to resign or face loyalty tests and
preparing to house thousands of immigrants at Guantanamo Bay.
What a wonderful country.
But first, we shouldn't have to talk about the plane crash in DC on this show because
there usually isn't an immediate political angle to a mid-air collision that hasn't yet been investigated.
But half the voters decided to make Donald Trump president again, so here we are.
The American Airlines flight from Wichita was about to land at DCA when it collided
with an Army helicopter on a training mission, killing all 64 people on the plane and three
in the helicopter. Trump held a
press conference the next morning before anyone had any real information about what actually happened.
So of course, being president, he took the opportunity to console the nation and reassure
the public that air travel is safe. Let's listen. We do not know what led to this crash, but we have
some very strong opinions and ideas, and I think we'll probably state those opinions now. I put safety first. Obama, Biden and the
Democrats put policy first. Their policy was horrible and their politics was even
worse. They put a big push to put diversity into the FAA's program and I
assume maybe this is the reason. The FAA, which is overseen by Secretary Pete Buttigieg,
a real winner.
That guy's a real winner.
Do you know how badly everything's run
since he's run the Department of Transportation?
He's a disaster.
On DEI and the claims that you've made,
are you saying this crash was somehow caused
and the result of diversity hiring? And what evidence have you seen to support these claims?
It just could have been.
That's why I'm trying to figure out how you can come to the conclusion right now that diversity had something to do with this crash.
Because I have common sense, okay? And unfortunately a lot of people don't.
Later in the day he did a press event where he signed a memo to the FAA blaming the crash
again on diversity programs under Obama and Biden and ordering the administrator to roll
them back.
So, Trump has been president for two weeks, signed a record number of executive orders,
fired a record number of federal workers, and is blaming his own FAA on the first fatal
commercial plane crash on American soil in 16 years
because the FAA says on its website that they want to make sure that people of different
backgrounds have equal opportunity to get hired, including people with disabilities,
language that was there during Trump's entire first term. I mean, it seems like Trump got
what he wanted, which was to, you know, pick a fight
about whether the plane crash was caused by diversity.
And so he got what he wanted
because that is what everyone has had to talk about all day,
arguing about whether the plane crash
that has yet to be investigated,
the investigation has just started,
was caused by diversity.
Dan, your thoughts.
We have to begin with just pointing out
and saying out loud just how absolutely disgusting
and cynical what Trump did is, right?
There are upwards of 70 families who are dealing with loss,
who are trying to find out what happened.
There are communities across this country and the world who have lost community members because of
this. It is a traumatic thing for the entire nation to deal with when we have a plane crash like this.
And instead of consoling people, instead of trying to comfort people, what Trump did is he,
as he does with every tragedy tragedy is immediately try to exploit it
for his own gain. I know this is going to happen all the time over the next four years, but I do
think we have to continue to call it out when he does it, even if it is only maybe for our benefit.
There is something dangerous about allowing this to just become the normal way in which we do things.
Just reading some rote pablum that your speechwriters wrote for you that you
didn't clearly did not care about before launching into this absurd unfounded attack. That is
not sufficient, right? And we should be, it should be called out for. And I do think we,
you say he got the debate because we are all talking about it. We as a select group of
people of which we are part of the rest of the country did tune in for this, right? The plane crash is something that people,
gets people who do not pay attention to the news
to pay attention to the news.
It is when historically CNN's ratings
go way opposite during a plane crash
because people, they fly, they think about flying,
it is a big deal.
And so people who saw Trump do that today,
I'm not convinced that this is some giant political winner
for him to see him doing that hours after the plane crash. And so, like, yes, there will be a big debate about DI,
and we can talk about how Democrats should talk about the plane crash and that going forward, but
in the moment, what he did was repellent. And I think a lot of people will find it that way.
Sarah Longwell had done some focus groups last year early on, and she was talking to some voters
in the focus group who said that they didn't like Trump, but they were going to vote for
Trump. And I think there's this guy who said, you know, I'm just going to close my eyes for
the next four years, not watch them on TV and just enjoy the Trump policies. And the reason
and just enjoy the Trump policies. And the reason that has never been a real option
is because every president faces crises and disasters.
And I started thinking about this when the fires hit LA
a couple of weeks ago before he was president.
And as people are still fleeing from their homes,
as we were all figuring out who should evacuate where,
and we were trying to get alerts,
Donald Trump immediately kicked off this whole thing,
blaming Gavin Newsom for the fires,
talking about fucking water in Northern California,
all that bullshit.
And I thought to myself like,
this is gonna be the next four years.
And even in the best case scenario
that any of us can imagine with the Trump presidency, right?
He does a bunch of corruption, still pretty bad,
but we all make it, we survive a second term.
Like there are still gonna be crises.
There are gonna be disasters.
There's gonna be tragedies.
And when the country tunes in,
we're not gonna be able to get good information from him.
He's going to pick fights with people he doesn't like
and his political enemies and blame people
and divide people and make people angrier.
And he is going to compound every single fucking tragedy that this country faces.
And God forbid when there is a crisis that depends on all of us getting good
information, like there was last time he was president during the fucking pandemic.
We're not going to know what to do because we don't have,
the media has been splintered, balkanized,
like no one knows where to go for good information.
We can't trust our president.
We can't trust the government
because there's a bunch of fucking bozos
that are running the government now.
And you know, like last night when this first broke,
I was like terrified, as you all know,
very nervous flyer. it's like worst nightmare,
you know what I'm thinking?
And I saw on Twitter immediately,
some people on the left were like,
oh, this is Trump's fault
because he got at the aviation safety committee last week
and also that maybe the freeze affected this
and that thing.
And I thought to myself,
look, maybe some of this could be true, maybe it's not,
but like, I wouldn't wanna say this right now.
Like the plane just crashed.
Let's just like have a fucking moment.
Let's not be like him.
And not because like we should be nice, you know?
Like if we wanna present people with an alternative
and with a real choice,
then that requires not acting like Trump
when a disaster happens and like immediately just throwing around accusations without knowing all the facts.
And also by the way, like let's give the country and each other a moment to
collectively grieve and mourn and also like find out, you know, reliable
information.
And so I was like, oh, it's just like, it's so annoying, but whatever.
It's like random accounts on Twitter, who the fuck cares?
And then wake up today, Thursday, and the fucking president
of the United States is out there.
The first thing he does is blame diversity.
Doesn't even know who the air traffic controllers were.
What caused the plane, whether it was the air traffic controllers fault,
whether it was the FAA's fault, whether it was the pilot's fault, the helicopter,
or whether it was no one's fault, because sometimes tragedies just fucking happen.
Fires just fucking happen.
Sometimes just things happen.
And like, it's just, it is,
it's gonna be a long four years, man.
It is two thoughts on this one.
Obviously Trump, without any evidence,
as reporters, I think, did a very good job of calling out,
blaming this on diversity.
Like it's obviously a lie that this is DEI's fault.
Like Trump doesn't know that, no one knows that.
And it's not, it's not how the world works.
But it's also the most true thing
that Trump and Republicans ever say,
because what they truly believe is that
what makes America weaker is diversity, right?
That everything that is different
from what they view as inherent American culture,
white male Christian culture, makes us weaker.
It is probably the most true thing.
I think this was Charlie Kirk who tweeted this.
I would say I apologize, but I don't,
if it was someone else,
but was if you wanna go back to the 50s,
you have to get rid of the 60s,
or you have to undo the 60s.
And that is what this is all about.
This idea that in their mind,
they truly believe that any effort that seeks to add
diverse points of view,
diverse backgrounds to an institution,
which means that it is less white, less male,
is there for a weaker institution.
Like that is what they truly believe.
Well, I mean, what they are saying now is,
the new thing now is if you are a woman
or a black American or Latino or Asian or gay or anything but a white man and you have a job that
is a senior position, whether it's in government or media or politics or anything else, you got
there because of diversity efforts,
because of DEI.
There is no way you could have earned that job.
It's, they start with you got the job because of DEI,
and then you have to somehow prove
that you didn't get the job because of DEI,
but that you got it because of merit.
I mean, that's where they are right now.
That's where they are right now.
The DEI vice president.
Right.
That's where they are right now.
And the second thing here,
and this goes a little bit to the politics of this,
is there was this surreal thing of me sitting on my couch
in my house in the middle of the day,
watching Donald Trump in the briefing room,
stage managing a press conference
with a bunch of fucking adults.
Right, I was like back in the 2020.
And that is the stuff that people don't like about Trump.
Right, when they are tuning in
and he is acting like a clown,
when he can is clearly unable to meet the moment,
when he has background noise to low gas prices
and cheaper milk, he's fine.
When he is in your face, when you want information
and he is making about himself,
that is what causes people to take a step back
to not like about it and that is what that was today.
Yeah, and he's got luminaries like Pete Hegseth
and JD Vance and Sean Duffy,
former real world contestant
who's now the transportation secretary,
all parroting the exact same line.
It's like all taken,
they all have to take turns going up to the podium
and just parroting exactly what Trump said.
And idiots like Sean Duffy and Pete Hegseth, they probably believe it too.
JD Vance, like, he knows better.
Like, he knows better, and he's just,
but he has signed up for it,
and he's just gonna fuckin' parrot the line,
the Trump line, and just be the guy that Trump calls up
and says, yeah, no, go ahead and say what I just said.
I mean, that was a press conference of two reality stars,
one cable host, and a former CNN pundit,
all together to lead our government.
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So I wanted to ask you about the democratic response. Pete Buttigieg, for example, he posted a tweet
calling Trump's comments despicable, which they were,
and pointing out that there were zero fatal airline crashes
in the four years that he was secretary,
and then saying, quote,
President Trump now oversees the military and the FAA.
One of his first acts was to fire and suspend
some of the key personnel who helped keep our skies safe.
Time for the president to show actual leadership
and explain what he will do to prevent this
from happening again.
And of course I mentioned there were pieces circulating
among Trump critics about the gutted
Aviation Safety Committee and also how the head
of the FAA resigned last week.
And this was after, you know, a couple months ago,
Elon Musk went after him on Twitter
and said he should resign because the FAA sort of demanded
some kind of safety fix to a SpaceX rocket.
And Elon was very pissed about that.
He thought it was regulatory overreach
and said that he threatened he was gonna sue the FAA. So,AA. So that guy's out, so there's no FAA administrator. How do you think
Democrats should handle all of this? I think Pete handled it exactly right, which is we do,
Trump wants a big fight about DEI. That's the fight he wants to have. We don't have to take
the bait on that. We don't have to get down, we don't have to fight on his chosen territory
every time. We just have to always remind ourselves that Trump is in charge of everything.
He owns it all.
And in this plane crash, he's the person responsible for the FAA, whose air traffic controllers
were giving direction to the airplane.
He was in charge of the military, whose helicopter was involved in the accident.
He's in charge of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating it.
And after the end of this investigation, if they find out that there were insufficient number
of air travel controllers, as is very possible,
that the few air travel controllers we have
were deployed incorrectly,
Donald Trump's the person for fixing that problem.
Like he ran promising to fix all of our problems,
to put us in a golden age, and he did not do that.
And we should hold him accountable for that.
I'm not saying that voters are going to blame him
on his ninth or 10th day for a plane crash
that happens on us.
Watch, I don't think they hold presidents responsible
for crashing planes, but they do hold presidents accountable
for how they address the crisis itself
and how they solve the problems
that led to that crisis, right?
The voters did not blame George W. Bush
for the hurricane hitting New Orleans.
They blamed him for the fact that we weren't prepared for it
and now probably responded to it.
And the way that he is responsible,
we have to hold him accountable
for what happens from this point forward.
Also, I think it is useful to our point
that we've been making, which is like Democrats
don't wanna just defend institutions,
but we should be the party of reform.
Like have the investigation
and whatever reforms need to be made to the FAA,
they should be made and we should push for them.
And if there are reforms that should have been made
under the Biden and Obama administrations,
then like, let's find that out, you know?
And look, every single, this was by the way,
an former FAA official sent this message
to David Shepardson at Reuters
who covers aviation for Reuters.
And just so people know, he said,
every single air traffic controller candidate
goes under the same rigorous testing.
Very few applicants even make it to the training stage
because the process is so difficult.
And those diversity initiatives that Trump mentioned
don't even apply to air traffic controller hiring.
So that's a former FAA official.
So that's just complete bullshit from Trump.
And then, you know, Juliette Kayyem in the Atlantic, she's a former DHS official.
You know, she pointed out that in 2023, FAA identified 19 serious runway incursions, which is the most in almost a decade.
So this is not like completely out of the blue.
There was a series of close calls
over the last couple of years
that alarmed a lot of air safety experts.
And the causes have been varied.
It's either air traffic control staffing shortages,
which by the way, the New York Times reports,
there was one air traffic controller at DCA,
the night of the crash when there should have been two,
pilot inexperience, demand for air travel, outdated technology. And of course, knowing
all of this and knowing that DCA is already a very crowded airport and there's also like
military flights and training flights like the one that took place the night of the crash
that happened. The FAA actually added flights to Reagan last year
over the objections of a lot of local lawmakers.
And why did they do that, John?
Why do you think?
Well, Congress did it and why did they do it?
Because they want to land at DCA instead of,
tell us when they come in for work.
Huh.
But again, it's like, and you know what?
So just find out what we need to have safe fucking air travel
and do it.
And it doesn't matter like who's politics that fucks up.
Just do it.
But I will say that in just two weeks,
the Trump administration is, you know,
we're gonna talk about the freezing all spending.
We're gonna cut government.
Elon Musk is telling people to quit and to take buyouts.
And if you, there's waste in government, there's efficiencies to be had, There's an abuse, there's fraud. All that stuff is good, right?
We should all clean up government.
We should make it more efficient, but they are
gutting government and want to gut government so
badly that it's going to get to the point where
basic government functions that all of us depend on
like air safety, like the FAA, like air traffic
control are going to be in jeopardy. And so we're going to have to the point where basic government functions that all of us depend on, like air safety,
like the FAA, like air traffic control are going
to be in jeopardy because these fucking people
don't think we need government.
They think that government is there for them to get rich
and for them to like, you know, do favors for their friends
and punish their enemies.
And they don't see a real use for government
in helping protect the American people.
I mean, we're going to get to the freeze and the hiring thing in a second,
but just on this point, there are the shortage of air traffic controllers.
You know what's going to make it harder to get more air traffic controllers?
Cutting federal spending.
Yep.
Making it higher to hire higher people,
and then just shitting on the federal government so much
that no one wants to work there.
Yes.
How are you going to get enough people, qualified people,
who can do the job in the pipeline? Because as this FAA official pointed out,
it's hard to become an air traffic controller.
You need people of a certain training and qualifications.
And so you need a very big funnel to get them in.
And you're not gonna get enough people,
qualified people to do the job if you are making it,
you don't have the money to recruit them,
you don't have the money to pay them,
and you make working in the federal government
seem like it sucks.
Especially if a lot of people who are
training to be air traffic controllers, who are
in school to be air traffic controllers and
the ones who aren't white men, what are they
going to, why are they going to want to be in
the federal government when now, uh, anytime
that they, you know, if they get the job of air
traffic controller, the Donald Trump and his
administration or potentially future
Republican administrations are going to call
them DEI hires.
And if something goes wrong, they're going to get blamed because they're a DEI hire. What the fuck are we doing?
So let's talk about the freeze. The other big news this week was the completely out of the blue
Trump administration memo announcing a freeze on all government grants and loans. The memo followed
executive orders last week calling for the government to stop spending money on woke projects,
not really defined
well, and it immediately plunged nearly every function of the federal government into complete
chaos.
Democratic and Republican officials all over the country were fielding panicked calls from
people in their states who were worried about not being able to access funding for Medicaid.
The Medicaid portal was briefly shut down.
Head start classes, free school lunches,
college financial aid, medical research,
and a lot of other programs that the White House said
were not part of the freeze,
but somehow were still temporarily interrupted.
A bunch of nonprofit groups immediately challenged the memo
and a federal judge agreed to put it on hold for six days.
The White House then rescinded the memo
after the judge agreed to put it on hold so they could comply with White House then rescinded the memo after the judge agreed to put it on hold
so they could comply with the judge's order.
But then White House press secretary, Caroline Levitt,
tweeted that they weren't actually backing down
and that the rescinded memo was only intended
to avoid confusion with the judge's order.
Then a second federal judge,
considering a lawsuit brought
by the Democratic attorneys general,
said of Levitt's post, quote,
"'I can't cross-examine the tweet.
Not yet.
Not yet.
But said he may need to grant a longer-term restraining order because Levitt is making,
quote, a distinction without a difference.
We later learned from reporting in the New York Times and the Washington Post that the
White House Office of Management and Budget put out the memo without getting approval from senior officials like White House Chief of
Staff Suzy Wiles or even Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller.
And they were all pretty pissed about the fallout.
The entire episode gave Democrats a chance to show the fight that they'd been lacking
over the last two weeks.
And let me tell you, Dan, they were pretty happy with themselves. Let's listen to Chuck Schumer.
People are aroused.
I haven't seen people so aroused in a very, very long time.
Ha!
Dan, I wanna know, when's the last time
you can remember being this aroused
by a rescinded OMB memo?
Look, John, everyone has their thing.
And I would say that OMB memos have never been my thing,
but I am also not here to kink.
Don't kink shame people.
I am not kink shaming anyone,
especially the Senate minority leader, right?
So live your life Chuck Schumer,
whatever floats your boat.
Wow, wow.
On the process point about how the White House
rushed this decision and generally stepped on a rake,
what happened to the whole, this is a professional White House
now, Suzy Wiles is running it like SEAL Team 6. What happened? I thought
we were, I thought this was the Trump White House that was finally figuring it
all out. RIP to all of those beat sweetener pieces written by all those
White House reporters about how what an amazing job Suzy Wilds would do and how she'd make all the trains run on time.
Look, to be fair here, it is true that this version of the Trump White House is better run.
Oh yeah, for sure.
In the first version, but that doesn't mean it's well run.
The fact that some minion in the office of management
and budget, which currently does not have a director,
can put out a memo that vaguely shuts down
trillions of dollars of federal funding in a moment
without running it by anyone is one of the most
evocative examples of incompetence
I've ever seen in my life.
And then the fact that they put this memo out, it's not even like this was a bad idea. This was like a well executed bad idea.
The memo was so vague, no one had any idea what it meant. It really shut the spigot off and caused
mass chaos across the country. One memo written by, once again, an OMB nerd, which is what we
always call them when we work with them. A nerd, like a nerd deep in the OMB, sends out this memo, shuts down Medicaid funding,
housing vouchers, everything, total disaster.
Then the White House, instead of just being like,
throw the OMB minion under the bus, all defends this.
Stephen Miller, who did not sign off on it,
went on CNN to defend it.
And they defended it up until the moment,
a judge took it away and Trump got upset
about the bad press coverage,
and they rescinded the memo.
Not only Stephen Miller who works on the White House, but Republican politicians all over
the country defended the memo.
The Speaker of the House.
Glenn Youngkin, Governor of Virginia was like, this is misinformation spread by the media
and partisans and all these Democrats are, this is hysteria and blah, blah, blah.
And then the White House was like, oh yeah, we take it back actually.
But I do think that it is revealing about
like the argument that Stephen Miller was making
and Russ Vogt who is going to run the Office of Management
and Budget, the man who authored Project 2025,
they believe that the president does have the power
to control all federal spending and decide who gets what
money, even though it is the job of Congress, according to the Constitution, to appropriate
funding. And Donald Trump and Donald Trump's White House now believe that they have the power of the
purse, not Congress, in contradiction to the Constitution, and that they get to just not
spend money that they don to just not spend money
that they don't agree with that Congress has appropriated.
So I do think that they are gearing up
to eventually challenge,
this is known as the impoundment act,
which just makes clear,
because it was clear in the Constitution before that,
but makes clear that presidents may be able to delay
spending certain money,
or they can maybe not spend extra money if they have achieved the goals of the law with
the money that they already spent.
But they are not allowed, presidents are not allowed to just not spend money because it
doesn't comport with their political positions if Congress has passed a law appropriating
it.
And Stephen Miller and Russ Vogt don't think that's, they think that the president is king
and gets to do whatever he wants with his power.
And so it's gonna go, they're gonna eventually challenge us
and it's gonna go to the Supreme Court.
I mean, that's fine.
They work for the king, so maybe that's less surprising.
The person who is more surprising alarming this is
Mike Johnson, the speaker of the house.
Oh, he doesn't give a shit.
The power of the purse is their singular power.
It is the greatest check and balance they have
over the functioning of the executive
branches, how they can dictate policy, have influence on what happens.
And Trump is like, no.
And he's like, okay, more please, sir.
I mean, it's just absolutely embarrassing.
They have all decided except for, I don't know, maybe three Republican senators at most,
four.
And I haven't seen anything from any House members, that Donald Trump, because he was elected, he can do whatever he
wants, and that their role is just to cheer him on and go on TV, I guess, on all
their favorite, you know, regime media channels, and talk about how wonderful
dear leader is. Like, I don't even, like, why do these people want their jobs? Just
like, go make money somewhere.
You can probably make more money in the private sector.
What are you doing?
You're not making any decisions on your own.
You're just there to like fluff Donald Trump.
I mean, that's a, it's an image you're painting.
Yes.
It's, you know, Chuck Schumer.
Chasing your head, Chuck Schumer.
Yeah.
Chuck Schumer's got you going.
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So let's start with the Democrats.
Now that we're back on Chuck Schumer's arousal.
The Times had a story on Wednesday
about how democratic governors got on a call with Schumer
to push him and the democratic caucus
to do more to oppose Trump and his cabinet nominees, more about them in a minute, because, you know, things like the spending freeze
are pummeling the states, but the governors themselves can't really take action to stop it.
Presumably, the details of the call were leaked, presumably by the governors or their staff,
to the New York Times reporter, Reid Epstein, what did you make of this piece?
The blame shifting and just zooming out
sort of like the democratic response in general.
And it does appear like the party has found its footing
on their response to the OMB spending freeze.
I mean, basically I think Reid Epstein got a window
into a lot of the conversations that are happening
in the Democratic Party right now.
There has been, particularly in the first,
at least the first week of the Trump presidency,
a tremendous amount of frustration at how,
elected Democrats more generally,
but congressional Democrats in particular have acted,
I have rented, I believe, on this podcast
and in multiple other forums on the internet
about Democrats voting for Trump nominees.
Like to what end? Like what do you think the upside of that is for Trump nominees, like to what end?
Like, what do you think the upside of that is?
Why would you want to put your name?
Like, do you really want to have endorsed Sean Duffy?
Like, is that really what you want?
And just like-
Is that an ad you're gonna run in your race
about your bipartisan credentials?
I did support Sean Duffy.
No one knows who that is.
Or Scott, or the hedge. Or the billionaire hedge fund manager
who's gonna help implement the Trump tariffs.
Like is that, it's just like, what's the upside, right?
What's the argument for it?
And just this, like some of it is unfair
in the sense that there's nothing Chuck Schumer
and the Senate Democrats could do
to stop any of these appointments from happening.
No Senate Democrat voted for Pete Hagseth, right?
No Democrat's been the 50th vote for one of these people.
That has not happened.
They've just voted, I don't understand the votes,
but they've been in places where there were enough Republicans
to put them over the top, so it didn't really matter.
I mean, they have very limited legislative authority
to stop stuff.
But there is just this frustration
that there's just been too much silence and too
much equivocation from Democrats in their messaging where it's like,
we just can't figure out like the right way
to talk about Trump because before it seemed easy to us
because we felt like we had all the political high ground
because even if we lost the presidency in 2016,
we had the majority of voters were anti-Trump.
Now the priority voters pick Trump
and we're just like, everything is on one hand,
we disagree with Trump, on the other hand,
we also agree the border should be secure, right?
It's just, there's like all this equivocation.
In the response to the federal funding freeze,
Democrats did better, right?
They got louder if they spoke more strongly
and spoke with one voice.
Now, I don't think we should break our arm
patting ourselves on the back over it,
but I think you should get credit.
It was better than it had been to date.
And I think if there's a lesson to take from it,
it is that the things that Democrats were saying
about the federal funding freeze was not our typical
pay-on to institutions that sort of sounds like something
on the cutting room floor from Hamilton.
But instead we just talked about like how people were getting hurt, right?
This program in my district can't get money. These people can't pay their rent.
This Head Start program is closed because parents don't ever take their kids because of this.
Like it's just like very simple granular real world impacts on real humans. And I think there is a lesson in that going forward,
that with more of that and less of the stem winders
about democracy.
And just, I think a good lesson too is,
like just say what you feel, just go to the mic,
get to your favorite platform, all the platforms, whatever,
and just say how you feel about this.
And there was plenty of things I heard Democrats say
over the last couple of days about it
that were cheesy or made me cringe.
I'm not gonna criticize any of it
because it is more important to get out there
and talk quickly and show some emotion,
show some anger over this
on behalf of the people that you represent,
not just anger at Trump,
but anger on behalf of people who are getting screwed
by Trump.
I think that's an important distinction and just do it.
And sometimes it's going to hit.
Sometimes it's not.
Sometimes you're going to say things that resonate.
Sometimes you're going to say things that make people cringe.
It's okay.
Like this is going to be, it's going to long four years, but I think just
getting out there and talking and doing it.
You always say like everything
everywhere all at once, like that is better than sitting and waiting and thinking about how's this
going to poll and what should I say? And we need a caucus meeting first and we need to just go out
there, go out there and talk. This is a really important point because I think one thing that
held Democrats back as we were waiting for the message, we don't know what it is. We haven't
analyzed all of the results yet.
We haven't done a bunch of exit polls or focus groups
with first time Trump voters or whatever else.
And people are, we're flummoxed.
We're all gonna fucking die waiting
for the catalyst results.
I mean, they're supposed to come in like six weeks,
so I hope not.
But it's just, the election shook Democrats to their core.
Like what we thought worked did not work
in any way, shape or form and blew up in our face.
And so they're waiting for the right thing to say.
But if there was one lesson of the Trump era
is that volume and frequency is much more important
than precision when it comes to messaging.
You just get out there and start talking.
By the way, cause that's the game he's playing.
It is, just talk all the time.
Cause if you're talking all the time,
it increases the number of chances
that someone will actually hear what you're saying.
And if you happen to fuck up and say the wrong thing,
if you're out there five minutes later,
you're gonna pay less of a price for it.
This is one of the things that really hurt Kamala Harris was she was out there so much
less than Trump.
So when she did make a mistake, like she did on The View, it haunted her in ways.
Trump was out there saying crazy shit on a podcast three times a day, but because he
was doing it, there was always a new thing coming after it.
There was less political consequences for doing it.
Same problem with Biden over the last four years.
I mean, let's not, like, if you speak every six months.
Right, right.
But yeah, no, it is a volume game.
And just someone added this up, but apparently,
like in Trump's first term, in his first week,
he was in front of the press or in front of cameras
speaking for like four hours the first week,
Biden in his first week was a little less maybe like three hours or something.
The first week of Trump's second term, it was like eight hours. He was in front of cameras. I mean,
even like he did that fucking awful press conference about the plane crash this morning,
Thursday morning. And he did like another press avail as he was signing the more executive orders
blaming Biden and Obama for the plane crash
later in the day and he was taking more questions.
For even as nuts as Trump was in 2017
that he was still abiding sort of by a,
what is now an anachronistic model
of political communications
where you try to stage manage stuff, right?
We're gonna be like, this is the story of the day.
If we do X, we can't do Y later because it'll ruin our headlines about our EOs.
It's like, Nope, just do it all.
It's always happening.
It's never ending.
There is no new cycle and Democrats could learn some lessons that like, we obviously
have a huge megaphone disparity here.
Like we don't have, we have a very small handful of politicians can get real attention.
It's great if we can all speak with one voice
because that will help about one thing,
but that's not gonna happen every time.
Not necessary.
So just get out there, yeah.
Yeah.
So the spending freeze fiasco has done
a little to slow Trump down.
Keep signing orders and memos,
targeting immigrants, government workers,
trans kids, educators, parents, just about everyone.
In the past few days, he's issued the following
executive orders that will deny federal funding
for schools that teach kids about racism and discrimination,
penalize schools that don't teach content
that is patriotic enough.
I guess Trump gets to define what that means.
An executive order that will deport international students who protested the war in Gaza,
will revoke their visas,
ban gender-affirming care for trans children,
and send tens of thousands of undocumented immigrants
to detention facilities at Guantanamo Bay.
The White House also sent a mass email
offering more than two million federal employees a buyout
if they just reply to the email and write the word resign.
We're gonna talk about the email in a second,
but on the executive orders,
which one of these seems real?
Which of them seem like bullshit?
Most of them are bullshit in the traditional sense
of the president having the authority to implement
what he said he is going to do.
Right, across the board,
not just what you mentioned here,
across the board, most of these executive orders,
they're not even really executive orders.
They're really presidential memorandums.
They're just, they're missives, right?
They are press releases with signatures. He doesn't have the authority to do the things
he's saying. There's no legal precedent for him from somewhere very clearly in violation of the
Constitution. I mean, we'll hopefully be struck down, but who knows? But there is not a ton of
actual legal power in it. But I think that really undersells the danger here. Let's take the example of the ones in education trying to deal with,
you know, quote unquote, critical race theory or forcing patriotic education.
The federal government has almost no role in what local schools teach.
Even if they were to use federal funding to try to put those, put policies in place, that's very limited.
90% of school funding comes from state and local, uh, communities.
If even in the States where they have actually passed laws, putting some
of the stuff in a place, they're like, studies have shown that they've
had very little impact on what I'm into.
Many cases are have not been as impactful as the conservative legislators
would think because teachers still, you know, there's not someone in the school telling teachers what to do. But there is a chilling
effect of these sternly worded but very vague missives declaring that things are now illegal
or not allowed or if you do them, there will be retribution. Right? Like for example,
Michigan State University this week canceled their lunar
new year celebration because they thought it, according to reporting from this in the Lansing
journal, that it might violate DEI policy, anti-DEI policies. Right? It's because they're confused.
They don't know that here's this thing. We have no idea what it actually means. Are we going to get
ourselves in trouble? Are we going to face political blowback? Could there be a big fight over this? Could there be retribution from the
government? And even if you, I'm sure that if the general council of the university looked
at it and was like, obviously we would win this fight, you don't want the fight. You
can't afford the fight. You don't financially time-wise. And so you're gonna see people making a lot of decisions
to avoid getting on the wrong side of Trump
on some of these things.
And I think about here in California,
like up where I live, the public schools every fall
do Ruby Bridges Day to celebrate Ruby Bridges
and to teach about segregation and desegregating the schools
and everyone, if you can, is to walk to school that day
like Ruby Bridges did. I don't think this would happen here,
but you could see in another part of the country,
people wondering whether that was too woke to have, right?
Is Black History Month gonna be too woke?
Are people gonna trim some of that stuff back?
Because they're worried about violating,
angering a federal government.
Even the federal government has no statutory authority
to enforce these policies on you.
Yeah.
And just another example that just popped up
that I think is even more consequential,
which is the EO on banning gender affirming care
for children.
Again, that is not something that you can do
by executive order.
I'm fairly certain, though I do not have a legal degree.
Um, but a children's hospital and healthcare provider in Richmond just said that they have
suspended all gender affirming care for those under 19 years old because they feel like they
have gotten very specific guidance on this from the state.
I assume that means that a lot of these Republican governors who like Trump,
like Glenn Youngkin in Virginia, probably see the federal EO match it with a state EO. Now,
what's ultimately going to happen with gender affirming care for children, it's a case at the
Supreme Court right now. So it's going to be decided there. I don't have a lot of hope about
how that's going to turn out. Also Congress, with the Republican Congress, I'm sure they're going to try to include,
there's been some reporting that they might include like a Hyde-like amendment in the
budget bill that sort of, you know, threatens to cut off all federal aid to hospitals and
healthcare providers that provide gender affirming care like they currently do for hospitals
that provide abortions.
That's the Hyde amendment.
So I don't think that like, I don't think that's the last word here, but you're
right that the chilling effect is there's going to be schools and hospitals and
organizations all across the country in red states and maybe in some blue states
or red areas of blue states that just take these seriously because it's a fucking
executive order from the federal government.
Just take these seriously because it's a fucking executive order from the federal government.
On Guantanamo?
Are we really gonna build a 30,000 person detention facility in Guantanamo Bay?
Just for context, the Cook County Jail in Chicago is one of the largest
single site facilities in the country and it has an average daily population of 9,000. We're gonna build a 30,000 person detention facility that who's going to run.
We're just going to send undocumented immigrants that don't know where they're from,
where they came from. We're just going to put them in a detention center for what?
Indefinitely? Like what the fuck?
That we would hold migrants in one of the most notorious prisons in the world, right?
Something that has been at Guantanamo Bay
has been a recruiting tool for terrorists for 20 years now.
And I assume would be run by the military
because Guantanamo is a military base.
So you would have a military run prison camp
for migrants who came to America.
I know Tom Homan said, this is the worst of the worst.
Which, which by the way, they, you know, they, they, they've been saying that we thought it was
going to be bullshit. It is bullshit. I think the, the rate for, um, how many
undocumented immigrants have been rounded up and deported with, um, criminal records
versus undocumented immigrants who the only law they broke was illegally crossing in
the first place is like, like Joe Biden had a higher percentage of deportations that were actually immigrants with criminal
records than Trump has in his first week already.
So it's just, the whole thing was bullshit.
They're not just going after undocumented immigrants with criminal records.
They're going after every undocumented immigrant that they find.
I mean, this is something that Tommy and Ben can talk about much better than I could at least is, you know, it's not like the US reputations like doing fucking great right
now. But I mean, with Donald Trump's our president, both what is, you know, our role and what is
happening, Gaza has been deeply damaging to our reputation around the world. But the idea that
we're going to house migrants in a prison camp is no like a prison camp is like I said, a notorious prison camp
is gonna be deeply, deeply damaging
to our reputation around the world.
Also, this just like happened this week
in a speech that Donald Trump gave
and no one paid a lot of attention to it.
But after he finished his whole anti-immigrant thing,
he was like, and then there's some people
and maybe they didn't come here illegally,
but they're just criminals in this country, American, there's criminals and they're
here and they're really bad criminals.
And you know what?
I think we're going to get approval to just deport them.
We're going to, we're going to send them to some other foreign countries.
And I'm like, you're going to send American citizens who are convicted of crimes to, to
deport them to foreign countries?
Like, are we going to, now we're gonna,
like when is the line that he's gonna start
trying to send Americans to Guantanamo Bay?
American citizens to Guantanamo Bay.
Like what?
Are there any particular American citizens
that you have been worried about over the recent years
of being sent to Guantanamo Bay?
I mean.
I just.
I mean, the thing is it has been a running joke for nearly a decade among,
about us, about being sent to Guantanamo about, you know, various people who have been a Trump
opponent has been sent to Guantanamo and they're built it now.
It's gonna be interesting.
Like you would feel like you're going to need money to build a lot of money to build the
largest prison, uh, under American control, uh, at a military base.
I presume you probably have to appropriate money for that.
Maybe they can find it in the couch cushions
the way they found money for the wall,
but there'll likely be a big congressional debate
about this.
A big congressional debate,
the courts will have a role as well.
And look, I think that the scary moment here
is what happens when the Supreme Court,
if the Supreme Court hands down a decision that
Trump is opposed to and what Trump does.
And so far the White House complied with the federal judge that blocked their spending
freeze and I guess it was kind of a fuck up in OMB anyway, so whatever, they were fine
with it.
But it's a very conservative court and a lot of times they give
Trump exactly what he wants, but they hand down a decision that he opposes.
And then he says, eh, not going to listen to the court.
You know, JD Vance was on a podcast a couple of years ago.
It said, they told you, it said, Oh, my advice for Trump in a second term would
be to fire everyone in the federal government and replace them with all your people.
And when John Roberts tells you, you can't do it.
You say, yeah, you and what army?
I mean, JD Vance is on, on the record saying that.
So like what happens that that's the real constitutional crisis.
That's when, that's when people start going to Guantanamo.
So that's something to watch for coming attractions, Dan.
Cool.
Cool.
Okay.
We're going to take a quick break, but two things before we do that.
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Let's start with the buyout.
The email had the subject line fork in the road,
which was exactly what the email that Elon Musk sent to Twitter employees had said line fork in the road, which was exactly what the
email that Elon Musk sent to Twitter employees had said, fork in the road,
right after he took over the company. Do you have a sense of whether this move is
serious, whether the federal government is authorized to spend money on a buyout
for federal employees who decide not to come back to the federal government to
work? I have no idea whether they are technically authorized
to do it, but I imagine this is quite serious, right?
As you point out, this is exactly what Elon Musk
did at Twitter.
He has installed some of his closest allies, people
who helped him with all of the layoffs at Twitter,
at the Office of Personnel Management,
which is an obscure but incredibly powerful agency,
which staffs the government.
I imagine that there probably is some sort of authority
that allows you to,
because these people are choosing,
by doing this, they were not firing them, right?
This is a way to get around civil service protections,
right, you are not firing them.
You are giving them the opportunity to leave.
Now, Judd Legum in his newsletter,
a popular informationist pointed out,
he's read the actual missive
that the OPM posted on their website,
and it's not actually a buyout.
A buyout is you take the money for the next nine months
and you stop working tomorrow.
What they are saying is basically you leave in September
and your job duties will change,
but you're not free of working.
You might still work.
There's a lot of gray area into what would happen.
You'd be free of some in-person responsibilities,
but it is incorrect in Judd's view.
And he makes a very compelling case.
This is a buyout.
It's actually just a way to get people
to forcible resignation or encourage resignation.
Well, there's also a video uncovered of Russ Vogt,
again, project 2025 guy who's gonna be the OMB director,
who basically said, we wanna make working
in the federal government as traumatic as possible
for bureaucrats that we wanna get rid of.
So this is, and clearly that's what they've been trying
to do the last couple of weeks,
is to try to make it so miserable for people
that they just leave on their own.
And I think it is just, the reason why we should take this
very seriously, regardless of what they're,
the specific powers they may have is,
this is the full conservative project of decades now,
which is to howl out the federal government
so we can do less stuff.
Then on the things it continues to do,
it does them less well,
which makes the public more dissatisfied with government,
which causes them to elect more anti-government politicians who then howl out the government some more, rinse, repeat.
And the end goal of this is not just though the government's doing less in healthcare and education,
is what these hardcore conservatives who are not just Trump types, these are Paul Ryan people,
is they're going after social security and Medicare. What they do not want is the federal government
to be giving people healthcare and retirement security.
And the only, and those are sacrosanct programs,
Trump voters love them.
The only way you ever get to be able to take those down
is to reduce people's faith in government
to such an extent that they're unwilling to trust it
with their healthcare and their retirement security.
And so this is what this project is.
Yeah, yeah.
And social security and Medicare probably come at the end.
Yeah, that's the last thing.
You make it so that everything else is hated.
They can do nothing else well that people are willing to say,
put my retirement in the stock market, right?
Or privatize my Medicare to insurance companies.
And by the way, I think this is part of the reason
that they walked back the spending freeze
because it caused the kind of uproar around the country
that they know is unpopular.
And they want to cut government
and cut all those programs and benefits
in a much sneakier, quieter way
than what happened with like an all out spending freeze
that freaked everybody out.
So it is, it's something to watch.
Speaking of way too much going on at once, three of Trump's most extreme cabinet picks
head Senate confirmation hearings on Thursday alone, health and human services, secretary
nominee RFK junior in front of the health committee, DNI nominee Tulsi Gabbard in front
of the intelligence committee and FBI nominee Cash Patel in front of the judiciary committee.
Let's start with Kennedy. This was actually his second hearing. in front of the Intelligence Committee and FBI nominee Cash Patel in front of the Judiciary Committee.
Let's start with Kennedy.
This was actually his second hearing.
The Finance Committee got its turn on Wednesday.
And both days were contentious and fairly terrifying.
Here's a sampling of some of the Q&A for RFK Jr.
You equate pedophilia to the administration of vaccines?
It wasn't pedophilia. It administration of vaccines? No, it wasn't pedophilia.
So it was a perfect metaphor.
Well, if you have one in 36 kids who has neurological injuries, and if that is linked, that's something
that we should study.
Is it a perfect metaphor?
It's not a perfect metaphor, but there's no metaphor that's perfect.
But I am pro-vaccine.
Vaccines do not cause autism. Do you agree with that?
As I said, I'm not going to go into HHS with any pre-Ordain.
I asked you a simple question, Bobby. Senator, I agree with President Trump that
every abortion is a tragedy, that we can't be a moral authority in this country.
Right. So, but that isn't what you said back in New Hampshire in 2023.
My question is exactly when did you decide to sell out your life's work and values to
get this position?
Senator, I agree with President Trump that every abortion is a tragedy.
Show me a single statement I've made about science that is erroneous.
How much time do you have? So basically these two days boil down to Democrats
trying to paint Kennedy as anti-vax
and also unqualified, which he is.
Kennedy's trying to say, no, not anti-vax.
I never was, I'm being misconstrued.
Who do you think came out on top?
And are we getting a, we're getting a vaccines
optional HHS secretary?
That seems like, I mean, if we just got a Fox weekend host
as our secretary of defense, everything's on the table here.
I don't know, I don't know what's going to happen here.
I think there was one, yes, Democrats focus a lot
on the vaccines that is the most, that is RFK junior's
Achilles heel politically with the public.
Like that is the part of him
that they are most skeptical of that they do not like.
But I thought some of the smartest questioning
came from Michael Bennett in the first day
in the finance committee,
Michael Bennett, the Senator from Colorado.
He did this the right way.
He did a lightning round basically with RFK Jr.
where he asked him, he read him quotes and he read them in context and said,
did you say this or did you not say this?
And it was some of the things we've heard about vaccines,
about various conspiracy theories. But the last one he asked was,
do you believe that basically,
do you believe a, a pro abortion access comment of his?
And the reason why that was smart is that's how you defeat RFK Jr.
Is you have to get some,
the only way to actually defeat him.
There are ways to score political points with the public,
but to actually defeat him, you need to get a Republican,
you need to get four Republicans to vote against him.
And one area of concern, and this is a weird thing to say,
Mike Pence's political organization is running ads
attacking RF, trying to get Republicans to oppose RFK Jr.
because he has been in favor of abortion access
prior to becoming Trump's buddy here.
So like that's a way, that is a smart way to do it.
Was he gonna confirmed?
Probably, but I thought that was,
that at least showed a savvy way to try to actually get
some Republican votes or make it more uncomfortable
for Republicans to do it with their constituents,
which is gonna matter more than making them uncomfortable
than just getting more Democrats
who are already opposed and riled up.
Well, I thought some bad news on that front was,
he basically said that he would look at the safety
of Mifepristone, the abortion pill.
And so that's on the table.
And then after the hearings, the Susan B. Anthony group,
which is an anti-abortion group,
said that they now favor RFK Jr.
Cause they think he's gonna help them pull
Miffitt Pristone off the market and ban the abortion pill.
So that is pretty, pretty frightening.
It's not good if he gets confirmed.
I was just trying to find a bright spot for Democrats,
trying to keep him from getting confirmed.
My only bright spot, we'll see what happens,
is Bill Cassidy, the Senator from Louisiana,
Republican Senator from Louisiana, who's a doctor,
and who voted to impeach Trump,
add some really tough questioning
about RFK Jr.'s anti-vaccine stances and positions
and what he said, and basically ended the hearing,
leaving it up in the air,
whether or not he was gonna vote for him. I mean, he's theoretically potentially the hearing, leaving it up in the air whether or not he was gonna vote for him.
I mean, he's theoretically potentially the fourth.
Cause we know there's three possibles
and Murkowski Collins and McConnell.
Although not that I have any evidence that
particularly McConnell is gonna do the right thing.
Also you could see Cassidy being no,
but then like maybe McConnell doesn't vote no on this one.
So it's like, it's tough to figure out.
It's not like those are automatic nodes at all.
But I guess Cassidy would be the hope there.
We're not gonna subject you to separate sections
on Tulsi Gabbard and Cash Patel.
Reminder here if you need them.
Gabbard is an Assad and Putin sympathizer
with no intelligence experience.
And Patel is a Trump adoring hatchet man
with no FBI experience.
Both hearings were pretty tense.
Let's take a listen.
This Gabbard is simple yes or no question.
Do you still think Edward Snowden is brave? hearings were pretty tense. Let's take a listen. on this J-6 choir were the rioters who are in prison. I'm not aware of that, sir.
I didn't have anything to do with the recording.
You weren't aware of who made the recording?
No, Senator.
Your boss has said that a General Milley,
who served us with great distinction
I happen to have great admiration for,
should be tried for treason.
Do you agree with that?
Senator, everybody's entitled to their opinion.
Who put away the Unabomber?
The FBI.
Who put away Timothy McVeigh and his Stalin's stomach for blood?
Break agents at the FBI.
Who helped investigate Jussie Smollett?
What?
How did he get in there?
Who's self-aggrandizement set back the fight for minority rights for years.
Uh, I think that was local authorities.
Cause the FBI had opened an investigation, wasn't it?
That was, I have to say that was quite the turn that I was not expecting.
Yeah.
What was the point he was trying to make up even up into that point?
I guess that the FBI is great.
I mean, sure.
Sure, I don't know.
So Cash Patel has just decided, like, the old Cash Patel is just gone.
He's gone.
I don't know what you're talking about.
I don't know this guy.
I didn't go on this podcast with all these white nationalist racists with Nazi sympathizing views, didn't do any of that.
Never heard of that person.
Jan Six choir, I don't know what you're talking about.
He also, he broke with Trump on the January six pardons
for the violent offenders, the people who were there.
He's like, I just disagree with that.
And he was very much like, no retribution,
not gonna be looking backwards.
So that's Cash Patel, I guess he's getting through.
It seems that way.
He, I mean, all the reporting has been,
he has really assuaged a lot of the very obvious concerns
about him with Republicans.
Now, I think he is-
By just lying and just pretending,
or just saying like, yeah, I was just saying
some crazy shit on podcast, which I guess,
I guess if we're ever confirmed, we can say that too, huh?
There's not a chance that either of us
are ever seeking center confirmation.
Let me just play something you responded to
from John Lovett that was really offensive.
Oh no, not the Plindy's 2018, no!
Just be like, I don't know any of those people.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Oh no, the San Francisco live show, fuck!
Sounds like my voice, not my voice.
People mix our voices up all the time,
so I just say that was Tommy.
Yeah, so Cash Patel, FBI, great.
Seems like that's happening.
I mean, the fact that whenever you're
doing the list of people who are possible no votes,
Tom Tillis would be on that list,
because he is a senator who has to run for reelection,
has had moments of sanity in his brief career,
but he introduced Cash Patel,
so it seems like we're not gonna get him.
And then I guess Tulsi Gabbard then
is the one who's in most jeopardy?
Yeah.
Because she wasn't mean enough to Edward Snowden.
Actually, John, you know what the most fucked up thing is?
The person in the most jeopardy may actually be
his nominee for secretary
of labor because she wants to endorse the pro act.
Oh God.
She was the person.
Oh yeah.
She is actually, she's actually not even like, oh, okay enough for Trump.
Like she's actually a decent, like any Republican president who nominated her Democrats would
be like, wow, that's pretty cool.
On one specific issue, right?
Yeah.
Well, no, I just, she's pretty pro labor
as the next labor.
Yeah, so there were a lot of Democrats
who didn't endorse the PRO Act, so.
Right, yeah, exactly, exactly.
So she's in the most danger.
It was, I'm not entirely sure of the strategy
of focusing most of our ire on Tulsi Gabbard
on the Edward Snowden trader thing.
I don't get that either.
I don't get that either.
She has plenty of targets there for Tulsi Gabbard.
I mean, obviously it's the Intel committee.
This is like they're very closely aligned
with the Intel community.
And I mean, I obviously have very strong feelings
about what Edward Snowden did to them,
but it's just from a public perspective
or even trying to peel off Republicans,
it seems like, I'd be curious to know what the reasoning was
because there were smart people who were making that case
and I was surprised by it.
Yeah, so, well, and those are all
the most controversial picks.
I think Pam Bondi is also getting through,
which is fucked up.
She did, she made it through committee on Party Line Vote.
Wonderful, wonderful.
Well, we'll see, we'll see if any of these.
See if we can take down the pro-labor secretary.
One last thing before we go.
So right before this recording,
I interviewed Chris Murphy,
Senator Chris Murphy from Connecticut for Offline,
which will be out this Sunday.
It's a great interview.
Oh, he wanted to talk about big tech and regulation.
He's been talking a lot about social media and loneliness
and all the topics we love discussing on Offline.
But because I had him for the interview,
at the top I asked him all about these last two weeks
and how they were responding
and how Democrats were responding.
He's someone who has not been afraid to be out there
being very forceful, sounding the alarm.
And so I asked him about all that
and I thought his answers were interesting enough
that wanted to play it here on Podsave America as a preview of Sunday's offline episode. So you'll be hearing that right now.
Do you think some of the reticence about speaking up has to do with the fact that some of your
colleagues are just personally afraid? Like do you sense any fear among either your Democratic
colleagues or even the Republican colleagues? Listen, that is not a conversation that we have out loud, but I don't know how
what has happened in the last week doesn't have an impact. I haven't shared
this yet, but it is just true. My office has received phone calls and threats that
are different than anything we had received prior to the pardoning of the January
6 protesters. We have had to have very different conversations internally about how we protect me,
my family, and my staff. I assume other offices are getting those calls. I assume those calls are
reaching other democratic activists who speak up online all around the country. And whether or not that
reaches the level of consciousness, I don't know. But when your family is threatened with
harm, of course, it may at the very least subconsciously depress your interest in fighting
as hard as you can. And, you know, given the fact that Elon Musk Can can sort of rouse those people with one or two or three tweets
It probably also has to do with why there hasn't been a concentrated effort to take him on personally
Because folks don't want to end up as I have been and many others on the receiving end of sort of his social media storms
Because what comes with that is an implicit threat of violence
Those threats do not seem to have slowed you down. How are you personally sort of handling that?
Well, I just, you know, feel like I have a unique responsibility. I mean, I'm one of 47
Democratic senators. I'm going to take some precautions to make sure that me and my family and my staff are
protected.
But if I, you know, mute my voice, you know, then all is lost.
And yes, I don't completely understand why everybody isn't fighting as hard as, you know,
as some of us have been. So I feel like my role right now is to model
a kind of vigorous, organic, authentic anger
at what is happening to hopefully inspire others to join.
Good for Chris Murphy, huh?
Yeah, Chris Murphy's great.
First of all, terrifying that that's happening,
that he's getting those threats and that other people are,
and that people are scared now of speaking out, but I'm that he's getting those threats and that other people are, and that people are scared now
of speaking out, but I'm glad he's out there
and I'm glad he's not backing down.
So, all right, that is our show for today.
Everyone have a great weekend
because the news is so wonderful.
And we'll be back in your feeds with a new show on Tuesday.
Bye everyone.
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