Pod Save America - Trump's War on the U.S. Government
Episode Date: February 7, 2025Donald Trump and Elon Musk continue their all-out assault on the federal government, shuttering USAID, rooting out and firing workers linked in any way to diversity initiatives, and breaking and ignor...ing laws as they go. Jon and Dan hash out all the latest, including Trump's plan to have the US "own" and redevelop Gaza, Democratic pushback, and whether federal judges will step in to stop—or at least slow—the madness. Then, Tommy talks with Sen. Brian Schatz about Democrats' all-night floor fight against Trump's OMB pick, what they think is working, and how they're gearing up for the big battles ahead. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
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I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, we'll talk about Trump's new proposal for the United States to quote
own Gaza.
His continued destruction of our own government that's being led by Elon Musk.
And he may finally be hitting some legal roadblock, so we'll talk about that.
The Democrats are also now using what little power they have to fight back, and later you'll
hear Tommy's conversation with Senator Brian Schatz about why he and his colleagues gave
speeches all night to oppose Trump's nominee for OMB director and
What else they're planning but first Trump attended the national prayer breakfast on Thursday in Washington
Which you don't want to miss when you've been chosen by God to save America as Trump has in the spirit of our Lord and Savior
He gave a speech filled with his trademark humility and grace. Let's listen
And as the Bible says blessed are the peacemakers and in that end speech filled with his trademark humility and grace. Let's listen. religion they oppose God. I don't know if you've been watching but we got rid of woke over the last two weeks woke is gonzo I'm sure you've seen it the water
comes down from the northwest parts of Canada I guess and but the Pacific
Northwest and it comes down by millions and millions of barrels a day and I
opened it up wasn't that easy to do but I opened it up. Wasn't that easy to do, but I opened it up
and it's pouring down and it's a beautiful thing.
You know, it is pouring in Los Angeles,
has been the last couple of days,
and I assumed it was rain,
but apparently it's water from our Lord and Savior,
Donald Trump.
Barrels of water from Northwest Canada via Donald Trump.
Yeah, he just opened up the spigots
and it's just been flowing from the skies
because that's how water travels from north to south
on our heads.
That's how gravity works.
So much to unpack here, but let's start with
Trump's aspiration to be known as a peacemaker
since we haven't had the pleasure of discussing his plan
to turn Gaza into what he calls
the Riviera of the Middle East,
a phrase he blurted out during a press conference
with Bibi Netanyahu on Tuesday.
Trump did not rule out sending American troops into Gaza,
which he said the US should quote own,
but not before the forced relocation
of two million Palestinians,
the very definition of ethnic cleansing.
Trump later walked back the part about sending
us troops, but aside from Israeli politicians
and Trump surrogates, just about every other
observer is a mix of very confused and very
opposed.
Does this fall into the watch what he does, not
what he says category, or is this one to take
seriously?
What do you, what was your reaction to this?
I, you know, we've talked a lot since Trump
has been sworn in about how to modulate our reaction
to certain things.
We don't want to be at an 11 all the time
and you want to try to separate just him
having verbal diarrhea on the stage
from like the things he's actually doing
hurt people's lives, many of which
we're going to talk about in this podcast.
But I do think that's at times a false dichotomy, right?
Like what the president says matters, right?
It has an impact.
Especially in foreign affairs.
Especially in foreign affairs.
And so do I think that Donald Trump is going to be able
to put together a plan to forcibly relocate two million
people who do not wanna go to countries who do not wanna
have them against the wishes of everyone in the region and do so without the U.S. troops so we can build luxury condos in Gaza. No,
I think that's unlikely to happen. But the fact that he said it, and Tommy pointed this out,
matters because that is a massive recruitment tool for Hamas and groups like Hamas.
Right? This is exactly what they have talked about. The idea they're gonna be moved from their home so the United States of America can own Gaza
for a resort, right?
For a series of Trump resorts on the waterfront.
Like that's a damaging thing to say.
Like that does matter.
Oh, is it?
Yeah, I mean, well, we are, like we had this,
like everyone is, like we're having like concerned policing.
Like, oh, you can't be worried about this.
You have to be worried about this.
You're not worried enough about this.
And like one of the ways we concern police is there's things he says that he's never
going to do.
And there are things that he's doing that he never talks about.
Sometimes the things he says he's never going to do matter.
And as you point out, particularly in foreign policy.
So all the reporting and it was confirmed by the White House is, was that, um, this wasn't just
off the cuff.
He had been thinking about this for a while.
He's had this plan for a while and, uh,
Axios had a story.
And I think that the headline was like, what,
what was in Trump's mind and what Trump was
thinking with this.
And so I said, Ooh, I'm interested to learn this.
And there was a source close to Trump that told
Axios he is a disruptor and he wanted to challenge the discourse.
That story made me wanna throw my phone against the wall.
He's a disruptor.
He's just, you know, it's a war-torn country
with starving people in the middle of a conflict
that has been going on for hundreds of years if not more
that is sort of a solution has evaded presidents and leaders but you know what Donald Trump's a
disruptor he's just wanted to he wants to challenge the discourse by saying that we should own Gaza as a country, we've got Greenland, Canada, the Panama Canal, Gaza, we're going to
forcibly displace 2 million Palestinians.
But then he said, oh, well then they'll
going to have new homes, new homes and just
a nice life.
Modern new homes, modern new homes.
Modern new homes, modern new homes they're
going to have.
Yeah.
So like, clearly I think what happened here
is someone told him that a very real
problem right now is how are the people of Gaza going to live in a country that
because of Hamas and the Israeli government is just absolutely fucking destroyed.
There's people starving.
There's disease, like it's just, it's horrible.
Hamas has still not been completely rooted out either.
And what are you going to, like, how are you gonna rebuild?
What are people gonna do while you rebuild?
Like, these are real questions and it's a real challenge.
And I think he didn't wanna know more than that.
And all he wanted to think of was like,
well, why don't we do it?
Why we're buying up everything else?
We're getting Greenland, getting the rest of it.
We'll do it.
It'll be great.
We'll send troops.
It'll be fine.
They'll be fine.
And then he just said it.
I think that's probably, he wants to be the
guy who, uh, is seen as fixing the hard problems,
but he doesn't want to do any of the difficult
or unpopular things required to solve the hard
problems.
Look, if there is one situation in a history of
world where it makes sense, it just starts spitball
and ideas, it's, it's Middle East peace.
That's where you do it.
That's the one, that's where you want. Yeah. That's where you do it. That's the one, that's where you want to
freelance.
That's where you want to freelance.
As you also heard in the clip of the prayer
breakfast, woke is gonzo.
Uh, we've talked about Trump and Elon
trying to root out and fire federal workers
who've had anything to do with any diversity
initiatives.
Uh, they also are trying to cancel all
diversity programs.
Uh, I think we've said this before, but there was even a lunar new year event
at a public university that was canceled.
Pam Bondi, who is now our attorney general.
So congratulations, Pam Bondi.
She has already released a memo
instructing the civil rights division
of the justice department to quote,
investigate, eliminate and penalize illegal DEI
and DEIA preferences, mandates, policies,
programs, and activities in the private sector and in educational institutions
that receive federal funds. In case you don't know, DEIA, the A is for
accessibility, so we are also making sure that people with disabilities cannot
have any initiatives or help or anything like that. We don't want to do
anything for folks with disabilities as well.
They got added to the DEI for Trump.
Bondi is also heading up a new task force to quote, eradicate anti-Christian bias, which
Trump also announced at the breakfast.
And on Wednesday, Trump signed an executive order to ban trans girls from participating
in girl sports, which will almost surely be challenged in court,
though apparently the NCAA has already moved on this and is abiding by the order.
So the 10 athletes that that applies to in the NCAA, so that's, we got that problem covered.
Promise is kept, right?
The reaction from MAGA fans on social media suggests that this is the stuff they're most excited about.
They're all high five and they're celebrating these moves.
Question is, are these performative?
Are they real?
And are some of them seemingly just too,
an excuse to fire and harass people
who aren't Trump loyalists?
In everything Trump and his minions do,
harassing people who are different than them
is always, that's the benefit of all of it, right?
That is what, that is to them
what cutting Medicare was to Paul Ryan, right?
It's the thing they talked about when they were
sitting by the keg in college, like that is the truth.
These things are somewhat performative
in the sense that there are always questions
about the legal authority they would,
that they're using here.
Does it exist?
Will a court uphold it?
Is the bizarre interpretation of various regulations
they're using for these sorts of things
truly give them the authority to do stuff?
But they have real world effect, right?
Even like there's a very real chance you point out
that this, that the executive order
on banning trans participation in sports
is gonna be held up by a court.
That didn't stop the NCAA, they did it.
Half the country has laws on the books
that ban trans participation in sports.
What's gonna happen to half the country
does not have those laws, right?
Do you think our high school and rec leagues
going to really take that, take a fight on, we want to take on a fight
with the department of justice.
Even if they just from justice has no chance of winning that
you see the same thing with the DEI programs, right?
Just Google the other day announced
they were abandoning theirs.
Now I think on the corporate side,
a lot of them are just waiting for the recent excuse
to do this, right?
They're not necessarily afraid
that Trump's gonna come after them.
It's like they were waiting for a reason to get rid of these programs. And now they can, now Trump has given them cover to do this, right? They're not necessarily afraid that Trump's gonna come after them. It's like they were waiting for a reason
to get rid of these programs,
and now Trump has given them cover to do it.
But it has real impact, and it makes me think about,
you'll remember this, at a rally early in the campaign
when Trump was first, first started talking about this issue,
he basically said, you know, when I bring up tax cuts,
you know, no one, I could give you all tax cuts,
no one cheers, but I bring this up, you all cheer,
and it's kind of like, you could see it clicking his brain.
Like there is real enthusiasm for it in the base.
And that's probably why they were cheering here.
Just in case people think that, you know,
Trump going after all these DEI, DEIA initiatives programs
is about like canceling, you know,
the agency's unconscious bias training or, you know, getting rid of all the Ebram X candy books, you know, the agency's unconscious bias training or, you know, getting rid of
all the Ibram X. Kendi books, you know, that are sitting on the federal government agencies.
A right-wing group called the American Accountability Foundation last week started a DEI watch list
website that published photos, names, and public information of mostly black employees
within the Department of Health
and Human Services. These were people in the public health agencies and had the word targets
above their pictures. These are doctors, scientists, researchers, and so that website
has been going around. There was about 50 employees suspended at the Department of Education.
So there's a guy who works in a regional office for the
Education Department at the Office for Civil Rights. This person is a West Point grad,
Army veteran, former prosecutor, got a perfect rating in his last three evaluations. He was
suspended from his job because he had been appointed by two Trump political
appointees to a diversity council that was created under the first Trump administration.
Cool.
Trump administration creates a diversity council, two Trump appointees, appoint this guy to the
council, veteran, prosecutor, perfect ratings, doing his job. He has now been suspended from his job.
So these are the effects of these orders and this climate,
which is as Russ Vogt, who is set to be the new OMB director,
said that their goal is to terrorize federal employees,
to traumatize them.
He said their goal is to traumatize federal employees
so that it's miserable to come to work every day.
That is, that's what the real goal is.
And you know it, you can say like,
federal workforce is too big and too many bureaucrats
and we should cut weight, like, yeah, sure, of course.
There's a way to do it.
There's a way to identify budget cuts
and send them to Congress and have them in a budget
and tell employees, okay, you can leave, you got severance, you got this, you got that. This is not what's happening.
This is not what's happening at all. Ezra Klein made this point on his podcast recently,
talking about this effort to basically force federal government employees to leave. It's like,
do they have a plan for this? Like what happens if a bunch of primary care physicians in the VA decide to leave?
Yep.
How are you gonna replace them?
Who's gonna give healthcare to veterans?
Scientists and researchers at the NIH,
law enforcement officials, judges.
I mean, the list goes on and on.
Air traffic controllers.
Exactly, where we have a shortage of people already.
Do I think that the federal government
could probably operate with fewer employees
across the board?
I'm sure that's the case, absolutely.
But you have to have a plan that focuses
on the most essential workers.
Where do you have excess staff?
Where do you have a dearth of staff?
I mean, where do you have a few loose people
you have no easy way to replace them?
Because you know what's really hard to do?
Get other doctors who are not currently
in the federal government to come work
for the federal government.
A lot of these federal workers,
most of these federal workers could be making
a lot more money in the private sector,
but they do it because they believe in public service.
And how are we gonna get new people now?
You're gonna go to the DOJ so you can work for Pam Bondi
as she hunts down DEI initiatives.
Oh, by the way, so Pam Bondi, she's going after DEI initiatives and she's going to stop
the weaponization of government.
Here's another one of her first moves.
One of her first moves was to eliminate the DOJ's anti-corruption unit that prosecuted
white collar crime and
seized Russian oligarchs yachts and billions of dollars in stolen assets.
Sources tell Bradley Hope, who's a Wall Street Journal contributor, former
writer there, he says that the sources tell him that the money that they have
recouped from oligarchs yachts, billions of dollars in stolen assets, the money
that was supposed to go back to the victims
and the governments it was stolen from is instead
going to, uh, fund detention facilities in Gitmo.
So, um, we're cutting down on white collar crime so we can build
mass detention centers to send undocumented immigrants.
That's what people voted for.
That's what people voted for.
We were being too tough on white collar crime and Russian oligarchs. Undocumented immigrants. That's what people voted for. That's what people voted for.
We were being too tough on white collar crime
and Russian oligarchs.
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for 15% off. Let's talk about Elon Musk, the world's richest man and dumbest genius. He continues his civics 101 education which involves learning how government works before trying to
illegally dismantle the services people count on and terrorize the public servants who provide
them. But he is starting to run into some resistance with the courts on Thursday. A federal judge in DC ruled that the Treasury Department
cannot provide access to any payment record
or payment system of records to Elon's doge bags.
I'm calling them doge bags.
This comes as CNN reports
that just days after the inauguration,
the doge bags tried to force the highest ranking
career official at the Treasury Department
to just stop all payments to USAID, just stop them.
And when he refused, that's when he resigned.
It has also come to light that USAID's inspector general
was investigating the agency's partnership with Starlink,
a service Musk owns, to provide internet in Ukraine.
Separately, another judge on Thursday also delayed the deadline for federal employees
to decide whether they want to take Elon's fork-in-the-road buyout offer, at least until
the hearing on Monday when the judge decides whether to block the program, which around
40,000 employees have now agreed to.
Charlie Savage at the New York Times wrote a piece
rounding up all the ways that Trump and Elon
are ignoring or contravening the law as they do all this.
You're seeing the lawsuits pop up,
the federal judges starting to issue orders.
You see this as a hint of good news,
systems the guardrails are holding,
or is it just too early to tell?
I think it's too early to tell,
but I think if you're looking for good news and we should all look quite
hard for good news these days,
really got to dig deep.
Sorry.
We're like a truffle pig for good news.
You got to get deep in there.
The good news is, is that Trump and Elon Musk and
his minions are not going about this in a smart way.
There are ways in which you could try to affect
real long-term change and damage, frankly, the
federal government in ways that are more legally sustainable.
Right.
You can, there are ways to paper it over, to go through steps or process,
to pause and think about it, but they're not trying to do that.
They are looking for short-term wins, headlines.
It's like Silicon Valley move fast, break things.
And in doing so they are leaving themselves very vulnerable to legal
challenges.
Now, ultimately you're getting things stopped at the district court level. What's going to happen to what gets to the challenges. Now, ultimately, you're getting things stopped
at the district court level.
What's going to happen when it gets to the appeals court level
where you're going to have more of these circuits,
they're going to be filled with Trump judges.
And then, of course, what happens when it gets
to the Supreme Court level,
and the Supreme Court's going to have
some pretty big decisions to make
about how much power the president has.
And like they love Donald Trump,
there was a majority that loves Donald Trump,
he put a lot of them on that court.
But something will have to be in the back of their mind
is if you do a massive expansion of presidential power,
is there's going to be a Democrat in that office,
hopefully in the not too distant future.
And are they willing to do that?
When you talk about just the ability of the president
to unilaterally just get rid of the power of the purse
to not spend money at Congress Appropriates,
like that would be a massive change
in sort of the balance of power in this country
that is extended for centuries.
Yeah, I mean, you could see them ruling
and they've been sort of hinting at this for a while
and there've been some other rulings
that pointed this direction,
that the president does have more power
than precedent suggests in terms of like, you know, firing
civil servants or all that kind of stuff.
The Schedule F stuff, again, though, the way that Elon has gone about it, the whole thing
about the payment systems and having, you know, random doge bags access the payment
systems.
I don't think they're going to get away with that one.
But on some of the federal workers, I do wonder about the USAID stuff. I don't think they're going to get away with that one, but on some of the federal workers.
I do wonder about the USAID stuff because I don't imagine that you can just eliminate an independent agency that was created due to a law that passed Congress.
They're of course trying to get away with saying that they are reorganizing it, but just before we recorded the news is that only 290 of the 10,000 USAID employees
worldwide will keep their jobs.
That, I mean, that has to be illegal, right?
Obviously the courts can decide what is truly legal or not, but as you pointed out, an agency
created by Congress, funded by Congress, you do these things and you can't just unilaterally
fire all the people and make it go away and not spend the money.
Like that it's just, that is clearly
is a violation of something.
Yeah, yeah it is.
It is fucking, the USAID thing,
and again, we all know that foreign aid doesn't pull well.
Get it?
But what is happening to USAID?
Some of the employees at USAID
have been serving their country for
decades.
They are some of the most apolitical nonpartisan people you'll ever meet.
They're in dangerous areas all over the world trying to keep people alive with food and
with medicine.
And since this freeze and you know, Rubio's out there bullshitting that like, oh, the
freeze is over and we've made exceptions and now everything should be fine.
And if you can't get your grant back, then that's your problem.
And maybe you're doing it on purpose to make us look bad, which is all bullshit.
But since the freeze and since the freeze has been ended, or at least there's been a
carve out for sort of life saving assistance, it hasn't really worked.
HIV patients still aren't getting their medicine in Sudan,
where there is a genocide,
according to the United States government.
Half the population of 50 million is starving,
needs food, famine is spreading,
and two thirds of the soup kitchens in Khartoum,
the biggest city, are closed because of this.
I saw Samantha Power, the former USAID director,
our friend,
on Colbert the other night saying that like,
this is how bad it was.
Like kids, in some places in Africa,
kids were in line for their TB medication,
their tuberculosis, and like three kids got theirs,
and then the rest of the line had to go home
because the freeze happened
and they couldn't legally provide anymore.
In Zambia, there's medical supplies to stop like hemorrhaging pregnant women and life
threatening diarrhea and toddlers and those are all gone now.
So it's just going to be like people around the world are going to die and by the way
the money that it costs for malaria nets or some of these life-saving HIV drugs is like tiny, tiny amount of, sorry, a small, small amount of money.
We're not saving as much money. Money that's already been appropriated.
So like, don't fucking tell me that you're, we're like going to take this money and now give people tax cuts in America,
which would, which most people still probably wouldn't prefer.
But like now this is just a waste now. And these USAID employees,
like they have families in foreign countries,
suddenly they've been told like, you gotta go home.
They don't know how to go home.
They don't know who to contact.
They're taking their kids out of school.
They've like given their life for this.
They are also, I've talked to some people at USAID,
they are threatening to investigate
the senior officials at USAID for some of this DEI stuff or whatever.
And the reason they wanna do this
is to try to fire them for a cause
so they can make sure that none of these people
have a severance, none of these people have healthcare
after they leave.
So just like cut them off immediately
and send them out the door.
This is truly insane.
It is a fraction of the government's budget.
And you can argue about individual programs
or whatever else.
It is a fraction of the government's budget.
And maybe the reason they're going after this
is because Elon Musk is mad at the USAID
Inspector General for investigating Starlink.
Or it may be because they recognize politically
that foreign aid is the weakest of the herd.
It's the easiest to go after, the hardest to defend.
You get Democrats in position where they're defending foreign aid. I think Democrats should defend foreign aid in the weakest of the herd, right? It's the easiest to go after, the hardest to defend. You get Democrats in position
where they're defending foreign aid.
I think Democrats should defend foreign aid in this case.
We should defend the point of it.
We should defend the fact
that we view it as our responsibility in the world
to do good things.
And it's just the way that it is ruthless, it is cruel.
It's truly sociopathic, the way they are doing this.
Just like targeting these people who did nothing.
Like this isn't even, USAID isn't even really part
of some crazy mega conspiracy like the FBI or the DOJ.
Like you under, like it is also absurd.
It's a new one.
They just discovered.
They just.
Like you can understand if like as a scholar
of Trump insanity or mega insanity, you can understand we if like as a scholar of Trump insanity or MAG insanity,
you can understand we're going after Jack Smith people
or the FBI agents who've investigated January 6th,
even if they were just asked to do so by the superiors,
that is also wrong and terrible.
But this one just seems like so random
and just like, and the ruthlessness of it is,
it's truly crazy.
Like it is, it's hard to fathom how insane this is.
Another possibility is that Elon and the Doge bags
are just, they're looking at programs
that they're finding online and they are in some cases
outright lying about them or taking it out of context
or they don't know what the fuck they're talking about
so it seems nefarious.
And they could have just seen a couple of those programs
at USAID and decided, oh, that's where we're gonna start and then again these people
because they have no experience in government because they don't bother to
learn anything because they think they're the smartest fucking people in
the world because everyone governments bad and everyone's attack is a fucking
genius who's gonna save the world that's how they think out there a lot of them
unfortunately they are now just they're going on a website, usaspending.gov, and all the Elon fanboy accounts
on Twitter are doing this too.
And they're looking at publicly available information
about government spending and acting like
they are making some incredible discovery
about corruption that has been hidden.
The website is there because George W. Bush
signed it into law thanks to a law that was sponsored by Senator Barack Obama and Republican,
extremely conservative Republican Tom Coburn to make sure that all the government spending
in the entire budget is online for everyone to see. That's the only reason that they're all
finding all of this fucking spending that they're like, oh, this is the greatest scandal in history.
And they just like stumbled over it
because they weren't fucking paying attention
to anything the government did up until now,
unless it like had something to do with their companies
and making sure they couldn't make more billions of dollars.
I can't stand these.
It does make me wonder if transparency is a mistake.
Like it is.
It's just, if you have people with massive megaphones,
just pushing out, out of contact, misinformation to large-scale people at a time
when the media is, does not have the capability or the reach to push back.
It's not, it's not particularly great.
There's, there's so many examples of this,
but the one that really took off this week is a real, a huge scandal,
huge scandal. Here's Donald Trump describing it at the, at the took off this week is a real, a huge scandal, huge scandal.
Here's Donald Trump describing it at the prayer breakfast this morning.
Did you see what happened yesterday where they found hundreds of millions of dollars
of money was fraudulently given to newspapers and I guess Politico?
I don't know, they're here.
Good.
I hope you're enjoying your breakfast
No, they gave money to to all this out of out of US aid
So Yeah, huge scandal Trump also truth about it early on Thursday morning saying that billions of dollars had been stolen
Quote much of it going to the fake news media as a payoff for creating
good stories about the Democrats.
What a scandal.
What a scandal.
Well, think of all the good stories they've read about Joe Biden.
Money well spent.
And just in case you think this is Donald Trump.
No, the brain rot is now Trump, Elon Musk, just dozens of fucking, uh,
MAGA, Doge accounts online, Musk fanboys, Trump fanboys, everywhere, right?
They all think the right-wing media, they vote Fox, it's everywhere.
The federal government purchased eight million dollars worth of Politico Pro subscriptions.
Politico Pro is separate from regular Politico and it's for CEOs and companies and governments.
And it's, it's basically, I don't know, you get, you learn information about
legislation and analysis and very complicated.
It's like a Bloomberg terminal is basically what it's like.
It's like a Bloomberg terminal and it's like $7,000 a year for a subscription to it.
Pretty expensive.
Look, if, if I saw a bunch of Politico pro subscriptions in our budget, I'd be like, hey, do we really need that? Maybe we should cut those down. But like,
the idea that that was turned into USAID is secretly funneling money to Politico to get
good stories for Democrats, first of all, not getting their money's worth. Yeah, seriously.
I don't know if you've read Politico the last couple of years, not getting their money's worth on that one.
There's also, then they go through and all of these Republican Senate offices,
house offices, also spending government money on a subscription to Politico Pro.
In fact, in 2017, the executive office of the president under Donald Trump paid
$97,000 to
Politico Pro.
You are missing one key part of this conspiracy theory
that is very important.
Oh, okay.
Which is on the day this sort of came up,
it was reported by Semaphore that because of a glitch,
Politico failed to pay their employees.
So the theory is not just that the government's giving out.
Oh, as if that's a coincidence, yeah.
Was giving all this money to Politico,
it's that once Elon Musk in the doge bags,
which I assume he made up and is quite impressive.
I just on the spot really, just.
Very good, that's just genius at work.
Got him placed in. You know what guys,
I'm just a little behind the scenes.
Reid didn't want me to call them nerds,
because he thought that was, you know.
He said, and I quote, where he comes from in his social circle,
nerds are cool, is what he said.
You know what, nerds?
I was a nerd.
Nerds are cool.
Yeah, yeah, I'm not making fun of nerds.
I get it, but fuck these people.
Yeah, the problem is not that they're nerdy.
Or that they're young, or that they're smart,
or that they're like, great.
I want young, smart people in government
and that's amazing, want that.
But to go back to this, the point here is,
is people believe that Politico was unable to make payroll
because Elon Musk in the Doge bags
shut off the fountain of money.
And this one really is, this is like
the chef's kiss apotheosis
of perfect right wing conspiracy
theories.
You have a shadowy government agency that helps foreign countries and foreign people
funneling money to a Washington DC based outlet that's owned by a German billionaire to write
good stories
about Joe Biden and Democrats and bad stories about Donald.
But it's like, that is everything.
If you could just get Anthony Fauci's name in there,
it would be just perfect.
Like you would be 10-10.
It's also perfect for like the anti-Anti-Trumps
or the former anti-Trump since they're all on board now.
Cause they're all out there like,
look, obviously the craziest conspiracy is wrong,
but that is so much money. And the fact that everyone's defending this much money. It's like, look, obviously the craziest conspiracy is wrong, but that is so much money.
And the fact that everyone's defending this much money,
it's like, no, if you don't like the government
spending this much on Politico pro subscriptions,
go talk to your Republican senators and congressmen,
go through the normal process.
So talk to your, talk to the fucking,
fine, cut it, I don't give a shit.
If anyone subscribes to Politico pro.
If Donald Trump wants to cancel all the Politico pro,
great, that's his. Do it!
Do not cut those message box ones though. I'll be very clear. No, do not. I'm sure there's a lot of
those in the federal government right now. One more thing about the doge bags before we moved on.
So of course everyone is like, what are these kids helping Elon who haven't been vetted,
have don't have security clearances,
they're trying to, I don't know,
shut off millions of dollars of payments
that have been appropriated by law.
This is concerning, and then you get this from
the Silicon Valley assholes who are on Twitter now,
the Musk fans, and they're like,
we should want, this is ridiculous,
these are young, smart, brilliant people,
I know this one, and he's brilliant, and he's a coder, but it's like, great,
fine, whatever, that's not our issue.
Well, Wall Street Journal, right before we
recorded, here's the lead, a key Doge staff
member who gained access to the Treasury
Department's central payment system resigned
Thursday after he was linked to a deleted social
media account that advocated racism and eugenics.
And you're thinking to yourself, well, what were the tweets? Well, you know, what do you advocated racism and eugenics. And you're thinking to yourself, well, what were the tweets?
Well, you know, what do you mean by racism and eugenics?
How bad could it really have been?
Well, here's a quote, just for the record, I was racist before it was cool.
The account posted in July, according to the Journal's review of Archive Posts.
Another one, you could not pay me to marry outside of my ethnicity, the account wrote on X in September.
Another one, normalize Indian hate.
And then this was in December,
this was just a couple months ago,
99% of Indian H1Bs will be replaced
by slightly smarter LLMs, AI.
They're going back, don't worry guys.
To me, that's just that, that is the, right?
We're going to replace immigrants, people of color,
ethnicities we don't like with the machines,
with the robots.
That's the vibe.
That's the vibe there.
I hate to tell this to this Doge guy,
but who do you think the LLMs are coming for next?
I thought, look, there was another one.
There's another one whose name had been out there.
And I went to his Twitter account,
it's still like, he's retweeting fucking Nick Fuentes.
You know, I know he had dinner with Donald Trump,
so I guess that's fine now, but like what?
It's un-fucking-believable.
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All right.
Now it's time to talk about the Democrats again.
You know what?
It's getting better every time we do this section.
Lawmakers have been more vocal, trying new legislative tactics, as we'll discuss in a
minute.
There's also been protests, rallies, went
to Treasury, went to USAID. They are still working on landing the perfect sound
bite. Let's listen.
Hello everybody, are we gonna fight the fight? Are we gonna win the fight? Are we not gonna rest till we win? We will win! We will win! We will win! We will win! We will win! We won't rest!
What do we need? We won't rest! We won't rest! We won't rest! Thank you everybody!
We won't rest. Thank you everybody.
Okay, okay.
So, I just wanna say, poor Chuck Schumer,
he's gotten a lot of shit online for that.
And yeah, do you cringe listening to it?
Sure.
Is Chuck Schumer the most eloquent speaker?
Is he gonna rile up a crowd?
Probably not.
Could you not understand what the crowd said
when they said, what do we want?
Me neither, me neither.
But you know what?
They're trying.
They are out there trying and they are doing
their best with what they got.
And like, I am going to give them credit for
that.
And I realize it's cringe and I realize it's
not great, but like, you know what?
It's all hands on deck right now and everyone's
just throwing stuff at the wall to see what sticks and we're trying.
And I encourage that.
Well, we were on this podcast last week
or the week before some other time in the 12 years
when Donald Trump has been president.
We talked about how Democrats have to get out there
and make noise, just start talking,
stop worrying about what exactly it is you're gonna say
and just be out there.
That clip makes me question that advice, I would say.
No, in all seriousness, like look, is it perfect?
No.
Don't worry about everything you're gonna say,
but do say something.
That's right.
I mean, the clip of Maxwell Frost asking what do we want
and then they probably be unable to answer
is kind of like the moment that will,
like if you put, how we lost this election to TimeCast,
so that would be it.
But look, let's give credit where credit is due,
is they are out there, they are making noise,
they are raising hell.
We'll talk about it in a minute.
They are doing, they're fighting back now
in ways they were not in the first couple of weeks,
and we should give them credit for that.
And just the mere fact that there is an opposition
presence raising hell about the bad things that are
happening is a huge change from where we were two weeks ago and it's a net positive for
sure.
And again, let's talk about Chuck Schumer.
He's got this Democratic caucus, he's got John Fetterman in the caucus, he's got some
other people who are probably telling him, we want to vote for some of the nominees because
that's good politics in my state and he has to sort of balance all the needs of the caucus.
And to Schumer's credit, they came up with a strategy this week. They said,
can we stop any of these nominees? No, we don't have the votes because we don't have enough
senators. And so what can we do? Well, we can slow them down. We can hold the floor and give a bunch
of speeches so that we delay these nominations already. I think Cash Patel now is not going to
be voted on for another week because of Democrats delay tactics. So they're gumming up the works,
they're doing what they can and they decided to hold the floor Wednesday night into Thursday
for the nomination of Russ Vote for Office of Management and Budget, the budget director.
And Brian Schatz, who you're going to hear in a bit, talked to Tommy and Schumer's office
and everyone, you know, they reached out to us and said, look, we're going to hold the
floor.
We want to make some noise.
You guys were talking about making noise.
How about you guys do a live stream and, you know, we'll have all the senators who are
on the floor or a bunch of senators on the floor, Democratic senators come talk to you
guys.
And you know, we did it.
It was great.
And, you know, they sat down, they were there all night.
They popped into the live stream.
And again, it's like we like, people are trying here.
People are trying and we have limited power.
That doesn't mean that people who aren't good
or bad messaging, whatever, gets a pass,
like we can all improve, but they're trying.
They're trying.
So now Schumer has also got the whole caucus to oppose,
or he's asking the whole caucus to oppose
all of the remaining Trump nominees
as a protest.
Again, probably not gonna do anything unless we get Susan Collins and Murkowski and McConnell
and someone else to vote against them.
So it's probably not gonna happen, but good for him.
And then Hakeem Jeffries, Democratic Minority Leader in the House, he had a letter earlier
this week that made clear that House Democrats won't be helping Republicans deal with government funding or the debt limit unless they undo Trump's federal
spending freeze and and potentially other concessions. What do you think about
that? That strikes me as the most effective move because it's probably the
one piece of leverage the Democrats have. Yeah, this runs very
counter to everything I've ever said before in my career but Democrats should
absolutely in my view,
hold the debt ceiling hostage.
Me too.
And now, you may say-
We're in a new time.
But it's also, it is different.
To be fair before all the people who are yelling hypocrite
at us come at us, is Democrats are not in the same position
that McCarthy was with Biden or Boehner was with Obama.
Democrats don't control the floor,
and there are enough Republican votes
to extend the debt ceiling. They do not need a single Democratic vote.
If Mike Johnson and Donald Trump are unable to get the votes they need and
they want a Democratic vote, they're gonna have to give us something very
significant for it. This is on them. It's not... And by the way, we're not saying
give us something like, give us universal health care and we'll raise them. It's like, stop fucking shutting down payments
that Congress lawfully appropriated.
Yes, this is a very important point.
Stop letting 25 year old racists access
to the fucking treasury payment system, you assholes.
Yeah.
This is not Ted Cruz demanding the defunding
of the Affordable Care Act and like that. This is asking for the demanding the defunding of the Affordable Care Act.
This is asking for the government to spend the money appropriated by Congress the way Congress wanted it to be appropriated in mind you bipartisan budget deals. We are not even asking, although
we could, for Donald Trump to spend all the money that Hakeem Jeffries, Chuck Schumer,
and Joe Biden sent his way. That's not even it. These are all deals signed off on by Mitch McConnell,
Chuck Schumer, Hakeem Jeffries, Mike Johnson.
Like that's all we're asking.
But no Democrat should vote for the debt ceiling
absent a significant set of concessions
from the Republicans.
Yeah, you want the debt ceiling votes?
Go talk to Chip Roy,
who's probably not gonna give you a yes vote on that because it doesn't cut enough,
which is for him, most of government.
Like go yell at him, go talk to the Freedom Caucus.
They're gonna be, they're the ones who are gonna vote
no on this, don't fucking talk to Democrats
when you are like violating the law
and refuse to be held accountable by anyone.
I think Democrats should adopt as a general approach,
essentially a no layups rule.
Everything you want to do, we're going to make harder.
Right? Even if like, it may seem like you guys did this live stream, the senators were out there,
they're eating up clock. And you say, well, what did that actually get?
He is going to get confirmed. You know what it gets us is every single minute that we are,
Donald Trump and the Republicans are not able to do what they wanna do.
It's a minute they're never gonna get back.
Yep.
Right, we are burning clock here.
And we should do it on everything.
You delay it, we use every tactic we have.
And it's frustrating to people,
we don't have a lot of leverage,
we don't have a lot of power,
but everything we do have, you do to delay,
to obstruct, to make it,
because there are no other checks, right? There's
no one in the Republican, there are not a people in the Republican party who are going
to stand up to him. The media cannot do it. The Supreme Court is on his side. They are
trying to run roughshod over how our government works and we have to use every tool we have
to fight back in every way possible. And it may, it's not always going to be satisfying,
but every single little bit helps. That delay, that is one week that Cash Patel
is not going to be able to prosecute Donald Trump's
or investigate Donald Trump's political enemies, right?
That seemed like a lot, it's going to seem like a lot
to the people in that who were going to prosecute
that one week.
Like that's, it's not the end, it's not going to solve
all of our problems, but it's the right approach.
No layups.
And again, the rest of us don't have to be spectators here.
In fact, we shouldn't be spectators.
Like the other tool we have is to make a lot of noise
about this and we don't have the megaphone
that Donald Trump and Elon have.
You know, we have some numbers and everyone has,
you always say this, everyone has the potential
in their own life to talk to friends and colleagues
and post and we all have platforms
and it doesn't matter how big your following is like
we got to get up off the mat here and actually start fighting and I know that like you know there was an Axios story that Democrats were getting like deluged with calls and to like ask them to
fight and I think that some of the Democratic politicians like okay we are what else do you
want us to do like call some of Republicans, the House Republicans in vulnerable districts so we can take the
House back. Call their offices. Go protest outside their offices because,
like, you know, we got a... the Democrats, they get it now. They don't have much
power because they didn't win and, you know, if they're backing off and not even
putting up a fight, then yeah, we should yell at them. But right now they're
trying to fight. Okay, when we come back from the break, you'll hear Tommy's interview with a very tired Brian Schatz
who just talked through the night.
Two quick things before we do that,
latest episode of Polar Coaster.
Dan, what's the latest episode like?
Well, we talked a lot about where Trump stands right now,
some of the weakness in his numbers,
how all his various executive orders and policies
are polling and some sense of where Democrats go from here.
And Caroline Rustin floats a very notable
former Bravo personality as a Democratic nominee in 2028.
Wow, okay, now that's, look,
if that isn't reason enough to tune in.
And if you're not listening to Polo Coaster
because you're not yet a subscriber,
go to crooked.com slash friends and subscribe.
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When we come back, Brian Schatz.
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Thank you Lumen for sponsoring this episode. I am excited to welcome to the show
a great friend of the podcast,
Hawaii Senator Brian Schatz.
How are you Senator?
I'm doing fine.
We're mobilized, we're motivated.
We're a little tired from the overnight,
but we're doing fine.
I was gonna say, you're fresh off a democracy bender.
Senate Democrats held the floor
for about 30 hours, I believe.
First question is just how you feeling, but also can you explain to listeners who didn't
catch our live stream yesterday what you and other Senate Democrats have been up to?
Well, we're maximally delaying the vote on Russ vote to run the Office of Management
and Budget.
And in order to do that, we took to the floor and basically haven't relinquished it and will
Be done in a couple of hours
And all Democrats are united against Russ vote
I don't think anybody in the public has ever really paid attention to OMB
but the reason that this guy is so important is he's one of the authors of
Project 2025 and part of project 2025
specifically talks about how they think the job of omb should be
Especially powerful that it should be representing quote the president's mind in all things like just weird stuff
And um, and the person who wrote that is rus vote
And now the person who is going to assume that position is rus vote. This guy's the architect of the federal funding freeze
He's the architect of illegally dismantling agencies.
And so he's quite a dangerous character.
So for those people who thought they were going to get like, we're going to shake up
Washington and maybe we'll get some mean tweets, they are setting about to dismantle the American
government's capacity to solve basic problems, not like new programs, but Medicaid Medicare
Headstart, you know federal firefighters VA home loans the Small Business Administration. So this is deadly serious
We are fighting back and you know, even today. I think there were two at least two
Positive results in the in the federal court. So part of what we're trying to say to everybody is,
we will fight where we can.
We are in the minority, which means that we're gonna,
you know, frankly lose some of these battles
because it's gonna be 5347 a lot.
But we're starting to see a mass movement out there
in the world that is standing up for democracy.
And by the way, we are starting to see that,
yes, the things that he is doing are illegal,
and they are being found to be illegal, and they are being stopped by the courts.
So one of Trump's magical sort of political powers is to get people to believe things
that are flatly not true about him.
And he's trying to EO his way around the fact that the stuff that
he's doing or the stuff that he wants to do is so unpopular, there's no way it would get
through any legislative body.
They can't pass a bill, so they just write it down as if that makes it law.
That's not actually how it works.
That's not in the Constitution, just jot it down.
Will it to be?
Yeah.
Well, you were telling me yesterday that Russ Vogt kind of thinks of himself as the hand of
the king.
Is that in the Constitution as well?
I mean, there's just, it's just, I was ready for
Trump 2.0 to be bad, but this whole element of
setting up this Doge team under Elon Musk and
having this young group of people that I don't even
know if they work for the government or not.
They've never been vetted.
We don't know their names necessarily.
They're just kind of rampaging through agencies, I guess, trying to cut whatever they can,
whenever they feel like it.
And it's just, it's taken us all, I think, a minute to catch up with how radical that
is.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, but also it's so radical that it sort of benefits of us because, you know, it's
not the frog being boiled, right?
It's the frog being fried.
And so everybody's kind of like, OK, I'm out of my slumber now.
There is no there is no ability to relax.
There is no ability for anybody to claim, well, why don't you guys give him a chance?
Or there's no ability for even the punditocracy to like stroke their chins and say they're the Democrats go again. I can't believe they're overreacting
This is no big deal. He's basically a normal Republican and they're complaining about outcomes, but they don't like the outcomes
So they're saying democracy is at stake
nobody can credibly claim that what's happening is legal.
And they have a very specific theory of action,
which is, as they talked about,
muzzle speed, flood the zone.
But that's a fancy way of saying,
we're gonna do a ton of illegal stuff at the same time
and see if like one or two of them will stick.
And I thought Ezra Klein last Sunday wrote a very nice piece
called Don't Believe Him.
And I think he got criticized by the internet
for being too casual about the Trump presidency.
And that's not how I took it.
I think we should be totally alarmed.
But we also shouldn't concede our
power away, either our people power or our ability to win in the courts or our ability
to at least gum up the works legislatively. There's this sense that the coolest thing
on the left to do is to catastrophize and say we've already lost, that the Democrats
are hopeless, that the movement is dead, and that ha ha ha ha ha, I'm so left that I don't even want to participate in the left anymore.
And I think everyone's like normal people who want to fight for our democracy and fight for
our country are saying, yeah, enough of that bullshit. Activism is not just getting into
someone's replies and saying, why aren't you fighting harder? It's figuring out how you
personally can fight harder. And I think one of the places that I've seen over the last week, you know, real
courage is within the federal government. A bunch of people are starting to disobey
or I should say decline to execute illegal orders, to establish themselves
as whistleblowers, to stand in front of federal buildings and protest,
which is not risk-free,
but I think once you start to see each other, right,
there really is strength and safety in numbers.
And I don't want to get too philosophical about this,
but I just do think there's something very important
about showing up in real life
when you start to see each other on the street and not just intermediated through an app, that you go, okay, I got friends here,
this is real, I'm in, let's go, we're going to win this thing, we may be getting our butts
kicked for the next six weeks, but six weeks is not six years.
And other Americans have faced other challenges
to the American experiment,
and they did not simply tweet, we're cooked.
They plot like hell, and they continued the experiment.
Listen, I, you and I both spend some time on Twitter.
I think I know the kind of frustration you're feeling,
the kind of tone you're talking about,
where people are somehow blaming the Democratic Party
for everything that Donald Trump is doing.
And it's exhausting, it's frustrating,
but let's just sort of talk about the tension and the anger.
I mean, Democrats are pretty angry right now.
We're angry at Trump, angry at what he's doing,
we're angry at Joe Biden for putting us in this place.
And as you mentioned, a lot of people are lashing out
at Democrats in Congress for not doing more.
So help me just set expectations a bit.
What power do Democrats in the Senate actually have?
What can we do to block some of Trump's actions?
And what is just gonna have to be messaging
to create a political cost down the road
to some of the things Trump is doing?
Well, think of it this way.
There are certain things that need 51 votes
and certain things that need 60.
So any time it's 51 votes,
all we can do is make our best case
and delay them a little.
And by a little, I mean 15 minutes, 27 minutes, 45 minutes,
sometimes not at all.
And we can make a nuisance of ourselves in small ways, but that's not really changing
either public opinion or the situation on the ground.
They're not getting their cabinet any slower if we do minor procedural roadblocks.
And by the way, we are doing all of the in and out of a quorum call or in and out of
executive session, but there's no magic bullet called slow them down.
Remember that the people
talking about Mitch McConnell's obstructionism are talking about an era when the cabinet needed 60
votes. Now the cabinet needs 51 and they've got 53. So everybody needs to understand they're very
likely to get their entire cabinet and all we can do is scream bloody murder about how dangerous this is.
Then there comes a point this year and it's not that long from now when they need 60 votes
for regular legislation and that's when Democrats are very relevant because they need seven
more than 53 and that's when the Democratic senators can exert some authority and use
some leverage.
I'm not prepared to sort of tell you exactly how we're
going to do that because frankly we have to become united and that's a leadership call,
that's a joint decision, but we're not casual about those moments in time when we actually do
have like raw leverage to push back on what's happening. Right now, we have very little ability to stop them.
And the best thing we can do is, as you say,
make them own these votes.
I do not think the RFK Jr.
yes vote is going to age well.
I don't think the Pete Hegseth vote is going to age well,
obviously, Kash Patel and all the rest of it and
But I'll also just say that to be to be fair to folks who are frustrated
You know, they're not sure what we're supposed to be doing but they know we're not supposed to be doing nothing, right?
And so one of the reasons that people were I think fired up at this 30 hours on the floor is like it was something
We're fighting. We're showing some fight, we understand the urgency of the moment.
But it's like the old, you know, Steve Jobs used to say, people don't know what you want,
what they want until you show it to them.
It is not their job to say, why don't you put the Senate in a quorum call?
Because I take that as a, I'm at the end of my rope, would you please tell me what you're doing here?
And let me just tell you my theory of change here.
Yes, we can gum up the works and we should.
Yes, we will have actual raw leverage
on the vote count later and we should use that
as ruthlessly and aggressively as we can.
I also think, you know, let's not underestimate
the power of the federal courts to declare,
and this is already born fruit, what the President of the United States is doing as flatly illegal,
and to enjoin and stop those actions.
And then I think we also have to, together, as citizens, build a mass movement because when you're
fighting autocracy and you know this as well as anybody you need the legitimacy
of people on your side so it's not just us fighting and then people either
cheering us on or not cheering us on you know on social media people need to see
each other in three-dimension it has to be tens of thousands of people it has to
be peaceful.
We have to have the moral high ground.
But the way to beat autocracy
is not just like legislative maneuvering,
it's actual people power.
And let's not forget that.
Yeah, that's well said.
And I agree with you.
I think that that RFK votes gonna age
like a vat of raw milk
that we might be available on store soon.
Let's talk about you personally.
One way you have used your power
is you've put a hold on all of Trump's
State Department nominees over this Elon Musk led effort
to illegally gut USAID.
Can you give listeners just a quick explanation
of what does that mean in practice?
And also, what are you asking Trump to do that will get you to release
these holds going forward?
What it means in practice is that there
are a bunch of State Department nominations.
Let me back up.
A lot of these nominations are mandatory two hours.
And so that doesn't sound like a long time,
but there are hundreds and hundreds of them.
So when, for instance, Tuberville held up all the military nominations,
these are like a two-star becoming a three-star.
There were a thousand of them.
And some folks were like, why don't you go to the floor and just start plowing through them?
And the answer is because it's a thousand nominations times two hours.
We would have been in the Senate for a year and a half confirming
a bunch of, you know, rear admirals and literally have no time for anything else.
And so it does gum up their ability to get ambassadors and assistant secretaries through,
but anyone they really want to get through, they just allocate the time and do it.
And my I haven't actually said this anywhere else,
because I just issued the press release
sort of without going through too much of an internal policy
planning program.
OK.
It's very Trumpy interview.
I like it.
Well, it wasn't quite Trumpy.
I mean, I had a staff with me, but I just told them
this is what I wanted to do.
Look, I am actually a little more willing than people
may know to have a negotiation
about how USAID is done.
I think that it's not unreasonable to ask the question, if we've got the Belt and Road,
and everybody watches what China is doing and says, wow, that's really smart that they're
all around the world helping folks, but it's also aligned with their economic and, you know,
geopolitical, geostrategic objectives.
USAID does some of that, but there's an argument,
and it's been on a bipartisan basis,
that sometimes USAID is even at cross purposes
with the State Department.
So I'm open to better alignment.
I'm also open to the idea that we should reduce overhead.
I think wherever we can reduce overhead, we should.
And I'm also open to the idea that, yes, there's some civil society stuff that we should be
funding, but I'm not sure we should ever fund an opera overseas if we haven't gotten everybody
who needs a mosquito net a mosquito net. So I am actually open minded to reforms if they're done through a regular legislative
process.
I've just told everybody I will only arrive at the negotiating table once the agency is
reopened.
And right now they're shuttering the whole place.
I mean, just flatly legally, it is an extraordinary thing they're doing.
They are bringing, you know, thousands and thousands of patriotic Americans, skilled Americans,
who have set up a life in wherever it is, right? In Asia or South America or Central America or
Africa or wherever it is, they brought their family there. And then they just got this email
saying you're coming home within the next 30 days. Yeah, it's just a rotten thing to do to humans. wherever it is, they brought their family there. And then they just got this email saying,
you're coming home within the next 30 days.
It's just a rotten thing to do to humans.
But also, we may end up with eight people
from our primary development agency in all of Asia.
Like this is nuts.
Nuts.
There's Marburg's disease in Tanzania.
There's Ebola in Uganda.
So I actually think this is going to back up on Donald Trump.
And I know there's some conventional wisdom knocking around that foreign aid people don't
care about it.
And I stipulate to the idea that if you took a poll, most people would not rank foreign
aid as their top priority.
But it's one of those things where also people wouldn't rank the FAA as their top priority, but it's one of those things where like also people wouldn't rank the FAA as their top priority, people don't
rank food inspections as their top priority until any of those things cause
a disruption at home, a lack of stability and safety at home, and I think you know
these diseases know no political or geographic boundaries. And this is a very serious situation.
Yeah, no, look, I understand this.
I have the same sort of tension in my head as you do
where I worked in the national security world.
I've seen the amazing good that organizations
funded by USAID can do.
I've also seen the agency as a whole feel bureaucratic
and slow and it can be frustrating at times.
But you're right.
I mean, there are specific examples
of programs being run by USAID,
like tracking highly contagious, deadly diseases
all around the world.
You mentioned too, Marburg,
which is like Ebola without a vaccine, basically, is sort of how it's been described to me.
There's Ebola, there's this bird flu outbreak
that seems to be everywhere all of a sudden.
And if suddenly we're just flying blind to this stuff
and you can trace it back to cuts to USAID,
that is an incredibly powerful message.
Yeah, I mean, and you know, look, I mean,
I'm not rooting for Donald Trump,
but I am trying to solve this problem.
And so, you know, one of the things I've said to Republican colleagues is like, I get that
foreign aid is not on the top of your list, except when we have our first Ebola case,
you know, in the United States.
And so and people are going to say, wait, what the hell, we don't monitor this anymore.
Or you know, PEPFAR is shut down and PEPFAR is shut down. The HIV AIDS prevention program which has saved tens of millions of lives is shut down.
It's technically not but the problem is that you know everyone's shut out of their email.
Literally we can't even operate.
They've been sent home and nominally in order to like pretend to not violate federal civil service laws and other laws. They're
saying, we'll still pay you please work from home. But then
they shut them out of their emails, which I but by the way,
is, you know, I'm not a lawyer, but I'm smart enough to
understand this. It's one thing to send people home to telework.
But if you don't have a reason to do that, and then you shut
them out of their ability to work,
then it's all a pretext, right?
And then you are just de facto shutting down the agency.
And that's why I'm very, very confident
that this will also be found to be in violation of the law.
But this one in particular, USAID, it's an arson job, right?
The other ones, they're trying to see
what they can get away with, NSF, Small Business
Administration, VA, and it's really super damaging.
This one they want to, I think they know they only have a couple more days before the full
freak out happens with the media and international attention.
And by the way, we have, sorry to get all fired up here, but we have the Munich Security
Conference next week.
We have a bipartisan delegation of United States senators.
JD Vance is going to be there.
I'm assuming Secretary Rubio is going to be there.
All we're going to spend our time doing is getting yelled at.
Why did you shut off the primary arm of goodwill internationally?
So usually the Munich Security Conference is a three-dimensional example of why America remains the indispensable
nation.
Everybody's hanging on our every word.
Everyone wants to know what direction we're going in.
And I think it's not going to be that.
I think we're going to get just, I mean, people will be polite, some of them.
But whether it's Africa or Asia or Central Europe or anywhere else, people are just getting
the first item on their list when we have our bilateral meetings is what the hell did
you do to PEPFAR?
What the hell did you do to disease prevention?
What the hell did you do to foreign military financing or any of the economic supports?
This is such small money in the scheme of things that we need to understand it for what
it is. It is not a budget or fiscal question.
This is America first policy.
What they want is for us to recede from the rest of the world.
They want our government to be about half as big.
They want it to do way fewer things. It is want, I mean, it is a quite radical vision.
They don't want FEMA to exist.
They think the FAA should have AI doing air traffic control.
I mean, it's a very creepy, radical vision.
And I'm not sure Donald Trump cares one way or another about all this, but he is letting
these combination of these sort of,
oligarch tech dudes and whatever,
and some old school right wing think tank people
just kind of have the run of the place.
Yeah, and just on the foreign APs,
I mean, a lot of this is money that has been dispersed
and is budgeted, you know?
And if we are helping fund some major component of the government in Jordan, for example, we can like rug pull them once on actually providing that funding before we lose our influence with that government in that country forever.
So this is incredibly damaging, no matter how it kind of ends. But you mentioned your Republican colleagues. I mean, look, they like foreign aid when it's in the form of bombs.
They might not talk about USAID,
but they think they know it's valuable.
And there's also some Republicans in the Senate
that we know hate Donald Trump.
Like Mitch McConnell hates Donald Trump, famously so.
Not enough to do anything about it,
but he doesn't like him.
Susan Collins is now complaining publicly
about Elon Musk's role being inappropriate.
In conversations with them,
do you think this is gonna shape up
being like the first term
where these guys kind of grumble on background,
but then refuse to use their power to change anything,
or are people getting more worked up?
Like, how do you read this?
I don't know.
I just don't know.
I've certainly had conversations with, I mean, seven to 10 Republicans who have
a real stomach ache about this thing in particular, because as much as I disagree
with many of them about almost everything, a lot of them don't want babies dying on
their conscience, and the question is whether they're
going to exert themselves.
So this weekend, the Republican senators
are going to be meeting with the president.
And we'll see.
I mean, I think it's not a, I mean,
it's probably a safe bet to assume, no, they will not
step up.
And even if like handicapping wise,
maybe I still think there will be instances where they stand up
for what they think is important.
I think there has to be more time elapsed.
And one of the conversations I'm having with some folks is I don't think the question is
time elapsed.
I think it is damage done.
And if they're doing the damage super quickly, you may not have six months.
But I think there's also a human psychology element, which is
if it sort of piles up over six months, it's easier to get there to displaying your independence.
If it all happens at once, it looks like to them, you're immediately turning on the newly
inaugurated president. So they've got a tightrope to walk. Some of them do that more skillfully and,
frankly, more honorably than others.
And you know, my job is obviously to articulate to try to slow them down, to articulate to
the public, you know, where I think the country is going in the wrong direction and that part
and on some level is the easy part.
But I still, you know, I'm still trying to find three or four votes for certain things, because that is the job. And,
and I think we should all hope that our democratic senators are in the
business of describing how horrific all this is in the business of trying to
slow it down,
but also in the business of trying to do the Senator thing,
which is to find four votes to stop all this crazy shit. And if it, if it is,
if we're unable to do so,
then at least we know that we've exhausted the possibility
and that we can go, you know, rhetorically speaking,
full thermonuclear.
Yeah. Let's talk about the Democratic Party right now,
because we don't have a leader right now, right?
Like, we have former presidents, we have congressional leaders,
but there's not like a single person guiding the party on messaging and policy like you would have if there were a Democrat in the
White House or a major nominee running for president.
On top of that, a lot of the Republican leadership is getting up there.
They don't seem particularly fluent in digital media platforms.
The messaging can feel a little behind the eight ball.
Now I'm saying this to you because you're an exception to this.
You are young and an effective communicator
and someone who understands like how to communicate
in 2025.
And I'm just wondering for people who are like,
look, a lot of us are getting the cringy clips
on the group chat.
What do you say to them about the way
you are pushing Democrats to evolve and get better and be more nimble?
Look, I remember there was a lot of that kind of chatter about Nancy Pelosi as she was speaker and
Then there were various moments during which we went ah
she's really very good at this and I just
Chuck Schumer is really very good at this. Is it true that
he's new to the internet age? Sure, but so am I, frankly. So I just worry about the theater
criticism part of the job, right? Like we need to cheer each other up.
Like it's a theater critic. It's like it's, it's, there's good messaging and there's
bad right? The like there's a good? The harder part is getting it to the people
who need to hear it.
And maybe if it's so cringy, it gets to them, that's good.
But like, you know, the corny-ass chance,
we can all just agree that maybe that's not going to cut it, right?
Well, let me answer the question this way.
You know, Chuck has designated Cory Booker and Tina Smith
to kind of get us to be better at digital. Mm-hmm. And
Look, I think you're exactly identifying the problem, which is we can say exactly the right thing
but if nobody sees it, it doesn't matter and the problem with the kind of
battle-tested way of doing things from the past is you pull a thing
doing things from the past is you pull a thing among the things on the list of things you pulled, you pick the one that's at 70 and not 67 and not 64, and then you say the thing
that pulls the best.
The problem with that model is it's very likely that the thing that pulls the best is also
the thing that is the least offensive because that's why it pulls the best.
So it's really a kind of lowest common denominator.
Which thing do you find least objectionable?
And that might work if you're in the mode of making a television commercial and basically
forcing it into the brains of a bunch of viewers, but it will not go viral because it's definitionally
not interesting.
Yeah, it's boring.
And so that's where I think Trump is brilliant, right? They're eating the dogs. They're it's boring. And so that's where I think Trump was, is brilliant, right? You know, they're eating the dogs, they're eating the cats.
That was offensive. It hurt him in the short run, but he again surfaced the
question of immigration. And what happens is he suffers for two days looking like
an idiot, but then on the third day people go, yeah, but you know he's got a
point about immigration, and then we're third day, people go, yeah, but you know, he's got a point about immigration.
And then we're talking about the thing that he wanted us to talk about.
So his ability to command attention is not a trivial thing.
Now we have a structural problem, as you pointed out, when you're out of power, you just definitionally
don't have a leader until you have a nominee, right?
We could say it's the Democratic Party chairman, we could say it's Chuck, we could say it's
Hakeem, but the truth is, there's not going to be a one person who leads our party out of the wilderness.
It's got to be all of us together.
But I will say, like, we're all getting better at communicating online and understanding
that, yeah, cable hits are important, but like, there's very, very few undecided voters
who are watching any of the cable shows.
It's not that we shouldn't do those anymore,
it's just that we should think of those
as one of the tactics in our toolkit.
And just by virtue of metrics, we are doing,
I mean like five-fold, eight-fold better than we did
even three weeks ago, because there's a commitment,
not just from the sort of digital native members
of the Senate, but some others who are like newly
willing to be authentic and speak plainly and like, you know, because part of it too is like
you got hearings and you got votes and you got meetings and you got everything else. You have to
actually allocate time to like staring into an iPhone and saying, here's what I'm up to. It's
weird. But it's a, and I actually had to tell my staff like,
we're doing this thing.
You have to grab me, even if it's just while I'm walking
to the floor, stick a camera in my face
and make me start talking.
And so we're doing that more and it's starting to work.
We also need to over time build a bigger ecosystem
of progressive media and it's not exclusively, well, it's you guys. I like what you know, progressive media.
And it's not exclusively, well, it's you guys.
I like what you're saying right now.
Keep going, I didn't mean to cut you off.
Showing up, but it's also kind of the network effect
of like you went on Barstool, right?
It's the recognition that,
think of it like your high school buddies.
You do not, I don't, exclude anybody It's the recognition that think of it like your high school buddies.
You do not, I don't, exclude anybody who thinks RFK is junior is great.
You might argue with them or you might never talk about it, but you just try to find common
ground and try to build community because I think one of the things Trump did in the
last election that was kind of brilliant is you can talk yourself out of Tulsi Gabbard's base mattering
because you could take a poll and go, oh, that's only 1%.
And then you could do the same thing with RFK
and say, that's only 2.5%.
Well, holy shit, we only lost by 1.5%.
Exactly.
And so coalitions that work, and you
were part of the maybe most powerful coalition
on the Democratic side in recent memory are always like on
policy and on politics kind of contradictory and
We became the party that like wouldn't accept anyone with a weird idea wouldn't accept anybody with
Without like a kind of down-the-middle
View that was totally rational and totally acceptable and I think we have to be a party that says look if you've got some
Heterodox views if you've got even some offensive views
We still want you in the in the tent, right?
Like one of the reasons to see in the state of Hawaii Democrats are so powerful is we have conservative Democrats, right?
We just like welcome them because we figure, hey, better you're a conservative Democrat
than a moderate Republican.
And I tell you what, your listeners are gonna hate this.
I miss Joe Manchin, right?
I miss-
I miss his vote.
Not his personality, but yeah, I miss his vote.
Yeah, well-
The houseboat seemed nice too.
His votes, I mean, I actually like his personality
better than his votes, but I still like,
we would be thrilled to have three or four Joe
Manchins so we could all be frustrated at the fact that he doesn't vote like a,
like a Hawaii Democrat, but at least he votes to make Chuck Schumer the leader
and puts Patty Murray in charge of appropriations and put Ron Wyden in
front of, in charge of tax and Martin Heinrich in charge ofations and put Ron Wyden in front of in charge of tax and Martin Heinrich
in charge of energy and all and Sheldon Whitehouse in charge of environment and public works.
Like that's what matters in the end. And so we have to kind of like, we have to decide,
do we want to win? I remember talking to a buddy of mine who, who was in the Hawaii legislature
and the magic number in the Hawaii legislature to become the speaker is
26 out of 51 so you need 26 votes and
he was at 22 and
and
It was really hard to get to 26
And we had a private conversation about a group of people who he found to be kind of objectionable and I said
a group of people who he found to be kind of objectionable. And I said, well, what the fuck, man, do you want to win and try to get to 26 with no objectionable
people?
You can't do it.
So you have to make deals, arrangements, promises with people that don't agree with you.
And that's the way we're going to rebuild this political party is we're going to have
to aggressively welcome people into our tent.
It doesn't mean we abandon our core values. It just means that one of our core
values is to exercise power on behalf of people and we can't do that unless we actually win
some damned elections and people do not like being scolded out of the tent. And that was
definitely the vibe for a while and I think we've kind of shook off those cobwebs.
I look, I love what you're saying.
I've noticed that a lot of you,
you and a lot of your colleagues are taking reps,
recording things that you're just posting on TikTok
or on Twitter or wherever, just trying to get out there,
talk more, explain what's going on.
I think that's great.
And I think you're right, we cannot rely on MSNBC hits
because those people are old and already agree with us.
I could not agree more with the need
to go to different places.
Like I hope, I once said Democrats should never go on Fox.
I'm wrong.
People should, we should go on Fox.
We should pick fights.
We should be interesting.
We should make content that is compelling to watch
because there is tension in it.
And people should go on like Barstool sports shows
or other places that I think we're, we're
seen as, uh, not kosher.
And it's not because you agree with everything
Dave Portnoy thinks or said, it's because that's
not a standard that we apply anywhere else.
You know what I mean?
Like I don't judge like ESPN talent based on
what John Skipper's political views are when
back when he was in charge of ESPN.
He's not anymore, it's someone else who I forget his name.
But anyway, so I think that's great.
One thing I just would love to get a sense from you on is,
okay, we're an NFL team, we're in a full rebuild.
We're tanking to get the draft picks,
we're firing the coach, new GM,
quarterback is doing ayahuasca somewhere.
What three things do you want people to think of when they think of the Democratic Party?
What are the three core values that is part of our rebrand?
Economic fairness and fighting corruption and standing up for each other. And the standing up for each other, I think, let's be honest, I did this on the fly.
I just think economic fairness is very straightforward
and the billionaires on the stage in front of the cabinet
was I think a gift to us because it put three dimensions
around what we think is happening.
And they're about to move forward with a massive tax cut.
They're obviously trying to almost literally
raid the treasury and shut down critical services.
So that's relatively easy to talk about.
And I just think, you know,
we are no longer the party in power.
And so we need to fight against the power structure
and not defend all the elite institutions.
These people are at the helm.
The corruption story is both true and alarming, but it's also something that attracts swing
voters and attracts some of the voters that liked Barack Obama and then swung over to
Trump because they wanted someone who was going kick these politicians in the stomach right and then the third thing and you know
Forgive me for not having the precise words, but it is just a little bit of belief in each other, right?
this this core value that
That we're building a mass movement to like actually envision something different and to forgive each other our past political
or personal transgressions,
to be welcoming in coalition building in a way that
I think is gonna make all of us a little uncomfortable
because we're gonna be so fucking pissed, right?
Now you realize Trump's an idiot.
I know, and we gotta be nice to those people.
We gotta be nice. We gotta be nice to those people.
I've been having
like, you know, I've been having a bunch of those conversations with folks and remember that people
move from, you know, in favor of somebody to a little bit less in favor of somebody to undecided
and then they join you. They never flip, right? Because it's just psychologically too hard to go
like, holy shit
I was wrong about everything some people might do that for but for the most part
You're moving them over in a way that allows them to not feel stupid
not feel put upon not feel like they're being told that they were wrong and like that is honestly like
Just millions of people who listen to
Podcasts and are politically engaged.
One of the most important things we can do is win people over like one by one.
I believe that.
I know that there's a little bit of like almost technocratic like data driven campaign stuff
where it's like it's all person to person conversations.
But at this stage, we're not in a campaign.
And we do just need to create a little room for people to
To say by the way people all the time
Mismember who they voted for the worst trump gets the fewer people will remember that they voted for him
Right. There's also a category of people I talked to a buddy who was describing his friends
um Who are republicans and they said, you know
They voted for trump because they were pissed about Biden and prices and his age
But they're not fans of Trump and they're gonna give him a relatively short leash before they abandoned him
And so those are those are real opportunities for us
If we can just appear to be somewhat welcoming and not just turn this into a I can't believe you allow this guy to take
The helm and now you wanna join us?
The answer is everybody's welcome
and I don't give a shit what your views used to be,
how you voted.
This is the biggest possible tent right now
because in my view, everything is at stake.
I agree.
Those are great words to end on.
Senator Schatz, thank you for staying up all night
for democracy and also listen, those Maryland senators, they got nothing of a commute. Those are great words to end on. Senator Schatz, thank you for staying up all night for Democracy.
And also, listen, those Maryland senators,
they got nothing of a commute.
You're coming from Hawaii to D.C. and back,
so shout out to you for logging some miles,
and thank you.
Thank you.
[♪upbeat music playing.♪
[♪upbeat music playing.♪
That's our show for today.
Thanks to Senator Schatz for coming by,
and thanks to all the Democratic senators
who stopped by our livestream on Wednesday as they spent the night holding the Senate floor
to oppose Russ' vote.
Dan's going to be back in the feed on Sunday with an interview with Ben Smith, the co-founder
and editor-in-chief of Semaphore and former media columnist of the New York Times about
the wonderful media environment we're all living in.
That should be fun for Sunday and then we'll be back with a new episode in your feeds on
Tuesday.
Have a great weekend everyone. Bye everyone
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Matt DeGroote is our head of production.
Naomi Sengel is our executive assistant.
Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Hayley Jones, Phoebe Bradford, Joseph Dutra, Ben
Hefcoat, Mia Kelman, Molly
Lobel, Kyril Pellivive, and David Tolles.
Our production staff is proudly unionized with the Writers Guild of America East.