Pod Save America - Two Strikes. Is Hegseth Out?
Episode Date: December 5, 2025Secretary of War Pete Hegseth reacts defiantly to two scandals: his department's decision to murder the survivors of a September strike on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat, and a Pentagon report that f...ound that Hegseth's infamous Signal messages put American troops at risk. Jon and Dan discuss what comes next for the former Fox News host, and then jump into the rest of the news, including Trump's disgusting comments about Somali Americans, his insistence that affordability is a Democratic "con job," and Mike Johnson's struggles to hold his caucus together after the GOP's underperformance in the TN-07 special election. Then, Dan talks to Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries about Democratic momentum heading into the midterms, the ongoing investigation into the double-tap strike, and Trump's pardon of embattled Democratic Congressman Henry Cuellar.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. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm John Fabro. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. On today's show, we'll talk about the latest drama with
Mike Johnson and House Republicans after their way too close for comfort win in Tuesday's
Tennessee special election, as well as Donald Trump's promise to come to their rescue
with a nationwide messaging blitz on affordability, the issue he calls a con job.
We'll also talk about Trump's especially disgusting, even for him, comments about Somali
immigrants and how the Pentagon Press Corps has now officially been replaced with intrepid
journalists like Laura Lumer and Matt Gates.
Then Dan talks to Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries
about Trump's pardon of Congressman Henry Quayar,
Mike Johnson's headaches, and lots more.
But let's start with the new developments
and what is still the biggest political story of the week.
Had to do it. Had to do it. Because he is. Because he is.
Hexath continues to live up to the song.
A new independent investigation of Signalgate
from his own Department of Defense found that his actions put American troops at risk.
We'll talk more about that in a bit.
And he was defiant this week about the Pentagon's decision to murder the survivors of a September strike on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat.
Here's Heggseth during one of those 24-hour cabinet meetings where everyone takes turns glazing Trump while he catches a few winks.
Got another use of glazing, huh?
We've only just begun striking narco boats and putting narco terrorists
at the bottom of the ocean.
I did not personally see survivors,
but I stand, because the thing was on fire.
It was exploded, and fire or smoke,
you can't see anything, you got digital,
this is called the fog of war.
This is what you and the press don't understand.
You sit in your air-conditioned offices
or up on Capitol Hill,
and you nitpick,
and you plant fake stories
in the Washington Post about kill everybody.
I watched that first strike live.
As you can imagine at the Department of War,
we got a lot of things to do.
So I didn't stick around
for the hour and two hours, whatever, where all the sensitive site exploitation digitally occurs.
So I moved on to my next meeting.
And by the way, Admiral Bradley made the correct decision to ultimately sink the boat and eliminate
the threat.
It didn't stick around for that second strike because I had to go back to my air-conditioned
office, which was much like the air-conditioned set on Fox News, where I was previously employed
before this job.
Like, what the fuck is that guy doing?
It's his first strike on a boat, on a Venezuelan boat, and he had to go somewhere else.
What was he doing?
Was he going to fucking take some kind of Department of Defense nameplate off a door so he could put Secretary of War back on there?
Like, what the fuck?
I assumed that in the room and in which you watch these strikes live, you can't bring your phone.
As we know, this guy's got a lot of group chats happening, and so he had to go back and check in.
Other meetings, okay.
On Thursday, Admiral Frank Bradley, who gave the order to kill the survivors and chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Dan Raisin Kane, briefed members of Congress about their rationale for the second strike in a classified closed-door session that included video footage of the attack.
Republicans left the meeting, largely satisfied.
Tom Cotton called the strikes, quote, righteous and entirely lawful.
He also said, quote, I saw two survivors trying to flip a boat, loaded with drugs, bound for the United States, back over, so they could say.
stay in the fight. Democrats, unsurprisingly, had a completely different take. Adam Smith,
the ranking Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, told Greg Sargent at the New Republic,
quote, this did not reduce my concerns at all or anyone else's, calling it a, quote, highly
questionable decision that these two people on that obviously incapacitated vessel were still
in any kind of fight. And here's Jim Himes, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee,
speaking to reporters after the meeting. What I saw in that room was one of the most
troubling things I've seen in my time in public service, you have two individuals in clear
distress without any means of locomotion with a destroyed vessel who are killed by the United
States. So we have moved from fake news. It didn't happen to where we always seem to end up
with Trump, which is we did it and we're proud of it. Now that Republicans in Congress,
Congress seems satisfied because it did seem like there were some cracks in the support among
Republicans and some questions that Republicans in Congress had about this. But now Tom Cotton,
the rest of them seem like they are on board again with the administration's explanation.
Where does this story go from here?
I think the question is going to be if and when the video was released. Because based on what
Congressman Himes and others have said about the video, it is quite disturbing. It seems very,
It based only on the description, obviously, we haven't seen it, of course, but it seems to completely undermine what HECSethus said, the argument here, because the rationale, and this is important, the rationale is that this lethal strike was necessary because these two people on a destroyed boat were either going to reenter the fight.
We don't know what fight that is or how they were conducted, or more ridiculously, continue the effort to deliver the drugs.
Were they going to paddle with their hands?
like how are they going to get it's it is absolutely absurd if the video says what these
democrats say it says it completely exposes the fallacy at the heart of the entire republican
argument here of trump's defense of hexet's defense of the military's defense yeah they were trying
to say that um they were going to radio or somehow call for help to other uh you know
quote unquote enemy combatants part of this drug smuggling ring they're heading to the united
States, though they, at least Adam Smith told Greg Sargent that in the briefing, the
official said there were no records of any kind of communication. So this is just a guess on their
part. And he also said that from what he saw in the video, that it was just like two shirtless
men sitting on a capsized boat. He's like, what you would expect from survivors of records like
that. And even though Adam Smith said he believed them that there were drugs originally on the
boat, he said once it was hit, there was no proof that the drugs were still on the boat. But like,
that aside, even if they were. What were they going to do with the drugs? This whole, I thought about
this when we first started talking about the story about the second strike. Like the focus on the second
strike, which is completely understandable because that's been the big story of the week, it's making
the first strike somehow seem like less of a war crime by comparison, but it's just as horrifying
and likely just as illegal because the administration has offered no justification that the
people they are murdering because they say they're part of a foreign terrorist organization
that threatens the United States. They have no evidence that they are other than the existence
of cocaine on their boats. So you are part of a foreign terrorist organization that is
threatening the United States, the safety and security United States, because you happen to be on a boat
with drugs. That is what the U.S. government has decided now with cocaine. And that is insane.
It is insane to say that people who are on boats with cocaine are enemy combatants who can be murdered by
the U.S. military with no arrest, no trial, no conviction, no due process. It's like, it's insane.
It is insane. And that boat, even if you, that boat wasn't even headed to the fucking United States.
it started to turn around when the strike hit.
It had already started to turn around.
You raise a really good point here, which is it's easy to get, like, once you start
talking about war crimes, you start talking about this from the context of this happening
within a lawful war.
Right.
This is not a lawful war.
There is no justification.
There is no congressional authorization.
There is no evidence.
It is just murder, right?
It is pure murder under the argument of self-defense.
but the argument for self-defense seems absurd.
These are not people taking bombs to the United States or anything like that.
This is, you know, it's not, there was not an imminent threat to the United States that
require these people to be killed.
Why couldn't they be arrested?
Why couldn't we stop the boat?
How come, how come, like, when Hegsef ever testifies or any of them testify in open,
but for Congress and it's public, like, I want someone to answer the fucking question,
why the Coast Guard can't do what they always have done in the past and interdict these ships
and arrest these people.
And the military could do it because they're in international waters.
Of course.
Right.
But yeah, that's what we've always done to stop drug trafficking is you have stopped
the people, seized the drugs, arrested the people, sent them back to where they came to
be prosecuted, brought them the United States to be prosecuted, and none of that is even
on the table.
And it is, the whole thing is so bizarre because it's not even clear what the end game is
other than just death for the sake of death.
I think they probably believe that it is all much like their immigration policy and the horrors they're carrying out there, that it's all about deterrence and that if people in Central and South America who are smuggling drugs here, that boats are getting blown up by the United States, they won't even try.
And so they think this is some kind of deterrent.
And because they think it's a deterrent, they feel like it's completely justified just murdering people left and right, who they happen to believe are on boats with drugs.
That's it.
If there's one thing the war on drugs has taught us, it's that harsh penalties and deterrence work.
Right.
Oh, wait, no, no, that is the opposite of what has happened.
And the other thing on this on the call, I think this is also just notable because the original order that Hags-Dess signed off on said that you, essentially there could be a second strike if there was some sort of hostile act.
And included, according to the story of the Wall Street Journal, among things that include a hostile act is calling back to the cartels, which is why they cited that here.
even though there was no evidence of it.
A call for help being the equivalent of shooting at American troops or an act of war
is an absurd proposition.
I do understand that if these people were called back to the cartel and you had reason to believe
that other members of the cartel were coming to the scene of the wreck by a boat with
weapons or whatever else that you would not then, it would be risky to send American
troops to rescue those shipwrecked traffickers.
But there's no evidence of that.
And also, we had full surveillance on the area.
So you would know whether there was other people coming or not.
It's just this was just to kill people for the sake of killing people.
It is also worth repeating, as we have said a couple times in talking about this story, that this was the first strike on September 2nd.
There have been many strikes since then.
There have been about 80 people that we know of killed.
And in a subsequent strike, when the first strike did not kill everyone on the boat, the survivors were picked up by the Coast Guard.
not tried, not arrested, sent back to their countries where they were just let free.
So these enemy combatant terrorists who pose such a grave threat to the United States
were just freed and sent back, which shows you how dangerous they really are.
Or how little evidence we had to prosecute them if we wanted to.
Right. And obviously, the president cares a great deal about drug trafficking,
which is why he pardoned the former president of Honduras,
who was involved in one of the biggest drug traffic in rings in modern history.
So he cares a lot about that.
There's just a story in the New York Post before we started recording
that there's a Long Island drug dealer who was freed by Trump
because, of course, had connections with the family,
I think with Kushner's dad, who was freed by Trump.
Free to the prison. Yeah, probably.
Freed by Trump, now convicted again of molesting his.
kid's nanny and threatening a synagogue congregant. That's the headline in the New York Post.
So again, this is an administration that cares deeply about prosecuting drug crimes. We know that.
We know that. Did you see the reporting from the Wall Street Journal on Hegseth forcing out
the commander of U.S. Southern Command back in October?
I did. There was an anecdote at the beginning of that story that talks about Hegseth's
first conversation with this commander, and where Hegseth basically says on the secure call,
basically. But I give you an order. You do it fast and you don't ask questions.
This guy is a four-star head of the military operations in the Caribbean, less than a year into his tenure he leaves.
It's from the journal because they say he had concerns about the legality of the strikes.
And this is someone who, during his Senate confirmation hearing in September, argued for a more muscular approach to dismantling drug cartels and talks about how, you know, when he first started his career, he started doing sort of anti-drug trafficking operations.
So this is not like someone who wanted to crack down on the drug cartels.
But for him, who was like going to be confirmed to work in the Trump administration, once he got there and heard from Hegsef, thought it was too much and was worried about it.
about it. And the fact that he left at the height of the military buildup in a lot of military
experts say is very, that's highly unusual and very telling. And imagine this guy, I mean,
also this guy served his country for his entire life. His first job is to get, his first
interaction in this job is to get yelled at by a cable news host. And then his second task is
to devise war plans for seizing the Panama Canal. Oh, yeah, that's right. And he wasn't working,
he wasn't moving fast enough on that. So that was one of the early strikes against him,
according to Higgs-Seth.
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So in some really exquisite timing for Pete, the Pentagon Inspector General's report
on Signalgate went public, just as the commanders were on the hill trying to explain away the
double-tap strike. Hegsef tweeted, total exoneration case closed, which of course is not true.
The report actually said, quote, using a personal cell phone to conduct official business and
send non-public DOD information through Signal risks potential compromise of sensitive DOD information,
which could cause harm to DOD personnel and mission objectives. In other words, Pete Hegsef,
by running his mouth too much on signal with all of his buddies in the administration,
put American troops at risk in that operation when they were bombing the Houthis.
So in one week, we have learned that the guy who runs our military may be responsible for war crimes
and put American troops in jeopardy by talking about sensitive information on an unsecured device,
which, of course, a mistake that we know our president cares about deeply again.
It was, you know, back in 2016, cared about it deeply.
Do you think that Heggseth's job is still safe because Trump just doesn't want to show weakness, doesn't want to give, doesn't want it to be seen giving his opponents a win?
I do think his job is safe because in Trump world, the only mortal sin is disloyalty.
So you can be corrupt, you can be incompetent, you can be a anti-vax wackadoodle, can be all of those things, as long as you are loyal to Trump.
And so this will just, I mean, I guess you're right.
Like if the, if the video is released and that causes more of an uproar, maybe there's more pressure.
But I don't know.
The pressure will be on the admiral.
Right.
It's like, every other scandal, they just like, they just weather it and they don't care.
They figure everyone's attention is going to go somewhere else.
And so Pete Heggseth continues to, you know, just fuck up his job as, you know, the top official overseeing the most part.
powerful military on earth. And also I think Trump likes it when his staff members, his cabinet members
feel like their job is at risk or they're in trouble because that's more leverage. Because what
Trump wants is someone who's going to do whatever they say and not disagree at all, not push back
at all. And Pete Hacks at that has no position, is in no position to push back on anything. So
no matter how illegal the order, no matter how absurd the request, he will do what Trump says.
And that's what Trump wants at the end of the day, above all else. Yeah, you can be, you can be as
incompetent as you want, and
plenty of his cabinet officials have taken
him up on that.
Pam Bondi, for
example, over at DOJ,
I don't know if you saw just before we started recording,
the brilliant
legal minds at the Department of Justice
have failed to secure an indictment
of Tish James
10 days after a judge throughout
their first indictment.
Just absolute confidence.
They're 0 for 2 on
trying to indict as James for mortgage fraud.
They are oh and one on trying to indict James Comey for mortgage fraud.
And wouldn't you know, we also learned today that the government accountability office,
which is a independent organization, but under the purview of Congress, has opened an
investigation into Bill Pulte, the federal housing official who spends most of his days,
I guess, accusing politicians the president doesn't like of mortgage fraud.
so far unsuccessfully.
So they're crushing it.
It's, I mean, it's, you always just have the state again.
It's the easiest thing to do in our criminal justice system is to indict someone.
It's, I think it's a flaw in our system, but like the saying is you can indict a ham sandwich,
and they cannot, these guys cannot indict a ham sandwich.
The cases are, they're too dumb.
The cases are too spurious.
Their evidence is too thin, and they keep failing, falling flat on their face.
Do you think they try again?
I guess they can try again.
How many times, could you just keep trying to indict someone over after?
Yeah, you are, you are, it's, you only get, you're only freed of this when, uh, you get acquitted.
Yeah, I was going to say, I was going to say, I was going to say,
they are. I'm starting to think that maybe, maybe these charges aren't on the level about the mortgage fraud.
I mean, it seems possible. All right. You and Lovett already did some reaction to a Tuesday special
election in Tennessee seven where Afton Bain didn't pull off the upset, but did hold
Matt Van Epps to single digits.
What was it, like nine, nine points?
Nine. Nine. Nine at the end.
But we now have some more reaction from Republicans.
They aren't encouraged to say the least.
Here's Tennessee Congressman Tim Burchett, who's about as conservative as they come.
Evangelical Christians, which I associate with, 45% of them don't go to the polls.
30% of gun owners don't go to the polls.
Yeah, we got a real problem and we better wake up.
What do you think?
You think he's speaking some wisdom there?
I listen to the full clip, and I don't think he fully understands his scope of the problem, but he is correct that there is a problem.
So give him credit for that.
Yeah.
You've written a couple of message boxes about this now.
What are your big takeaways from Tuesday night that now that we've all had a few days to process?
So throughout the course of the year, Republicans have dismissed the previous special elections by pointing out somewhat correctly that Democrats always do well because it's a low turnout special election.
So it doesn't, it's not really indicative of things.
And we know that because we did well in special elections at 23 and 24, and we did not win the presidency.
Then they sort of dismissed the victories in Virginia and New Jersey and elsewhere saying these are taking place in largely blue states.
Here you have an election that took place in a deep red district and it was not low turnout.
The turnout on Tuesday night was just as high as it was on election day, 2022 in the last midterm.
So this is as good, a dry run as we're going to get to understand how voters are interpreting the economy,
Trump, backlash to the extremism, all the above.
And so this is very hard to, you can't dismiss this.
And so I think the main takeaways are the Democratic base is fired up.
Afton-Bain received 20% more votes than the Democrat who ran in 2022.
While Republican turnout was high for a special election, Matt Van Epps, the Republican who won, received about 9,000 less votes than Mark Green, who was the incumbent in 2022.
So Democrat, so Democrat turnout was way up, Republican turnout, not that.
the same. We don't have exit polls here. So we can't know for sure like we did in Virginia and
New Jersey about how many Trump voters or Republicans voted for a Democrat. But the math in a
district this read suggests that certainly a lot of this is turned out, but some of it is also
persuasion. So there are some people who, you know, probably similar to New Jersey and Virginia
who are soft Republican voters who are voted for Trump because of prices or whatever else
voted for a Democrat this time. That's a very positive sign. The other thing, the other thing
that I think is really interesting here is the absence of Trump.
Trump did a couple like fake tellotone halls, which is always what they do to let him say he did
something. His only other appearance in the race was he happened to call Mike Johnson,
why Mike Johnson was at a press conference and Mike Johnson put him on speaker.
Classic.
But interestingly enough, Trump showed up in no ads, not even like geo TV stuff down the
stretch. And that's really, really interesting because in a, like this was a swing
district, you understand that decision because Trump will gin up Democratic turnout more.
But here's a race that's so in a district so Republican, if you turn out every single voter,
you gin up everyone, Republicans win by a lot.
And so they made a decision that of, they decided not to use Trump.
That was a conscious decision.
They did it for either one of two reasons.
The first being, they thought he wouldn't turn out voters that much.
It's interesting.
And the second is that he was.
so toxic to swing voters to independence that it would push more people to into Bain's camp.
And there's reason to believe the latter one is certainly true because in the Gallup poll that
came out recently, Trump's approval rating among independents is 25%. On every single issue,
a majority disapprove of what he is doing. And, you know, independents tend to make up in the
2022 midterms. They made up basically a third of voters. And so if you are losing three of every
for independent voters, you don't want Trump anywhere near the race.
I think that has real implications for what the midterms look like and how Democrats can use
Trump and how Republicans can't.
Do we know that it was the Van Ep's campaign's decision not to have Trump come or did, could
it also have been the case that Trump was just lazy and didn't care?
I think Trump visiting would be a relatively extreme measure for a special election,
but they didn't even use them in ads.
Like, he didn't record one of those word videos that you put out.
Either seen no reports of Trump robocalls at the end.
He just was, they were, they, for some reason.
Maybe he posted.
Yeah, I think he posted.
But he posted on Twitter.
Like, that is, that's a fake thing to do.
That doesn't really affect, like, what percentage of people in the 7th District of Tennessee
are seeing his tweets on like the ninth most, most trafficked social media site?
That's where he calls for Democrats to be hanged.
Yes, yes.
I mean, not that his tweets don't matter.
They do matter.
But it's not a particularly effective or efficient GOTV tool.
have you so obviously this is like a rough calculation but what uh it was a trump 22 district
she lost by nine so that's like a 13 points swing yeah have you done the math where like if
in the midterms it was a i don't know 10 plus point swing like you know 10 and change if you're
sort of you know approximating it how many seats we'd win yeah so there are four republicans in seats
Kamala Harris won right now. There are, I think, 10 Republicans in seats that Trump won by
five or less. And then there's another 14 or so that are in seats that Trump won between
five and 10 points. And so that gets you to 28 seats. Now, there are some Democrats in seats
that are. Jared Golden seat. Jared Golden. Who's not running again. Henry Quayar, Don Davis
and North Carolina, who are a handful of people who are in very gerrymandered seats who have,
Democrats who are in either lean or solid Republican seats, according to the Cook Political
Report ratings.
But the question—
None of them are in Trump, like, over Trump plus 10 seats, right?
No, no, no, no.
But they're—no, no, they're all—I think they're all under Trump plus 10.
The question—and then you have Don Bacon, who is one of those four, who's an actually
a lead Democratic seat in Nebraska, too.
The question will be about the size of the Democratic majority to get to something that
looks like a, you know,
2018-style majority,
you're going to be able to get to that,
to those districts who are between Trump 10 and Trump 15.
You have to have to have some of those in play because you're not going to win all
the Trump plus 10 ones, you know, just because of their, you know,
it turns on her our candidate, it's on her, their candidate.
Like, we actually only won, this is political report data that Amy Walter and I talked
about on last Sunday's pod, but I think we won like a third.
of the Trump five to ten districts in 2018.
There just were so many more.
There were 19 Republicans in districts that Hillary Clinton won that time around.
And so there's just, it was a wider playing field.
But with a plus 13 plus 10, you could have a majority much larger than one the Republicans have.
So you mentioned that that certainly depends on the candidates that run in each party.
After the results came in on Tuesday, since the results have come in on Tuesday, I should say, there's been a lot of conversation.
online about whether Afton-Bain was the right candidate for the district and candidate quality
generally as we head into the midterms. Would you like to weigh in? Yeah, I think this is a really
hard... Instead of just posting on Twitter like Elijah, I know Elijah's weighed in. He's having a great time
on Twitter on Twitter. He's doing a hundred retweets on that last time I look. That's a lot of engagement
for an Elijah tweet. He hasn't got that much engagement since he got to a Twitter fight with Jamie Harrison.
It is hard to say, like, there's a counterfactual here, right?
Which is, to her credit, Afton, Maine drove up democratic turnout in Davidson County, which has Nashville in it.
She won Davidson County by 58 points, which is 20 points better than Kamala Harris did in 2024.
So that's a significant gain.
That's obviously a significant gain.
It's probably fair to say that she is not the best ideological fit for a district that Trump won by 2020.
too. She was a had a lot of positions on defunding the police, a lot of video about saying
how much she hates Nashville. She was a very prominent organizer with a robust social media
history and endorsed by the DSA and the primary when she ran for state rep. That's easily
weaponizable against the Republicans. And when you have to do the math, you have to win a
significant number of Trump voters, that's probably not your candidate. With someone else
have won the seat, probably not. I haven't looked at the other, there are four people in that
primary, hard to know that someone else would have won. I think this debate is really hard
because, yes, of course, you want candidates who are good fits ideologically and culturally
for the district. That seems obvious, right? Even though he didn't win, you want someone like
John Tester running in Montana, Jared Golden, who's obviously retiring, was a excellent fit for
his district. But the question is, how do you execute that?
do we really want folks in D.C. to decide who the most electable candidate is?
You're having this. We're having the same conversation because it seems like Jasmine
Crocket's going to throw her hat in the ring in the Texas Senate race in the coming
in the coming days. And a lot of people are saying, well, she's the least electable of the three
candidates. And so do you want the DSCC of the DCC to come in and say, no, this is the
most electable candidate? Which is the exact thing that we're very pissed about happening in Maine
in Michigan. Well, it's not just do you want them to do it? It's, do you think that will be
effective? Well, that's my point. I think there's a lot of like, oh, we can just move around pieces
on a chessboard, uh, those of us who play pundits on Twitter. And it's like, yeah, I totally agree
that like you want a candidate who fits the district for sure. But, uh, what, five people ran in that
primary or four people? I think four, yeah. Four. And, and she won.
So she ran, she took a chance, she ran for office, she beat everyone else in the primary.
The voters decided, the Democratic primary voters decided they wanted her over the other
candidates.
And then she went on and so, yeah, was she the strongest candidate?
Maybe not.
But like, that was democracy.
It played out.
So, like, you can talk to all the candidates who ran against her in the primary and ask
them, like, why did you fuck up and not beat her if you were a more electable, more
moderate candidate. And I realize that, you know, some of the discussion online is like, well,
you know, Republicans in 2010 nominated a bunch of like tea party doofuses and that's what
costs them the Senate. It's like, yeah, they did. But I don't know that the NRSC could have
really done much about that. Well, they have. And like, you can try, right? Like, it's like someone can,
if you, if people think that Colin Allred is the best candidate, say, in Texas, people can, you know,
party leaders can call James Teller Rico and call Jasmine Crockett and try to tell them, hey, look at the polling, this is it, you shouldn't run.
They can try to do that, but they can't force them to do anything.
They can try to put their thumb on the scale like they're doing in some other races, and that could easily backfire, as we've predicted it might in some of those other races.
So you can try to do that stuff, but at the end of the day, it's like, it's up to the voters in the district and the candidates running.
And as much as I understand the concern among more moderate-minded strategists and pundits that you need a candidate to fit the district and that some candidates are either, and I would say either too progressive or it's always like talked about in terms of ideology, but I don't even know if it was her ideology as much as some of the things she said in the past and then chose not to really explain.
like it's not this wasn't this wasn't a race that was based on her positions necessarily like when i saw
the clip of katherine rampel of msnbc interviewing uh afton bain and asking her about some of her tweets from
2020 um when she said that the Nashville police department should be dissolved and that you know
good morning especially to the 54% of americans that believe burning down a police station is
justified so it's like whatever you have tweets everyone has tweets they don't like and then she did
didn't explain them. And she's like, I don't remember those tweets. And she's like,
oh, what do you think about those? Do you have a position on that? And she's like, well, I'm not
really focused on that. And I'm like, you know, Zoran Mamdani, DSA, socialist, right, had some positions
and tweets in the past that he and his campaign decided that they were going to clean up, that they
were going to say, no, this is the position I hold now. I am strongly in favor of X, Y, and Z,
even though I said that in the past, you know? So I like, some of this is,
ideology. Some of it is just like how you decide to campaign. And so I think like that's a big
thing. But regardless, I also think that moderate candidates, candidates that do fit the
district have a responsibility to figure out how to beat some of these other candidates who they
think are too progressive or too far to the left or not good fits for whatever reason. And
if the moderate candidates are either too bland or boring to gain any traction or
to, like, beat these candidates, then who the fuck's fault is that?
Yeah, it's, I mean, there is a world where you can, if you, if this party apparatus
were to choose, decide that they knew who the best candidate was, they can play a real role
here.
And then the Republicans lost the Senate in 2010 because they nominated a bunch of knuckleheads,
lost the Senate in 2012, for they lost a bunch of knuckles, even lost to, Indiana and
Missouri in that cycle because they had terrible candidates, Todd Aiken included there.
By 2014, they decided we're not doing that again.
And the NRC and the Republican version of the Senate Majority Pact, Republican Super Pax, basically nuked anyone who was not, they did not think was electable.
They shut off their access to money.
They would run ads against them.
They would put pressure on them to drop out.
They would play with the field.
So like what happened in, as I understand it, would happen in Tennessee 7.
Now, obviously, no one thought this was going to be a real race.
so it's not like anyone should have been involved here.
But as you had a progressive and a handful of moderates,
what the NRSC and the problem is have done in the past is they've tried to get out the other moderate.
Right.
So that it's moderate versus prognosis.
Now, the problem with that is, is I don't really trust the people in charge to do that correctly.
And so it's sort of as we live where we have.
I think the responsibility all of us who have who talk about and write about politics is to be as honest as we can be about our assessments of the candidates and what it takes to win and have human.
humility about what makes someone electable in 2025.
Yes.
And that it is the, I do, and also I think it's the responsibility of both sides of this
debates to field candidates and support candidates that they think can win.
And it's the candidates and those campaigns responsibility to, to win in these primaries.
Yeah.
It's just as there's, there's this assumption that there's, there's a bunch of people on
the left in the middle who, like, they're puppet strings picking the people.
It's really just a bunch of local candidates deciding to run.
And then maybe some D.C. groups get in.
involved and support them. But it's just it's a much more organic process. And I think the conversation
about Tennessee 7 allows. We should say that there's some some breaking news before we leave
the midterm map here. The Supreme Court has permitted Texas to keep its newly redistricted
GOP favorable congressional map in 2026. Kyle Cheney from Politico just tweeted this,
6-3 decision, Kagan, Sotomayor, and Jackson dissent. Although Kyle also points out that it's
notable that Alito Thomas and Gorsuch say they view California's new map is indisputably driven
by the pursuit of partisan advantage as opposed to impermissible race-based goals, which
bodes very well for Newsom and California in that legal challenge.
Because partisan gerrymandering is allowed by the Supreme Court.
Of course. But it's also interesting, though, that they're saying, as opposed to impermissible
race-based goals when we know that the Section 2 of the VRA is.
is very much up for grabs.
So I don't know what that says about that,
but that's what we got.
And they had to make this decision now
because the filing deadline's in five days, I think.
Right.
Now, I think, I don't know,
with everything we've seen,
like I still think,
and I know you talk to Amy Walter
about this on Sunday's episode,
but, you know,
even with Texas keeping their gerrymandered plus five map,
I don't think Democrats are in terrible shape.
I mean, the Speaker of the Virginia House
just said that he was contemplating
a 10-1 Democrat
Republican map in Virginia.
How many seats does that net us?
I think the map in Virginia is like 6.5 right now.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Look at that.
Pod Save America is brought to you by ZipRecruiter.
Tommy, what's your favorite holiday movie?
Saw.
Saw?
Okay.
Yeah.
You know, it's about a person who has.
hides a present inside a stomach of someone, in a sense. That's something that happens in there.
And then also, spoiler for Saw, it looks like somebody is dead. And then, have you heard the good news?
He has risen. So that's also a good idea to say that. But here's a thing, Tommy, to make a holiday
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ZipRecruiter.com slash crooked.
Could have said Miracle on 34th Street.
That's a good one.
Could have said Diehard.
Wickerman.
Because you took a wicker man.
Wickerman's really a very pagan.
It was just sort of a pagan worship ceremony.
in a sense
but that is also a holiday
we're saying
we're saying
Mary Wicker Wickerman again
that ZipRecruiter.com slash crooked
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the smartest way to hire
So Republicans
aren't waiting for the midterms
to knife Mike Johnson,
Speaker of the House,
who's becoming less and less popular
with some of his MAGA members.
Elise Stefanik,
who's been
performing the role of MAGA attack dog so she can get a better job.
She's currently gunning for governor of New York.
Good luck with that.
Is out there calling Johnson a serial liar who's in league with the deep state and said that
he wouldn't win the speakership again at the election were held today.
Nancy Mace, who seems perpetually unwell, told the New York Times, quote, I stand with
Elise and is reportedly considering following Marjorie Taylor Green into early retirement
because of her anger at Johnson's treatment of Republican women.
What is all this about?
Can you tell us what all the anger of Johnson is about lately?
Well, I talked to Leader Jeffries about this, and you'll hear his comments on it.
But I think there are a couple things going on here.
One is, Mike Johnson's a dufous.
He just, I mean, he just is.
He just happened to be the least defensive person when they needed to get,
desperately needed to get to 218.
And so he got the job.
He is not a policy wonk.
He's not a strategist.
He's just a guy.
and being just a guy in charge of the narrowest majority since the Great Depression is probably
he's punching above his weight.
He's not doing it well.
The second thing is he owes his entire job to Donald Trump.
And so he's always won Trump truth away from being ousted.
And so he has put Trump's interests in his own job security over the interests of the caucus.
And I think you saw that most vividly during the Epstein files.
thing. Basically, he made these Republicans go months of asking, answering awkward questions,
being on the outs with the base, because that's what Trump wanted, even though it was bad for
the members themselves. It was bad for the caucus. It's probably bad for their attempt to actually
have the majority. And then I think the last thing here is just they're all feeling the pressure,
right? They see these results in the elections. They see the poll numbers. They see that Trump's
numbers are in the toilet. And they're all starting to look for the exits. They figure out what's
going on. They're nervous. They don't want to lose. And so they're starting to act out.
It seems like with Elise Tophonic, she's just pissed that, uh, remember she was up for the UN job.
Yeah. And then, um, Trump and Johnson basically told her, no, you got to stay in Congress because
the number, the margin is so slim. And so we need you in Congress. So she loses that job. And then
she's running for governor. Uh, and her whole gubernatorial campaign is that, you know,
Hockel is too tied to Mumdani, and then Trump yucks it up with Mumdani in the Oval.
So it's possible that she's just pretty pissed at Mike Johnson.
She's taking out her anger at Donald Trump on Mike Johnson, because obviously she can't be angry at Donald Trump.
I see.
I think it's more political calculation than pure anger.
You think she just looks like a, what is the political calculation there that just helps her with the base?
Well, no, I think it is.
So I don't think she has any sincere moments in her life.
She was anti-Trump and that was good.
she was pro-Trump when that was good.
And now she wants to be governor of New York.
And so, like, she has to seem, and she is in the worst position possible.
She is the, in the leadership of a Congress that is at its second least popular time in
the history of Gallup polling.
And so she's trying to separate herself, seem like an outsider, but do it without actually
pissing off Trump or the base.
And this is a way to do it.
Yeah, I guess.
Because the actual substance of what she's pissed about is supposedly this provision that would
force the FBI to notify Congress if they ever opened another investigation of a political
candidate. And so she's alleging that Mike Johnson is in league with Jamie Raskin in the deep
state. Yeah. I mean, like it's absurd. I think she is looking for places to distance herself from
her own party without upsetting the base before a primary. Now, I mean, it makes for interesting
conversation about the drama with Mike Johnson, but he doesn't seem like he's in any real trouble. Like,
it's a year to the midterms. What are they going to hold the vote, a new vote for speaker and
someone else is going to get the votes? I mean, I could see him exiting after 2026, but I can't
see him getting ousted before then. Can you? No, I would be shocked if he was ousted before that.
It just seems no one wants the job. The process before was so painful. They've tolerated having this
duvis in charge for years now because they don't want to revisit that process. I think it's highly
likely if they lose the majority, which I also think is pretty likely, that he will get tossed
aside then. He doesn't even really want the job. I can't believe I did this, but I watched
several minutes of his, his and his wife's interview with Katie Miller on her podcast.
Yeah, a big Katie Miller fan. Well, it's like I'm always looking for content out here, right?
Just trying to help Elijah in his job. And the whole thing is a sob story about how hard the job is
and how he doesn't like it. So, so sad for you. Yeah, so hard. Well, luckily for Johnson and
all of these very anxious Republicans.
Trump is reportedly planning to tear himself away from ballroom renovations and midday naps long enough to hit the road for the next year
so he can sell Americans on everything he hasn't done to bring down the cost of living.
We're already getting a preview of how that's going to go.
Take a listen.
It's a conjunct.
They say affordability.
They don't say anything else.
Everyone says, oh, this fake narrative that the Democrats talk about affordability.
The word affordability is a con job by the Democrat.
Affordability, affordability, affordability.
She had no idea.
Their prices were much higher.
You think that was on the message calendar for that day?
No, I don't think so.
I think that is possibly the worst message you could possibly design ever.
A new political poll has 46% of Americans and a slim plurality of Trump voters saying the cost of living is the worst they can remember.
where they live. Ask whether Trump bears full responsibility for today's economy. Almost 20% of
Trump voters said yes. Obviously, a big majority of all voters said yes. What are your thoughts on
the affordability pivot? Will we even get one? I don't think we're going to get one because when
Trump hits, if you read the Axio story that previewed his upcoming event, and Trump has been so
I don't say lazy the right word, but he really hasn't done any domestic travel at all as president. He
really just, he does foreign trips and he renovates ballrooms. And that's like the full extent of
his duties. But if you read the story preview, it says that Trump is going to hit the road to
talk about his economic accomplishments, which is the exact wrong thing to do. He, I think,
Trumponomics. Trump, exactly. I mean, it is, I mean, we talk about this. There are parallels to
Biden, but it's like a hundred times worse than Biden at this. And Trump is going to fail at this
because to admit that prices are still high is to admit that he failed.
And he can't admit failure.
He's never done it in his eight decades on the planet, so he's not going to do with that.
So instead he's going to go out and do what he did in those clips we just listen to,
which it says poke voters in the eye every single moment.
It has to make as it being an absolute political disaster, which I plan on enjoying.
The other big difference is Trump has like at least two very easily doable options in front of him
to help with the cost of living, he could get rid of the tariffs that everyone knows
he put in place on his own and have hurt the economy and have made things in their lives
more expensive. Or he could do something about the Affordable Care Act subsidies that are about
to expire and the premium hikes that are coming for 20 million Americans. And he is thus
far refusing to do anything about that. So people are going to know that there are just options
that he is just saying, no, thank you, too.
And he's just going to go around talking about the tax cuts that he passed from the big
beautiful bill and then talk about how he lowered drug prices 5,000 percent.
And he's now, he's paying people to take their drugs.
Yes.
Like Mike Johnson went out and said, he was like trying to put a brave face on everything
that happened on Tuesday.
And he said, well, when the big beautiful bill kicks in, people are going to feel better.
They're not.
He's just extending tax cuts that people already had.
They're not going to.
I know.
that some of the smaller tax cuts like the no tax on tips and like are going to affect some people and
maybe a small percentage yeah maybe a small percentage of people will maybe see a slightly higher tax
refund uh in the spring but i don't know when you've got the the tariffs hit in the economy like
they have been the premium hikes everything else i don't really i wouldn't count on that if i were the
white house no i would not one tried interruption for trump is to uh just tell everyone that the real
blame for all their problems lies with immigrants. I'm certain he'll do that. He's already doing it
this week. He put a really disgusting new spin on this while talking about enforcement operations in
Minnesota, which is home to a large population of Somali Americans. Let's listen. We're going to go the
wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our country. Elon Omar is garbage. She's garbage. Her friends
are garbage. These are people that work. These are people that say, let's
come on let's make this place great these are people that do nothing but complain they come from
hell and they complain and do nothing but bitch we don't want them in our country let them go back
to where they came from and fix it thank you very much just really sick stuff uh for people who
don't know the reason he was even talking about uh the Somali community and minnesota
is because there was a fraud charges brought against an organization a couple organizations
I think that were basically you know stealing taxpayer money and I think a lot of Somali
Americans in Minnesota were charged though the ringleader the person who ran the whole
scam was a white person so Republicans right wing media everyone is
using that case as a reason to say, you know, we've got to kick all of the Somali
Americans out.
Never mind the fact that the vast majority, so Minnesota has the largest Somali community
in the United States, the vast majority of Somalis in Minnesota are U.S. citizens who've been
here for over a decade, who have jobs, just so everyone knows.
There's only a small percentage that have temporary protected status or refugees or, you know,
applying for asylum or whatever it may be.
and I don't know.
What do you think of the tried and true tactic from Trump on this one?
Just so people know, that sound you heard at the end of the clip was J.D. Vance banging on the table and support?
Was that J.D. Vance? Of course.
In the past, Trump has somewhat effectively changed the subject by making these outrageous sort of statements.
This is they're eating the dogs and they're eating the cats from 2024, you know, various attempts during.
his first term where he was able to just focus people on something else
through offensive, jingoistic, racist remarks.
And, you know, sometimes that would be effective.
I think that is doomed to fail this time around because every single,
now there is, unlike in Trump's first term or things,
we're kind of just like proceeding at pace in life,
now there is one central issue that everyone cares about and everyone's mad about
and it's cost of living.
So every time Trump is doing something that's not affecting the cost of living,
He is not helping himself.
You can't really distract people from the price of groceries, utilities, and housing.
You're not going to convince them that that's not a big deal and a big problem.
So when you're trying to distract them, they can see the cars up your sleeve.
They know what you're doing.
And I think it's going to be incredibly ineffective.
Yeah, the big problem for him here is that he's in charge.
Like, you could imagine a scenario where Biden was president, Trump's running against Biden,
and he's saying, oh, you know, the reason that we still have high prices in inflation is because
all these immigrants are stealing government benefits.
And Biden's letting them because he let them all into the country.
And you could say, okay, I could see that, unfortunately, being politically effective.
But in this instance, it's like, okay, you're complaining about Somali immigrants who, the authorities in Minnesota, a state mostly run by Democrats, are, they've been charged.
Governor Wallis was like, good people who are criminals should go to jail.
I don't care what nationality they are.
I don't care where they come from.
If you commit a crime, you go to jail.
And so I don't really understand the argument there that.
like oh yeah prices are high costs are high you're having a tough time also i'm in charge i'm
going to blame immigrants i am deporting immigrants i am cracking down on them but like what's his
excuse you know it's just not a it just doesn't it doesn't work as well okay one last thing
before we get to your conversation with hakeem jeffreys uh you may remember that uh back in october
basically the entire pentagon press corps including fox news and newsmax gave up their badges
and walked out of the building rather than agree to a a list of new rules from heggseth that
basically amounted to a ban on real reporting.
The Times announced on Thursday they're suing Heggseth over the policy.
But fear not, we've got a new crop of defense reporters on the beat,
including 9-11 truther Laura Lumer,
ladiesman Matt Gates,
the National Pulse, the Post-Millennial, Turning Point USA, Tim Kast,
and the Gateway Pundit, all of whom agreed to the reporting restrictions,
and they're already hard at work holding DOD accountable.
Sorry, DOWW.
here's conservative influencer Cam Higby
just grilling Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson
who no one even knew existed until this week. Let's listen.
What was the environment like here with the old press corps?
There's a lot of talk online about us and our level of professionalism.
I'm interested to hear what the level of professionalism was like before.
I've heard stories about ambushing people outside their offices,
making a hostile work environment for everyone who works in the DOW.
What was that like?
Oh, it was absolutely crazy. My first weeks here, they just waltzed in my office, rang my doorbell, literally nonstop. My doorbell was going off probably every single second.
There were instances where they were hanging outside of the secretary's office trying to see who he was meeting with.
In your mind, what is the purpose of the Pentagon Press Corps? Because it seems to be that a lot of people online, including the former press corps, who have been tweeting at me, that the purpose of the press corps is just to gather classified information and release it to the public.
It seems like that's, if you're an American journalist, I mean, you're not a Chinese spy.
Holding us accountable, I think, is very important, but also communicating to the American people, all of the work we're doing and all of the work that our warfighters are doing every single day.
That is, that is, that is the role of the press corps is to communicate to the American people, all the wonderful things that the government is doing.
It's one of the most honest things any Trump flack has ever said.
I just, like, thank God, her poor ears having to hear her doorbell ring.
from these reporters that just they were trying to reach her.
She is the press secretary.
That is the job of the press secretary to talk to reporters.
Am I right?
Those reporters hanging outside trying to see who Pete Hexeth is meeting with in public spaces in the Pentagon.
A bunch of fucking Chinese spies right there trying to, trying to suss out a meeting at the Pentagon.
And this whole thing was so comical.
These people were so embarrassing.
You know, I think it was campaign, we one of them tweeted.
I just had a great off-the-record conversation with, uh,
John Conrad.
John Conrad.
Great off-the-record conversation with Pete Hegsef.
He said great things.
He says,
Hegsef answered my questions.
It's off the record, so no details.
But I am very pleased with his leadership.
It's so good.
This guy works for the world's top maritime news website.
And then in his bio, it says blacklisted by Wikipedia.
So you know it's good.
And then they all took, everyone's mad at the Washington Post
because they wrote the original story about the second strike.
all these people took pictures at different desks saying that they were at the Washington Post desk.
But they couldn't even figure it.
They couldn't even suss that out.
They all, so it's like Dan Lamath, the Pentagon Reporter for the Post who wrote the original story, he tweeted out pictures of all of them at the various desks saying, I'm at the Washington Post desk, saying you have to figure this out amongst yourselves.
This isn't really important.
But do you think there are other maritime news websites that aren't the top maritime news website?
Oh, absolutely.
Do you think there's number two, number three, number four?
I think you are dramatically underestimating the vibrant maritime press that exists.
I mean, to be honest, there's a lot going on in the Caribbean right now that someone could be.
Maybe cricket should have a maritime reporter.
You know what?
Let's send Elijah.
Put Elijah on a boat.
Get him off Twitter for a little bit.
Get him on a boat.
Get him doing some real reporting.
This is a great idea.
Elijah, you're going to the Caribbean.
Okay, when we come back from the break, you'll hear Dan's conversation with Leader Jeffries,
but two quick things before we get to that.
Strict scrutiny is coming to the West Coast.
Join Kate, Melissa, and Leah in San Francisco on March 6th at the Herbst Theater,
and in Los Angeles on March 7th at the Palace Theater.
Grab your tickets before they sell out at Cricket.com slash events.
Also, go get your holiday shopping done with a visit to the Cricket Store.
I know a lot of you are looking for the right Epstein-Files-Related Christmas present.
May I humbly suggest, I don't even know, I have not read this copy, as always, may I humbly
suggest our release the naughty list sweatshirt. We got ornaments too. We decorated our Christmas
tree this weekend and we're unpacking the boxes and I found the offline ornament from a few years
ago. That's a good one. I like that one. I was like, what is, oh, this is from Johnspa other
podcast. That's what this is.
Anyway, go check out offline reset.
Don't be that guy on Amazon on December 23rd.
Head to cricket.com slash store to stock up on gifts now.
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Joining us now is House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. Leader Jeffries, welcome back to
Positive America. Great to be with you. Let's start with some good news because that's what we need
these days. So on Tuesday night, Democrats, although we didn't win, had a very good night in the
special election in the Tennessee's 7th District, where Democrats outperformed Kamala Harris's
performance there by 13 points. I take it you see that election as a positive sign in your
quest to retake the majority? And why do you think the Democrats did so well? Well, I think it's another
positive sign on the trajectory that we've seen from the very beginning of this year, the first
special election of this year took place in late January, a state Senate seat in Iowa that Donald
Trump had just won the previous November by 21 points. Democrats won it by 4. That was a 25 point
overperformance. We flipped that state Senate seat. And we've been winning special election after
special election after special election ever since. And if we've failed to win, we've overperformed
dramatically, as we just saw in Tennessee.
And of course, during the off-year elections that occurred in early November, we saw decisive
democratic victories all across the country in New Jersey, in New York, in Virginia, in Pennsylvania,
in Georgia, in Mississippi, and of course, in California, with Prop 50 up and down the ballot
at all points in between.
I think that the thing that unites these consistent democratic victories, or if we fall just
short, our dramatic overperformance numbers are that the American people are tired of the extremism
that they've seen from Donald Trump, the failure to do anything meaningful, to make their life
better, and Democrats, of course, leaning in aggressively and consistently on two messages.
Affordability, we're working hard to drive down the high cost of living, which is out of control,
and health care. We want to fix our broken health care system and, of course, deal with the
Republican health care crisis that's crushing the American people.
So affordability was a big part of this campaign.
It was the central focus of Afton Baines' message to the Democrat in that race.
In New Jersey and Virginia, where Democrats did well earlier this month, the Democrats not just
ran on saying prices were too high, but because they were governors, had specific proposals
about what they would do to lower prices.
You know, Mikey Cheryl, the governor like New Jersey, talked about freezing utility rates.
As you think about 2026 at the midterms, do Democrats need to have some specific proposals about
what we would do to lower costs, not just what Trump has failed to do to lower costs?
Yeah, I think that is going to be important as we pivot from 2025 to 2025 to 26.
And listen, there are a variety of different ideas that we've already begun to articulate.
We need to repeal the Trump tariffs.
These tariffs have actually increased costs on everyday Americans by thousands of dollars per year.
That's both groceries and its goods, and the American people are feeling it right now in a significant way.
Congress needs to reassert its authority in this area because Donald Trump has usurped the congressional power over tariffs, claim some emergency authority, and as a result, he's adversely impacting the American people.
So one of the first things that Congress can do is to repeal the Trump tariffs is absolutely essential if the Supreme Court doesn't beat us to it.
I think with respect to health care.
And when people talk about the affordability crisis, the three things that I hear the most
from folks as I travel across the country, it's housing, it's health care, and, of course,
it's groceries, goods, utilities.
And in terms of health care, one of the more immediate things that we need to do right now
is to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits because the failure to renew them is actually
going to result in tens of millions of people experiencing dramatically increased health care
courts. We're talking about $1,000 or $2,000 per month in some instances. This is unaffordable
for working-class Americans, middle-class Americans, and everyday Americans. It's a big difference
between what Democrats are all about and what Republicans are all about. I think on housing,
we need to use the tax code to both incentivize increased production to deal with the supply
problem that we have, and if you increase the supply of housing, you bring down housing costs,
both on the rental side and on the homeownership side, but also, I think, use the tax code
to incentivize and make it easier for first-time home buyers to be able to purchase a home
and get their piece of the American dream. This was done previously under President Barack Obama,
as you know, in the aftermath of the Great Recession, and it was successful, I think we need to look
at that type of initiative. What Republicans have done is use the tax code to provide massive tax breaks
to their billionaire donors while leaving everyday Americans behind.
Could you see the Democratic leadership putting together, you know, an equivalent of, you know,
what the Democrats said in 2006, which was a six for six, like a set of policy ideas that would be
that most Democratic candidates, whether incumbents or
challengers could run on? Is that one of the things you guys in your leadership team are thinking about?
Yeah, it's definitely on the discussion, and we've been in conversation about that. Initially,
we wanted to make sure that we just articulated a framework around three different issues.
The economy affordability, issue one, issue two, health care, and issue three, corruption.
And to make clear to the American people, listen, what we'll focus on is House Democrats
are driving down the high cost of living, because America's too expensive. We're focused on
fixing our broken health care system, which Republicans are destroying. Largest cut to Medicaid
in American history. Hospitals, nursing homes, community-based health clinics closing all across America
because of their one big ugly bill. Their refusal to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits,
that's a disaster. They're attacking the Centers for Disease Control, the National Institute
of Health, making it harder for people to get vaccines, including children. It's an all-out
assault on the health care of the American people. We need to fix our broken health care system.
And then third, deal with the corruption that exists in the Congress, in the courts,
and of course with the administration, the most corrupt presidential administration in
American history. Now that we've got a framework of the issues that we want to work on,
economy, health care, corruption, I think the logical next step for us is to begin to articulate
to the American people some more concrete ideas as to what a Democratic majority in the House
would look like. On the Obamacare tax credits, you know, Senator Schumer is reportedly going to
propose a three-year clean extension and try to force a vote on that. You guys have been pushing
that. Where does that stand? And are you open to negotiating with Republicans on it? Or is the
three-year extension, your bottom, clean extension, your bottom line? Well, our view is that the most
urgent and important thing that we can do right now is to extend the Affordable Care Act tax
credits and the legislation and the path to getting something toward an up or down vote in the
House right now runs through the House Democratic proposal in our discharge petition.
All 214 Democrats support that discharge petition, which means, as you know, Dan, that all we need
are four Republicans.
There are 219 of them.
Dozens of them have said that they know we need to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits.
All we need are four to join us.
And then, of course, in the Senate, let's see what happens next week.
Now, months have gone by, and we've repeatedly said to our Republican colleagues,
we are willing to work together to find a bipartisan path forward, find some common ground,
but we have to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits on a multi-year basis.
And Republicans have talked a lot and done nothing.
So I think time is running out to do anything other than a straight,
extension. But, you know, when we return to Washington next week, if there are traditional
Republicans who put a proposal forward in good faith, will certainly evaluate it. But their
leadership has shown no interest in doing anything, which is why we launched a discharge petition
and are working hard to get four House Republicans to join us.
The other big news happening on Capitol Hill today is the Trump administration briefed senior members of Congress, Intel, Armed Services Committee leaders, about this very controversial boat strike in Venezuela that involved a second strike that killed two survivors.
I understand they showed the video.
Have you been briefed on that by your team?
And what's your reaction to where this stands right now?
Yeah, I haven't had the opportunity to go down to the SCIF to view the video.
during the time that the Admiral was there.
But individuals who have seen the video have made clear it's very disturbing and certainly
demands further investigation, which is what I expect, you know, will take place.
Pete Hexath clearly is a disgrace called for his resignation months ago and the sooner he's
gone, the better off for the American people.
And I think the American people increasingly know that.
The question for us is, you know, why is it that we have a president who claims to want to stop the flow of narcotics into this country is engaging in what appears to be extrajudicial killings?
We've yet to see any authority or evidence presented to the Congress either in a public way or in a secure location to justify the strikes that have taken place,
including this horrific one.
And yet, same period of time,
Donald Trump pardons one of the biggest narco traffickers,
narco terrorists, the former Honduran president,
in the world.
And so it's very unfortunate that the administration
can't really be taken seriously here.
And now we've seen efforts by them to obfuscate
the fact that the buck should stop with the leadership, and that certainly means the so-called
Secretary of Defense, Pete, Hexeth.
Earlier in this sort of as reporting came out about this with the Big Washington Post story
and some subsequent reporting, there seemed to be an appetite, at least in the Senate, but maybe
in the House too, for bipartisan investigations into this bipartisan oversight in the way in which
Congress used to operate before these Republicans got.
in charge. Do you see any chance of that in the House, or was this briefing probably enough
to get sort of the lemmings back in line?
You know, well, I got to be honest that I'm very skeptical of the Republican willingness to
actually act like a separate and co-equal branch of government, because what we've seen
from the very beginning of Donald Trump's time in office is that they're just sick offense.
And when he says jump, they say how high. They're nothing more than you're,
reckless rubber stamps for his extreme agenda. But it has been interesting to see Republicans
certainly in the Senate, and even Mike Rogers, who issued a, you know, strong statement calling
for an investigation and then followed it up by opening up the investigation and demanding,
you know, that the admiral come to Capitol Hill as part of the process of that ongoing
investigation. So now it remains to be seen when Donald Trump cracks the whip, what's going to
happen. But this issue is now broken into the public domain. And it's going to be hard, you know,
for them to try to misdirect the attention of the American people at this point because
it's horrific what has occurred. And as you know, the American people overwhelmingly are not
interested in another foreign war. It's deeply unpopular, including with elements of Donald Trump's
mega base. So I think.
it may be the case that some Republicans are both repulsed by Pete Hegsef and also understand
that parts of their base aren't necessarily interested in the path that Donald Trump seems to be
dragging us down as it relates to Venezuela and the possibility of another failed foreign war.
I assume that if the Republicans, if there's no bipartisan oversight of this, the Republicans
do not do their duty here, that this would be a ripe line of investigation for a Democratic majority
in 2027? Yeah, there's no doubt about it. But listen, the line is also very long.
We've got an out-of-control Homeland Security Secretary, an out-of-control attorney general,
an out-of-control secretary of health and human services, all doing great harm to the American people,
to due process, to the rule of law, to law-abiding immigrant family.
and communities because of what has been unleashed by ICE in the Department of Homeland
Security and ways that are turning off the American people significantly. And then, of course,
we've got the most unqualified, so-called Secretary of Defense in American history. And so
from an oversight standpoint, there's going to be a lot to do. Yes, I can imagine. And we are
prepared to do it all. Going back to the Tennessee election for a second, the Democrat did
overperform by 13 points. That's a few points less than.
Democrats have traditionally been performing in these congressional special elections this year,
about five points. Part of the discourse had happened afterwards among a lot of sort of political
strategists and pundits was the candidate, the nominee, who I think ran a vigorous race in terms
of turning out the base, particularly in Davidson County where Nashville is, but was probably not
the best ideological fit for the district. She was quite liberal, endorsed by the DSA, you know,
had been a very active organizer who had a lot of videos of the Republican
and sort of weaponized. I don't know that another candidate would have won that race. I'm not arguing
that. But as you think about 2026, to win the majority, and especially win a sustainable majority
where you actually have a margin for error, you're going to have to win districts that Trump won
by 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, sometimes more than 10 points. How are you thinking about candidate selection
there? And are you in the D-Tri-C planning on getting involved to sort of ensure that the
candidates that you think are the best fit would be nominated?
Well, it's certainly the case that we want to make sure that there are Democrats whose life
experiences and whose perspectives match the districts that they're hoping to represent.
That's the reality all across the country.
And that will differ from place to place.
In the deep south, it differs from the Midwest.
In the Midwest, it may differ from the coast in terms of the type of candidate,
the type of life experiences, the type of life experiences, the type of
perspective, we've got to make sure that they're authentic, of course, that they're communicating
on the issues that matter, as was done in Tennessee in terms of speaking aggressively to the
issue of affordability, but that, you know, there's a sense that they can connect to the
broadest possible swath of the electorate. And there are always two things that have to be
done, as you know, to win these elections. Energize the base.
and then move swing voters who can go either way in your direction.
And we certainly, I think, are going to make sure that there are as many candidates
who are able to do both as possible.
Everybody in Capitol Hill, whether you're a progressive or a blue dog or a new damn
knows to win these tough seats, you've got to do both things.
Energize the base and move swing voters in your direction.
Now, a lot of that has to do with speaking to the issues.
that matter authentically around driving down the high cost of living and of course addressing
the health care crisis that exists in America and just generally wanting to make life better
for the American people. But, you know, I think what was successful for us in 2018 and there
were new Dems and there were blue dogs and there were progressives like Katie Porter who won
swing districts. But what they had in common was that they specifically,
spoke authentically. They were from their communities. They had a real close, authentic,
affectionate relationship that was developed with the people that they were hoping to represent.
And they had life experiences that made clear to folks that, you know what, I'm not a career
politician. I'm interested in serving the people. Your counterpart, Speaker, Mike Johnson,
it's been having a tough week. It seems like chaos is breaking out across the Capitol. You have
members of his own leadership team attacking him. There's, there were brief fears that there's going to be
a, you know, members just retiring left and right, even further narrowing his incredibly narrow
majority. I don't know how much scuttlebutt you're picking up or what you're able to
observe on the floor, but what is happening over there in the Republican caucus right now?
Yeah. I mean, it's the GOP Civil War that is raging. The bottom line is they can't stand each other.
and a lot of them hate Mike Johnson.
We have that in common.
This is somebody who apparently has repeatedly lied to them,
and we know he's repeatedly lied to the American people.
And they're falling apart over there.
They have no affirmative agenda.
They've done nothing to make life better for the American people.
And I think we kind of reached a boiling point to some degree this week,
because, again, you've got them not doing a damn thing,
to even pretend like they care about dealing with the high cost of living
or addressing the fact that the Affordable Care Act tax credits are going to expire
in just a few weeks.
And I think a lot of Republicans, like Elise Stefanik,
who I've never really agreed with on any other issue before,
but clearly she can't stand him at this point
and, you know, believes that they're rudderless,
and then you've got a group of other people who are like,
why have we continued to castrate our majority and not even pretend as if we are a separate
and co-equal branch of government? And I think as Donald Trump's approval ratings continue to speed
rapidly toward the basement, he's at 36 in Gallup, maybe it in fact is the case that some
House Republicans are like, yeah, do we have to agree with him on every single thing? Can't we find
some space, particularly now that we're heading into an election cycle that looks increasingly
difficult for us. So it's going to be very interesting to see how things unfold in the next
week or so. They already have such a narrow majority, and this I think was underappreciated
heading into this year, that it was a tough cycle, and it's very bitter for all of us to have
to absorb that we're dealing with this guy at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue again, and that, of course,
we felt just short in the House of Representatives. But the reality is that when Donald Trump came
in the office in 2017, he just lost the popular vote, but he walked into a Congress with a majority
of 241 House Republicans and only 194 Democrats. This time around, Donald Trump wins the popular vote.
and unfortunately does better directionally in every single state in the union.
And yet he doesn't walk into Congress with a big majority.
He walks into Congress with the narrowest majority that any party has had since the Great Depression, 220 House Republicans, 215 Democrats.
And so things are very fragile for them.
And that is also why we're starting to see the crime.
tracks really emerge because just a handful of Republicans who express dissent can collapse the
whole situation.
Last question for you, Leader Jeffries, you brought up, you talked about how corruption is part of
the message.
You brought up Trump's pardon of the narco, the drug trafficker.
I want to talk to you a little bit about the Trump's pardon of your Democratic colleague,
Congressman Quayar, who serves in one of the most endangered districts in the country.
you told CNN you thought that was probably the right outcome. Is that really the right outcome here?
Or should it would have been better to go through the actual court process?
Yeah. Here's what I thought. You know, what Donald Trump has done in other instances is actually
pardon people after the fact who've already been convicted by a jury of his or her peers in a court
of law. That's completely and totally unacceptable. Now, I don't know why Donald Trump actually
decided to go down this road. But it is my view.
that the charges that have been brought against Quayar, and he's innocent until proven guilty,
and whether you're a member of Congress or an everyday American taxpayer, hardworking American taxpayer,
you're entitled to that presumption that the charges that had been filed, to me, read as very thin.
Now, there may be members of the Department of Justice who brought this case, who take a different perspective,
and that's certainly fair for them to take that perspective.
But what we've also seen is that these type of cases
have repeatedly been thrown out by the Supreme Court.
Now, this has happened over and over and over again
by people on the Supreme Court
who don't otherwise agree with each other,
literally 8-0-9-0 decisions.
everyone from Cantanji Brown Jackson to Elena Kagan to Sonia Sotomayor joining with
John Roberts and Justice Kavanaugh and others, repeatedly throwing out these very cases.
And so that's the perspective that I articulated, and it wasn't just based on the specific facts
connected to that case that was brought, but the pattern that has repeatedly appeared over and
and over and over again, ultimately resulting in public servants being exonerated by the Supreme
Court, whether they were Democrats or Republicans. But I mean, so I'd say a couple of things here.
One is, yeah, everyone you're exactly right is presumed innocent to proven guilty. There will never
be an opportunity to prove someone guilty here. But it's also in many of these cases,
and as you say, he's presumed innocent right now. But many of these cases, it's not that the conduct was
actually not corrupt.
I'm not talking about this specific case involving representative of Quayar, but in the cases
that have been thrown out by the Supreme Court and other courts, it's that the Supreme
Court has just raised the threshold of what an actual crime of bribery is is so high that
it's hard to meet.
And so under this current threshold, you're getting, there's a lot of corruption that's
happening that is not criminal.
Having said that, I think the question here is, you know, I'm not a legal scholar.
I can't argue that case, so I won't.
But from the political perspective here, like, corruption is one of your, the three pillars, as it absolutely should be.
I 100% agree that this is the most corrupt administration in history, more corrupt than Nixon.
And there's nothing that better embodies that corruption than Trump's pardon process, where he's just doling out pardons to crypto people who have given his family money, to people doing business deals with the son, to this, you know, these drug traffickers.
do you think it makes it harder for Democrats to run against those pardons or criticize those
pardons when the one pardon we're okay with is the one that happens to be for someone on our
side? Well, there actually, I think, have probably been a few other pardons that he's issued in the
criminal justice area related to people, African Americans largely. And a lot of this
happened during the first Trump administration. And I, of course, worked with some parts of the
administration to enact the First Step Act, the largest, most successful criminal justice reform
legislation, to merge through Congress in a century. And it, in fact, has resulted in tens of
thousands of people being released from incarceration because of the failed war on drugs that
we've finally begun to turn around in some way, shape, or form. We still got a lot of work
to do to deal with mass incarceration, and particularly its impact on black and brown communities.
So I take your point, you know, more broadly on the corruption issue, I think that our view
on corruption is that we've got to clean up the mess in every single institution.
So that means the Congress, that means the courts, and that certainly means the administration.
Now, in that vein, I think the one piece of legislation that we've united behind as House
Democrats and Senate Democrats is that we have to prohibit congressional stock.
trading. And that you're right. If we're going to go after corruption, we should go after it
wherever we find it, which is why out of the gate, our view is we need to ban congressional
stock trading. It should not happen. There's no justification for it. It also shouldn't
happen in terms of judges or justices who get to decide cases before them where they may
actually have a financial interest connected to stock that they own. And it also should never
happened with the administration, Donald Trump, J.D. Vance, President, Vice President,
cabinet secretaries, it's insane that Donald Trump has actually most recently purchased
hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not millions of dollars, and Warner Brothers stock,
at the same time his administration is deciding on a potential merger that would be a financial
boon to the company and therefore any stockholders. But on this issue, the corruption issue,
we've intentionally decided to start by addressing the mess that exists in our own house.
And that's why we've led to your point to make sure that we maintain the high ground on banning congressional stock trading.
And will you guys sign the discharge position that a Republican representative has put forward to try to bring this to a vote?
Yeah. So I am scheduled to talk with a few of the leaders on that issue over the weekend.
And that includes, you know, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of course, Pramila Jayapole, Joe Morelli, Seth Magizena, whose legislation is connected to the bill that may be discharged to figure out what path we want to take and whether Republicans are serious.
Part of the challenge that we have here is Mike Johnson immediately said, we're not bringing that bill to the floor, the House of Representatives.
And so we haven't had the opportunity to even talk to our Republican colleagues about,
okay, what's the strategy?
We can try to discharge this bill.
But then are they going to stick with us when Mike Johnson erects these other procedural obstacles
that he could erect to try to prevent the bill from getting an up and down vote?
So we just want to make sure that we've got reliable, at least I want to make sure we've got
reliable partners on the other side of the aisle so we can see this through.
and make a clear promise to the American people that we're going to deliver it.
Now, I can guarantee you when House Democrats take back control of the majority,
if this issue is not resolved, we are going to resolve it
and make sure that we ban congressional stock trading
and then move on to the other aspects of corruption
that exist in the other branches of government.
But we're going to start by making sure we address the challenges that we have in our own house.
Leader Jeffries, thank you so much for joining us, and we'll talk to you again soon.
Thanks much, man.
That's our show for today.
Thanks to Hakeem Jeffries for coming on.
Alex Wagner, we'll be back in the feet on Sunday
with a discussion with the Atlantic's Michael Scherer
about the rise of RFK Jr.
Check it out.
Bye, everyone.
Bye, everyone.
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