Pod Save America - Will Elon Find the Epstein Files Before It's Too Late?
Episode Date: February 28, 2025The Trump administration promised to release the Epstein Files, but ended up disappointing MAGA die-hards instead. Can Elon do what the DOJ couldn't? In more important news, Trump and Musk continue sh...redding the government, with the NIH and FDA among the latest targets. House Republicans pass their "big, beautiful bill" and swear they won't touch Medicaid to pay for their tax cuts—but the math doesn't add up. Jeff Bezos makes a drastic change to The Washington Post's Opinion section. Meanwhile, Trump posts a deranged, AI-generated video of his vision for Gaza's future and announces a new oligarch-friendly immigration policy. Jon and Dan discuss the latest cuts and chaos, and how Democrats can use their limited leverage with a government shutdown approaching. Then, Jen Psaki joins the hosts to talk about the White House's press and communications strategy in a special preview of our subscriber-only show, Inside 2025.
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Hi Georgia. Hi David. What do you think the world needs more of?
Well, the world always needs more podcasts.
Didn't you used to have a podcast?
Not only did I used to have a podcast, Georgia, it's coming back.
David Tennant does a podcast with, Season 3 is coming at ya.
Okay, and who are your guests?
Who are my guests?
What about Russell T. Davis?
What about Jamila Jamil?
What about Stanley the Tooch Toochie?
So it's really just you hanging out with your mates then?
Yeah. Come join me. David Tennant does a podcast with. Bye. Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
Dan, nice to have you in LA.
In studio.
Oh, love that.
Great.
Well, we're going to have a good time today.
No, we're not because the news is terrible.
I know what we're going to talk about in no. We, we're not. Because the news is terrible. I know what we're gonna talk about in no.
We're gonna talk about Republicans in Congress
moving forward with the Trump economic plan,
which among other things would take away healthcare
and food from kids in order to fund a huge tax cut
for the 1%.
So that's lovely.
Democrats are also gonna have to decide
whether to use the limited leverage they have
in the government shutdown fight
that's rapidly approaching.
We'll get to that.
We're also gonna cover Jeff Bezos' decision to turn the Washington Post editorial page into the Wall Street
Journal. Then we're back with our latest installment of, wait, did that really happen? Where we'll
react to this week's most insane moments. It was a stiff competition, but I think we found the three.
I'm sure everyone remembers the one time we did that segment.
Well, it's back. Okay? It's segment. Yeah, well, it's back, okay?
It's back.
Repetition, it's key.
And stick around later for a sneak preview
of the excellent conversation that Dan and I
just had earlier in the week with our pal, Jen Psaki,
about White House press and communication strategy.
That's on our subscriber only show, Inside 2025.
But you get a sneak preview here, so.
Lucky you.
Yeah.
But first, Donald Trump kicked off the first cabinet meeting of the second term with a special presentation But you get a sneak preview here. But lucky you. Yeah.
But first, Donald Trump kicked off the first cabinet meeting of the second term with a
special presentation from the most powerful member of his administration or any administration,
special government employee Elon Musk, who showed up in his trademark dark MAGA hat and
tech support t-shirt to reassure everyone that Doge isn't a complete clusterfuck.
And we, and I should say, we will also make mistakes.
We won't be perfect, but when we make mistakes, we'll fix it very quickly.
So for example, with USAID, one of the things we accidentally canceled very briefly was Ebola prevention.
I think we all want Ebola prevention.
So we restored the Ebola prevention immediately, and there was no interruption.
So unfortunately for those of us who aren't keen on getting Ebola, what Elon said there
is not true.
Jeremy Kanondike, who led Ebola response at USAID under both Obama and Trump, said the
US government's capacity to respond has, quote, been wrecked right as there's an Ebola outbreak
happening in East Africa as we speak.
That's not all.
Kanondike also says DOJ has crippled the CDC.
Also, the FDA this week just canceled their annual meeting to discuss next year's flu
vaccines with no explanation.
Catherine Wu reports in The Atlantic that the NIH is still violating court orders by refusing
to restart most medical research.
And the person now in charge of the nation's health,
HHS secretary RFK Jr. said during the cabinet meeting
that the measles outbreak in Texas
that has now killed a child is quote, not unusual.
In fact, it is unusual.
Quite unusual.
It's not died of measles in the United States
for quite some time, quite some time.
Is this maha?
Are we maha now?
Is this, have we, have we maha'd?
I don't know how to say it.
It really, I think the question of whether we maha'd
or not depends on how you define the word healthy.
Yeah.
Cause if you define it in its traditional sense,
then no, we are not headed towards healthy.
We're headed in the opposite direction.
And there's so much to say here,
but just on the Ebola thing, just an
example of what an absolute chaotic clusterfuck that Trump administration
is in Uganda, where they are, they have been dealing with this Ebola outbreak.
They were in need of more protective gear because there had been one patient
who had gone to six different facilities and there's six different clinics.
And so they needed gear there to protect the workers there.
We could not access the gear because it was in a WHO
warehouse and because we, you were not allowed to speak
to WHO, this is according to a report in the New York Times.
You're not allowed to speak to WHO within the Trump
administration.
So it just sat there.
Then they tried to buy-
Because we pulled out of the WHO, the World Health
Organization. Yes, pulled out of the World Health
Organization.
And now we're not communicating with them at all,
even though it's the World Health Organization and they could out of the World Health Organization. And now we're not communicating with them at all, even though it's the World Health Organization,
and they could use the only superpower in the world
to help them out.
And they had protective gear that we had paid for.
So then they had to do a contract
to get more protective gear.
So we're not saving money,
we're not doing anything right,
we're just making things worse.
So much of the USAID clusterfuck
has not been about saving money.
Because, and I can't emphasize this enough
because people are like, well, voters don't like foreign aid
and they wanna spend money on other stuff
and some of it was wasteful and blah, blah, blah.
No, there was money that was appropriated already.
We're not getting it back spent on $500 million in food.
That's just like sitting in docs spoiling right now,
like malaria nets that were already purchased.
Like this stuff was already,
the money has already been spent in a lot of these cases.
And it's just now the life-saving food and medicine
just isn't getting to people
because they're all fucking assholes,
incompetent assholes running the country.
It's truly insane.
You have to be both dumb and lacking
in even a single iota of empathy within your body to run the government like this.
So are you saying that they're not showing competence
and caring?
That's what Elon said.
He goes, competence and caring.
That's what we're all about here.
There is no competence and caring.
And like you make the point that, you know,
the conventional wisdom is people don't care about foreign aid.
It's always, it's always top of the list.
When you ask people, where should we save money?
And they always say foreign aid. If you ask them anything else, they don't, they always top of the list. When you ask people, where should we save money in the government, I always say foreign aid.
If you ask them anything else,
they don't, they want to keep the military.
Many people do.
Never touch those security Medicare.
Certainly no country education funding,
whatever else it is.
But I think one, you can and should make the case here
for what is happening.
Cause it's not about whether you should spend
that money or not.
Even you should, you can make a case for why you should spend
it, why it's good for our security,
particularly when it comes to something
like a bullet prevention.
We help prevent pandemics and epidemics in other countries
so they don't come here.
Yes.
It's exactly what we are doing.
And if you don't control them at the root of the cause
of the pandemic, then it spreads everywhere.
Then an epidemic becomes a pandemic
and we are back to right where we were before.
But also it's the NIH stuff is particularly notable.
In every funding fight in history
between Republicans and Democrats,
Republicans are trying to cut funding.
The place where they always lose the public
is on food safety, drug safety,
research in diseases like cancer and Alzheimer's.
And that is what's happening here.
And particularly if you leave the disease research,
we know, I think we talked about this a couple of weeks ago, there have been major breakthroughs in Alzheimer's research.
There's real momentum there.
Just this week there was an announcement
about real progress with a treatment for pancreatic cancer
using mRNA vaccine technology.
There's huge momentum here,
and all that's gonna stop in its tracks
if we back away from this,
which is exactly what Elon and Trump are doing.
So the NIH has helped fund 99% of the drugs
that are approved in the last decade.
Catherine Wu's story in The Atlantic,
everyone should go read it, it will infuriate you.
Basically, they try to freeze a bunch of NIH funding,
and then they go to court, and the court says,
no, you can't freeze it, you gotta restart,
and people at the NIH want to start
approving grants again because everything had been frozen. And then HHS, the political appointees
at HHS from the Health and Human Services, this is before RRKG in your gut there, they said to the
NIH, no, you can't restart the grants. And then the lawyers at HHS and the lawyers at NIH was like, no, we have to, we are in
violation of a court order.
And the political appointees at HHS said, no, you don't do it.
And so there's been this like weeks, weeks long thing now where here and there, some
grants are like getting approved because people are just like sort of just doing their own
thing.
But everyone who works in the building is just like, they are demoralized.
A lot of these grants aren't going anywhere.
In some cases, there are critically ill patients enrolled in drug trials that cannot continue
because of this.
I mean, again, this is just, this isn't saving money.
This isn't making government more efficient.
This is just fucking ruining people's lives and like denying us potential treatments and cures that we've already paid for
Our tax dollars have already paid for. It's fucking nuts, man. It's nuts.
And, you know, sadly, the Doge chaos continues apace across the entire federal government.
I would refer you to this AP headline from Wednesday evening.
VA pauses billions in cuts lauded by Musk as lawmakers and veterans
decry loss of critical care.
Lot of cuts hitting veterans, veterans' health care, veterans with disabilities getting fired
left and right, VA hospitals.
At the cabinet meeting, Trump touched off a fresh panic by saying that EPA Administrator
Lee Zeldin is planning to cut 65% of the agency's workforce,
only to have the White House clarify later in the day
that he meant EPA is going to cut 65% of its spending,
not 65% of its staff, still bad.
Not good if you like clean air and clean water.
Right, yeah.
Then there's the fact that Elon and Doge have cut
about 400 jobs from the federal aviation administration,
only to have Elon tweet on Thursday, quote,
there is a shortage of top-notch air traffic
controllers, if you have retired, but are
open to returning to work, please consider doing so.
Is that where we're recruiting now?
Air traffic controllers?
Just on Twitter.
On Twitter?
Yeah, that's where we are.
I don't know. air traffic controllers just to on Twitter. On Twitter. Yeah, that's where we are.
I don't know. It seems like there's downsides
to the move fast, break things approach
from Elon and the Doge bags and the Silicon Valley types.
Yeah, it seems that way.
Let's stipulate that government can
and should be made more efficient, more cost effective.
That there's possible that there are places where there are too many people
Doing not not the right things like that is absolutely 100% true
But what Elon Musk and Donald Trump are trying to do here is not fix government
They're not trying to reform or not trying to make it more efficient
They're trying to break it to absolutely destroy the idea of a federal government
Whose job it is to help people to to protect people, to keep them secure and safe.
They do not believe in that and they're trying to destroy it.
And what that means is, and they have made a bet here, right?
Because of their actions, we are less safe, less secure,
we're at greater risk of plane crashes, disease epidemics,
pollution in our air and water, foodborne
pathogens, dangerous drugs, all those things are there. The point here is that
Donald Trump is responsible for everything. Everything that happens from
this point forward, he broke government. There will be consequences for that,
right? That could be a plane crash, something as serious and dramatic as a
plane crash. It could be very not unrelated to this measles epidemic that
is taking place in Texas where
we now have a, we've fired a lot of the people in charge of managing those things.
And we have as the HHS secretary, a vaccine skeptic there in a president, frankly, he
was a vaccine skeptic on to some degree.
And that canceled meeting with the FDA was supposed to figure out the flu vaccine for
next year.
Like they don't have a lot of time before they have to start production
of next year's flu vaccine.
So like no one knows why it was canceled.
No one knows when it's gonna be rescheduled.
And they're almost out of time to figure out
next year's flu vaccines.
And we've now had the worst year for flu
that we've had in decades.
There are consequences of these actions.
They have to be held accountable for these actions.
And that is, like I said,
that can be as serious as the things I mentioned.
Also, when you try to run the Social Security Administration
with half the staff,
payments are going to be missed, right?
They keep talking about how they're cracking down on fraud.
You know what's one way to have there be more fraud?
To cut staff at the Social Security Administration
or the IRS or those other places.
And this is, I just cannot obsess enough
is that every single thing,
the Republicans held Joe Biden responsible
for a million things that were nowhere near him, right?
Remember when everyone was supposed to be mad at Joe Biden
because you couldn't find a turkey on Thanksgiving
because of supply chain shortages
that you were gonna go to Target
and there'd be no Christmas presents
or holiday presents for anyone.
And we have to hold Trump to a same standard,
but we actually have a basis in fact for that.
You know, he promised stability, he promised security,
he's doing everything to create the opposite of that
and he has to be held accountable.
This is also a direct result of Elon trying
to run the government like he runs one of his companies.
And you know, everyone's like, oh, well,
he did this at Twitter and then he made Twitter
in some people's opinion, work better or whatever.
But like, if you cut a bunch of staff, fire a bunch of people at a company and it
degrades some services for a while, but eventually it becomes better run, more
efficient, whatever, right?
Like if Twitter, if he took over Twitter, fired a bunch of people and Twitter went
down for a while.
Okay. Like that's not great. Maha. That fired a bunch of people and Twitter went down for a while.
Okay.
Like that's not great.
Maha, that would be Maha.
That would be Maha, right, yes.
If, you know, he's at SpaceX
and they have to delay the launch of a rocket
because they fucked something up
because they didn't have the right people, whatever, right?
With the federal government, they are breaking everything,
firing all these people, gutting all these services,
and like say they make it more efficient
and better run years down the road,
like millions of people's lives are at stake right now.
And that is the difference between running
the fucking federal government and running a business.
And he also doesn't run Tesla and SpaceX
like he runs Twitter.
Right.
Because there are stakes with nothing
like federal government's stakes, but there are,
yes, you may have to delay a launch,
but you could also have an explosion, right?
You can, if there is a problem with Tesla cars
and the self-driving software,
like that obviously is kind of,
but Twitter is the example everyone keeps using,
and it's like, who gives a flying fuck
if Twitter goes down for a minute?
Right.
And you know what? It's at so low stakes.
It's like the sixth most important social media platform
in this country.
Right.
And by the way-
LinkedIn is 10 times more important than Twitter.
And it is worse.
Yeah.
Right now.
It's like spammy ads, bullshit.
Like, come on.
Speaking of Elon and the FAA,
because this is one I'm following closely.
He's also- Why?
I will say, as Dan was flying here yesterday,
I was like sending a story about the near miss.
You were sending a video of a near miss
as I was boarding my plane.
I didn't know you were on the plane, obviously.
But it's somewhat comforting in this time to know
that other people who have not been afraid
of flying their whole lives like you
are now starting to get nervous as well.
Misery loves company.
I can still do the math, but.
Yeah, no, I know.
So he's forcing the FAA now to withdraw a contract they gave
to Verizon to modernize communication
inside the air traffic control system
and to hire Musk's own company, Starlink, to do it instead.
Now, Elon tweeted on Thursday that Verizon's existing system
is on the brink of a catastrophic breakdown,
which is comforting.
He said, we're single digit months away
from a catastrophic breakdown.
It's like, oh, is someone from the fucking FAA
gonna tell us that?
Or do we just have to take the word
of the ketamine-addled fucking billionaire
who's running the government that,
by the way, if we don't put in Starlink,
air traffic control is gonna have a catastrophic meltdown.
It's like, is that what we're left to do
to figure out whether we should fly or not?
Like, is someone at the FAA gonna come
give a press conference, tell us about their fucking
air traffic control communication system or no?
It's just Elon tweeting.
I would just note that my bag is packed
on the couch in your office
and the second we finish recording this, I'm going to leave this studio and go get on the couch in your office. And the second we finished recording this,
I'm going to leave this studio
and go get on an airplane to fly home.
Well, luckily he said, we're a couple months away.
Well, look, right here,
I'm really leaning into the definition of the word brink.
And so, and he said, you know, this now,
he tweeted this in response to this story
about Elon trying to push them to cancel
the Verizon contract so they could do Starlink.
And he said, well, no, no, it's the Verizon things
on the brink of catastrophic breakdown
and I'm providing Starlink units
at no cost to the taxpayer for now.
Then, it's an update for you, just before we record it,
he corrected himself and said,
actually the existing system that's on the verge
of a catastrophic breakdown isn't Verizon's,
it's another company. The new system that's not the verge of a catastrophic breakdown isn't Verizon's. It's an old, it's another company.
The new system that's not yet operational is Verizon,
but now we're canceling that
and giving Starlink the contract instead.
The funny thing is, is I knew this from the beginning.
And even, and I'm not even in charge of Doge.
Cause you just read the words in the article,
it's very clear that Verizon is the new system.
Unfucking believable. And this isn't the only government contract
Starlink could be getting.
The Biden-era broadband equity access and deployment program.
God, terrible fucking name.
Bede.
This is, you know what?
Some of this shit I'm like, this is why.
This is why we're doing.
This is why Doge exists.
Yeah, right.
It passed as part of the infrastructure bill.
Could have just said broadband.
We're doing broadband.
Anyway, they set aside more than 40 billion
to improve broadband in rural areas
by growing the fiber optic network.
Didn't really happen that well.
Again, that's another problem for Democrats to think about
next time if we ever want to be in power again.
But Elon, surprise, surprise,
thinks that it should be satellite internet instead
and that Starlink should run this show.
I am shocked to find that out.
So stipulating Starlink might be great to use.
It might be the right solution
for all of our connectivity challenges
for air traffic control, who knows?
Still feels like a major conflict of interest at best
that we're not having companies bid for these contracts.
We're just gonna have the guy that's running,
that's single-handedly cutting government, firing people,
his companies get the contracts?
It's a coincidence.
It's hard to imagine how that happened.
Feels like Democrats should make some noise about this.
No? What do you think?
Yes.
I think Elon Musk is Donald Trump's political Achilles heel.
Yeah.
We've seen this in polling and in focus groups
that Peter Hammy wrote about in Puck News the other day.
Voters, they don't trust Elon Musk.
I think he's a tool.
That's what one of them said.
Trump voters said he was a tool.
Love that Trump voter.
That Trump voter had a point.
But they don't trust him.
They don't like him running around unilaterally
slashing government.
They don't like the idea of the world's richest man
rooting through government.
They think he is filled with conflicts of interest.
They don't think he's doing a particularly good job
in that Washington Post poll.
Only 34% of people approved of how Elon Musk
was doing his job in government.
And so we should talk about it all the time
in this conflict of interest.
And I think this is really important
because this is something I will flesh out.
I've mentioned this once before,
but I'm gonna, we'll one day flesh this out
into an actual written argument.
But my belief is that the narrative that Democrats
should tell about the Trump administration
is one of chaos and corruption.
And nothing embodies that more than Elon Musk and Doge.
This is incredibly chaotic.
I was gonna say, it's funny because you've talked
about chaos and corruption before this election.
I talked about it in the last Trump election.
You love chaos and corruption.
Well, with Trump, it's not that-
But I was gonna say, you were ahead of your time, really,
because if you thought that was chaos and corruption before,
Elon Musk is-
I had, my problem is Donald Trump
keeps becoming president.
Yeah, that's true.
I mean, we've done this podcast,
or a version of this podcast,
for three consecutive presidential elections,
and Donald Trump's been in all of them,
so chaos and corruption keep coming up. I don't know why.
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The Democrats are sort of figuring this out. I guess Hakeem Jeffries did a press conference today, I think Thursday, where
he mentioned that Elon Musk is making $8 million a day in government contracts.
And the average person on Medicaid makes $65 a day because they're looking to
cut Medicaid in the budget, at least if we're going to get to, at least if you believe the budget instructions. So yeah, I do think that's relevant
that Elon Musk is making $8 million a day in government contracts. And once more. And once
more while he's trying to slash government because he says it's wasteful and inefficient. Yeah, I
think that's something to look into, maybe something to talk about. And believe it or not,
even bigger Doge cuts are coming. Just one example, the Washington Post reports that the, as you said, the Social Security Administration has been told to start
getting ready to cut its staff by half. Of course, cuts like this have already happened at places
like USAID that we mentioned in a court filing. The administration detailed this week that they
have canceled more than 90% of USAID's foreign assistance contracts, or about $16 billion in
foreign aid across the government.
A federal court had ruled the government needed to pay out assistance money that was already
obligated by Wednesday at midnight.
But a few hours before the deadline, the Supreme Court stepped in and said the deadline shouldn't
be enforced, meaning the foreign aid freeze can stand for now.
So this was a, the SCOTUS ruling was pretty temporary and narrow. They basically, you know, there was a midnight deadline
that said the government must pay.
And I think the court was like, okay,
we can skip the midnight deadline
until we have a broader consideration of this case.
And the parties have to respond by tomorrow
with briefs to the Supreme court on this.
Right, so, you know, I would not,
I would not call this a huge win
for the Trump administration.
But I do wonder if we're seeing the limits of what the courts might be willing or able
to do to stop these guys from just destroying whatever they want.
And I think back to the NIH example that we just talked about where, you know, there's
even the lawyers, even the Trump administration lawyers in the agencies that are like,
and I think we should follow the court orders.
And then some other jackoffs are like, nah, fuck it.
I mean, this is the test, right?
This is the ultimate test of the system,
is the idea of the Supreme Court of, as a,
or the judicial branch as a co-equal branch of government
is really just a theoretical concept
that exists only through the acquiescence
of the executive branch.
Yeah.
Because the people who enforce court orders
work for the executive branch. Yeah. people who enforce court orders work for the executive branch.
And so this is the test.
And there's real speculation that John Roberts
is going to try as hard as he can
to avoid testing this proposition in a way
that would have Trump violate with impunity
an order from the court,
as JD Vance has encouraged him to do.
Because once that happens, the idea of
judicial review, the findings in the, the main
Supreme court case that you learned in the first
day of all common law classes, Marbury versus
Madison falls apart.
Yeah.
Cause what, once, once you say do this or else,
and they say no, and there's no war else, the
whole system collapses.
And so this is like a very serious situation.
You can really see John Roberts,
who's tried really hard to ruin the court slowly
to sort of avoid an epic confrontation.
That is going to be Trump's benefit
as these cases proceed through the process.
And I will say, for being totally fair,
and I don't know why we have to be,
but Trump has said he would follow court orders.
Well, that brings up another scenario,
which could also happen here,
which is Trump doesn't openly defy the court,
and then the court issues a ruling,
and then Trump says, I'm not gonna follow this.
They just don't.
Right?
They just don't.
And they don't do it at the Trump level.
Trump doesn't talk about it,
but we had to wait for a peace in the Atlantic, but Catherine Rooted to find out that all of these fuckers at HHS were telling the NIH
to violate court orders. So like how many times across how many agencies could that happen? And
then what remedies does the court have? You know, they can try to hold people in contempt. None of
them have wanted to do that yet. And they haven't even wanted to word their rulings
or decisions in a way that would suggest
that people might face contempt charges, right?
Because I think all these courts are nervous
that if they hold someone in contempt in the administration
and then they don't show up, like, what are they gonna do?
Send the marshals?
Is Cash Patel coming to get him?
Oh, it's really bad.
This is a real precipice of something very different
in American life that we are standing on right now.
Yeah, and part of what I wonder is,
like how to put it back together, you know?
Like if we, like, you know, Democrats win the midterms,
which we have to, but what's to say
that whatever the Democrats do in Congress
or try to stop in Congress,
that Trump's not just gonna plow ahead
or the agencies aren't just gonna plow ahead.
You know what I mean?
Like this is a real, we're in for it.
On his podcast, Ezra Klein once described
American democracy as a series of norms in a trench coat.
Which really is being, the trench coat is open
and there are only norms there.
Yes.
That's rough, that's rough.
All right, as much as it pains me to say this,
let's talk about what the Republicans in Congress are doing
since it could end up affecting people's lives
even more than Doge, believe it or not.
We got two big fights brewing over spending
and they're both important for different reasons.
First, we had the House budget resolution
or as Trump calls it, the big, beautiful bill.
Mike Johnson got this thing passed on Tuesday after both the hardliners on the right and some of the more
vulnerable frontline members both reneged on their pledges to oppose it.
Under the urging of Trump.
Under the urging of Trump.
In fact, there was a couple of holdouts and it looked like it might not pass and they pulled the bill.
And one of them was Victoria Spartz. Did you see the puck story on this? No, no. Apparently Trump called Victoria Spartz and started screaming at her and said,
you'll just be a fake Republican. I'm the president. Remember who I am? Started screaming
and like people were hearing him scream at her. And then she hangs up and Mike Johnson's right
there and he pats her on the back and he goes,
you know what you have to do now.
It's fucking mob, just a mob family.
That's where we are right now.
Yeah, I mean, related to this is there was another story
about how Trump's team has told
the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee,
the NRCC as it's known,
that they're only gonna support candidates
who pledge their loyalty to Trump.
Yes, and so this is gonna matter for,
because the budget resolution is like the first step
in passing the bill, right?
It's just a, it's basically like a shell of a bill,
it's instructions to the committees, whatever,
blah, blah, blah, you don't really need to know,
you just need to know it's the first step in the process.
It's a critical but largely meaningless step. Right, because, you don't really need to know. You just need to know it's the first step in the process. It's a critical, but largely meaningless step.
Right, because if you're a Republican
who is thinking of not voting for the final,
you vote for the budget resolution
because it just moves the whole thing a step forward.
We dealt with the same thing with Manchin and Sinema
and Joe Biden's Build Back Better,
which then became Inflation Reduction Act,
is they were like, yeah, we're gonna vote
for the budget resolution and then we'll- Should we do a little explainer on this sir sure yeah
So just so people understand
What Trump is trying to do here is he and the Republicans want to pass this bill without fear of a Democratic filibuster
So the only way to prevent a filibuster on a piece of legislation because the filibuster still exists for legislation
Thank you, Joe Manchin here's the cinema, but mayuster still exists for legislation. Thank you, Joe Manchin, Cure Cinema.
But actually, right now, maybe, thank you, Joe Manchin.
I would be happier if we had passed a whole bunch of other bills like voting rights and
other things, and the filibuster is still stupid.
But is to use the budget reconciliation process, which is a process that was set up understanding
that you have to pass a budget
and deal with budgetary matters
and you can't do that with a filibuster.
So this is basically like a filibuster free card.
Step one of that is pass the budget resolution.
In many years,
when you're not trying to use budget reconciliation,
Congress never passes a budget.
Cause it doesn't, you don't really need it.
It doesn't remember, particularly if the party
is in control of Congress on the other side
is different than the president,
it's a fake thing. But here it actually matters. All it is is the ticket to ride on the budget
reconciliation process. The budget reconciliation process, you only need 50 votes, but everything
in it must relate to taxes and spending. Right. You have to pass something. So you can't pass
laws that are just like, you know, famously we couldn't raise the minimum wage through budget
reconciliation. Yes, because there's something raise the minimum wage through budget reconciliation.
Yes, because there's something called the Byrd rule
named after Robert Byrd,
which dictates what is allowed
in the budget resolution process.
When there is a question,
the Senate parliamentarian rules on that.
Now, it is worth noting that the presiding officer
of the Senate can ignore the parliamentarian.
And some of us may have made a case that they should have done that back then.
But lo and behold, we don't have voting rights, so.
But at least the parliamentarian's integrity is intact.
So that's the process that has begun.
And now the Republicans, both the House and the Senate, separately, theoretically, have
to write a gigantic tax bill and a giant spending cuts bill that they have to pass before the debt ceiling runs out
sometime in late July or August.
And the important thing to realize here
is that none of their math works
and none of them have agreed on anything really.
Because they have promised,
and a lot of this is in the budget resolution,
a couple trillion dollars worth of spending cuts,
which you can only get if you really tackle Medicare,
Medicaid, social security, veterans healthcare.
They've also promised over $4 trillion in tax cuts.
They wanna make the Trump tax cuts permanent.
They want new tax cuts.
That's a lot.
They wanna raise the debt ceiling by $4 trillion.
None of this adds up.
Either adds up mathematically or legislatively.
Exactly.
And what everyone's focusing on is the House budget resolution
instructs the committees to find $880 billion in savings
from Medicaid.
And yet, all the Republicans, including Donald Trump,
are out there and Mike Johnson saying,
we're not going gonna actually touch Medicaid benefits
that people are gonna get.
It's all waste, fraud and abuse.
So, and the Senate is basically like,
eh, too much Medicaid, we don't wanna touch Medicaid.
But if they don't touch Medicaid,
then they need to find spending cuts other places,
but there's just not a lot of money other places.
What do you think is gonna happen here?
Is there a version of this that works that you can see?
Well, there's gonna be a version to lift the debt limit
before we default on the full freight
that credit the United States.
And look, Trump is able to get this through last time,
fully unpaid for.
Like they did not do cuts to pay for it.
Will he be able to do that again?
He obviously had a much larger house majority,
relatively larger house majority,
it's not a huge house majority.
It's really incredibly complicated.
The Medicaid math, and just so people know,
Medicaid provides healthcare and nursing home care
for like 72 million Americans, including children.
And they've talked about all kinds of things.
You know, one of the things that the Republicans
are batting around is one of the ways in which
a lot of people have access to affordable healthcare
is through a provision in the Affordable Care Act
called Medicaid expansion,
where the government covers 90% of the Medicaid match
for state Medicaid funds.
If they expand healthcare,
they maybe try to cut that back,
which would kick a whole bunch of people off healthcare.
Work requirements would save them $100 billion.
There's also a bunch of Medicaid reforms that we proposed
that I think didn't go through that for like target waste,
fraud and abuse and tax stuff,
they could throw those in there.
Like I could see them getting to a point
where they cut some Medicaid
that didn't necessarily get to people's benefits
and they did some other stuff there
just to say that they did, they got some fraud and abuse
but they didn't cut the benefits here and there.
And then they just add to the deficit,
make the tax cuts permanent,
somehow lie about the accounting.
Well, that's one thing they're definitely gonna do.
And then when the hardliners in the House
and Rand Paul in the Senate start yelling about it,
and then Donald Trump just calls them and threatens them.
The only way this passes is a whole bunch of people
have to vote for a bill
that they said they would never vote for.
Yes.
They either have to vote for a bill that they said they would never vote for. Yes. They either have to vote for a tax cut
that massively increases the deficit.
Which seems like, seems like no matter what they do,
even in their own math, it increases the deficit.
Yes, yes, absolutely.
That's the funny.
But without any sort of significant spending reductions
or changes to programs like Medicaid,
or they have to slash Medicaid in a way
in which they all said they would not do.
Yes.
And Donald Trump, it's worth just noting Donald Trump
in 2016 campaign said he would not touch Medicaid
and then he pushed like hell to pass a bill
to repeal the Affordable Care Act
that drastically slashed Medicaid.
And even if they don't touch Medicaid,
it's important for everyone to realize
nothing in this bill is for you.
Yeah.
Unless you make over $750,000 a year,
in which case you're in the top 1%
and you will get a very substantial tax cut.
It's about a trillion dollars in tax cuts
just for the top 1%.
And everyone else, yeah, maybe you get like a couple
of hundred dollars.
You're probably not gonna get more than you already got.
Exactly, right.
So you've had this tax cuts since 2017.
And they don't even think there's gonna be room in there
for his no tax on tips proposal.
Although maybe someone will find out a way to get in there.
But like, there's nothing else for anyone.
It's not gonna help fix the deficit
or even lower the deficit.
It's gonna add to the deficit, make the deficit worse.
And it's gonna cut a bunch of other shit
that a lot of people depend on.
Just it would be a hard to go into a lab
to craft a policy more unpopular
than cutting healthcare for Americans
to pay for a tax cut for billionaires.
Yep.
And again, the alternative is they don't touch healthcare,
which is gonna be really hard
and I don't believe that they'll be able to,
but they don't and then you go test this one,
a tax cut for billionaires that just adds to the deficit.
Well, we did this, we tested it and it was very unpopular.
It showed up in a shit load of 2018 house mentor meds.
Yeah, and you know what?
We got that one, we did pretty good.
That was a fun election.
That was a fun election we did pretty good. That was a fun election night. That was a fun election. Yeah. Okay.
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the other issue the Congress has to deal with much sooner is government funding
which runs out in about two weeks so usually only two things happen with the
shutdown first it looms and then it's averted.
That's great fucking writing.
That's great.
Reid gave me that line.
Yeah.
That's good, Reid.
Anyway, so the way a shutdown's averted these days
is by passing a continuing resolution known as a CR,
which just keeps the government open
at current spending levels,
with the hope that an actual budget gets passed
somewhere down the line.
Which probably won't happen.
Probably won't happen, which never happens.
We've been funding the government on CRs for like-
CRs and omnibus spending agreements.
Yeah, forever. It's a fucking-
No one's passed the fucking appropriations bill
in a long time. Right.
And you know what?
People in both parties are mad about it.
They all complain about it and then it never changes.
So two problems for Republicans this time around.
One, the house doesn't know if they can pass a CR with just
Republican votes since they have a few loony hardliners who have basically like
made a living saying I'll never vote for CR ever and I don't want to lift the
debt ceiling and I don't want to do any of this shit because they they think
that they want to like eliminate all of government. So they don't know that they
can get all the Republicans. Second, know that they can get all the Republicans.
Second, even if they can get all the Republicans
and it passes the House,
Republicans need 60 votes in the Senate,
because this is not the 51 vote budget resolution,
it's the 60, which means they'd need the votes
of at least seven Democrats.
So the question becomes, what should Democrats do?
Mike Johnson said on CNN this week that a CR,
he wants a CR to include language
that codifies the Doge cuts.
He has also rejected Democratic efforts
to include some guardrails in the CR around Elon and Doge.
What do you think Dems should do?
We've been talking about this in many forums,
personally, you and I, for a few days now.
I- Should just start recording our conversations,
it would be so much easier.
Just turn this whole thing into a reality show.
So they're doing multiple times.
That's right.
It's very, I'm always like,
do we talk about this on the pod or...
Was it a text, was it in person?
I don't know, yeah.
I do not think the Democrats can vote for a bill
that does not do something to stop what Elon Musk and Trump are doing.
What they're doing is dangerous and frankly unconstitutional
and they cannot allow it to happen.
Now there's some ways in which to go,
I think to go about this that would be smart.
Senate Democrats should insist,
should really say and insist that the house goes first.
They should not negotiate.
And I think that like, if Mitch McConnell was still there,
he'd make the house go first because he does not want to
pass a bill that he sends to the house that the house
hadn't rejects.
He needs the house to collapse in a heap of their own
failure, which they often do.
And then what he does is he gets together with Schumer,
passes a bill that has some sort of bipartisan agreement,
sends it to the house, sends all of his members home
and says, pass it or be responsible for shutting down
the government.
So the house goes first. That really simplifies things pass it or be responsible for shutting down the government. So the House goes first, that really simplifies things
because Democrats aren't the ones shutting down
the government.
Either Mike Johnson in the House of Republicans
can keep it open or they can't.
And so leave it on them, that's one.
Two, I think you, in the way in which we talk about this,
it has to be about the specific things that Elon Musk
and Donald Trump have done that have hurt people, right?
Food safety, cancer research, the FAA,
having competent air traffic controllers.
It cannot be about the power of the purse
or congressional progress.
I've already seen some members of Congress
and a political story on this today talking about that.
Cannot be about that is that we have to be protecting
people from cuts that are hurting them.
Like that is absolutely essential.
And look, there is risk in a shutdown, politically.
Like a shutdown is going,
we are not the one shutting down the government.
Republicans are shutting it down
because they cannot pass a bill in the House.
They are too incompetent to do it.
Or if it gets to the Senate, Republicans are,
I mean, the reason they couldn't get democratic votes
is because they are just blatantly destroying government
with like illegally.
Previous shutdowns have always happened,
other than, previous shutdowns have happened
when the government is divided and the part in the house,
usually Republicans in the house refuse to bring up a bill
to keep it open, right?
Or they pass something they know the president won't sign.
Republicans control all the levers of government.
If they can't keep this thing open, that's on them.
And there is political risk in this.
Like shutdowns are bad.
People get hurt in them.
We do not want this to happen.
But also we cannot save the Republicans from themselves here.
Yeah.
Because it's the one point of leverage we have.
And there is political risk in it, right?
There absolutely always is.
But I think the greater political risk
in the long-term for Democrats here
would be to walk away from a fight
when the party absolutely must demonstrate strength,
must find a point of conflict
where we can demonstrate to the American people,
we can grab their attention
and demonstrate to the American people what it is grab their attention and demonstrate to the American people
what it is we stand for and who we're fighting for.
And if we walk away from that,
we're not gonna get another opportunity.
No, I was gonna say, we have said now many times
that Democrats don't have much leverage and much power
in this Trump presidency, at least for these two years.
And that is true, except for moments like this, right? Moments where you need
60 votes in the Senate is like the only leverage we have. And we've just talked about stories where
the courts are issuing rulings that are not being followed, where Elon Musk and his people are going
in, getting access to our private data and personal information. They are firing people
that are firing people that
are providing services that are in some cases life-saving that people depend on
and Democrats are complaining, sending letters. In some cases Republicans are
starting to complain and send letters. Those letters are not being responded to
at all. Donald Trump and Elon Musk are basically saying fuck off as are the
rest of the people they have in the government. There are nominees that were voted into the cabinet
that just lied during their hearings,
said they weren't gonna do this, weren't gonna do that,
and now we're just doing it anyway.
So like, yeah, yeah, if you want our votes in the Senate,
then you need to like start following the fucking law
and being responsible stewards of people's tax dollars
and not cutting the services that they depend on.
It's just, there has been this real disinnocent times
between democratic rhetoric and democratic actions.
We talk about the existential threat of Donald Trump.
We talk about the deeply damaging things
he is doing or could do.
And then we were then, but our response exists
in the frame of normal politics. Yes. And if this is as dangerous as we believe it is and I think Senate
and House Democrats believe it is as they say it is then you have to be
willing to engage in more politically risky maneuvers to try to do something
to stop it. Yeah yeah and I think, I think they need the fight, you know?
Well, we'll be talking more about this
in the next couple of weeks.
One more thing here on the serious topics list.
It's a long list.
On Wednesday, Jeff Bezos sent out a memo
to the staff of the Washington Post,
which of course he owns, saying that from here on out,
the opinion page would quote,
be writing every day in support and defense of two pillars,
personal liberties and free markets.
We'll cover other topics too, of course,
but viewpoints opposing those pillars
will be left to be published by others.
He then informed staff that David Shipley,
the opinion editor, would be leaving the paper
as a result of his decision.
Former Washington Post journalist, Gene Weingarten today also reported
that a piece about Bezos' new policy
by Post media reporter, Eric Wempel was killed.
You wrote a message box about this on Wednesday.
Give us your take.
This is a very sad day for the Washington Post.
The Washington Post is,
while it's been struggling financially in recent years,
is one of the most important media institutions
in the country.
It is famed as a media institution that will cover anyone
and everything without fear or favor.
That will stand up to incredibly powerful forces
in this country.
They took down a president.
They published the Pentagon Papers.
And for- They came up with the slogan,
democracy dies in darkness, which-
That was kind of on the, that was in the,
probably the beginning of the decline.
Feels a long way away, doesn't it?
Yes, but now the, at least the opinion section
of that paper is nothing more than an organ
for the billionaire with multiple interests
in front of the federal government that owns the paper.
Yeah.
And what I think this, so this is a problem for the Post.
It's deeply demoralizing and unfair
to the very good journalists at the Post
who do very good reporting.
They deserve much better than this
because this has caused people to cancel their subscriptions.
It has caused people to not trust the work they are doing.
And I think it also is, and this is the broader point,
it is just another signal about the dangers
of corporate owned media, right?
The 21st century was the period of media consolidation.
Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post, Comcast bought NBC,
the Walt Disney Corporation bought ABC News,
the CNN is owned by Warner Discovery.
And for a long time, even as those were good purchases
because the business journalism was so good
that they were profit engines for these companies and they were good for the brand because they also owned
these valuable news brands that meant a lot.
In recent years, and because of that, these corporations abided by the traditional firewall
between the business and news side.
They did not get involved in interfering.
Over the course of time, the financial value of these journalistic organizations
within these larger conglomerates came down.
They still make money, but they're declining assets.
In fact, in some cases, they're drags on the stock price
because people know that these networks are
in inexorable decline because of changes
in how people consume media.
And now the firewalls are starting to come down
because they believe that Donald Trump
will hold the larger corporation and its interests
hostage over the coverage of the news entity.
And so we see this in the-
With good reason.
Yes, they're not wrong for thinking that, right?
Also remember in the first term,
Donald Trump just called it the Amazon Washington Post
and threatened them all over the place.
And canceled a, or at least tried to,
I can't remember the full details,
but tried to cancel a Pentagon contract with Amazon.
Jeff Bezos has Amazon contracts
and Blue Origin, a space company,
it depends on federal funding.
And all of them worry about regulatory scrutiny
in a vengeful way from the Trump administration.
And many, and what they want-
Which the new FCC chair has been carrying out.
Right, and that's what they, what they wanted,
many of them want to merge with other companies.
They want to buy companies and they know that Trump will,
Trump's FCC or FTC or whoever else is involved in it
will hold them in, so there are some examples here, right?
The Disney corporation has been in the crosshairs
of Republicans for a couple of years now.
They settle a pretty specious lawsuit involving George Stephanopoulos for a $15 million donation
to the Trump Library.
Trump has an even more specious lawsuit against 60 Minutes involving the editing of a Kamala
Harris interview.
The Paramount Corporation, which owns CBS News, has been bought by Skydance, a production company owned by Trump's buddy,
Larry Ellison's son, David,
that is going to need approval from the FCC.
And so what is Sherry Redstone,
the owner of Paramount, wanna do?
She wants to settle that lawsuit, that absurd lawsuit,
in order to stay on Trump's good side.
And so the point here is that media is changing.
The era of corporate media has come to an end
because the firewalls are coming down.
And so you mentioned the Eric Wemple thing, right?
Eric Wemple actually is a, as I understand it,
is a columnist for The Post.
He's on the opinion side.
But the story The Post ran about this
was basically the press release from Jeff Bezos.
It doesn't say, there's a furor inside The Post. basically the press release from Jeff Bezos.
It doesn't say, there's a furor inside the post.
In a different era, the story would be
about the reaction within the post.
We've seen this at the New York Times
and there's been certain situations when-
And probably ironically, the Times or Politico or Puck
or someone else will write the story
about the turmoil inside.
Now the post can't.
And the post did not do it.
And so what do we think is going to happen
when let's say the posts were to stumble on,
the example I used in my message box,
let's say the post were to stumble on a scoop akin
to the access Hollywood tapes
or when the New York Times got Trump's tax returns.
Are they gonna publish that?
Well, you know, they,
Jeff Bezos just paid $40 million to Melania
for a documentary three times more than anyone else
had ever offered for a documentary
that she'll be pocketing 70% of that.
And million dollars to the inauguration?
Yeah, million dollars to the inauguration
to sit there.
So no, I don't think they'd be publishing that.
Obviously, if Jeff Bezos stopped the publishing,
like there'd be mass grossing the issue at the post
and be the end of it.
Like we would all know that, but that's the future.
And my argument, and I think,
and this obviously self-serving for a whole host of reasons,
but it's also why we do these jobs
and why we're in this business,
I suppose something else is the future of media
is not corporate, it's independent.
It means it's gonna like entities will be smaller, right?
Cause the economics have changed
and they're gonna be more transparent about their biases.
Some of it will be purely traditional objective journalism,
some of it will be what we're doing here
at Crooked Media Pod, say America,
or what I'm writing on the message box,
but that is the future.
And like, as I said to people,
if you want a better media ecosystem,
you gotta build it yourself.
You have to support these entities. And look, I know, and I said to people, is if you want a better media ecosystem, you gotta build it yourself. I mean, you have to support these entities.
And look, I know, and I don't want a media world
where it's all just, you know, takes flying left and right,
and that's all that we have.
Right.
Like, we need to make journalism a viable business,
but you're right that like independent journalism,
which is, you know, there's not enough of it right now.
Like that is the, that's gotta be the future at this point.
Yeah, and the economics are very hard.
Some of it's nonprofit like ProPublica.
Some of it is smaller stuff,
like what our friend Jessica Yellen's doing
in News.Noise.
There's, but there's just, it just, it's a world
and you just, there is this inherent
and irreconcilable tension between a media entity
who views its job as trying to hold the powerful accountable
being owned by a large corporation
with multiple business interests before the powerful.
And this is all true.
And it is a story about corporate media
and where it's headed.
It's also a story just about like,
this is what happens in authoritarian governments.
Yeah.
You know, and like this is hungry shit.
This is like rush rush.
I mean, Peter Baker at the New York times was
talking about the, um, as we were going to talk
about this with Jen in the inside 2025 episode
too, but the idea that the now the Trump White
House is just picking the press pool.
So they get to pick who covers them from the
press and they have like, you know, gateway
pundit and OAN there.
And he was like, you know, I covered, I was the Moscow Bureau Chief for a while
for New York Times, and this is like Russia.
Yeah.
You know, it's not Russia yet,
but it certainly looks like the beginning.
And the idea that now the, now corporate America,
media, corporate media owners, whatever else,
are now basing their business decisions
and basing their other decisions on like what,
on how to make sure they either curry favor with Trump
or don't piss off Trump is,
it's getting to a pretty scary place.
Okay, we're gonna take a quick break,
but two quick announcements before we do.
Trump's given his first joint address to Congress
this coming Tuesday, March 4th.
Come hang with us.
We're gonna be there, the whole gang,
Tommy, Lovett, Dan and I are gonna live stream a preview of the speech on Tuesday
at 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific
on the Pod Save America YouTube.
We'll break down what to expect
and we're gonna take some questions
from Friends of the Pod subscribers, so check that out.
Then when the speech starts at 9 p.m. Eastern,
6 p.m. Pacific, head over to the Friends of the Pod Discord
for a subscriber-only live chat
where you can sort of process everything
and feel just a little bit less alone.
And then of course, we'll have an episode out the next day
about the speech.
Also, stay tuned at the end of this episode
for a preview of our exclusive subscriber series
Inside 2025.
As I mentioned earlier, Dan and I talked to Jen Psaki.
We break down how modern presidents have used the press
to their advantage, what it takes to control the narrative
and how Democrats are doing in the early days of Trump 2.0.
To get access to shows like Inside 2025 and to ask us questions on the State of the Union livestream and get access to our Discord and all our other great subscriber-only shows,
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All right, we have a new Friday show semi tradition around here.
We're gonna make it a fucking tradition.
You're gonna like it.
All right.
We're a new tradition around here.
It's our segment.
Wait, did that really happen?
We're gonna listen to the three craziest moments from this week.
And look, if we missed a crazy moment, and these aren't the three craziest, please let
us know because there's a lot of crazy moments this week.
These are just three that really stuck out to us.
Really just great engagement tool.
Yeah, you know what?
Tweet at us.
So we're gonna listen to the three crazy moments,
then we're gonna try to put the shattered pieces
of our brains back together.
All right, first up.
This is an AI generated video about Gaza
that the president of the United States,
Donald Trump, posted to his social accounts on Tuesday nights. Okay, for those of you who are not watching on YouTube, you're going to, this is a good
opportunity to just go to our YouTube channel and start watching here
because you gotta see the video.
And while you're there, like and subscribe.
Like, of course, yeah, of course.
We can tell about the content.
But the video, I mean, the audio,
the audio is pretty fucking nuts,
but it does not do the whole thing justice.
You gotta see the video,
which involves Elon Musk many times dancing.
AI generated Elon Musk.
AI, yeah, AI, there's all AI generated.
Elon Musk and there's like cash showering down on him.
A couple times there's golden statues of Trump in Gaza
and everyone's very excited about the golden statues
of Trump in Gaza.
There's a Trump Gaza casino.
There's a Trump Gaza casino.
There's a shirtless Trump and a shirtless Bibi Netanyahu
on the beach together.
That's the last scene in Gaza.
I mean, it's like you want to laugh.
You want to be like, I can't fucking believe this is real.
And also it's like just horrible and awful
when you think about like what has happened in Gaza,
what is happening in Gaza right now.
And just like the death and destruction and starvation
and everything that's happening.
And then like the president of the fucking United States
puts this video up?
What is going on?
Being Trump shares a lot of memes
that somehow make it to him.
I don't know how they get there.
And sometimes I feel like we're a little
like overly pedantic about it.
We're like, oh, how can the president of the United States
do this? And it's like, you know what? Everyone can, oh, how can the president of the United States do this?
And it's like, you know what?
Everyone can relax a little bit.
The president of the United States
is already a ridiculous human being.
This is low on the list of concerns,
but this is one that is particularly offensive.
Yeah.
And just because it just shows such disregard
for the people in Gaza, the people who have family in Gaza.
Yep. You know, it just, it is, it's so callous and so cool in Gaza, the people who have family in Gaza.
You know, it's just, it is, it's so callous and so cool
to think that that's funny with what is going on there.
It's just, like it just shows the fact
that there is no soul there.
It's like just a bottomless hole.
Yeah, everything is just like, just memes and fun
and whatever else, like who cares?
And he actually, he probably, somewhere in his fucking
deep, addled mind, somewhere in his fucking deep, addled mind,
somewhere in his fucking addled mind,
he probably actually thinks like,
I'm sure it's not gonna look the video,
but like, yeah, I can remake Gaza
as the Riviera of the Middle East,
as he said in a fucking press conference.
And put a casino there.
It's a fucking dark man.
All right, second, we have Trump making an announcement
in the Oval Office about a new immigration policy.
We're going to be selling a gold card.
You have a green card.
This is a gold card.
We're going to be putting a price on that card of about $5 million, and that's going
to give you green card privileges plus it's going to be a route to citizenship.
And wealthy people will be coming into our country by buying this card
They'll be wealthy and they'll be successful and they'll be spending a lot of money and paying a lot of taxes and employing a lot of people
Would a Russian oligarch be eligible for a gold card?
Yeah, possibly. Hey, I know some Russian oligarchs that are very nice people. It's possible
This is it that we want we want to be, we wanna be importing Russian oligarchs now.
Just let's, we're against immigration now,
unless it's rich oligarchs from abroad.
That we're selling American citizenship
for the price of $5 million.
So price, yeah, that's right, that's what we're doing now.
We've come a long way from the principles
of the Statue of Liberty right here.
Yeah, yeah, no, I would say.
It's so ridiculous that it's almost hard to believe.
You're probably too young for this,
is where our age difference comes in,
but do you ever see the HBO sketch comedy show,
Mr. Show, with Bob Barker and David Cross?
This is almost like word for word
what a Mr. Show skit would be,
because they used to really make fun of
really bad infomercials on TV all the time.
This is what it sounds like.
You like green cards, try a gold card.
Also, I'd love to know what the Steve Bannons
and the hardcore MAGA people think of this,
because they don't want any immigration.
Should we just ask Tommy?
They don't want any immigration whatsoever,
because they just don't like immigrants.
Their problem is not necessarily
what kind of immigrants are coming or how they're coming,
whether it's illegal or legal immigration.
They just don't like immigrants.
And now Donald Trump is like,
oh, for 5 million bucks a pop.
First of all, like also, and they're like,
oh, they'll be carefully vetted.
Like this is so ripe for abuse, for sketchy people.
I mean, like, Jesus Christ. You mean for people like Andrew Tate? Right, yeah sketchy people. I mean like, Jesus Christ.
You mean for people like Andrew Tate?
Right, yeah, oh yeah.
The Tate brothers accused of sexual assault.
There's reporting that the Trump administration
had leaned on Romania to let them leave Romania
where they were under house arrest
and they were free today and ended up in Florida.
And then Trump said he didn't know anything about it.
Of course.
Yeah.
But that's what we're getting now.
Real push coming to shove is when Romania
wants them back for their trial.
And what happens then?
Well, even Ron DeSantis was like,
I'm not keeping, no, I didn't ask for this.
We don't want this.
Well, there's nothing you can do about it.
Yeah, yeah.
Just send him to Alabama.
All right, here's the last one. Oh, and by the way, the gold card's not, he can't do about it. Yeah, yeah. Just send him to Alabama. Like, I don't know. All right, here's the last one.
Oh, and by the way, the gold card's not,
he can't do it.
Trump can't, it's gotta be passed by an act of Congress.
You can't just unilaterally do that.
Or can you, John?
Well, where's the, I mean, who, what?
Maybe, who knows?
I don't know.
Yeah, you're right.
Maybe it's five million bucks.
Many of the principals of Schoolhouse Rock,
inoperative now.
Where are we, is like like Assad gonna come here?
Putin?
Maybe.
Is that we're gonna get, we're just gonna get
all the oligarchs and autocrats around the world
just gonna come pay $5 million to come to America?
Live at fucking Mar-a-Lago in Florida?
I just can't believe people would really be into
the selling of American citizenship to the highest bidder.
You know, it's Trump's America.
All right, last one.
And we have saved the best for last.
Yes. Let me tell you.
Here's a photo of three people
standing outside the White House.
Again, for those of you who aren't watching on YouTube,
that's Chaya Reichik, also known as Libs of TikTok.
It's someone named DC Dreno.
He's a real meme guy.
Jack Pobacek, whatever his fucking name is. You know what, don't even try to do that.
Another right-wing influencer, Liz Wheeler, another right-wing MAGA podcaster, they're all right-wing
social media influencers. They're holding up a binder, they're each holding up their own binder,
that says the Epstein files volume one declassified. But alas, there was almost no new info
about the Epstein trial in those binders,
which made the MAGA internet very mad,
especially when the Republican House Judiciary account
tweeted in all caps with the alarm emojis,
breaking Epstein files released
with a link that when you clicked it, led to this.
That's right, Dan.
The House of Usher committee, Rickrolled America.
Rickrolled America.
What the fuck?
Would you like to talk, I don't even know how to get
into this for people who are so confused right now.
I have so many questions.
Yeah.
Do you wanna ask me?
Maybe I can.
Well, let me ask you a question.
Cause I've gone a little deep on that.
Why were the F-scene files classified?
They weren't, that was just a lie.
Okay, thank you.
Now keep in mind,
so these social media influencers were in the White House
with Pam Bondi, the attorney general,
Cash Patel, the FBI director.
I think Trump stopped by to say hi.
Oh, of course, you think Trump's missing that meeting?
Yeah, and because Pam Bondi had promised many times
that the Epstein files would be released, right?
There's this big thing.
So then they get the Epstein files
and it's all stuff that has been released before.
In some cases, years before.
In fact, you can go on Amazon
and buy like an Epstein files thing, which like has whatever evidence
they had that was publicly available.
And it's basically what was in the binders.
Okay. So now everyone's really mad about that.
So they're like, oh, fuck, what are we going to do?
Liz Wheeler, one of the social media people decided
to tell the whole story.
And so she said, the FBI was told to deliver the files
to Bondi. They did, about 200 pages.
Bondi smelled a rat because there was nothing juicy
in the 200 pages, just flight logs and Rolodex
of phone numbers, no smoking gun.
Still, Bondi promised to release the documents,
so she prepared a binder of them.
Then, last night, before the binders were delivered
to all the influencers, a whistleblower contacted
Bondi and revealed that the SDNY, the Southern District of New York, was hiding potentially
thousands of Epstein files, defying Bondi's order to give them all to her.
We're talking recordings, evidence, et cetera, the juicy stuff, names.
These swamp creatures at SDNY deceived Bondi, Cash, and you, America.
Be outraged that the binder is boring, you should be, because the evil Deep State
lied to your face. And so, next thing that happens is that Pam Bondi sends a
sternly worded letter to Cash Patel saying, hey, we have both been lied to and that the deep state FBI
and the deep state goons at the Southern district
of New York, the justice department that is now filled
with Trump people, somewhere is hiding the real Epstein
files and she's demanding that they be delivered to her
tomorrow, Friday, when you're listening to this, today.
Everything is so stupid.
Also, it's funny, it's also about like,
sex trafficking of children, this whole thing.
And I don't know what people are looking for.
They have all, all the MAGA people have gotten themselves
into this space where they think that there's some Epstein
files, I guess, is gonna be like a list of high profile Democrats and democratic leaning celebrities
and media figures who have all helped Jeffrey Epstein traffic children.
I guess this is what they're looking for.
Yeah, that's what they think is there.
They think it's like a Pizzagate thing.
It's exactly, it is part of the Pizzagate-
Which is why the Pizzagate guy was at the White House.
Pizzagate-Cubanon conspiracy narrative that exists.
This is what they think.
And they think these files are there.
But it is, here's what's interesting about it.
Tell me.
Well, I've been thinking about this for a while
because they now have everything.
They've won everything, right?
They got the White House.
They've got this right wing media apparatus.
They've got the FBI.
They've got it all.
They've won all the branches.
But they still have a bunch of dumb conspiracy theories
that aren't true.
They're still gonna fuck things up
as they have been in the last month.
They're not gonna get their way all the time.
And so they are still going to blame,
have people to blame.
Like lest we think, oh, they own everything now
and now who are they gonna blame?
They always find people to blame.
There's always deep state people out there
that still haven't been found in the agencies
and they're still lurking and the purge missed them.
And so there's always some kind,
there's gonna be Democratic governors who are villains
or anywhere there's an elected Democrat,
anywhere there's someone in the media
who is not loyal to Trump,
anywhere there's some bureaucrat
who isn't a loyalist to MAGA,
they'll be blamed to be cast by the Trump administration. who is not loyal to Trump, anywhere there's some bureaucrat who isn't a loyalist to MAGA,
they'll be blamed to be cast by the Trump administration.
Yeah, I mean, that's the entire evil genius
behind the deep state narrative
is it allows Republicans to control everything
and have someone within their own government to blame.
Now, that can work with a segment of people
who are looking for reasons to stick with Donald Trump.
You mean fucking crazy people?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, just Republican-based voters.
Right. Right, if you like Donald Trump. Well, I mean, just Republican-based voters. Right.
Right, if you like Donald Trump.
Well, I'm thinking that I was thinking about the pizza gate.
The pizza gate is off, but just this idea
that Donald Trump is failing
because someone inside the government
is preventing him from succeeding,
which is how a lot of Republicans justified
Trump's colossal failures in his first term.
But that's not gonna work for everyone.
No, it's not.
You're right, I totally agree with that.
I just think it is wild that the attorney general
of the United States sent a letter to the FBI director
saying that there's a deep state hiding files
that are going to expose corruption
from Jeffrey Epstein, who is dead.
Let's just follow the story closely.
Anyway, that's our crazy shit for this week.
That's our show for today,
but you're about to hear a special preview
of our subscription show, Inside 2025.
This is Dan and Jen and I,
we talked about White House communication strategy
and press strategy.
It's a great episode.
Again, sign up for ad-free episodes of Pod Save America
and all our subscriber-only shows,
all kinds of other good stuff at cricket.com slash friends
or through Apple podcasts.
Here's Inside 2025.
I think there is a way to be respectful
and valuing the freedom of the press
without being so old school wrapped up
into the rules they want you to live by
because they're not effective in terms of how you communicate with the public anymore. And that is like,
you got to like if you're running for president now, you're gonna be in the White House, you've
got to throw out some of how some of this is done to state the obvious.
Yeah, I would just one other thing on this, because I can't let it go is part of the problem
for the press here is they have a boy who cried wolf problem. Which if you screen that the
president not having a formal press conference
or not doing enough rope-lying Q&As
isn't a bridgeman of freedom of speech,
then people are gonna take you less seriously
when there is an actual threat to press freedom,
which is what happened to this president.
There's been too much confusion
between the First Amendment and access.
And when you get mad about that,
when you paint access or transparency
as assault on freedom of speech, then you're
setting yourself up for when the actual threat to freedom of speech comes to be taken less seriously.
Yeah. And also the American people, I don't think believe that the only person who can ask a
president a question is somebody who has a seat in the White House briefing room. That's just
because it's not. So the notion that they're the only ones, it just isn't how the world works anymore.
But yes, that was better stated than what I said.
I was getting at the same point.
It's an interesting fight that the Trump people are picking.
And I think part of the reason they're doing it
is just for the sake of having the fight.
Because like Trump himself, it's not like he's not visible
and not out there answering questions
and doesn't like to mix it up with the press.
Like he is in our faces way more than even his first term.
And so he's like willing to answer questions.
If he doesn't like your question, he'll yell at you,
he'll lie, he'll do whatever,
but he's answering those questions.
So it's funny that they are kicking out press,
even though he is very available to the press.
It's weird. But don't you think it's because they think it's, that they are kicking out press even though he is very available to the press.
It's weird.
But don't you think it's because they think it's, and I think it is effective, unfortunately,
in getting some to obey in advance, right?
Yes.
To not do stories so that they don't piss them off, to do extra outreach, to go like
so beyond the pale at the extra mile
and look at all these payouts that have happened from
and more will happen.
I mean, they will sue maybe all of us, I don't know.
And like, sorry, just because I say it doesn't mean it's,
if I don't say it doesn't mean something happens.
Jen works for the network that was the subject
of a truth yesterday.
We were in here.
Well, congratulations to me. But, you know, I think it's, it is, it is that. And it doesn't
mean it's like people, outlets or reporters are going to be like, oh, we're obeying in
advance now. They just do it. You know what I mean? And I think they know that it can
work in some capacity.
Yeah. So before we go, Jen, you started to give advice to future Democratic presidential
candidates, future Democratic comms directors, press secretaries. We have talked over the years
about press strategies, communication strategies, message strategies. It seems like now we need
attention strategies. What are some good attention strategies for future people who are gonna sit where you guys sat,
hopefully Democrats, someday?
Oh my God, that's such a good question.
I mean, I'm gonna steal a little bit of what Dan said,
which is like Democrats sometimes don't take advantage
of the cultural moments.
It doesn't have to just be the Super Bowl.
Sometimes there is an unwillingness or discomfort in showing all sides of yourself.
There's a lot of extremely smart Democrats out there.
A lot of them are elected.
You don't have to always talk like you are defending your PhD thesis at every moment.
You can talk about your love for sports, football, art, cultural things, music, whatever it may
be.
There is a stiffness sometimes is one of the things I would say.
Maybe there's another way of saying it.
Everybody needs to let their hair down a little bit more.
I don't know.
I just use 12 analogies, but I think you know what I mean.
You're right.
The other thing I would say about communicators, which is less about the attention,
but I do think it helps you in this regard,
is one of the things that helped me
in being the bridesmaid many times
for the press secretary job and never the bride until finally,
is that you have to know the policy
and the policy and the substance
of the person you're working for.
What do they believe?
Why do they believe it?
What's the answer to the 18th question?
Sometimes people think of being a press secretary,
and this is where people get confused
about the attention question,
as being able to craft a good tweet,
or X, or whatever the hell we're calling it.
It's not just that.
It's like, you've got to understand
the depth of the housing policy
so you can help your boss figure out how to communicate
and talk about it in a human way.
And sometimes I think that part is undervalued.
Yeah, no, I hear that because I had to become,
I had to become an expert in like 10 different,
like every topic, but like an inch deep, right?
Like I didn't want to go too deep on it.
I'm like, I think of like,
which I still don't know if I could explain now,
but like credit default swaps was like a phrase that came out of my mouth a lot in 2009.
No, me and you both in 2009.
Larry Summers had to teach us about that and I was a great teacher.
Dan?
Okay.
I give a few pieces of advice.
The first is when I was the, I was the communications director on the transition, which meant one
of my jobs was to try to figure out how to set up the White House Communications Office.
And so they handed me a binder on my first day, which had the org charts for every White
House Communications and Press Office from Jimmy Carter until George W. Bush.
And the thing that is so fucking alarming is the Carter and the Bush ones are almost
exactly the same.
Yeah.
Thank you.
And you know what, frankly, it's changed some, but not that much.
Not much.
Not much. Yeah.
And so I would tell every person, if you're about to start your presidential campaign,
your Senate campaign, your Senate office job, whatever it is, take the org chart you have
and light that thing on fucking fire.
Yep.
Because what it is, is that all we're doing is we're building on a view of communications
that uses the traditional legacy media as the primary vehicle for delivering our message.
So we have to get it, if you keep just
tinkering around the edges, you're always gonna
keep doing the same thing.
It's why legacy media brands keep failing
because they keep trying to become digital
by just appending onto the old print infrastructure,
whatever it is.
So that's one, ditch that.
You gotta doge that org chart.
Oh, sometimes we're pro doge.
I need a dozen guys under the age of 22
who didn't go to the prom.
Get big balls to get to a...
Big balls will help you.
There you go.
The second thing is we have to think about communications
as message delivery, right?
It's both, it's all content generation
or message generation in our heads.
Like what's the event we do?
What's the interview we do?
What's the social media posts we do? The real question is the one we should build all of
our infrastructure on is how do you get the piece of information that you want to put out in front
of the people that you need to see it? It used to be that you would just put it out in the press and
they would organically consume it in some way, shape or form. It doesn't work that way anymore.
So you have to have an actual plan to do it. And you have to build up an infrastructure that allows it.
That includes both like very aggressive influencer work,
organic social stuff.
And actually the thing that I've been most passionate about
is empowering your supporters to be your messengers, right?
To actually carry your message.
And the next thing I said at GenSane,
but it's so important is,
and everyone says politics is downstream of culture,
and that is true, but the thing that I think
in terms of communications is, if you are a politician,
find the thing outside of politics
that you are passionate about and can talk about
authentically and go talk about that thing all the time.
Like I still am so struck by the Kamala Harris interview
on Call Her Daddy, and it was all policy.
Like the Trump interview, obviously the Call Her Daddy, and it was all policy. Yeah. Yeah. Like, you know, the Trump interview,
obviously the Call Her Daddy was like 30 minutes
and the Trump rogue interview was three hours,
but the part of the Trump rogue interview that worked for him
was when he was just talking about UFC.
Yeah.
Like a guy who, like a UFC fan, right?
And like for some segment of his audience,
that's, it was Persuadeable Universe, that's a big deal.
If it's sports, go talk about sports all the time.
If it's pop culture, talk about pop culture.
If you go talk about what was on White Lotus or which Bravo shows you like or which music you like, right?
Yeah. And because that is a way to connect with people outside of politics. Obama did this all the time.
Yeah. Right. And he could do all those things. He could talk about sports.
He could talk about movies. But find ways to do that so that you can connect with people on something other than policy.
Because if you have that human connection first, then they're going to be more
willing to listen to what you have to say about the other stuff.
Can I give them two more pieces of advice?
Because we're rooting for these people to bring us back from the brink.
Yeah, we are.
One is this is so obvious in old school, but like, why are you running for
president? Please determine the answer to that question.
The second thing is figure out what you actually think of a range
of policy issues, right? I mean, we go through this thing where you see politicians try to bend
themselves into a pretzel answering questions about any range of issues. And it's like,
start with the place. And this is like to comms people who are advising people who may run for
president. What do you think about what's happening in Israel? What do you actually think, right?
What do you think should happen with healthcare?
And I think sometimes it gets so wrapped up
in like poll tested language and words
that it's confusing and it doesn't feel authentic.
And if you piss some people off, that's okay.
And I think we've gotten a little bit away from that.
Yeah, I think use polling and research
to help you find the most effective way
to talk about what you already believe
and what you care about and what you wanna prioritize.
That should be the direction, not the other way around.
Yep.
One final piece of advice, John, that's very important.
This is so fun.
Is that you and I have been podcasting
for three presidential elections now.
Oh my God.
And I would say the record of people
who've been on our podcast is one and no.
And the record of people who did not go on our podcast
is O and two.
Oh.
Oh.
Just something to think about.
Well, but that is such a good, I will say,
just to go back to the New York Times editorial board thing.
It's like there is still people who are of the age who might run for president who think if you have a Washington Post
Op it I keep picking on them. It's really I don't it's not even Jeff Bezos related like that's written in the print form
You're reaching America. I'm here to tell you you're not and so actually to Dan's point
Don't be so fragile about like what the name of the outlet is. Like who is reaching people and how is it reaching them
and is it reaching the audience you're trying to reach?
That's it.
It doesn't matter what their name is.
It doesn't matter how long they've been around.
It doesn't matter what their masthead is or no masthead.
And that would serve a lot of people well too.
Talk to everyone all the time and just be fucking human.
Just be human.
Talk like a human.
Talk like you're talking to people in your life.
And if you talk to people in your life
like you talk as a politician, then don't run for office.
Yes, it's true. Please stop yourself.
Thanks for listening. If you like what you heard,
we hope you'll subscribe at crooked.com slash friends
or through the Pod Save America feed on Apple Podcasts.
Love it. Tommy and I will be back with a new show
on Tuesday.
Talk to everybody then.
Have a great weekend.
Bye everyone.
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