Pod Save the World - Trump Torches Every Ally

Episode Date: August 6, 2025

Tommy and Ben kick off the show by digging into Trump and Netanyahu’s incompatible visions for the war in Gaza: a comprehensive peace deal vs. more fighting and annexation. They also discuss the con...tinuing humanitarian disaster in the Strip, horrific violence in the West Bank even as Speaker of the House Mike Johnson visits the occupied territory, and Netanyahu’s firing of Israel’s attorney general. Then they cover Trump’s tariff threats against India and his newly rocky relationship with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, how America has screwed over Lesotho and Switzerland on trade, and Russia’s tightening control over citizens’ internet access. Also covered: the legal case against former Colombian President Álvaro Uribe, and President Nayib Bukele’s move to end term limits in El Salvador. Finally, Justin Trudeau and Katy Perry get cozy in Montreal and State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce reinvents what’s possible when it comes to word salad. Then, Ben speaks with Elly Schlein, secretary of Italy's Democratic Party, about what it’s like being in opposition to Giorgia Meloni and how progressives can position themselves against the far-right.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.

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Starting point is 00:01:26 So I'm going full Trump BLS data truther and I'm firing our producers and whoever our YouTube rep is. Uh, we if you don't want those people to have that kind of calamity, you can hit that We're bent it easily by hitting that subscribe. When the chips are down, you're to blame everyone but yourself. That is a lesson of the Trump era. We're close to $150,000. Yeah, we are actually very close. In all serious, just like subscribe to POTS of the World on YouTube.
Starting point is 00:01:52 Subscribe on your podcast if you want because it helps us a lot. And if you're casual, just kind of dipping in, it doesn't cost anything. And also it helps us surface our content in the algorithm over there on YouTube. But also, Ben, this whole BLS conversation about Trump firing, like, his data, his statisticians, it brought me back to our time at the White House and the amount of time we spent freaked out about the Greek debt crisis. How many meetings were you in about that? When it was like, Mr. President, sir, an asteroid is about to hit the planet and explode us in the form of this Greek debt crisis. It was like seen as catastrophic.
Starting point is 00:02:27 Yeah, I always tell people that the thing that would surprise them is that in the first Obama term, I think there are more meetings about the Eurozone slash Greek crisis than any other foreign policy issue. Yeah. People forget that farm policy and economics are not separate, you know, they overlap. Yeah, like, for those not familiar with this, the Greek debt crisis, it was seen as maybe about to take down the European. Yeah, the Eurozone, if not the global economy. And basically the gist of what happened was in the 2000s, like several subsequent Greek government systematically lied about the size of their country's budget deficit and debt. And then when the truth was revealed in 2009, it created this debt crisis. that spread across Europe. It impacted the entire global economy. The Greeks needed like three bailouts and they had put in place all these harsh austerity measures that led to basically a decade-long recession, the rise of all these far-right parties, all this political instability. It was a huge deal, which is why nerds like us, when you see Trump firing like the statistician at BLS makes you worry a little bit. Yeah. If you're not making decisions based on like math and data, you're likely to make mistakes. Yeah, big time. Also, Argentina had a few issues here too.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Yeah, and now I will say that there was another side that was always interesting, like because the Greeks kind of got treated like shit by the Germans and kind of... Yes, Uncle Merkel. The Argentines got scammed by a bunch of American, like hedge funds, right? So there's always like, there was bad math in both directions on these things. Yeah, bad math, bad actors, all the above. Anyway, nice trip down memory in there. On today's show, we are going to talk about the ongoing human
Starting point is 00:04:06 Mediterranean crisis of Gaza, an effort to broker a permanent end to the war. And how it all of a sudden, well, not all of a sudden, but it's quite clear to me now, Ben, that Netanyahu and Trump are on, like, totally different pages on both accounts. And the question, I guess, is whether Trump is going to do anything about it. Whether it matters, yeah. Yeah, whether it matters. We're also going to talk about violent settlers in the West Bank, how they are enabled by right-wing evangelicals in the United States, some major internal Israeli political struggles. Then we're going to talk about Trump's tariff war of words with India and how it's bound up with the Russian invasion of Ukraine, how the trade war is upending the economies and politics of smaller countries like Lusutu
Starting point is 00:04:43 in Switzerland. We'll talk about internet access in Russia, a major court verdict in Colombia that will have massive political implications already has. And why El Salvador is officially now a dictatorship. Yay. I mean, he's been calling himself a dictator for a while. Yeah, he's a Buccaille's happy, I guess. And Ben, you did our interview.
Starting point is 00:05:03 What are folks going to hear this week? So I talked to Ellie Schlein, who is a member of the Chamber of Deputies in Italy, which is also the leader of the Democratic Party, which is the opposition party in Italy, has some things in common with the U.S. Democratic Party beyond a name, which is getting clobbered by a bright-wing, you know, neo-fascist. But Ellie has really revitalized the Democratic Party that was, you know, very much on its back. foot after millennia one. They performed far better than people thought in the last European parliamentary elections. She's going to breathe life into them. She's moved them to the left,
Starting point is 00:05:41 taking progressive positions on things. She's a younger woman leader. So we talk about what's, you know, the state of the battle against the far right, not just Italy, but across Europe. We talk about what Trump's tariffs, how they're impacting things in Italy and in Europe generally, what Maloney's getting out of her bear hug of Trump, which is not much given the tariffs and other things. So if you want a perspective of,
Starting point is 00:06:10 I mean, we hear a lot about what's going wrong on the global center left or progressive left. I think Ellie Schline is a good example of what might go right of someone who's like taking principal positions, finding innovative ways to fight back, has some good ideas,
Starting point is 00:06:23 both in the policy and the political space. So it was a great conversation. I had it. I was in Italy for, this fellowship that Jizend Ardern, front of the pot has, for female politicians. Ellie Schline had been in that last year, so she's kind of part of this network. But yeah, people should check it out. It's really, it's a little hope, right?
Starting point is 00:06:43 It's a little like, hey, there's some good leaders out there. There's some younger leaders out there. There's some women leaders out there that we should get behind. I like to learn about new, young, exciting, progressive leaders globally. And also, it's nice when foreign political parties align their names with ours. Like, it always sucks when you're trying to read about some. The liberal party? Yeah, some liberal party.
Starting point is 00:07:02 It's like right-wing fascists. Like, wait, how did this happen? That doesn't make any sense. Okay, well, definitely stick around for that and also subscribe to Pate of the World on YouTube for more great interviews. All right, Ben, should we start in Gaza again? I feel like this is... It's hard not to. It's going to be where we're at for a while.
Starting point is 00:07:18 So last week, we talked about how the world had finally woken up to this horrific extreme humanitarian crisis in Gaza that resulted from Israel blockading all aid from entering Gaza for several months. and then they took responsibility for aid distribution away from the United Nations and put it into the hands of this organization called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation or GHF. And those catastrophic decisions led to widespread starvation and the death of at least 859 Palestinians who were killed in the vicinity of GHS distribution sites, often by IDF soldiers who just shot at them. So Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Dent Yahoo tried to say there was no starvation in Gaza. He was literally gaslighting us, but even Trump wasn't buying it. So that still, like this week, leaves us with these two urgent, massive problems. Like first, the need to drastically increase the amount of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
Starting point is 00:08:06 And second, the need to figure out a way to end the war, specifically pressure Israel and Hamas to end the war. On that second point, Ben, Trump's special envoy for seemingly everything, Steve Whitkoff, golf buddy, is now articulating a new approach to negotiations with Hamas. Here's a clip of some leaked audio from a recent meeting Wickoff had, with families of Israeli hostages. The president, my president, President Donald Trump, who I can promise you, cares as much about your children with people who are alive and the people who are not alive. He cares as much about your children
Starting point is 00:08:43 as he would about any American child that was in there. So I can tell you emphatically that it is his mission statement that everybody comes home. He now believes that everybody would come home. at once. No piecemeal deals. That doesn't work. And we've tried everything, and that's part of it. You're supposed to try everything. But now we think that we have to shift this negotiation to all or nothing. Everybody comes home. And we think it's going to be successful, and we have a plan around it. So what he's getting away from there is a deal that's like bring back 10 hostages in exchange for a 60-day ceasefire,
Starting point is 00:09:27 instead going to an all or nothing approach. Like get everybody back and the war. But at the same time, our Whitkoff is saying that to hostage families. Netanyahu, according to Israeli media, is giving up on talks and taking the opposite approach, which is preparing to expand the war and fully occupied the Gaza Strip. So these reports came shortly after Hamas and another terrorist organization called Palestinian Islamic Jihad released truly awful videos of two hostages. Both these men are like dangerously emaciated.
Starting point is 00:09:55 They're begging for help. One was said he's being forced to dig his own grave in the video. It's like it's horrifying. For context, Ben, like the IDF already controls 75% of Gaza. The majority of 2.2 million people in Gaza now live in tents in southern Gaza. So this is the IDF moving into either turf they had previously occupied or just not gone into yet because they were concerned about the risk of IDF operations killing some of the remaining hostages. Another just sticking point for context in the previous talks has been Israel's demand that Hamas disarm and give up control of, Gaza fully as part of any deal. That demand was endorsed by all 22 members of the Arab League,
Starting point is 00:10:31 but you can understand why for Hamas that would be a non-starter. So Ben, a lot of wind up there, but it feels like a huge potentially inflection point to me. Like Trump either can pressure Netanyahu to cut a deal and like kind of make good on Steve Wickoff's word there that he actually cares about getting these hostages home or what else is going to stop Netanyahu from just expanding the war permanently occupying the Gaza Strip. and this thing just going on in perpetuity. Yeah, this has been the status quo ante for a long time, which is essentially that Hamas's position in these negotiations
Starting point is 00:11:11 has been that the hostages will be released, but the war has to end completely. And Netanyahu's never been willing to say that the war will actually end. You know, he wants to make a deal, get some hostages out, and then continue to prosecute the war. And when Whitkoff says, like, we're done with this piecemeal approach. Well, no, the piecemeal approach was Nantanyahu's because he didn't want to envision an end to the war in Gaza because the war in Gaza is kind of tied up in his political survival. And it's also tied up in what is a pretty clear ambition on the Israeli right to use this war to displace people out of Gaza, to ethnically cleanse some or all of it, and to take that land.
Starting point is 00:11:49 They say that. What Hamas did in Palestinian Islamic Jihad did in releasing those videos is horrific. it doesn't in any way justify the perpetration of this war, which is what you hear from some other people. I mean, there are, the fact of hostages doesn't require you to starve hundreds of thousands of people. What do you make of the timing of the release? I think Hamas, I don't think we really even understand what Hamas is anymore. You know, I mean, their leadership has been wiped out. I don't know if it has centralized control, you know, I don't know if one person who's negotiating even can reach back in. I mean, because there reality is, and this is one reason of a million that I think that war should end, is that there's not much more Israel can do military. First of all, the military operation is not about rescuing the hostages, and it never has been. And they're proving that. They're now conducting a military operation that's about occupying Gaza. But like, I think with Hamas, they, they, they're a shell of what they, he's not destroyed them. He's not destroyed all
Starting point is 00:12:51 their military capability. But the idea that Hamas is going to pose some huge threat to Israel, they stop bombing Gaza and starving kids is just not true. Well, and just to backstop you on that, I mean, it's not just Ben wrote saying that. It's 600 former Israeli security officials wrote an open letter to Nanyahu, urging him to end the war. It said in part, including every former head of the IDF and the shin bat, that's the internal security. Three former Mossad heads, five former heads of the shin bat, three former military chiefs of staff. And some of the quotes from the letter were that Hamas, quote, no longer poses a strategic threat to Israel. real and that the IDF, quote, has long accomplished the two objectives that could be achieved by force,
Starting point is 00:13:31 dismantling Hamas's military formations and governance. The letter also argues that the only way to get the hostages home is through negotiations. Yeah, I mean, which is so self-evidently obvious to anybody looking at this. There's just, Netanyahu is completely out of any justification or rationalization for what he's doing, other than if the rationalization is, we want this land and we want. want these people out and we're going to do whatever. You know, like, that's, sometimes you have to look at what their actions are. And actually listen to what they say, because some of them will say this out loud. They are now focused on reoccupying Gaza, displacing people, probably annexing and
Starting point is 00:14:13 settling some land and continuing the project of so-called greater Israel, right? West Bank, Gaza, who knows, maybe parts of southern Lebanon, southern Syria, being a part of Israel, right? So that's what's happening. And so with the disconnect and the Trump policy and the Whitkoff, you know, is that Trump, he, everything is short term. It's like, let's get to a hostage release or let's get to a ceasefire. But there's a structural problem of what B.B. and he's really right is doing that he's just not, you know, reconciling himself to. And Whitgolf, let's just, you know, we actually had some nice things to say about him early on when he got that first ceasefire.
Starting point is 00:14:52 and what is this guy's result cheat? You know, like Gaza, Ukraine, like Iran, remember that? He was going to do the Iran deal? Like, where is this deal making Steve Whitkoff, you know, other than his son making, you know, billions of dollars in crypto investments with the Trump kids? What is, what is Whitkoff really delivering here?
Starting point is 00:15:14 Not a lot. A beautiful painting, I guess. That's right. Putin did a nice painting. Yeah, that's right. The other sort of, there's one of their note is there's apparently, reportedly a big break between Netanyahu and the current IDF chief of staff, who Netanyahu hand-selected about the idea of expanding the war because the IDF is so strained after, you know,
Starting point is 00:15:32 conflicts not just with in Gaza, but also with Iran. Yeah, reserve is stoned going to get called up. And meanwhile, so now he's saying he's against his own IDF person. He's firing as attorney general, you know, I mean, it's a mess. But also, so like on this eight piece, I mean, there was a report just before we started recording in Axios that Whitkoff and Trump, discuss plans for the United States to, quote, take over the humanitarian relief effort in Gaza. Other Gulf countries would contribute funds like Jordan and Egypt would be involved somehow. But this quote from somebody to Axios said, the starvation problem in Gaza is getting worse.
Starting point is 00:16:06 Donald Trump does not like that. He does not want babies to starve. He wants mothers to be able to nurse their children. He's becoming fixated on that. The official continued. I don't believe that. It's such a bunch of bullshit, you know, like, because if he really cared, like, you just call it BB and say, like, and cutting you off. you know, like, or like he went out and cursed at him on Iran.
Starting point is 00:16:26 Like you just, like, you keep hearing how much he cares about this and he's not doing anything. And because the problem is not the, this is what drives me nuts. The problem is not a lack of food or money, you know. Like there is plenty of food in that part of the world. Much of it is sitting in trucks. Like, it's just weather can get in. We don't need. Sure, the Gulf countries can write checks.
Starting point is 00:16:48 Like, they will. Like, it doesn't matter how much food you have if it's not allowed to get to people. people. Yeah. That's the problem. That's right. I mean, there's sort of two parts of the problem. One is like clearly the Israelis have an on and off switch when it comes to allowing aid in, right? They can blockade them when they want and they can unblock aid the blockade when they feel like when the pressure gets too great on them. But second, I mean, it's quite clear that Israel has to fully abandon this GHF system and go back to the UN system because the transition to this hybrid GHF fake fucking Israeli U.S. carve out backed by a security contractor system has been part of the disaster. And now, like, it for a couple of reasons, like, first of all, it's just like an extension of the IDF and has
Starting point is 00:17:31 way less capacity than the UN did, right? There's just like exponentially fewer distribution points. Also, um, the getting to these four sites in southern Gaza has led to these massacres. And third, at this point, like the famine is so far along that they're distributing the wrong stuff. I was reading about how the, the GHF is still distributing like regular dried food to people, but these are like starved, people starving to death. They need heavily fortified specific types of food. You can't give someone like a bag of lentils, especially when they don't have fuel, shelter, a kitchen, clean water, right? Like, none of severely malnourished kids can't eat the stuff that GHF is distributing. They also need health care. And so, you know, there just has to
Starting point is 00:18:16 be like a fundamental change in how they're doing business. Look, the provocative thing I'll say here, and, you know, this is when people, some people start disagreeing, is, GHF is doing what it was intended to do, which is to starve the Palestinians. I mean, how else, Israel is somehow capable of having a pager operation that minutely targets every member of his blur or pinpointing a general in an apartment building in downtown Tehran, but they can't deliver food into Gaza. You think if Israel really wanted, if the Israeli government really wanted, people in Gaza that have food that that that operation would look anything like this Potemkin,
Starting point is 00:18:56 GHF nightmare. If that's not true, like, prove me wrong. You know, like, if you think that Israel's earnestly been trying to feed the people of Gaza through the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which, like, George Orwell couldn't have invented a better name. It's like the Ministry of Peace in 1984. Like, if that was a sincere effort that after months has just proven to not work, then, yeah, tomorrow they could just say, we're going to let the trucks in, we're going to let the
Starting point is 00:19:23 UN, you're right. Like, you have to return to the system that works in distributing aid. And that's the UN system. Even if the U.S. is, quote, unquote, coming in to take it over, you know, with the golf countries, they're going to need that U.N. system to deliver the aid. Like, we tried building a peer under Biden. We tried GHF. Like, we tried air drops.
Starting point is 00:19:42 Like, let's just go back to driving trucks into Gaza and having hospitals and distribution centers. And, you know, because if not, then it gets awfully hard over time to look like your intent is to not harm these people. Yeah. And also, I mean, Israel made an enormous strategic error in going to this blockade strategy and the GHF strategy because they wanted to, they said they wanted to disempower Hamas, right? They said Hamas was systemically stealing the food and reselling it and it was giving them power and funds. But the impact has been the opposite. I mean, it is like trained the world's attention on what's happening in Gaza. it is led to massive outcry at, you know, the Israeli government's policy. It's led to countries like France and the UK and Canada to start talking about Palestinian recognition.
Starting point is 00:20:29 Like, it's been an enormous backfiring. And so, you know, also the part of this negotiation we just mentioned was this, this demand that Hamas lay down arms, like disarmed, stop being in charge of Gaza. And I like, I can understand that. I understand like how Israelis want that. But they're never going to do that. They're never going to do it. Of course they're not going to do that. They have to get past that.
Starting point is 00:20:48 But this is what drives me crazy about it, is that precisely be like, Israel rightly is like these people are terrorists and they're terrorists that did, you know, don't accept the basic rules of how things should work and, you know, want to massacre people and they're religious extremists too. If that's true and that is true, of course that kind of organization isn't going to. to like voluntarily disarm and surrender. Like precisely because of their ideology, they're never going to do that. And so if you're setting as your conditions for ending the war, something that you know will never happen,
Starting point is 00:21:29 you're setting the conditions for the war to never end. And that is the loop that we're stuck in. And the majority of Israelis back cutting a deal to get the hostages home, even if it means ending the war. And they just have to go down that path. It's been getting out of this war anyway anymore. Like they, I mean, like,
Starting point is 00:21:46 The really telling point, I mean, there have been a few, but one was after Sinwar was killed. Because that would be the inevitable point to say, we took out the whole leadership of this group. We've, you know, dealt it these huge blows. And now, you know, it's not a strategic threat, as literally Israeli security leaders say. But that's when this, you know, the tale about this war being more, being about more than just Hamas is the fact that it never ends. Yeah. Another big issue been has been the West Bank violence. A couple weeks ago, we talked about violence at the West Bank and the murder of a 20-year-old Palestinian-American from Tampa in the West Bank.
Starting point is 00:22:24 I believe there still has not been an arrest in that case, despite one stern tweet from U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee. This week, another American died because of settler violence. Kamis Ayyad, a father of five who had lived in Chicago, died as smoke inhalation after settler set fire to cars and homes in his village. His family believes that tear gas was also fired by the IDF, and that was a contributing factor. Last Monday, an activist and father of three named Aouda Hathleen was shot in the chest by a settler. He helped make the documentary No Other Land, which won an Oscar last year. This story is awful. A settler was driving a bulldozer in this Palestinian community.
Starting point is 00:23:04 It damaged the main water pipe that was used, so this villager asked him to stop. The driver got out, knocked him down. Palestinians started throwing rocks. And it prompted this other settler. You know, Levy, to come out with a gun and begin firing sort of like at random all of the place, which killed Hathleen, who was just standing a ways away. And this settler who fired the shot had been previously sanctioned by the U.S. under the Biden administration for settler violence.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Those sanctions were removed by Trump in January. Thank you, Mr. Trump for that. This guy, the settler was detained. He was charged with negligent homicide, but then release from house arrest on Friday. Since then, the IDF has arrested five of Hathleen's family members who were at the scene at the time. They still have not released his body, even though an autopsy was done. And the women of the village are on a hunger strike until he's returned. So just, again, summarize.
Starting point is 00:23:52 The murderer was released on house arrest and there's been no accountability. So all of this is a bit of context, Ben, just to get at the ways Republicans and evangelical Christians in the U.S. are propping up and supporting these violent settlers. So Mike Huckabee, who we just made fun of, the current ambassador, U.S. Ambassador to Israel, supports the settler movement. By the way, if you want to waste 15 minutes and get yourself really mad,
Starting point is 00:24:18 you should read the Puff Peace profile of Huckabee in the Times. Yeah, what the fuck was that? Like, it was so weird. It was so weird. I was like, what am I? Is this like newsmax? It was a weird thing to read. Yeah, it's like in this moment of this horrific humanitarian crisis,
Starting point is 00:24:32 you're doing this kind of like gauzy. It's like a beet sweetener with Mike Hockabee. Yeah, you're quoting his like 2008 campaign manager talking about what a rock star Mike was when you visited Israel with him. So bad. But anyway, sorry. In addition to that, though, Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House, is in Israel right now. He's visiting an illegal settlement in the West Bank. His trip was organized by a woman named Heather Johnson.
Starting point is 00:24:54 She leads a group called the U.S. Israel Education Association. Johnson is a self-described world-renowned speaker on the Jewish-Christian relationship in modern Israel in biblical prophecy. in English, that means she's a Christian Zionist who believe she's helping facilitate unfolding prophecies. Prophecies like the second coming of Jesus Christ and Jews like you, Ben, being converted. It doesn't am well, yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:18 The Jerusalem Post, Quota Johnson is saying, quote, Judean Samaria are the front lines of the state of Israel and must remain an integral part of it. This was Speaker Johnson, even if the world thinks otherwise we stand with you. So Ben, Speaker Johnson's visit, he's clearly there like kind of reacting to the pledges from France, the UK, Canada that we mentioned earlier to recognize the Palestinian state.
Starting point is 00:25:41 But in practice, he's just propping up like right-wing, crazy, violent extremists. Yeah, the Judean Samara, you know, people should know, that is basically saying there is no West Bank, there is no Palestine, there are no Palestinians. Judean Samara is the term for basically Greater Israel that encompasses the West Bank, to Judean Samara being like these biblical lands of Greater Israel. So that's literally Mike Johnson, you know, endorsing the annexation of the West Bank as part of Israel. Huckabee said there is no Palestinian, by the way. It was a while back. Yeah. I mean, this is a limit. I mean, we always have the debate about genocide. This is erasure. I mean, like, you're saying that these people don't exist.
Starting point is 00:26:23 They happen to live in a place that's not theirs and need to leave. Like so that's at least erasure of Palestinian identity from American. politicians like Mike Johnson. And I think what's important for people to realize probably people who are listening to this podcast or maybe where your algorithm has you on Instagram or X or wherever you are, TikTok, it's a reminder that actually even it feels like there's this mass movement of opinion against what Israel is doing and in favor of, you know, humanitarian assistance and, you know, movement towards Palestinian recognition that actually, Really fucking the actual most powerful people in the world, Donald Trump and Mike Johnson, people like that, are actually fully on board with this project, you know? And we have to remind ourselves of that, right?
Starting point is 00:27:14 Because, you know, of all the images you consumed last week, of all the celebrities, all the statements, the image of Mike Johnson, you know, saying Judean Samara is probably the most important thing that happened. There's the Speaker of the House, right? And also there's some recent polling. It was a conservative group called the Vandenberg Coalition, but they released an August poll about like Trump voters, foreign policy. views that found 83% of respondents said they believe Israel has the right to defend itself and that the U.S. should support Israel's efforts to that end. So like to your point, it does, like, look, it's been a sea change recently. I'm really glad to see people carrying and paying attention. But like Republican voters, especially evangelicals, are hardcore in support of Israel. Yeah. And some of that's
Starting point is 00:27:53 because of like this deep multi-decade commitment in building this kind of evangelical bridge to the Israeli right in the settler movement. And part of that's just like, like, Palestinian lives don't really matter. They're brown people. And part of that's like, whatever Trump's for. You know, there's still these multifaceted. Now, there are cracks, right? And, you know, Marjorie Taylor Green and Tucker Carlson and Joe Rogan and Steve Ben.
Starting point is 00:28:18 And like, so you're starting to see signals. The question is, you know, everybody focuses, it's interesting. Everybody focuses on the Democratic Party in Israel, as, you know, understandably, given that the Democratic Party has generally been home to Jews. and our politicians look like hypocrites. But there might be an interesting, like, you know, fight beginning to brew on parts of the fringes of the Republican coalition. Yeah, and peel away 20%. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:43 And that would make a big difference. Yeah. Well, in Democratic side, in Congress, Representative Rokane has gotten over a dozen House Democrats to back recognizing a Palestinian state. That's a good thing. I did notice, Ben, that when Canada started talking about recognizing a Palestinian state, Trump took to truth social to threaten them. He wrote, wow, Canada has just announced that it is backing statehood for Palestine. That will make it very hard for us to make a trade deal with them. Oh, Canada.
Starting point is 00:29:10 So I guess trade deals are now about Israel? I mean, I read that and I was like, is that America first? No. It's America first. So you, let's get this straight. Like you have to pay more, pay higher prices because we're going to tariff, you know, lumber from Canada because we don't want Canada. recognize Palestine? Like, that's an America first foreign policy. Yeah, and also for about 10 hours yesterday, it seemed like getting FEMA funds was predicated on your support for Israel. So that was odd to.
Starting point is 00:29:42 Opposition to BDS is a requirement to get FEMA assistance, also not very America first. Like, so there is a glaring, I mean, not that there's a tremendous amount of ideological coherence to everything Trump does, but there is a glaring contradiction between his kind of America firstism and, you know, his position on all things related to, you know, supporting the Israeli right wing. And similarly, we'll get to this on, you know, tariffs too, like, and Russian nuke subs. I mean, this is not exactly like a guy that is extracting the United States from international conflict. He's just getting us either deeper and existing ones or creating new ones himself. Yeah, like literal Twitter fights are leading to submarine deployments seemingly.
Starting point is 00:30:25 So that's, yeah, you're right. We'll get there. We'll get there, but yeah, sir, we'll go. I'll save my takes because I've got some sizzling hot ones. I'm excited to hear these. Just two final kind of internal Israeli kind of political matters. First, on Monday, the cabinet voted to fire the Israeli Attorney General. So Netanyahu hates her, the Attorney General, because she opposed his judicial coup in
Starting point is 00:30:46 2023, you know, for those who were not paying attention then, there was, Netanyai was attempt to gut the independence of the Israeli judicial system and take control of it. She also blocked Netanyahu's attempt to fire Ronan Barr, the head of the Shindbet, their FBI equivalent. This all sounds so familiar. I know. Barr had also been investigating Netanyahu's aides for corruption. And then she oversees Bibi's corruption trial. For now, that firing is frozen by the Supreme Court.
Starting point is 00:31:11 But we'll see what happens. But it's a big data point on sort of the Net Yahoo as authoritarian leader, selfish political actor sort of docket. Also, Ben, we've talked a lot about this crazy. truly extremist far right minister named Itamar Ben Gavir, who's the national security minister currently. Earlier this week, Ben Gavir took a visit to the Alaksa mosque compound, which the Jews called the Temple Mount. It's a holy site for Jews and Muslims. And there's a longstanding agreement that Jews can visit, but not pray there. So of course, Ben Gavir's office released a video of him praying there where he said, quote, in his prayers, quote, it's important to convey
Starting point is 00:31:50 from this place that we should immediately conquer Gaza, exercise or sovereignty there in a eliminate every last Hamas member. So Ben, in normal times, like, those actions, those comments from Ben Gavir would be viewed as kind of the most dangerous possible political incitement in the past. Things he's done has been seen as precipitating wars, basically. It seems like in this case, his entire goal is kind of just to blow up any hope of a ceasefire deal. But Jesus Christ, man, like, it's bad. He's messing with, like, the deepest cords.
Starting point is 00:32:22 And once you start, you know, weaponizing the holy sites in that way, you know, when he says every last member of Hamas, he means every Palestinian in Gaza. Because Ben-Givir draws no distinction between an ordinary Palestinian civilian and Hamas. And it's just, again, a reminder of, like, who's actually in the driver's seat, you know. Yeah. It's still these people in the driver's seat. Yeah. This is a man sanctioned by Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, and the UK. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:48 Israeli minister. I mean, you know, he's a terrorist. I mean, he was convicted. You know, if you find that effect, he was convicted by Israel of terrorism-related offenses. Like, this is who's in charge. Yeah, he used to be banned from Israeli political life in part because he used to have a photo one as well of a man named Brooke Goldstein who murdered 29 Palestinians who were praying in a mosque.
Starting point is 00:33:07 So that's the kind of guy we're talking about. Potsay of the world is brought to you by Strawberry.me. The clock is ticking. Sure is. That's what I did there. The days are rolling by, turning it's a week's months here to say, Andy Bruni. We spend nearly a third of our waking hours at work. But the unfortunate truth is that for many of us, that's time languishing away in a job we've outgrown,
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Starting point is 00:34:22 Slash world. Stop settling. Start building the career you actually want. Okay. Let's turn to tariffs, especially, uh, the Twitter tariff war between Trump and India, because I think we're used to like kind of the flailing, you know, tariff by tweet policy, but I was sort of surprised to see India get pulled into the cross here, is given the stakes here. So just to rewind the tape a bit, then, last week Trump announced a 25% tariff on India. He said he's angry about trade barriers and also suggested that he would add some sort of additional penalty because India was buying or selling military equipment with Russia. This 25% tariff is supposed to go into place on August 7.
Starting point is 00:35:04 But since that additional sort of threat, Trump has been popping off on India for buying Russian oil and gas. This is from a truth social post on Monday. Quote, India is not only buying massive amounts of Russian oil, they are then for much of the oil purchased it, selling it on the open market for big profits. They don't care how many people in Ukraine are being killed by the Russian war machine, end quote. Pretty incredible if you just figured that out then. India responded by calling Trump's tariff threats unjustified and unreasonable. the Russians said, quote, attempts to force countries to stop trade relations with them are not legitimate. So, Ben, Trump went on CNBC Tuesday to try to kind of smooth things over.
Starting point is 00:35:43 Let's listen. So India has not been a good trading partner because they do a lot of business with us, but we don't do business with them. So we settled on 25%, but I think I'm going to raise that very substantially over the next 24 hours because they're buying Russian oil. They're fueling the war machine. And if they're going to do that, then I'm not going to be happy. India and China have long been the largest purchasers of Russian oil since the Russian invasion. I guess he's just figuring that out. Trump has also announced that August 8th is the new deadline for Russia and Ukraine to figure out a ceasefire deal.
Starting point is 00:36:17 Putin is trying to, you know, tap them along, as Trump would say, by saying he'd consider a meeting or having Demetri Peskov as spokesmen say he'd consider a meeting. But, I don't know, busy month, I guess. Ben, I thought Trump and Indian Prime Minister and Randra Modi had kind of a romance going. Where do you think this turbulence is coming from? I don't know. It's peculiar to me because clearly Trump is not just decided to, I mean, the one thing we've always said about terrorists that I think if you want to hold on to one truism, it's that they're never going to go away that Trump likes to turn the dial up. He likes to focus on a different country every week. And he decided to focus on India. And then buying Russian oil and gas is not some new thing that just popped up. I mean, he would have been aware of this in January, February. He would have been aware of this on the original Liberation Day. And so he's kind of grabbed on. to this is one of the reasons why he's hammering them with tariffs. There's a number of things that are notable about it. One is, just so people know, like, and the Biden people have said this, like, they kind of gave India pass in part because India, remember, they were price caps set on how
Starting point is 00:37:20 much you could pay for Russian oil and gas. And the Indians were actually, like, paying at that price cap. So it was a lower price point. You know, ideally, you'd want them to not buy any, I guess, but they have hundreds of millions of people that need electricity. And they, they, can buy this oil and gas cheap, you know, and they thought they were doing that as part of a U.S. strategy. And so now they're being punished for having kind of agreed to do that. It's also, like, Modi could not have gone more of it as way to be a buddy of Trump's. Remember the howdy, Modi rally where Modi basically endorsed Trump's re-election in 2020.
Starting point is 00:37:55 I will say there's a whole bunch of constituencies in the United States that falsely thought that Trump was their friend. Some is this kind of pro-Mody Indian American community. that is, lo and behold, finding that Trump is not a reliable friend. You know, Modi's finding that Trump is not a reliable friend. I don't know what he's doing. I mean, I think, you know, there are a lot of trade barriers that India has, and you want to negotiate your way through those,
Starting point is 00:38:19 but you're not going to do that overnight because it's a big complex economy. The one other thing I want to say about this, so it's really worth, like, putting a pin in, is we are now fighting with the Chinese, we are fighting more with the Russians, we're fighting with the Indians, we're kind of trying to humiliate the Europeans, constantly, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:36 Who are, like, where are the friends? Who are buddies? This is a recipe for the rest of the world to literally gang up on us. I would have at least thought you tried to hug India into your team, right? You know, if you want to stand up to the Chinese. Like, fighting all them together seems like a really dumb strategy. And I think Trump was complaining about, like, agricultural import barriers in India, but, like, that is not a place where Modi can give.
Starting point is 00:38:59 Like, so many of his constituents are living on the edge of poverty, because they are farmers. And if all of a sudden, more U.S. agricultural products are flooding into India, that will be devastating for an end. It will be devastating for the economy. I mean, you remember years ago there was this like strike among farmers that basically shut down India. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:17 The most dangerous moment Modi's had as prime minister, you've got hundreds of millions of people who rely on agriculture, many of them are subsistence farmers. And so if you are demanding that the Indians allow all these agricultural products to flow in from the U.S., those people are going to fucking strike again and shut the economy down. So this is what happens when you try to negotiate trade deals in 30 days, 90 days. Like, India is not going to be able to do that. And they must just be so confused. Like, what is this guy mad about?
Starting point is 00:39:44 This is a completely random aside. Something made me think of it. Did you see that the Sean Duffy, the Transportation Secretary and now acting NASA administrator, announced plans to build a nuclear reactor on the moon? No, I know. I somehow missed that. They want to do it. They want to do some sort of like 100 kilowatt.
Starting point is 00:40:04 nuclear reactor on the moon by 2030. It's so funny to have your you're acting, acting, the guy who's no idea what he's doing, road rules guy, acting administrator, announcing massive like budget cuts over at NASA and like they're firing, they're doging all these people, but also they want to build a nuclear reactor. No Medicaid, but we'll put, you know what one of my problems is with the Trump cabinet is that I, A, I kind of missed a decade of pop culture when we're in the White House, but B, I never watched like road rules or, you know, the duck family or whatever. that one was. I didn't watch Suck Dynasty.
Starting point is 00:40:35 Like, and these people are all in the cabinet now. I know, man. Because everybody's Sean Duffy, road rules. I'm like,
Starting point is 00:40:40 well, I didn't watch fucking rule rules. You got to go back. I mean, there's a lot of people from that reality TV ecosystem. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:48 It is weird. All right, that was a random thing. Another trade thing we wanted to highlight. Well, we should be aware if we're gonna have a nuclear you know,
Starting point is 00:40:54 plan on the moon. It seems like a big deal. Yeah. I don't want to put nukes on the moon. Also, I don't know. I don't understand power generation,
Starting point is 00:41:00 but maybe let's try solar. Yeah. Feels like you have good access to sunlight. They'll do anything to not use solar. I know. All right, Ben, so remember in Trump's joint session speech, that's a state of the union. Who could forget? But we call the joint session and what's the first time for reasons I forget.
Starting point is 00:41:14 It's a memorable speech. This is dorky. In that speech, Trump made fun of an African country named Lesotho. He called it a country, quote, nobody has ever heard of. So a few weeks later on Liberation Day, Trump once again decided to kick the shit out of LaSutu by slapping them with a whopping 50% tariff. And everyone is like, why? Why are we doing this? Because this is a tiny landlock country. It's home to like about two million people. Many of them live in poverty. And is the furthest thing from a threat to the U.S. economy or the U.S. manufacturing jobs. So why are we like tariffing
Starting point is 00:41:47 the life out of them? And Trump's goons at the time pointed to the U.S. trade deficit with Lusutu to justify the tariff rate. So the U.S. imported. Which is insane. You should explain why that's buy anything from us. Yeah. So we import like $235 million worth of goods from them, mostly textiles. They imported like $3 million worth of U.S. stuff, which again, is not surprising. They don't have money to buy or stuff. Right. It's an impoverished country. So ultimately Trump ends up, well, fast-warting a bit. He ends up slapping a 15% tariff on Lusitu, which is a lot insane, like 50%, but it is still enough to do enormous damage to their economy. But some of it was already permanently done, right? Because the threat of the 50% tariff, all kinds of other cuts, just like kind of cratered their industries and made companies look other places for textiles. And so the textile industry is the largest industry. It employs over 30,000 people, many of them, women. It's like clients like, you know, Levi's Walmart, et cetera. And so you have these companies in the Lassutu being crushed. And you also have countries more like diplomatic clout taking advantage of the tariffs that Trump's putting a place on
Starting point is 00:42:57 others to poach business. You get scamy lobbyists going to countries like Lesotho and trying to demand millions of dollars to pay for lobbying. And so before the tariffs, I mean, Ben, you want to explain how the African Growth and Opportunity Act, which is about to expire, had kind of helped these smaller countries export things to the U.S.? Yeah, no. I mean, the United States, deliberately through the African Growth and Opportunity Act, Agoa, set up these kind of trade preferences to try to create economic growth by getting rid of barriers for them to sell goods into the United States, for the U.S. therefore, to provide investment. And the idea was, if these are growing economies, it's going to be good for them. You know, it's going to lift people out of poverty.
Starting point is 00:43:40 But ultimately, it's also going to create markets. Like the way that you actually address in the long term, the trade deficit issue in places like Africa is you need places like Kenya and South Africa to become, you know, rich enough. Right. Have a middle class. have a middle class, it's suddenly they're also consumers and then you have a more mature trading relationship. So you have to kind of help them develop to the point when you have a more mature trading relationship and cutting them off. And by the way, what China's answer to that is they were just going to pour money into your country and build stuff and build infrastructure, which they actually like better, you know, than these kind of, you know, negotiate,
Starting point is 00:44:15 because they had to agree to a bunch of other steps in order to be a part of the African Growth and Opportunity Act. They had to kind of make changes and reforms and and kind of set up economies that plug into our capitalism and stuff, right? So it's not like we didn't get anything out of this. Chinese come with no strings attached and they just build infrastructure and like maybe pay some people off and they're making investments. And so I think what's so horrific about this is, first of all, you're right, Lusutu can't compete because, you know, they can't hire the fake lobbyists that get them out of jail.
Starting point is 00:44:49 But they're also not big enough, like as a textile industry, like, you know, Bangladesh will be hurt a lot by terrorists, but there's such a big infrastructure of textiles that it's hard for big companies to just move operations out. You know, it's easy to close up. If you're looking at it, where can we cut costs and not want to pay terrorists, you start with the smaller countries, who are also the countries that are more vulnerable to the USCID cutoff. Yes.
Starting point is 00:45:13 And so we are doubly fucking these countries over in ways that will lead to, like, death and poverty and disease. like, so this is something that is, you know, not a small stain on the Trump administration and the country. This is the bigger point I wanted to get at because, like, we've kind of moved on from the Elon Doge madness and the devastation of USAID, but the impact is so rippling out. On top of that, like the tariff craziness, the letters, they're kind of like one day stories now because it happened so often. But in a country like Lesotho, like it is going to cause irreparable damage. I was listening to the BBC Global News podcast a couple of days ago. They did this story about trying to combat child sex abuse and trafficking in Kenya.
Starting point is 00:46:00 And they were interviewing this woman who had been a sex worker for 40 years. And now she's like dedicated her life to taking in young girls who escape this fucking evil trafficking. And this woman like in addition to taking these girls, she tries to provide HIV AIDS protection to people in the community like mostly condoms. but now all the condoms are drying up and about to be gone, and the people who are employed by USAID to do that work are about to be unemployed. So this whole community is just absolutely devastated because we pulled the rug on them. Yeah. And it has political impacts, too, because, like, the people I've talked to over the years in Lusutu are kind of, you know, there's a king there.
Starting point is 00:46:40 Shocker, he's not the best, most benign leader. And he's an autocrat. There's a lot of corruption. and what happens when you withdraw, you know, when industry dies up like this and revenue dries up and at USAID dries up, like the place becomes more autocratic, right? There's less resources that are more under the control of the bad guys. And then there's more of a black market. There's more criminality. There's more human.
Starting point is 00:47:08 I'm not saying all these things are necessarily definitely going to happen in Lusutu. But I do think across, you know, all these countries that are being hurt in this. this way, the worst actors tend to benefit in a weird way from, you know, this kind of economic collapse or this kind of withdrawal of international support. Yeah. It's a great work, Mr. Trump. Sort of related story. I mean, also in the barrel this week, Ben, is Switzerland, which got completely hosed with a 39 percent tariff rate last Friday, one of the highest in the world, only Laos-Mianmar and Syria are higher, I think that 40 to 41 percent, which is a very weird list, by the way. I don't understand whether we're tariffing Syria at 40%. But anyway, so what happened here with Switzerland? It seems like it was a
Starting point is 00:47:49 lethal mix of Europeans thinking they were negotiating a good faith and Trump's complete and total economic ignorance to back up. So the Swiss have been negotiating for months with the U.S. Trade Rep, Jameson, Greer, Treasury Secretary Scott Besson, I think their goal was to land at like a 10 or 15 percent tariff coupled with a big investment, a $150 billion investment by the Swiss into the U.S. with these fake announcements. Yeah, these fake announcements. Trump thinks it's like a sovereign wealth fund for him. But then on Thursday, the Swiss president, Karin Keller Sutter, had a 20-minute
Starting point is 00:48:21 call with Trump that went terribly. And per usual, Trump got fixated on the U.S. trade deficit with Switzerland. Trump did this phoneer interview with CNBC. He talked about a lot of crazy shit. But this is the part where he started ranting about Switzerland. It's time that they pay up. And they have to pay up. We couldn't afford to have the deficits.
Starting point is 00:48:40 Look, I did something with Switzerland the other day. I spoke to their prime minister. The woman was nice, but she didn't want to listen. And they paid essentially no tariffs. And I said, we have a $41 billion deficit with you, madam. I didn't know her. I said, we have a $41 billion deficit. And you want to pay 1% tariffs.
Starting point is 00:49:02 You wanted 1%. I said, you're not going to pay 1%. So after that very happy call with Trump, which I think this all happened coincidentally on Swiss National Day. The country got hit with a 39% tariff. A Swiss tabloid called this Switzerland's biggest loss since 1515 when the French beats Switzerland in the Battle of Merignano. I forgot about that in a bit.
Starting point is 00:49:24 So, but Ben, to just explain to listeners why we have a trade deficit with Switzerland, it's because of gold. Switzerland refines about a third of the world's gold. They export it in the form of gold bars, most of which goes to New Jersey. Bob Menendez's house. Under the bed. Yes. Right under the bed in the closet.
Starting point is 00:49:40 in the vest. But gold makes up two-thirds of recent Swiss exports to America. It's exempted by tariffs. Their second biggest export is pharmaceuticals, which Trump has been making a lot of noise about, too. Last week, Trump sent letters to 17 pharma companies, two of them Swiss, demanding lower prices. But the administration has yet to set a tariff policy on drugs. So pharmaceuticals are still tariff-free. But after this, just weekend of, you know, what the hell is going on in Switzerland, the Swiss president had to hop on a plane to Washington to try to fix the damage and get a more attractive offer. But like none of this just seems like a good way to run a railroad.
Starting point is 00:50:16 It kind of gets back to your question at the top. Like, who are our allies again? I mean, are you really worried about the Swiss? I mean, when you look out of the world, this is not the country that you should be stressed out about. At Alps. They've got Alps. They've got cheese.
Starting point is 00:50:31 They've got, you know, a lot of money. It's fine. There's small country. Where is this all going? Because it's clearly not going to end in Trump's present. You know, there's endless tariffs. These countries are going to take, the Swiss do have, in case you weren't aware, like a relatively healthy banking sector that is like strategically important to the global economy.
Starting point is 00:50:54 I'm sure Donald Trump probably likes it too. Yeah. I mean, but they could take that and, you know, deal with the Russians or the, you know, we're just creating so many incentives for these countries to literally, Yeah, maybe they'll fly to U.S. and they'll promise to invest $1 trillion in the U.S. economy and it'd be some fake announcement to get the terrace down. But then they're going to fly home and just start really aggressively working to figure out how to be, like, treat us like some, like the drunk that like they don't want to allow into the, into the neighborhood, you know. Well, it also just, they might fly home on an F-35 because in 2021, they agreed to buy 36 F-35s at a price of $7.5 billion. dollars, if not more. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:39 So it seems like they're doing some pretty good investing in all the things Trump wants. Yeah. There's no logic to this. I mean, Lesotho, India and Switzerland, the three countries we've talked about, like have nothing in common. And they're totally different reasons. You know, with India, it's like he's now mad about them buying Russian gas. Lesotho, it's like a trade deficit that makes no sense. Like Switzerland, I don't, you know, like none of this makes sense either mathematically or politically.
Starting point is 00:52:06 No, it's idiotic. But the Battle of Mernignano, French versus Swiss, so you get some storied kind of old school programs, like a Big Ten matchup. Yeah. The Battle of Mergnano was the last major engagement of the War of the League of Cambre, which is part of the broader Italian wars from 1494 to 1559. So I think this is sort of like a bowl game in the old school BCS process. I'm just trying to make sense of any of this and work it in some.
Starting point is 00:52:36 Well, I just, you know, the only good thing came out of is maybe the Swiss were like knocked back on their ass and like didn't get to be the kind of like major Catholic power in that part of Western Europe. But like whatever sent them into neutrality, like neutrality worked out pretty well for the Swiss. Like they kept their head down during those two world wars that happened last century. You got some of that chocolate too. All right. We're going to take a quick break. But as we mentioned last week, Ben, crooked media, votes of America. We're hosting our first ever crooked. Con. Crooked Con is a chance to join America's smartest organizers and least annoying politicians to strategize, debate and commiserate about where we go from here, hopefully up. We will be in Washington, D.C., November 6th and 7th. It's going to be amazing, starting with a Positive America live show at the Warner Theater on Thursday, November 6th. Then on Friday November 7th, we'll be at the Wharf, joined by some of the smartest, most influential names in politics for a full day of conversations, workshops, live pods, interviews.
Starting point is 00:53:33 conversation. We're trying to build a big democracy movement movement here, Ben. I'm going to be there. And we need to talk about it. I'll be a cricket count. You're going to be there. And it's going to be fun. I think it'll be a really good time. I actually think like politics in the online world feels so terrible. Yeah, it's going to be... Human. Yeah. So go to crookedcon.com.
Starting point is 00:53:53 Crookedcon.com for tickups, lineup announcements, much more. And we have a discount code that you can use to buy your November 7th ticket early. It's freedom and content. That's the code crookedcon.com. Freedom and content is the code for getting tickets early. Discount tickets are limited, so act fast. This is an ad by BetterHelp.
Starting point is 00:54:23 Listen, you listening to this show right now. You know how scary and terrible the world can be. It's bad stuff happening everywhere. There's new horrors you learn about every day in the news. Thanks to me and Ben, usually. There's a lot of reasons to need therapy. There's all that stuff I just said. There's your home life.
Starting point is 00:54:38 There's your work life. There's some dark, dark secrets. that you've bottled away, that you've shoved deep down inside, they want to come out. Because as a child, you weren't encouraged to talk about your feelings. Anyway. These days, it feels like there's advice for everything. Coal plunges, gratitude journals, screen detoxes, but how do you know what actually works for you?
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Starting point is 00:55:25 of a button, helping you fit therapy into your busy life, plus switch therapists at any time. As the largest online therapy provider in the world, BetterHelp can provide access to mental health professionals with a diverse variety of expertise. Talk it out with BetterHelp. Our listeners get 10% off their first month at BetterHelp.com slash crooked world. That's BetterHelphelp.com slash crooked world. Okay, well, we've talked about Russia a bit. Let's talk about internal Russians. We've always talked about the war in Ukraine, the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:55:58 But it's been a while since we talked about like the political climate inside Russia. And this story caught our eye. So it's about online freedom in Russia, Ben. A lot of this came from a recent New York Times piece. And then there was a really interesting broader report from Human Rights Watch on internet freedom in Russia generally. So I bet a lot of listeners think like Russia run by a dictator, Vladimir Putin, he probably cracks on on all news and information like they do in China or North Korea. The reality is much more complicated than that. Before the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in
Starting point is 00:56:28 2022, there were censorship rules. There was like data monitoring and storage requirements for a lot of companies. But Russians themselves, they could access Western news sites. They could use social media sites like Facebook and Twitter and YouTube. Some websites were blocked, but internet savvy Russians would use a VPN. Yeah, they just figured it out. Things changed a lot in 2022 by like March of that year. I think Facebook, Instagram and Twitter were all blocked, as were some Western media sites. But YouTube was widely available. Telegram also remained widely available. But then recently, the Russian government has cracked down even further. YouTube has been throttled. Russians are being forced to kind of squeeze into using a domestic competitor. And that's a big
Starting point is 00:57:08 deal because Russian activists like Alexei Navalny used YouTube to gain big followings and disseminate really powerful information about government corruption. I remember you flag some of those videos for me back in the day of like Navalny's guys flying drones over, you know, Palaces. Putin's literally billion dollar Black Sea palace or whatever. Those videos got millions and millions of views. And they're incredibly well done and savvy and like Spragile like Wildfire. More subs than we have. Yeah. Thank you. We got to correct that. And so as of this time last year, I think an estimated It is 79% of Russians over 12 used YouTube monthly. So it was like, you know, spread everywhere.
Starting point is 00:57:43 So killing it would be a big deal. The Times also dug into how the Russian government is now building out like a state-approved set of apps that can be more easily monitored. One is in messaging app. They're calling Max. Starting in September, smartphones sold in Russia will be required to pre-install Max. Ultimately, Putin seems to want Max to be like kind of we chat in China, which combines messaging, social media, payments, government services.
Starting point is 00:58:05 I guess there was a new law mandating that. the Russian government services like be offered via Macs somehow. I'm not sure that works. This sort of seems like a signal that Russia might ban WhatsApp, which has 100 million monthly users in Russia and maybe Telegram, although the Russian government, they like, they kind of like telegram. Telegram be hard for them. Yeah, they spread their shit on Telegram too, so we'll see. But VPN use is still prevalent, but the government is taking steps to crack down on VPNs.
Starting point is 00:58:30 They're banning them. They're telling Apple to stop allowing VPNs in the Apple store in Russia. They're banning VPN ads. You can't learn about new VPNs if you're a Russian citizen. And now a new law is penalizing, not just sharing, but also searching for quote unquote, extremist content like stuff produced by Alexei Navalny's organization. So it was just sort of an interesting window into Putin's brand of authoritarianism. It's not like totalitarian. People can still get information if they want. But the question is like, is it too scary to try?
Starting point is 00:59:04 didn't they maybe not want to really know the truth about the war in Ukraine? And then the online walls are definitely closing in here. Yeah. I mean, it's interesting because it's kind of like if the Chinese have the extreme example, right? In China, essentially, anything that is online, you know, you have to assume is subject to potential surveillance, right? Which creates a self-censorship, right? You know, you don't know what is being watched, but you assume that it can all be watched. Right.
Starting point is 00:59:32 Because it's funneled into these platforms. that the government has entry into. And also there's a heavy degree of censorship. So you can't learn about certain things, but you can learn about the great wisdom of Xi Jinping, et cetera. What's interesting here is that Putin is kind of creating a model that is moving in that direction. Again, you can have the illusion of connectivity, right?
Starting point is 00:59:53 You can go to a website where there's news. You can, you know, do stuff on telegram. But what's happening over time is the surveillance capacity is increasing, the demonstration cases, right, of people being punished for stuff online starts to circulate. That leads to self-censorship where people just aren't going to say things, not just online, but also on even things like Telegram, which is ostensibly encrypted. And because there's less and less platforms, it's easier to monitor those platforms,
Starting point is 01:00:23 bully those platforms, etc. Especially with AI. Yeah, because AI, as we've talked about, like, I used to think, well, it's not like the Chinese government can read everybody's text. Well, the AI can. So like AI can filter through everything. I hate to say this, but it's worth watching what's happening in Russia because it's not inconceivable that you start to see similar approaches here. And I mean, what we've seen is this playbook, right, migrate from Russia to Hungary to the U.S. So I'm not suggesting we're going to wake up tomorrow and it's going to be like that. But the American right pays attention to this playbook that Putin runs. And you might see. start to see some aspects of it to start to pop up here, right? Preferred platform. And you already bit, do, like, there are preferred platforms and their platforms that are bullied. There's monitoring of social media. Like, it's now U.S. government policy that you have to monitor the social media of, like, students who are coming here and things like that. So there's a creeping, you know,
Starting point is 01:01:22 there's a creeping prevalence of some of these tactics here. And so, unfortunately, we may not be, you know, if the Russians are getting close to the Chinese, we may not be there. But I wouldn't be shocked to see some of these practices start to creep in here. Yeah. Also, this is a random aside, but it's kind of funny that Warner Brothers destroyed one of the greatest brand IDs ever and getting rid of HBO and renamed it Max, and that's also
Starting point is 01:01:43 the Russian messaging app. I mean, if you want to watch like good content, it's still the Conan O'Brien Hot Ones rant about the HBO Max name change. What an episode. Full scent from that guy. I salute you. I do too. All right, let's turn into a couple stories at a Latin America.
Starting point is 01:01:59 So, former Colombian president, Alvaro Uribe was found guilty of bribery and procedural fraud. The gist of the case, it goes back a long time, but just the gist of it is a lawyer working for Arribay, tried to bribe a former paramilitary member to retract testimony where he said Arribay founded and financed a paramilitary group in the 1990s. This case, this verdict, is an enormous deal for Colombia. Arribay was president from 2002 to 2010. He's a towering figure in Colombian politics.
Starting point is 01:02:28 The case has been going on for over a decade. It started after Eribe accused a leftist senator of slander after the senator brought witnesses into the Congress to testify about Eribe and his brother forming this right-wing paramilitary group in the 90s. But the broader roots of the conflict go back to the 60s internal battles in Colombia between the Colombian government, Marxist guerrilla groups, right-wing paramilitary groups, drug cartels, others. So, Ben, do you want to just sort of sound off on why this is such a big deal? Yeah, it's a, Riba is the absolute dominant figure in right-wing Colombian politics of the last 25 years, right? And, you know, he was president for eight. You know, during that time, he took a very hard line against the FARC. That was the, you know, originally a left-wing insurgency. They've been fighting a civil war for decades. And he kind of has roots, you know, if Latin American politics often have these left-right conflicts, the Colombian right has these problematic. roots of paramilitaries, death squads. So you had the Colombian military fighting the FARC, but you also had these kind of vigilante paramilitary right-wing groups that guys like Arribae were kind of swimming in the same pool as. Arribay, after 2010, he's succeeded by his
Starting point is 01:03:45 defense minister, Santos, who won a Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating a peaceful end to that conflict. Arribay came out against that peace deal. He went full Bolsonaro, right? He became Trumpy. He was tight with like right wing, you know, Colombians in Florida. And he was, you know, constantly at odds with the increasingly left strain of Colombian politics. So the current Colombian president Petro, he's kind of emblematic of the Colombian left. Reba is emblematic of the Colombian right. Always a whiff of corruption around this guy. Always a whiff of being in federal paramilitaries. So I have not delved into the details of the case. But this is not, it's not a surprise that this would happen in the sense of him potentially being connected.
Starting point is 01:04:26 to do these things. What is clear is that Lula in Brazil with Bolsonaro and Petro and Colombia with Irribe, don't give a fuck, you know. They're going to accountability. They don't give the shit who they're going to piss off. They're not worried about Trump. And this is a big, you know, fuck you to Trump in some ways because I don't think Trump's like buddies with the Rebe, but that's his guy. You know, if he has a guy in Columbia. That's his milieu. It's the Bolsonario of Columbia, right? For sure. So it's also Petro saying, I'm not afraid of like getting randomly tariffed over this, you know, because I think this. guys should be held accountable. Yeah, I mean, on July 28th, Marco Rubio tweeted, quote,
Starting point is 01:05:01 former Colombian president, Uribe's only crime has been to tirelessly fight. I bet Rubio's buddies with the Rubio. And defend his homeland. The weaponization of Columbia's judicial branch by radical judges has now set a worrisome precedent. So once again, they're coming down hard on efforts for accountability. Coincident only when it's left-wing leaders in charge of the countries, right? And I think like this lawyer, like I think they got him on tape trying to get these paramilitary groups are retract. And for people wondering, like, hey, why would you want to start a right-wing paramilitary group?
Starting point is 01:05:31 Well, in 1983, a Reba's father was kidnapped and murdered by the FARC. So that's probably the origin story. Like, there's some depth here to this. And by the way, if you were like, well, I wonder you care about this? Well, the United States poured billions and billions and billions of dollars into the war against the FARC. We set up this school of the Americas in the South that was like training people that also were accused of human rights violations. There's, you know, there's plenty of rabbit holes you can go down on this one. But Arabe, you know, was like, like, Isaac Rubio love Uribe because he's kind of the, they're kind of right-wing guy, like, you know, takes, you know, no quarter with the left and hates the Cubans.
Starting point is 01:06:07 But, I mean, who believes Marco Rubio when he's weighing in on democracy issues? No, nobody. He's a clown. We'll get to that in a minute. He's a shitty archivist, too. Terrible archivist, burning emails. Bad Kennedy Center board. Yeah, well, where the Epstein files, Marco.
Starting point is 01:06:20 We should put a pin in this, but I was reading some interesting reports. about how Colombian mercenaries are popping up in Sudan. Yes. Because they're getting hired by the UAE to fight on behalf of the RSF in the Sudanese Civil War. So it's like these conflicts spill out globally over decades. Yeah, there's all these guys. Look, the FARC became also just narco traffickers, too. It's not like they were good guys on the left on that war.
Starting point is 01:06:46 Yeah, they weren't pushing for Medicare for all. It may have started about Medicare for All. It became that something else. Every good movement ends up in drugs. But these guys, in California. Colombia, like, fought for, like, decades in these, you know, shifting insurgencies, and they pop up everywhere. It's like the South Africans who were fighting all these wars, you know, on behalf of the apartheid regime. It does show you, you create this class of people that they,
Starting point is 01:07:10 that's what they know how to do. Yeah, not good. Let's also just check in on Trump's closest ally and prisoner pen pal in El Salvador and Ibukele, Ben, because last Thursday, legislators in El Salvador or abolished presidential prison terms, which will potentially allow Buckele to become the self-profest world's coolest dictator that he wants to be for life. The National Assembly, where his party, Buckele's party, holds a supermajority, also extended presidential terms from five years to six years. So Buckele was first elected in 2019. He won re-election last year. We've talked about him on the show many times he's for a period was quite popular, the most popular, you know, elected official in the Western Hemisphere because of his effort to combat gangs and gang violence. Those efforts included,
Starting point is 01:07:57 you know, cutting secret deals with gangs to get them to try to reduce or high their violence. And then declaring what he called the state of exception, which allow the government to suspense of liberties, round people up indiscriminately, throw them into prison and never even charge them with a crime. And there's many of them are so rotting there. More recently, Butkele has used that power to crack down a journalist human rights groups, a group called Christosol where a friend of mine named Noah Bullock works and now was forced into exile. And not long ago, Ben, you know, it's worth noting Buckele was beloved by many people in Silicon Valley because he embraced Bitcoin.
Starting point is 01:08:30 Most recently, Buckele cut that disgusting deal with Trump where about 240 men from the U.S., mostly Venezuelans were sent to El Salvador and left to rot in this nightmare torture prison. They've been, you know, there's been a deal cut to get them out. But we recently learned that one of the men sent there by Trump, by Stephen Miller, by Marco Rubio, Brave Freedom Fighter, was this makeup artist named Andrei Hernandez-Ramero. Andri was tortured and sexually assaulted by prison guards. So the U.S. government paid for this to happen. So, Ben, this, like, just fast track into authoritarianism was not just predictable. It was, I think, predicted by many experts by us on the show.
Starting point is 01:09:10 I've not seen a lot of outrage from Rubio. I'm actually seeing the opposite. I'm seeing people like Matt Gates sharing Buckele clips or he's bragging about how he doesn't care if he's called a dictator and calling him a transformational leader. It's kind of like willfully ignoring what the Israeli right says when they announce that they want to ethnically cleanse Gaza. I mean, this guy announces he's a dictator. He announces the human rights abuses that he wants to carry out. He announces that he wants to quash dissent. and then the same people that like if nicholas maduro says those things you know we put like a 25 million dollar reward on his arrest and sanction everybody in the country and this guy we call like a great friend right i mean it just it just points up the absolute absurdity like hypocrisy is like the point now you know it's like we want to show that we have complete double standards and all we actually care about is whether you align with our sometimes sadistic priorities like
Starting point is 01:10:09 deporting people to be tortured in Nye Buckeli's prisons. I mean, the question I have is just like how sustainable the act is there because, you know, the sugar high of like driving down violence is now going to lead into the hangover of corruption, human rights abuses, consolidation of power. We've seen this movie before. I think one constructive thing I'd say for Democrats is that connects some of these stories. There are some really interesting left-wing leaders in the Western Hemisphere right now. And I actually recently had an opportunity to meet like a cross-section people. First of all, one of the things that stood out to me is Claudia Shanebaum was like a hero of everybody I met. She is wildly popular. Like people, we need to talk to this lady. Like people need to
Starting point is 01:10:52 how do we get her on the show? We yeah, we need to like she's doing interesting things. She's like a, you know, Zoran Mamdani. She's got interesting policies and political strategies, right? Like, you know, Lula and Petro are kind of the old lions down there in Colombian Brazil. even though he's kind of nearing the end of his term, I like Gabriel Borich in Chile. Yeah, it too. There's a very cool, multifaceted Latin American left that, you know,
Starting point is 01:11:17 like, that we should, you know, Democrats and progressives should be building deeper connections to. And, by the way, should be sending the message that, like, someday Democrats, I think you're going to be back in power, you know, and, hey, Naibu Keli, we're not going to forget, like,
Starting point is 01:11:33 what the fuck you did. Truly evil things. And torturing people and trolls. you know, people here who care about that. So, you know, we have to have a long memory, too, like the Wright does. Something's something. Amen. Two quick things. Finally, the first one is, it's former Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, dating Katie Perry. I have two friends in my life. I'm on like a three-person text thread with who are completely obsessed with this story. And so I've been able to follow every social media spot,
Starting point is 01:12:08 spotting. And it is a remarkable journey back in time to like the late Obama second term world when like Justin Trudeau and Katie Perry were like ascendant. They both have roots in a very high amount of popularity in a very particular moment. You just said ascended, but she did go to space recently. That's true, but that seems like it was part of the highest descent. That's true. I don't know, what do you think? I mean, there's a question of whether it's real. Yeah. And then what your take is about it? I don't really have a take.
Starting point is 01:12:41 I think they were photographed having dinner, maybe walking a dog. He went to her concert. They had a cocktail, too, I think. I think there's a cocktail as well as a dinner. Yeah, what did he get, when did he break up with his wife? That was a couple years ago. It was like, while he was prime minister, was like, you know, and it was kind of, you know, I don't know what.
Starting point is 01:13:00 Who knows? Yeah. Apparently his dad, Pierre Trudeau dated a bunch of celebrities, including Barbara Streisand. Well, yeah, and I was going to say, I mean, Justin Trudeau was, you know, had a bit of a reputation when he was younger for getting out and about. And yeah, his dad was a famous, did we say womanizer? Matharia? I don't know what does.
Starting point is 01:13:18 Yeah, I don't know. When Pierre Trudeau was prime minister, they called it that, you know. We. But, yeah, I don't know. I wouldn't bet on this one sticking necessarily. Okay. I'm just going to say. The Orlando Bloom relationship probably lasted longer than the Justin Trude.
Starting point is 01:13:33 Right. I feel like that ended pretty recently. I think they announced its formal end. I'm actually up on this Katie Perry news. You'll see when your daughter gets a little older. I know everything about Katie Perry, Sabrina Carpenter, Chapel Ronan, like, Taylor Swift, obviously. I'm just checking it on this, Rachel, these days.
Starting point is 01:13:51 All you're going to listen to in a few years is that collection during Billy Elish, you know. Yeah, yeah. And artist TK. Finally, Ben. So we have some amazing producers on the show, Michael and Saul, and Alona's on Baby League. but she'll be back very soon. They are obsessed with briefings
Starting point is 01:14:10 by the State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce who somehow like made a living as a radio host TV person but just can't talk. We need like a dedicated weekly segment on this. I think we're treading that direction. So this is a super cut they put together. Ben and I have not seen this before.
Starting point is 01:14:30 We're watching this cold. So we're going to kind of just watch and react in real time. We're going to leave the mics open here. and just see what Tammy Bruce had to say. Speaker Johnson was in the West Bank, which you referred to as Judea and Samaria, and said that it rightfully belongs to the Jewish people. Is that official U.S. policy? And if it's not, what is U.S. policy towards the West Bank?
Starting point is 01:14:52 Well, I have said this about other diplomats who've spoken their minds, including Ambassador Huckabee. Certainly, that's not. If there's a policy in that regard, you would hear it from me. But it's not the opinion of the U.S. government? Well, I'm not going to speak about opinion of the government. As a reporter, how do I know if he's just expressing his opinion about the settlement being part of Israel, and when actually this is a policy?
Starting point is 01:15:21 So you want, so we're getting into a little bit of a conspiracy dynamic here. It's not true questions. No. ...to which the State Department would countenance destroying unspoiled food for some. some reason? Well, I, again, don't know of all the circumstances. I can say that there could be a reason of all the things that exist around the world. So, you know, there's, that's our opinion regarding the bill. We also, can I say that, oh, God. Holy shit. I think that's as much as I can say in that regard. I, I, that's as much as I can say in that regard. I, that's as much as I can. say today. You can say more to me. Yeah, stop the fight. So it seems like there were two main things there. It was Mike Huckabee like endorsing settlements. Again, you have a entire team that works for you when you're the State Department spokesperson or the White House Press Secretary who figure out
Starting point is 01:16:21 what stories are in the ether, what you're going to be asked and then prepare responses for you. Seemingly, they just kind of skip that step there. Also, the fact that this administration is destroying unspoiled food that could go, that was supposed to go from USA, ID to, you know, starving kids all around the world and they're just like burning it is such a scandal. I don't know people are talking about. But there's things I don't. Yes, that's the important point, but I'm going to be pettier here on this. Please, the petty section of the show.
Starting point is 01:16:47 First of all, as I understand it, right, she was a Fox News host and she had like a radio show. Yeah. And did she not speak? Did she speak? Because I didn't consume that show, but like, did she speak on the show? Because she seems like someone who has a hard time literally getting words out. But then the other thing I don't understand about some of these people that go in is why did she want to be the State Department spokesperson in the first place? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:17:13 Because she clearly didn't seem like she's having fun up there. No. It doesn't seem like, you know, I mean, she could have just had her radio show where she yelled about these things. Like, you want to have fun and like, you know, if I was a right way. You want to go on the trips and like be in the meetings. And you could have fun as a right wing troll. Like just argue with them. Right.
Starting point is 01:17:31 And not just kind of hemming and hawing and ah and who speaks or what. And by the way, Mike Johnson's not like a diplomat. He's a member of Congress. Like these, and these aren't trick questions. Like what, what's our opinion about the West Bank, you know? You made a good point there, which is that if you're a spokesperson in the Trump era, you should just go in and attack. Like Carolyn Love it. You know, I get where she's coming from.
Starting point is 01:17:52 I don't like it. Like Tammy Bruce is kind of trying to treat it like the old school serious way where she like attempts to answer the question in good faith and do policy. But no one, no one's expecting that from you anymore. I mean, I guess, like, credits her for trying, but she's not very good at it. And how are you not prepared? I mean, you used to prep people. It's all you do. These are questions you know you're going to get.
Starting point is 01:18:13 Like, Mike Johnson, we talked about this on the, you know, Mike Johnson goes there and refers to Jada and Samara. Like, she seems like shocked to be asked these things. What did she think that she's going to get asked? It's baffling. It's baffling. And, like, that's a hard, that's a notoriously hard briefing room. And to your point of why would you want that job? Like, did she watch any of Matt Miller's briefings?
Starting point is 01:18:31 Like, that place is brutal. Is Matt Lee still there? I love that guy. The AP guy? I think so. Yeah, they have a notoriously, curmudgeonly tough and relentless AP reporter who just hammers you.
Starting point is 01:18:46 Yeah, I briefed in front of him a few times and he just like, you know, when you went up against him, it was like trying to like drive on Dennis Rodman. You're going to get hacked. Just crushed. You're going to get crushed. And he was going to block shot.
Starting point is 01:18:58 And kind of mock you in the process, which, again, I respect. Okay, that's it for our Tammy Bruce section. and thank you, Tammy, for everything you're doing. When we come back, you'll hear Ben's interview with Ellie Schline about fighting the far right in Italy and trying to bring back the Democratic Party. So stick around for that.
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Starting point is 01:20:56 safe.com slash crooked world. There's no safe like SimplySafe. Elie Schline, thanks so much for joining us. Thank you. It's pleasure. So I want to start by asking, you know, from the outside, when people look at Italian politics. Prime Minister Maloney looks like a very strong figure. She has a big presence on the international stage. But I wonder if here in Italy, where you see that there might actually be some vulnerabilities? Is that the case? Is the image she projects the image that people are consuming in Italy? Or are there some vulnerabilities where she may not be meeting people's aspirations? It's true that Meloni is still strong in the polls. for example, but I think that there are a lot of vulnerabilities, because in the end, if you
Starting point is 01:21:50 ask around if people are off well today after three years of our government, they would say no. They will say no because this government of Georgia Meloni for three years in a row has done nothing for the cost of living, for example, has done nothing for the low wages. We have in Italy among the lowest wages in the European Union. So our point is, what is the situation of the Italians today after three years of a government? Is it better or is it worse? And the answer would be definitely worse. So why is she so strong?
Starting point is 01:22:31 Because as the right wing is doing also in other countries, they are very good, not at answering to people needs, but at pointing out an enemy every day. And usually it's the same enemy, immigrants, LGBTIQI communities, for example, or journalists, judges, the European Union. So everything that is not working in this country, according to Meloni, is somebody else's fault. And everything that works is for how she's doing in government. But this, after a couple of years, will stop working. I mean, she still says that if we have problems and people face problems in accessing health care, for example, it's the fault of the previous government.
Starting point is 01:23:22 But the truth is that since she was in government, she's cut down the resources for the public health system. So you have to imagine that today, for an Italian that needs, for example, a normal examination, medical examination, you can wait up to one year and a half. And this is something that also the voters of Meloni feel on their skin. So this is something on which we are insisting a lot. Wages, the cost of energy. In Italy, we have the highest energy bills of the whole European Union. And it is not to be like that.
Starting point is 01:23:58 But the point is that Meloni does not have the courage to address the extra profits that the big companies of energy production industry, are making and that is hampering all the other industries, businesses and families in the country. So yes, she is strong because every day she builds a communication in which they distract the public opinion by pointing the finger at some enemies, some scapegoats to blame for what's not going well in the country. But in the long term, this is not working and we can see it already. when we build an alternative progressive coalition in the local election or regional election, when we stick together, we win.
Starting point is 01:24:45 So they are strong, but they are not unbeatable. This is my point. And we will not beat them by running after them on their agenda. So we will not beat them by copying their issues, for example, on security and migration. We need to force them on the ground where they feel less comfortable. which is social justice. On social justice, we see that they suffer because they're not answering the needs of people.
Starting point is 01:25:14 If you think about her most famous speech in Spain, a couple of years, she said, I'm Georgia, I'm a woman, I'm a mother, I'm a Christian. And I say, good for you. But how does this help Italians that cannot afford their rent or that cannot pay for their bills? So this is the point, social justice, on which we are, are insisting to rebuild credibility and to regain the trust also of voters who voted for for Melania the last election.
Starting point is 01:25:44 It's interesting because we see a similar dynamic across Europe in the United States in the sense that you have far-right parties that make elections about identity, about immigration, about a sense of security, even though they don't necessarily have the answers on these cost-of-loving issues that people are concerned about. It feels like, though, where they've been successful, including here in Italy, is making the elections about the issues that they want them to be about. And social Democrats, progressives have had a hard time making the elections about issues that are actually usually more important to people's lives. How do you shift the conversation in the way that you're talking about? What can you do differently?
Starting point is 01:26:31 Is it a matter of political communications, tactics, coalition building? persistence, new policies, like how do you shift the basis of an election from those identity issues to those social justice, cost of living type issues? You have to insist and hit like a hammer every day on this important issues for, you know, everyday living of Italians. That's how in a difficult situation, we shifted the debate on a minimum wage, for example. Italy does not have a little wage. law on minimum wage, despite the fact that, as I said, we have among the lowest wages in Europe. There are 22 countries in the European Union that already have such a law.
Starting point is 01:27:16 And we have built a coalition of the opposition forces supporting a law that, in a way, strengthens the role of the trade unions and collective bargaining. And we saw the difficulties of Georgia Meloni, because she did not even vote against our law. She tried to kill it and, you know, put it aside in the parliament because she knows that in Italy 70% of voters are in favor of such a law. But we have to hit every day because it's also true that the right wing has invested a lot in communication and media. In Italy, they now control public media and they have transformed the public television in a machine of propaganda of the government. And at the same time, they own a lot of private media, both television, newspapers. So it's even more difficult for us to set the agenda in the country.
Starting point is 01:28:14 So we have to insist every day on minimum wages, access to education and healthcare, and the cost of energy, which is a problem both for businesses, because they lose competitiveness. If you think about it, our businesses pay an energy bill that is free to. times higher than the businesses of the same sectors in Germany, in Spain, in France. How can you live like that? Yeah. So it's both a problem for businesses and for families. So on these issues, I see that Meloni, even if she is proud of her ideas and position, is hiding.
Starting point is 01:28:56 She's not telling the truth to the country. So I'm mentioning this as an example of a right wing that is, very strong and proud on identitarian issues, but then runs away when they have to face the cost of living, the everyday problems of Italians. Yeah. Do you, you know, we, I'm a member of the Democratic Party,
Starting point is 01:29:20 shares a name with yours. We have this constant debate in the United States, too, between kind of the center left and the left. And at a time when people are frustrated with the political establishment in the far right of the state, succeeded in demonizing the political establishment and kind of tying it to the center left, there are arguments from the left that you need to move away from those policies.
Starting point is 01:29:44 But then there are arguments from the center left that if you move too far to left, you'll lose people in the middle. Is there a similar dynamic here in Italy? I followed the party a bit. It seems like you've moved it in a more progressive direction. Is that a matter of policy or is it more a matter of being more willing to fight for your principles? It's the same debate we have been seen in Italy for the past 15 years, I think.
Starting point is 01:30:10 Yeah. And that is also one of the reason why I decided to run as a secretary of us, as leader of the Democratic Party. Because we had lost our identity completely. And we were coming from years, difficult years, of, you know, large coalition governments, big coalition governments. where obviously from the outside, some political forces, let's say, anti-system, would say, see, there is no difference between the left and the right. So the first thing we needed to do is to rebuild credibility and identity on our core issues, which are also the values of our constitution, as I said.
Starting point is 01:30:56 The main platform of our party is insisting on how. healthcare because it's number one worry of Italian citizens, at the same time about wages and working conditions. Think about all the young people that have precarious jobs. If you have a job that lasts just for six months and you don't know if you have it the next day, how can you build your future? How can you create a family if you're willing to do so?
Starting point is 01:31:26 The right wing has been, let's say, effective. in telling the country that the most important problem was migration. And they have been talking about an invasion, and it's not even there. But they, in a way, created the idea that was number one priority of the country. For 10 years, they have insisted on migration. But they have not seen the migration outside of the country, of these young people that have done sacrifice to study here, but then with low wages and precarious jobs, they have to go elsewhere to build, you know,
Starting point is 01:32:07 a dignified future for them and for their families. So what I'm saying is that we need to be radical in our beliefs and credible in our ideas. That means also renewing our parties and pushing for a new generation of young, female and feminist leadership, I would say. So this is part of the job we are doing. At the same time, we have to be very clear on the issues that are discussed at dinner in the families in Italy. What we are saying is that when you lose track of the difference, of course, you also lose
Starting point is 01:32:49 votes. And we needed to re-establish a progressive agenda for the party. And this is interesting because when I won the primary election, it was after the defeat in the 2022 political election. And after the defeat, when Georgia Meloni won the election and went into government, our party was going down to the lowest in history, 14% in the polls. And then when we start rebuilding credibility on work and healthcare, after one year, we managed to win the European election with 24% So this is working. It's still not enough. We also have to build a credible coalition with other partners, but this is working because people feel that we are honest in what we're trying to do and what we're trying to say. Yeah. On foreign policy, you know, at a time when Germany had an election, Emmanuel Macron is, you know, nearing the end of his term, it seems like Maloney has tried to position herself as a European. European leader who has a relationship with Trump.
Starting point is 01:33:59 She came to the Trump inauguration. She's been to Mar-a-Lago. She's kind of in this collection of right-wing, I'd say autocratic type leaders globally. On the one hand, I guess she can tell Italians, hey, look, I have a relationship with Trump. I'm raising Italy's profile in Europe and on the world stage. On the other hand, I can't imagine Trump is that
Starting point is 01:34:26 popular here, particularly given tariffs and other things. I was recently here and I had to buy some Italian wine before the tariffs went into effect. But how do you look at that? Is it a vulnerability or strength that she is so close to Donald Trump? It is unfortunately a vulnerability right now. According to the polls, Italians do not like President Trump. And what he's doing is already damaging our economy. And it's not only since he signed the tariffs in April. It was even before because the announcement of the trade war that is threatened towards Europe has already started damaging the economy because of the uncertainty. So we have 58% of our businesses who stopped their investments because they don't know what's going to be to.
Starting point is 01:35:25 tomorrow. And in all these months, Meloni was not even able to criticize her friend Donald Trump. And it's not the only issue in which we see that she is damaging the national interest because of her political alliance with Mr. Trump. We've seen this on tariffs with the silence of the government. Not only the silence, there was a vice prime minister who said that tariffs, are an opportunity. Just to give you an idea, the biggest organization of businesses in Italy said that even if they stop at 10%, it would mean 20 billion less in exports next year for Italy, and it would be the risk of losing 118,000 jobs. So it's not only silence, it's also complicity, okay? And we have seen the same when Donald Trump forced the U.S.
Starting point is 01:36:25 European member states to rise the military expenditure to 5% in the framework of the NATO alliance. And only the Spanish government led by Pedro Sanchez said to Trump, no, I want to stay in the NATO alliance. I can't guarantee that I will reach the capacity targets set by NATO, but our military said that we can do that without rising the military expenditure to 5%. because that would be the end of our economy, that would be the end of our social welfare, and that would mean today only buying more military equipment from other states like the US of Trump.
Starting point is 01:37:09 Whereas what we need in Europe is obviously, in this new geopolitical scenario, Europe needs to provide for its own defense and security, but it's nonsense to strengthen 27 different national armies instead of coordinating them, strengthening interoperability, making joint research and joint procurements, and going towards a common European defense. So you see, it's interesting because now with President Trump, it's even clearer that the right-wing nationalists
Starting point is 01:37:45 are strengthening each other with the same rhetoric of hatred and walls, okay? But in the end, there would be enemies on the overall. opposite sides of the walls that they want to build at any border. Okay? So there are contradiction and there is room for us to explain that we as progressive have much more in common in terms of values and policies that we're pushing. For example, on housing, we are facing similar challenges in terms of housing in all the member states of the European Union.
Starting point is 01:38:18 On terms of wages, again, education, okay? We have much more in common, but we have to strengthen up. our networks, because you can name them in any country, and you cannot name the progressive in any country. Well, yeah, I mean, there's the last thing I wanted to ask you. And I should say, as someone who worked in U.S. national security, 5% is a crazy defense target, kind of arbitrary. It was bizarre to me to see people pledging something that they're not going to do
Starting point is 01:38:47 that makes no sense. But I wanted to ask you, on your last point, there's clearly a sense that there's a very networked far-right global. globally. And it manifests in common political strategies, convenings, media, online strategies. If you're a progressive anywhere in the U.S. or Europe, or even in other parts of the world now, you kind of feel like you're up against not just the right-wing party in your country. You kind of feel like you're up against this global wave that is crashing over us. What can be doing? obviously the most important thing is winning elections. You have to think about building a party
Starting point is 01:39:30 and then building coalitions that can ultimately win an election in Italy. That's job one. But what can be done to form some greater sense of solidarity and coordination and common strategy and common momentum, really, among progressive parties, center-left parties, so that we're not all alone in our countries, you know, fighting this machine, that there's a sense that we're all together helping each other. That we're overwhelmed in a way, yeah. Exactly. You know, we're creating our own momentum in our own wave that can spread across borders.
Starting point is 01:40:05 This is an important mission for all of us. And it's an obsession for me personally because I was a member of the European Parliament before being the leader of Partido Democratic in Italy. Look, I think that we cannot and must not leave international. nationalism to the nationalists of the far rights. This is what is happening. We have common values, common policies we're pushing, common solution. For example, when Trump decided to build a wall on the border with Mexico and Orban did the same at the border in Europe, they strengthen each other. Yeah. And the way the Trump, the Trump's wall and Orban's wall strengthened the rhetoric of
Starting point is 01:40:50 Meloni and Salvini in Italy, why don't we build the same when Pedro Sanchez rises minimum wage of 50% and helps all Spanish workers, you know, facing inflation in the last years in the middle of the war, the energy crisis, the climate crisis. We have to use and say the same words and also set the same agenda. And I think that since we have our next, because, for example, we are part of the party of European Socialists. Why don't we organize a rally on the same day in our 27 different countries? Why don't we do the same with the Democrats abroad? Because we are facing the same wave of extreme rights.
Starting point is 01:41:41 Look, think about what Meloni is doing in Italy. To sum it up, she is cutting down healthcare. She is cutting down public school. because they are cutting 6,000 teachers in public school in Italy. She is blocking our proposal on minimum wage and making the work, the jobs in Italy more precarious. At the same time, she has built spending $1 billion euros an empty jail in Albania to deport migrants.
Starting point is 01:42:13 How is this helping Italians pay their bills? There is no way. But if you look what is happening in the US, it's quite the same. In the first 100 executive orders of President Trump, there was nothing on wages. And he's doing the same to deport migrants by also violating fundamental and human rights. So they are doing the same things. They're all of the same. But we have to have the same answer in terms of social and climate justice.
Starting point is 01:42:40 And the things that progressive are doing because they are doing, and this is working in some countries, must at the same time and in the same way, strengthen the others. So it's about, you know, organizing, networking, strengthening our network and also showing that we share the same values and we are a team. We are a family. And we can do it by organizing together. We cannot be, we would say, in Italian provincial. We have to, in a way, learn a lesson from what happened in the last years in the strongest mobilization that we have seen, for example, on climate, Fridays for Future, or other organization, and also the feminist movement, they were effective in setting the agenda of the governments because they
Starting point is 01:43:33 have, from the start, thought of their mobilization, like of something that could go beyond every border. That was the strength. On the 8th of March, you see mobilization of, you know, organization for gender equality in all the different states. And this is working. And without the climate organization and mobilization in those years, we would not have today some climate policies, the Green Deal, for example, the investment on renewable energies. So this is working and our political forces should aim at doing exactly the same thing, organizing, mobilizing together and showing that we have the same agenda on social justice and climate justice. And that would strengthen each other and in a way, respond to that right-wing wave with a stronger progressive wave.
Starting point is 01:44:28 Well, I love ending on what is both a fighting and optimistic note. Thanks so much for joining us. I really enjoyed the conversation. Thank you. Thank you, too. It was a pleasure. Thanks again to Ellie Schlein for doing the show. And, man, Tammy Brewers still stuck in my head.
Starting point is 01:44:48 We just listened to that. So it's still fresh. We're going to make, we have to, people on the Discord. If you've made this long, you're probably on the Discord. Come up with a name for a weekly segment, you know. There we go. Tam Cam Cam. Tam.
Starting point is 01:45:03 The Bruce, whatever, you know, like, you know. Bruce is loose? Yeah, yeah, whatever the thing is. Or workshop days. Okay. Potty of the World is a crooked media production. Our senior producer is Alonamikovsky. Our associate producer is Michael Goldsmith.
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