Raging Moderates with Scott Galloway and Jessica Tarlov - How to Fight (and Beat) Trump in Court
Episode Date: June 20, 2025Jessica is joined by Skye Perryman, President and CEO of Democracy Forward, a nonprofit organization behind many legal challenges to Trump administration policies currently in the courts. Skye talks a...bout what it’s like being a lawyer right now, the ongoing struggle to protect immigrants’ rights and reproductive freedom, and why a popular protest movement is so important to the fight against authoritarian regimes. Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov. Follow Prof G, @profgalloway. Follow Raging Moderates, @RagingModeratesPod. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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School's out, the weather's getting warmer, and you know what that means.
It's sleepaway camp season.
It's never been the case that the majority of American children went to summer camps, but summer camps came to assume a really
important place in American popular culture.
If most of us didn't go to camp, why are we so obsessed with it? That's this week on Explain
It To Me. New episodes every Sunday, wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to Raging Moderates. I'm Jessica Tarlov, and my guest today is Skye Perryman. She's the
president and CEO of Democracy Forward, a national nonprofit, legal and public policy organization,
which has been actively filing suits against many of the actions taken by the Trump administration.
Skye took the helm shortly after January 6th, 2021,
and the organization has expanded its scope
and reach since then.
And earlier this year, she was named to Time Magazine's list
of the 100 most influential people of 2025.
Sky, thanks so much for joining the show, welcome.
Thanks for having me.
That's great, I'm excited.
I wanna start off, and you probably have to do this
all the time, but can you tell us about democracy forward, what the organization does, and a little bit of what's been going
on?
Absolutely.
So, Democracy Forward, we're a nonpartisan, nonprofit, we're a legal organization.
We have a lot of lawyers on our staff, and we go to court on behalf of people and communities
around this country, including, by the way, people who don't agree with each other, communities
that may not always be in lockstep with each other.
But when the government, whether that's the federal government or state governments or
local governments, are overstepping in a way that could really harm people's rights and
that endanger our democracy overall.
We also, in addition to our lawyers, have phenomenal policy experts, communicators,
and researchers.
And we do a lot of work to also educate the public
through reports, through showing up at Congress,
through helping people engage in their own communities locally
at this critical, critical time.
And you were recently just in Congress last week, right,
with the three Democratic governors and Sky Perrymen.
I was there. I was there for the whole eight hours.
And it was a busy news week last week, and we should note for our listeners, we're recording
this on Monday.
But tell us about your testimony and how you ended up being the one non-govern editorial
guest on the panel.
Well the committee members get to invite who they wish and they ask if we would come and
join the governors for the hearing. This was a
hearing where the Republican, the majority of the Oversight Committee brought in three governors
that they claimed are, quote, sanctuary state governors. What we know is actually there's no
one definition of sanctuary states and some of the governors that were there have states that don't
even claim to be sanctuary states, but they wanted to have a hearing around immigration.
And one of the concerning trends we've seen in this time, regardless of what people's
views are on how to solve the immigration crisis, is that there's a lot of targeting
of specific communities, whether they're immigrant communities, people of color, trans people,
you name it, you know, targeting a community.
That is actually something that we see in societies where there's a democratic backslide, right, where our democracy is really, where
there's a lot of concern.
And so I was asked by the minority staff and the minority members of the committee to come
and just provide some context about where we are, what's been going on the last 130,
40 days or so, what we're seeing in the courts and what this means for our democracy as a
whole. So it was an honor to get to do that. But it was a long day.
A long day. And can you rehash a little bit of that for us?
Sure. You know, so I started out with a few just general points to remember,
which is that we are really in a time that I think really transcends
traditional politics. I mean, we have a president, and I said this on the House floor last week,
we have a president who has without irony claimed that he is a king.
In the last 130 to 140 days since inauguration,
what we have seen is an administration that has sought to ignore due process,
that has sought to strip away protections that are available to every American under the Constitution.
We have had to go into court to stop a national funding freeze that endangered funds and services
in red communities, by the way, and blue communities in big cities and small towns.
So I went through some of what we've seen.
I went through the fact that just in under 200 days, the courts have had to rule against
this administration more than
170 times. And these are not just courts that people might call liberal courts. These are
judges of all political affiliations, those appointed by the president himself, those
appointed by Republicans and appointed by Democrats. So we talked about that broader
piece. And then when I spoke about immigration, we talked about how this administration's tactics
truly shock the conscience of most Americans in this country, even people who don't see
eye to eye on how to solve the issues surrounding immigration in our country right now.
And so in our cases alone, and we highlighted this for Congress, we have had to go to court
to prevent the government from prolonging the detention of children away from their family members.
We have had to go to court on behalf of clients who've been removed from the country without any process at all, any due process.
We've had to go to court on behalf of groups like the Baptists and the Quakers who are just trying to keep ICE from entering their houses of worship and in conducting enforcement operations indiscriminately.
So these are really things that transcend whatever the political debates are of the
day.
And so I highlighted that and then highlighted the real concern that we see in countries
where you have people that are in power that are using their power to target and demonize
particular people groups.
That should concern every single American,
whether you're in that people group or not,
because it's a use of power that is an abuse of power
that can really endanger our national community
and our democracy as a whole.
So those were some of the highlights
of what I was able to highlight last week.
I hear the argument made a lot,
and we had Mark Elias on the podcast and I talk about
this on Fox all the time that it seems like the courts are holding the line and you highlighted
how these are bipartisan rulings. You know, you have Reagan appointees, the same as Trump
appointees as Bush, Obama, Biden, etc. Yeah. Do you feel confident that the courts can sustain us? And I say this in a nonpartisan
way because you highlighted some cases that would be protecting folks who don't vote the
same as I do. Are you confident in the courts?
So I am both confident in the courts and also believe the courts are not the institution
that is going to save us. So let me say where I'm confident. What we have seen since inauguration is something that a lot of people doubted that we would
see. So I want to talk about what we've seen. We have seen judges of all backgrounds, judges
who were appointed by presidents of all political backgrounds, check this president. We have
seen judges, even when attacked, continue to be clear about the Constitution, that they
expect their orders to be followed, continue to be clear.
And we have seen the Supreme Court, which is a court that many of us take issues with
the way the majority has decided a range of cases, and I'm one of the first people there
on that.
We have seen the Supreme Court also check this president.
The Supreme Court has not rubber stamped everything this administration was trying to do. Maybe they've approved of a little more than what people
would want, but they haven't. And so that is good. That is a good indication that in
this country right now, our courts are doing the job that they are supposed to be doing.
And by the way, the lawyers, including the ones on my staff, but the ones in lots of
different places across the country are also showing up.
The president's attempt to target lawyers has backfired, I think, on many of the firms
that capitulated and has not deterred the legal community writ large from doing its
job and showing up to defend the Constitution.
So that is like, I have confidence there, and we're not seeing that shift.
We might, but we're not seeing that shift right now.
But the courts are not going to save the American people
or our democracy, the people are.
And the reason that we are so focused on the courts
at Democracy Forward is not just because
they're a critical institution and being that backstop.
I mean, they are, and we gotta go in,
and without court orders, we would have a lot more harm
since inauguration than we've had.
But we also focus on the courts
because they are a front line in the people's voices.
Going to court is a way that the American people
can make clear in no uncertain terms
that they are going to be there,
they expect their rights to be protected.
And the courts have a role in that work too.
And then of course, over the weekend,
we saw the mill, and I'm sure we're trying to talk about it,
we saw the millions of people marching, right?
So it is, the strategy is courts plus people.
And fundamentally, it's going to have to be the people
that say no more, but the courts
are going to have a huge part of that rescue plan.
And that's really a lot of our role at Democracy Forward.
Yeah, since you brought it up, I do want to touch on the No Kings protests that took place
over the weekend, estimates between four and six million people across the country.
I have friends that live abroad who went in Barcelona, in London.
I don't know the technical name for the rule, but something like when 3.5 percent of the population
voices concerns or protests against an administration, that's when you can really get the ball rolling.
Do you feel like the ball is rolling? And what does that actually mean? Because I, you know, I'm an elections analyst,
a political analyst, so I'm looking at the midterms, right?
And hoping that everything is free and fair
and that the Democrats can perform well
so that at least we have bipartisan checks on each other.
We need some system of checks and balances.
But can you talk about what you see the impact of things
like the No King's protests?
And I imagine this is going to keep happening
because the organizers of it have said so
and people seem genuinely angsty about what's going on.
Yes, we were proud, you know, our organization,
along with so many others,
we're proud to co-sponsor and be engaged in this.
So let me say a few things.
One is if we remember how we got here, okay,
the vast majority of the American people,
in poll after poll,
rejected the extremism that was in project 2025,
conservatives, liberals and moderates.
It is why on the election path,
the president and those associated with his campaign,
you know, disavowed their association
with the extremism that we've seen in project 2025.
And so when the president
came into office, he had a choice. He could say, wow, you know, against a lot of odds, I'm here,
and I'm going to actually take this seriously and govern for people. Or he could do an about face
and start rapidly accelerating what most Americans reject, including people, by the way, in his own base.
Most Americans reject, which is the extremism
in Project 2025, and really seek to be a dictator
or a king or what have you.
By the way, he has called himself a king.
We don't have to call him that.
He has said that without irony.
He chose that path.
He chose to rapidly accelerate a playbook
that they disavowed on the campaign trail,
putting key architects of Project 2025
in administration positions,
doing things that we've had to stop in court,
like seeking to dismantle the Department of Education,
which is broadly unpopular
among the vast majority of Americans.
And so we have seen democracy forward since day one. We have seen the people showing
up because we have been in court every single day and we are not in court on behalf of ourselves.
We are in court on behalf of communities across the country, teachers, veterans, educators.
We've been seeing this. It just doesn't look like individual people on the streets. Now,
starting in April and now, we're starting to see now millions of people on the
streets so we are very encouraged and we think it has it's more than just people
on the streets that could mobilize in a midterm I mean that is important to make
sure folks stay engaged but this is an administration that has changed course
when they face pressure when they face pressure in the courts which is by the
way why they want no one to go to court and they want to say they're not going to
deal with the courts because they want to deter people from going to court.
And they have changed course when they have faced broad political and public pressure.
And so I think what we're seeing is we're starting to see the American people demand
a whole lot more of this administration start asking uncomfortable questions of their elected
representatives in Congress. What are you doing? How and why are you backing a president that is doing
the kinds of things that are disastrous to our communities in red states or blue states
or communities? So I'm very encouraged and I think it has a lot of impact even beyond
the sort of midterms that we look to next year.
Are some of those about faces that you're talking about, like the return of Kilmer or
Brega Garcia from El Salvador?
Yeah.
I mean, look, there's a range of them.
The funding, let's start with the first two weeks, where the White House, Project 2025
folks just came out and announced that the following day they were going to cut off all
federal funding, pause it.
The administration was not planning on the fact that they were going to face pushback
in the courts.
We were able to get into court in a matter of hours, stop it in the courts.
And at the same time, people in communities across the country were working the phones
because all of a sudden they were concerned, are my Meals on Wheels program going to be
discontinued?
What's going to happen in our communities?
And all of a sudden, the White House in their first national press conference, it was a
disaster.
Now, we have to keep the injunction in place because there's a range of ways where behind
the scenes they're trying to actually facilitate that funding freeze, but we have that court
order in place.
To some degree, you saw these reports over the weekend about how all of a sudden the
administration has decided they don't want to conduct raids, ICE raids on farms and in certain industries.
It shows the arbitrariness, by the way, of how they're operating.
You'll hear more about that from us in the courts, but you'll see that this pushback
does matter.
The tariffs, I think you've seen them gain a lot of heat and they've sort of flip-flop
there.
And then, of course, the courts have required that there be a facilitated return of Mr. Garcia. And fundamentally, the administration did have to
follow what the courts were saying. So I think in a lot of those ways, we have a lot of examples.
We see in our work every day, by the way, there's a lot of cases that don't make the headlines
where we go into court and the administration agrees almost quickly, okay, we're going to pause this while this litigation is pending. So it's a real testament
that these voices and showing up matters. And I think we're just starting to see the
beginning of it from the American people.
Yeah, it's good to know. I try to pay as much attention as I can or as closely, but obviously
the big headline cases are the ones that you end up talking about, but you and other organizations are in court literally every day trying.
Every day.
I want to stay on immigration for another question.
Can you talk about the balance between federal and state immigration policies?
I know it's a very delicate dance and that the federal government is claiming obviously
that the state government is violating federal immigration policies in states like Illinois and California. And
the president put out a statement that he's going to be conducting raids exclusively in
blue states, ignoring the fact that Texas and Florida are the second and third biggest
populations of illegal immigrants in the country.
Right. Well, this is something where the constitution is like really clear and it's a place where
the administration and their allies, you know, find misinformation to be their friend here,
to sort of spread misinformation.
So immigration is a national, it is a federal enforcement issue.
That is the federal government's job to regulate immigration.
It is the federal government's job to enforce our immigration laws. Now our
federal government has failed in a range of respects. I think everyone agrees with
that. People on the, you know, people on the opposite ends of the political
spectrum agree that our immigration system is broken in this country. There's
a report from the Cato Institute that goes through the many ways in which it is, and everyone, I think,
has called for or wants to see some type of real comprehensive immigration reform. But
this is fundamentally a federal issue. States under our Constitution cannot be conscripted and forced by the federal government
into engaging in the federal government's sort of enforcement priorities, especially with respect
to immigration. States and local communities have to make decisions in their states about where
they're going to put public resources, public safety resources. I mean, we are today filing a case to restore funds
that this administration has cut to programs
that aid the survivors of domestic violence, right?
I mean, these are the kinds of community-based things,
public safety things that are happening
in communities across the country.
And our constitution recognizes that states
have a lot of power in determining how they
are going to use their resources.
There is now a conflict over the fact that this administration at least expects the states
to be conscripted in to their enforcement operations, which is not something that states
are required to do.
Some states may choose to do that and other states may not.
But that is sort of what a lot of this conflict is.
And I'll just say, and I said this in Congress last week, at Democracy Forward, we have had
to go to court since inauguration to protect communities that are receiving federal funds
to actually help enhance public safety that this administration, if left to their own
devices, wanted to freeze or cut for people. So we don't really think the public safety that this administration, if left to their own devices, wanted to freeze
or cut for people.
So we don't really think the public safety, some of this is like, this isn't about immigration
policy.
It's not about public safety.
If we want to have serious discussions about that, I think there's a lot of good discussions
to have.
But this is an area where I think there's been a lot of labeling and finger pointing
and a lot of misinformation.
And so there's no silver lining to any of this.
But hopefully the amount of attention
that people are now paying to all of these things,
the fact that this administration is doing things
that totally shock the conscience,
including by the way of folks that don't see eye to eye.
Hopefully this is a moment where folks can sort of see
beyond the attempts to polarize,
see beyond these misinformation attempts
and really kind of focus on what we expect the country to do.
Yeah, it's not a particularly fun activity to actually read budgets, but I always say
look at the actual budget because that's the clearest way that a government is going to
tell you what their priorities are and who is adding more money for public safety and
who's taking money away.
And it's usually not what you think it is, or at least it hasn't been in the past.
We're going to take a really quick break. Stay with us.
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In 2001, Lindsay met a man named Carlo. About a week later, they went on a date.
And almost 15 years after that,
she found out Carlo had been keeping a secret.
Did you just go through every single moment
of your relationship trying to see
if you picked up on anything or?
Yeah, I didn't sleep for days.
I ran over things again and again in my head. And part
of me didn't really still believe it. It took quite a while to sink in.
I'm Phoebe Judge. Listen right now on Criminal, wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome back.
Can you talk a little bit about what it's like to be a lawyer right now?
Is it just feels like such a perilous time to be doing this kind of work with the attacks
on the law firms and all the firms that have capitulated?
Now, of course, he's just dragging them even further and people are losing top talent,
folks who want to go over to firms that are not going to be doing pro bono work for the
government and then a place like where you are that doesn't fit into one of those categories,
but has definitely got to be atop the list of annoyances for the administration.
Look, I think this is the time to be a lawyer
in that the skills that the legal profession affords,
the role that lawyers play in our society
is incredibly important in this moment.
I mean, our obligation is to the constitution,
it's to the rule of law,
it's representing people, our codes of ethics.
You know, you represent people even if they are unpopular
or not favored
by those that are in power. You do it zealously and with a duty of loyalty. Those types of
fundamental principles are so important in this time. They really are one of the things
that I think that are holding the fidelity to the Constitution and respect for the Constitution
in this moment.
But it is a hard time.
Our team at Democracy Forward, our team of lawyers, I mean, they face, you know, at times
that we face threats.
We put our names publicly on court filings that are going up against the administration
every day.
In the first days of the administration, we sued Doge and we saw tweets from Elon Musk
and others about the lawyers and about the cases
that we were litigating.
And this is not just something that our organization's facing.
A lot of organizations and lawyers are facing this.
And then you also have the judges facing it as well.
But I think that what our team sees every day is that the work that we're able to do
on behalf of people is stopping some of the most callous and harmful actions
that this administration is taking.
And without lawyers willing to go to court
and without the brave people willing to be part
of those lawsuits, the last 130 days would be much worse
than it's been.
It's been very bad and very taxing for people. a lot of people have gotten hurt and we've got clients
right now that are being held in El Salvador in prison without any process.
So I'm not saying that this is something, this is a really dire situation, but what
we see in our work every day is the difference that the law is making, which
of course is why the president and his allies are now trying to come for
the courts and come for the lawyers. And by the way, the very courts that they had a real
role in shaping. I mean, again, we're winning before judges of all ideological backgrounds
that were appointed by all presidents.
I realized that I hadn't brought up the tragic shootings in Minnesota over the weekend of two Democratic lawmakers, one passing away with her husband.
And then hopefully everything will
be fine with the other lawmaker and his wife.
They now have the assailant or the alleged assailant
in custody.
But it feels to me like the tinderbox has actually
exploded now.
And to see this going on, to have the protests in Los Angeles,
last week some rioting, then the No Kings protests,
and also these shootings in Minnesota at the same time.
It not only feels like a tough time to be a lawyer,
it feels like a really tough time to be in public office.
And I worry that not only will people lose their lives,
but there will be no way to recruit top talent
to want to go and do these jobs.
Because we're talking about state legislators.
We're not talking about Nancy Pelosi anymore.
Yep.
Look, I mean, I have a lot of concern about that.
And over the weekend, there were confirmed reports in Texas,
my home state, that there were threats
on lawmakers in that state legislature that were going to attend No King's Peaceful Protests.
And then there were a range of reports on healthcare professionals, which of course
is something in the reproductive healthcare space, in the abortion space we've seen for
some time, people that have been killed or shot just by virtue of doing their jobs. And so this is, you know, I think this is a scary time
and there are no words to make that not true.
There's no court cases that are gonna make that not true.
But what I am taking heart in is that people are showing up
and people are saying we're better than this.
People are looking at what a scary time it is and they are showing up to people are saying we're better than this. People are looking at what a scary
time it is and they are showing up to run for office. We can't, I mean, the amount of
lawyers that want to come be part of our work at Democracy Forward, it's outstanding, even
as there are threats. And so I think that there is a grave concern and there's no question
that what's happening right now is going to fundamentally alter the course of how we rebuild back in the future.
But over the weekend, I think the other way to look
at what we saw happen is that the American people
are not going to stand by and allow
the worst of our country.
They're not gonna stand by and allow that.
And I think we saw a lot of people coming together,
people that don't agree on everything, people of all different backgrounds saying there are red lines that
we are not going to allow this country to cross. And it was such a tragic weekend. We
have folks on our staff who worked for the former speaker in Minnesota. Of course, we
were just with Governor Walz and Congress a few days earlier. So it is just, I know
it's something that's really so incredibly tragic for
their families and communities, but also for everybody watching this and that is feeling so
shaken in this time. Yeah, it's quite palpable when you hear people talking about them. Yeah.
And, you know, hopefully the end of it, but not surprising that there were threats also in Texas.
And I think it took a lot for Governor Walz to actually say he didn't want people to go to the no-kings protest. I'm sure that was a decision he did not take lightly in
making that recommendation, especially since managed to be peaceful, you know, millions
of people who are feeling so upset and so much unrest, pulling this off peacefully is
quite the achievement. You
mentioned reproductive health. That was the other direction I wanted to go in.
Democracy Forward was instrumental in the court cases surrounding the Dobbs
decision. I know that this is ongoing with access to medication, abortion.
SCOTUS has upheld access for now to methopristone. But can you talk about the
state of play when it comes to the women's reproductive health space?
Yes, I mean, you know, first of all, let's just remember that many of the tactics
that we're seeing now that are being advanced towards other issues or people
groups or tactics that are being advanced by the president and his allies
with respect to our democracy overall.
If you go back and you study the reproductive rights and reproductive justice movements,
you're going to find every single one of those tactics that have been used with respect to
trying to prevent people from accessing reproductive health care, including by the way for decades
and not just recently after the ballot initiatives and not just after jobs. For decades, the research has been there to suggest that the vast majority
of the American people believe in some type of legal access to abortion and reproductive
health care. This is only polarizing because we've allowed, you know, extreme groups to
make it polarizing. But the data of where the American people are when you actually
sit down and talk to people, where they are, has been consistent for some time.
And now, of course, you see that in places like Missouri, red Missouri, that have passed
reproductive health care initiatives, places like Florida got over 50% of the vote, et
cetera.
So that's, I think part of it is like grounding ourselves in what the people need and know
about reproductive health care in
this country, and then what we're facing, which is a Supreme Court that has rolled back
for a generation, privacy rights of people seeking to terminate a pregnancy or needing
to terminate a pregnancy, combined with an administration that has now quietly, they've
not been as loud about abortion in the last 100 and so days
as they've been about immigration,
but that has installed all of the players
who are going to make this care less accessible.
You see that in the bills
that are being debated in Congress.
You see that in statements that are being made
at the Food and Drug Administration and Secretary Kennedy
suggesting that, you know, utilizing junk science
to try to create doubts around safety and efficacy
of a medication, methampristone,
that has been studied for decades.
And so that means that our work is really cut out for us.
And at Democracy Forward, we will do a range of things.
One, we will continue to represent our clients
and the cases that exist that are seeking
to curtail reproductive healthcare access in order to try to stop those efforts in the
courts.
We will continue to work at the state level, both in states that are acknowledging and
affirming the rights of people to access health care and in states that are continuing with
a range of policies that also truly shock the conscience to try to deprive people of
reproductive health care.
There's needs for representation in all of those states
and you'll see us doing that.
But I think you'll also see,
and I think one thing we all need to be very focused on
and vigilant about, is it's not just about abortion
and it's not just about reproductive health care
and contraception and it is about all those things.
But this is an administration that fundamentally
does not want to affirm or have any type of fidelity
to facts and information and data and science.
And moreover, it is a administration that has shown,
and we saw this in the first Trump administration,
that has shown that not just do they not want
to have anything to do with facts and evidence,
they will actually take efforts to create misinformation and junk science in order to
be able to change a narrative for the American people.
And so this presents really generationally profound threats, not just for reproductive
health access, but for health care and lots of services and essentials in our country.
And so we are really watching that. And we see and are concerned about some of the trends
that we know we're going to see on abortion and reproductive health care spilling over
into other areas like vaccines or cancer treatments or cancer research and lots of other things. Yeah, it's alarming to say the least
that RFK Jr. is exactly who he said he was.
I don't know how Senator Cassidy is feeling these days
since we're hearing again about how the polio vaccine
has killed more people than it saved or whatever nonsense
the secretary was saying last week,
but it's concerning across the board.
I wanted to ask you quickly about the big, beautiful bill.
What role is democracy forward playing in the deliberations about the bill?
Obviously the attacks on healthcare are, I assume, a major focus and the implications
there, but talk me through it.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, we represent clients that really make up the vast expanse of the
American public.
And so we have a lot of concerns.
Our clients have a lot of concerns around access to health care, Medicaid, of course,
the defunding of Planned Parenthood, so many issues in the bill.
We are very concerned that Congress has slipped in a provision in the bill that would essentially try to make it harder for people
to be able to go to court
and hold their government accountable.
There was one version of the bill
that would seek to require bonds
that individuals pay money
in order to be able to go into court
and to defend their rights against the government
and would even go so far as to suggest that if you don't pay that money and the president or the administration
violates a court order that you can't hold the president or the administration accountable
or in contempt for that. That is not how the courts are supposed to function. It is an
affront to the separation of powers, but it's also affront to the American people and to
the notion in our country that all of us, every single one of us have to have some fidelity to the law,
including by the way, the president and the administration.
Another version of the bill would just require these bonds sort of across the board and government
facing litigation.
It's something that the administration has been trying to do in court unsuccessfully
and now they're trying to do through legislation.
So we're really focused at Democracy Forward on making sure people understand the critical
nature of these access to court provisions, making sure that that doesn't get lost in
the shuffle while there are so many focuses on lots of other really highly concerning
things.
And then of course, we're going to stand by.
We don't lobby at Democracy Forward.
We really are mostly really focused on the courts. But we are going to stand by to be able to take any legal action
that may be necessary to help people in communities whose rights may be violated by the bill, but
also to help those communities who the administration or their allies may try to target in their
attempts to use their voices to oppose the bill. So we're watching all of those things.
Wow.
Busy bees over there.
We are busy.
Yeah.
One last question.
We ask all our guests this.
What's one thing that makes you rage and one thing
that you think we should all calm down about?
I think the thing that makes me rage the most right now is if you just look at the textbook of
how, and I'm going to use the word, like autocratic actors operate, they do the things that we're
seeing.
So, you know, in The Hill last week, there were these posters of people that have been
accused of terrible crimes.
I mean, everybody wants people that commit horrific crimes
to be held accountable.
Like that's not a debate among any large swath
of the American public and the sort of polarization
and the utilization of these tragic human circumstances
to try to use them for political purposes
and then depend and to create sort of demonizing,
whether you're demonizing, you know, immigrants, whether you're demonizing LGBTQ people,
whether you're demonizing women, I mean, whoever they decide to demonize.
I think that just makes me rage because if you study what happens in these other societies with
democracy's backslide, this is like exhibit A. And yet in America right now, we're treating this
like it is a sort of real
political issue and debate. And so I think that is something that really enrages me.
I probably am more enraged after sitting eight hours through that hearing last week.
You know, the things that I think people should calm down about on some level, I do think we're in a fundamentally
changed paradigm where we are trying to combat
a really rapidly accelerating autocracy.
I'm just gonna say that.
And so what that does mean is that you do have to use
your voice on lots of different issues a lot of the time.
You can't just pick one or two issues when that means
that like you're gonna see this rapidly accelerating
autocratic threat. But I do think that there are some places where we could just take a beat and
say, you know what, if this is like what someone thinks good policy is, okay, let them go have
their policy on that. It's not going to be helpful to people. It's going to backfire.
They're going to get a bunch of pushback.
That's not what we are in court about every day, which is the continued high volume of
actions that are really fundamentally redefining this country, the values in this country,
people's rights in this country, and what we are about and what we are protecting.
And so we have to fight on all fronts and in many ways.
There are some things that they're truly policy disagreements.
Let's have a policy disagreement, right?
That's not a five alarm fire.
The problem right now is though, there is so many five alarm fires.
They're not made up.
This isn't hyperbole.
It is happening right now before our very eyes.
And that's why, you know, we and others are having to work on all fronts, you
know, every single day to try to work on all fronts, you know, every
single day to try to protect as much of our country and as much of our people as we can.
Thank you so much for your time, Sky. It was great to have you and we'll continue following your
work.
Thanks so much.