Raging Moderates with Scott Galloway and Jessica Tarlov - Why Progressives Won’t WIN in the 2026 Midterms (ft. David Frum)
Episode Date: October 22, 2025On the heels of the No Kings protests that drew an estimated seven million Americans, there seems to be a strong coalition to take on Trump and the GOP. But, what will the Democrats’ message be? Jes...sica Tarlov and guest host David Frum of The Atlantic discuss the Democratic Party’s predicament — and the value of tacking to the center. Plus: is there a justifiable rationale for the Trump administration’s deadly strikes on boats in the Caribbean? And, Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner’s insurgent campaign was set back last week by years of past internet comments coming to light. He has taken responsibility for his remarks — but, in a primary against Gov. Janet Mills, will it matter? Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov. Follow Prof G, @profgalloway. Follow Raging Moderates, @RagingModeratesPod. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@RagingModerates Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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What's up, everybody?
It's Cam Hayward, your Steelers captain and host of Not Just football.
On this week's episode, we break down everything that went down against the Bengals,
the good, the bag, and we've got to move forward.
Then we're shifting our gears to focus on.
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Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Let's go.
Welcome to Raging Moderates. I'm Jessica Tarlov. Scott is out today, but we have a fantastic
replacement, someone that Scott is actually obsessed with. So it's always good when that works out.
I have the Atlantic's David from here. David, it's so good to have you.
Thank you. I didn't know I had this virtual relationship with Scott. Oh, he has a virtual relationship with a lot of people. And he tells me, well, he says it publicly, but if you don't listen to every Scott Podcasts, which frankly would require you to quit your job and only consume Scott Galloway content, you would know that he uses your line from your 2019 piece. If liberals won't enforce borders, fascists will constantly. So. All right. Well, thank you. I'm honored. Okay. If you're uncomfortable with the praise, I can move on to.
Are you, you want more?
Oh, pasha.
Are you a baseball fan?
Because your Blue Jays won the pennant last night.
So my son is a Blue Jays obsessive.
Okay.
And this has actually been a kind of, my late father was a sports fan,
and I was such a disappointment to him,
because I would go to games and read a book,
and he was, it just broke his heart.
But God has judgments in store for people who break their father's heart,
which is my son.
I have three children, but my son was,
a sports fan. And I had to take him. And with your son, you can't read a book. Isn't this great dad?
Oh, yeah. Loving every uncountable second of this unending spectacle. So anyway, he is so into the Blue Jays.
He is so crazy about this. So, yeah, big day. Yeah, my favorite line about it. I'm not a
tremendous baseball fan, but I was thinking about, you know, we've never met. We just messaged a little
bit. So how can I connect with David from in the banter section? So I was like, oh, Blue Jays, you're from Toronto.
But it's the first time that we'll have a World Series with teams from two cities that the president has threatened to invade.
That was my favorite commentary on the situation.
That's very good.
If the Blue Jays win, the United States becomes the 11th province, I think that's, they should be a little like action on the table.
Is that how it works?
I think that should be how it works.
Yeah.
I'm sure Carney has something funny going for how he'll react.
I think we nailed it in the banter section, so I'm going to get into the meat of the pod.
In today's episode of Raging Moderates, we're going to talk about why Democrats are still running against Trump,
why Trump is creating chaos for our southern neighbors, and we're checking in on Graham Platner's race and his controversial Reddit posts.
So it has been nearly a year since Democrats lost the White House. I'm still sad. But you wouldn't know it from watching their campaign ads.
From Virginia to New Jersey to California, candidates are still running hard against Donald Trump, warning voters that the Republican opponents are just extensions of the presidency.
strategy may fire up the base, and it looks like it does, based on this weekend's no king's protest, but critics say it risks sounding stale at a time when voters are looking for something more forward-looking.
I want to start with Democrats' strategy right now. What do you make of the, you know, running against Trump all the time approach?
Well, can I just say something as someone who does this for a living?
Yes.
About the construction of the New York Times story that we're talking about.
So there you are a Democratic pollster going about your business, polling for me.
mayors and governors and so on. And the New York Times calls up and they say, what do you think
about the future? What do you think the Democratic message should be? And maybe you're caught
off guard and maybe you don't want to give away stuff for free. So you say, I think elections are
about the future. The most anodyne, boring, meaningless thing. And I think the Democrats need
an affirmative message as they campaign for the future. So that's all you've said. You've said
nothing. But the New York Times reporter who's responding to different constituencies that say,
you know this guy, Graham Platner, you progressives, foisted on the party. He's a disaster.
and you shouldn't have done that.
So what you do is you take the completely anodyne quote
from the Democratic pollster,
and you plug it into a story that is to say,
my progressive friends who foisted Graham Platner on the party
and Mamdani and all the others,
that was not a disaster.
That was a good idea because you see elections need to be about the future.
So you don't have an evidentiary basis.
It's a pure opinion piece of a kind
that you're seeing in some progressive places
because Graham Plattener is a disaster.
And they're trying to build this into something.
And when you sort of add up the article,
Okay, Donald Trump is the president of the United States.
He's a president who said he intends unconstitutionally to stay for a third term if he possibly can.
He completely controls his party.
He is raising taxes without Congress.
He's imposing spending without Congress.
He's demolishing the White House without permission from Congress.
He's quite unpopular.
There are important races ahead in Virginia, New Jersey, and New York soon, and there are midterms that may or may not be free and fair next year.
Of course you run against the president.
Who would say otherwise?
And the only people would say otherwise are the people trying to convince
they're nervous followers that Grand Platner was not a disaster.
Well, I definitely want to get into the Grand Platner of it all.
But in the piece that we're talking about,
so this was Shane Goldmocker's big piece from,
it was published on the 19th.
And it was one of the articles that was most texted around,
I would say, in Democratic circles.
And I think part of it was that it came off of the high
of the No Kings protest, which felt like,
hey, we're alive.
And then Shane was like, not really, or like you're alive, but you've been saying the same thing on loop.
And I totally get your point that when you have an opponent that is so unpopular and there are so many different threads to his unpopularity that you could pick at that it's smart to run against it.
But Shane also had spoken to Chris Lissavita, who's Donald Trump's pollster, who said that this was a one-dimensional strategy.
Wait a minute.
Donald Trump's pollster thought it was not a good idea for Democrats to run against Donald Trump.
Trump. No, no, no, no, no. Don't.
Oh, okay. I guess we should follow your advice, sir. There is more to this.
But they figured out something that we didn't. And I have listened to many interviews with
Chris Lissavita. And some of it I find super annoying and detestable. And some of it, I think,
like, he got something that we didn't. And I'm not saying that we won't, Democrats won't
win the midterms. I'm not saying that special elections haven't been going.
in our direction. But there are a lot of people who voted for Donald Trump in 2024 who gave
him a shot again, right, who voted for him in 2016, then Biden 2020 and went back. And also I'm
thinking about younger people where the same kind of messaging doesn't resonate. They actually do need
a positive view of what the future is going to look like or candidates that are talking about
something that feels different from Donald Trump has autocratic tendencies. Can I dissent from that?
It's not just the autocratic. That's why you're here. Okay. So,
once there is a Democratic nominee for president, that individual person will need an individual
person's message.
That's a bit off.
What is upcoming are the 2026 elections, which may or may not be free and fair.
And I keep saying that and people say, yeah, yeah.
But like, that's a really important asterisk.
J.B. Pritzker was here a couple weeks ago saying the same thing.
But if they are free and fair, the Democrats will not win those elections, Trump will lose
them.
And there will not, there cannot be a message because the message that we're not, we're
works in one place is not the message that works in another place. And one of the reasons the
out party does well in midterms is the out party has the possibility to run different races in
different places, whereas the in-party has to run the same race everywhere. So if you're a
Republican anywhere, you have to defend the tariffs. You have to defend Americans being forced
to pay more for everything. You have to defend Trump raising taxes without permission of
Congress. You have to defend the spending. You have to defend the wars in the Caribbean. You have
to defend everything. But if you're on the other side, you can attack where your constituents are
most likely to be impressed by the line of attack, and you can emphasize different parts of
the incumbent's record. When people try to sell you a vision of, you need an affirmative
message in a midterm election. What they're usually trying to do is bootstrap into the party
discussion, an argument that would not succeed on its merits. I mean, the no-kings rally demonstrated,
you know who is very responsive to the anti-Trump message? Not super ideological, middle-of-the-road
boomers, who normally, Alex B. Keaton, remember him?
I do.
He was at the No King's Rally, I'm sure.
He's a fictional character.
But he was there with his wife and daughters, and they're very upset about different, he's
upset about the tariffs and the whites.
These are your NPR listeners, right?
That's a...
Not so much NPR.
These are your Atlantic subscribers, actually.
These are the people who vote in for PTA.
These are the people show up all the time.
These are people who don't move around that much, who have homes.
That is your midterm electorate, and it's not that progressive.
And so a lot of the progressive energy in the party is trying to boost.
Strap, well, we need an affirmative message. Here's an affirmative message. Let's do this.
In fact, what is going to happen in 26, if Americans are allowed to vote, they're going to vote, some will vote against the tariffs, and some will vote against the wars in the Caribbean, and some will vote against the autocratic tendencies, and some will vote against the mass roundup and detentions, and everybody will have their own reasons.
And you've got a coalition here that spans Bernie Sanders to Anne Romney, and you have to talk to all of them and get them all motivated. And the affirmative message is for the presidential election, when you have an individual person who can make individual decisions.
decisions. Okay. I'm putting Chris Lafida aside. You've made him no longer relevant, but you did say
something about how the no king's crowd. No, I, listen, this is fun. This is like lively right off
the bat. You know, sometimes when you meet a new podcast friend, you don't know how it's going to go,
but I'm thoroughly enjoying it so far. This feels not quite like the five, but we're alive this
morning, which is great. And you said something about how the no king's crowd wasn't that progressive.
And there was a big look into the candidates who have been winning their elections that the Times did pretty graphics as well.
And they were emphasizing how it's usually the moderate candidates that end up winning these elections.
And one of the things that came out of it that flies a bit in the face of what people had been thinking for a long time is that it's actually the economically progressive and socially moderate or even socially conservative candidates that are doing well.
It had always been, at least for me, in kind of the circles that I run in, this idea that you had to be socially liberal and more fiscally conservative in order to win votes.
But that doesn't seem to be the case anymore if you look at like a Ruben Gallego and the way that he talks, right?
He's unabashedly, you know, Medicare for all, tax the billionaires, always talking about corporate greed.
John Ossoff is doing the same thing.
And you're seeing that all over the country.
But then they're shying away from being as socially liberal as certainly the reputation for the party.
has been. What do you make of that? Do you think that is the secret sauce to Democrats being
able to win? In congressional elections, it depends where. So that's not Abigail Spanberger's
formula. That's not the formula in New Jersey. That's not Lizzie Fletcher's formula in Texas
seven. So in 2018, Democrats made their breakthroughs in House elections in places that were
kind of upscale. I keep pointing out in 2018, they won what had been George H.W. Bush's
district that had not gone Democratic since before the civil rights era. They won Newt Gingrich's
district that had not gone Democratic since the 70s. They run Eric Cantor's district. And in every
one of those cases, they were winning with economically moderate women who are mildly socially
liberal. Those are affluent areas where that message worked. And so the whole point to a midterm
election is if you're the out party, you get to be flexible. And there is no formula. And I think
what happens is I think a lot of, there are a lot of democratic strategies who don't just want to win,
but they want to win a certain way. And they start with, we need an economically progressive message.
do we do that? Well, normally economically progressive messages are quite hazardous and
even toxic, but it may be if you find someone with plaid shirts and tattoos, then you can
sell an economically progressive message. But I think, like, who's pushing this? Is this truly
an analysis of where your district is, or is this something you want to do anyway? And you're
looking for a way to get it done. And I don't think people have come into politics because they
have views. I don't criticize that. But you should always be, when you're talking to consumers
of information. Be clear in your own mind and be clear to them what is advocacy and what is
analysis. And the analysis is different things work in different places. And there are a lot of
places that are going to be on the map in 2026 where economically moderate and socially moderate
is going to be the formula. And where the attempt to have one more go at the Bernie Sanders
campaign is going to not work. Yeah, that's, I mean, I've kind of felt, I have a bit of a,
it's like a 10-year bone to pick with Bernie Sanders, basically. And I feel like he,
gets a free pass for a lot of the things that he advocates for and also in the age discussion.
And we're going to talk about Grand Platner and Janet Mills towards the end of the show.
But yes, Bernie Sanders politics obviously don't work everywhere.
But as someone who works in conservative media, I know how important it is that you have the branding right for the party.
So yes, everybody goes out and they run their races.
And the people who are running races that don't fit the stereotype of AOC or Bernie Sanders, they get ignored by the right.
Like, no one wants to talk about Pat Ryan, right?
That's very boring.
They want to talk about Bernie and AOC and Graham Platner.
Yeah.
So I'm thinking of this from a communication standpoint as well as the practical kind of
on the ground of how you're doing it.
And that's why I think I was drawn to this idea of really emphasizing how much you can have
a through fair argument about, you know, pushing back on the quote unquote oligarchy if you
want to use Bernie's terms about it, but making sure that you are not as socially liberal
as Democrats have been in the past.
Yeah.
Well, you definitely, look, if socially, what does socially liberal mean?
The Democratic weak points are crime, immigration, and to a lesser degree, trans.
And those are not messaging problems because being soft on crime in particular, it was the great unifying message of the Democratic Party from 2014, the carceral state.
Defund the police was maybe on the extreme edge, but there are lots of people wanted to release people out of prisons.
And indeed, there were something like, I've now forget the exact number of reductions in the number of persons held in prisons, but it was measured,
with six digits, not five.
So that was a real problem because crime went,
I remember writing with this for the Atlantic in 2014,
saying Democrats are making a huge gamble here.
And look, 2014 is one of the low points in crime in the United States.
There's nothing wrong with making a little experiment.
What if you reduce incarceration a little?
But you don't, on a gamble and a hunch and a whim,
reduce it massively all at once,
because then you're going to get a crime wave,
as indeed followed, partly because of the pandemic,
but continuing after.
But one more thing that needs to be said about the Bernie Sanders problem.
Look, Democrats are the party of the state.
They're the party of government.
They have things they want to do.
And if they are the party of government, you have to elect people who know what they're talking about.
Now, if you're the party of the anti-state, then it doesn't matter.
Then you can elect all kinds of Ron Johnson types who don't know how anything works.
Because you're not trying to make something work.
But if you're trying to make things work, you need politicians who understand how things work.
You need responsible people.
And I think there's a lot of chafing that Democrats look at Republicans and have envy and say,
well, why can't we have our own Ron Johnson?
Like, why can't we have one of those fools?
Well, you could if you didn't want to run the state.
But since you do, you'd better get into someone who knows how things work.
And that's the problem with the oligarchy message.
There's nothing wrong with saying if you're, I'm not a social Democrat, but I'm not a liberal.
But if you were, you know, we want to have a more redistributive.
Nothing wrong with that.
How would it work?
And you know what?
It's not going to work through class war and antagonism.
It's going to work through mechanics of bureaucracy and government.
and you better understand them
and better understand what the tradeoffs are
and what kind of revenue measures work
and what kind are going to be counterproductive.
You need a real concern
for the mechanics of government
if you're going to be a Democrat.
Well, that doesn't fit on a bumper sticker
and that's something that we struggle with constantly.
You know, you ask a Democrat,
you know, even up to the leadership of the party,
like Takiam Jeffries, you know,
what are the slogans?
And he's like, you know, speaks for 20 minutes or something.
And you say, no, it has to go on a bumper sticker, right?
like no tax on tips, build a wall.
And Ruben Gallego in particular, I'm on a Ruben Gallego trip right now.
So be warned for the rest of the podcast.
But he was talking about how damaging equity or the concept of economic equity has been to the party and that people don't hate the rich.
They want to be rich themselves or they at least want to be able to buy a home and a big effing truck.
That was his messaging.
And I was like, we could run on let's get a big effing truck, I think, for sure.
Yeah. I mean, look, everyone runs on the same slogan in every election, more for you.
That's everybody's slogan. And then the question is, what is more and who's you? And that's where the footnotes come in. And then the questions, well, why haven't you got more? And the different parties have different explanations. But it's just, look, the Republicans have a structural problem, which is Americans care a lot about health care. And what does the Republican answer on health care less for you? Yeah. So the Democratic fate is they are the party of governance.
that means they have less room to nominate people who don't care about governance.
We do. We need to do some change, I think, in that reputation. But overall, you're right,
which is a pretty consistent theme with you. And we're going to take a quick break. And then we're
going to talk about wars in the Caribbean.
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Everyone thinks we are in an AI bubble right now. But so what? Are
aren't we used to bubbles where people lose their minds financially and Menadol straightens
itself out eventually? What if this one is different? The point is, all of these other booms
nowhere near as unprofitable. This would be like if every Uber cost $10,000 and ran on giraffe blood.
That's Ed Zittron, a writer and podcaster and a critic of big tech in general and AI specifically.
And I'm Peter Kafka, the host of channels, the podcast about tech and media. You can hear my
conversation with Ed Zittron right now on channels wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
Welcome back. Trump says he's taking the fight to, quote, narco-terrorists ordering U.S.
forces to blow up suspected drugboats in the Caribbean, but officials on the ground, including
in Venezuela and Colombia, say those vessels aren't carrying fentanyl to the U.S. at all.
They're moving cocaine and marijuana bound for Europe and Africa, much better than fentanyl,
but still drug trafficking. Now, after a Colombian,
fishermen was killed in one of those strikes that followed a spiraling.
Columbia's president is accusing the U.S. of murder, Trump's cutting aid and threatening
tariffs, which he loves to do.
And even some inside the Pentagon are questioning whether this campaign is really about
drugs or regime change.
What are your top line thoughts on what's been going on over these, you know, last several
weeks?
We have 32 dead now in seven strikes.
I think it was the latest count.
I've been obsessing over these subjects for a while, dating back to the Biden administration.
because one of the things that happened during Biden
was a lot of Republicans rallied around the idea
that the United States needed to conduct strikes
inside Mexican territory.
That's where the fentanyl comes from.
And Ron DeSantis, when he was running for president,
talked about having a kind of naval blockade
of the Mexican Pacific coast,
potentially intercepting Chinese vessels carrying precursors.
J.D. Vance endorsed rocket strikes.
And these are Dan Crenshaw,
who is in a different world would be
a very important Republican leader
who is by no means a hothead
and a very intelligent person, he endorsed the idea of strikes on Mexican territory. Now,
this is not a war on the Mexican state, but this would be war on Mexican territory with or without
Mexican permission, a very dangerous situation. Trump was always less hot-headed on strikes
inside Mexico than some of his other people were. And once president, he's backed away. And I think
the Venezuela campaign is a way to give the people who wanted strikes inside Mexico something,
but something less dangerous than strikes inside Mexico. It's on the high seas. It's not on Mexican
territory, you know, these are controlled incidents. But it is, again, even though it's less
dramatic and dangerous than what they wanted to do inside Mexico, it still has dangerous
implications. And the story about Columbia is an example of this. So Trump can't even spell
spell the country, Colombia, correctly. He spells it like the university. That is confusing,
though, when you've gone after the university so much, right? Yeah. Maybe it's like spell check,
but I don't think true social has spell check. Sorry. Now carry on with your very smart point.
Now, the United States has a very important relationship with Columbia, dating back to the Clinton years.
Columbia was a major source of cocaine to the United States.
Crack cocaine was a big killer.
And President Clinton, President Bush, President Obama had a series of programs to facilitate security cooperation with Colombia.
That became a very, very important partner.
And the Columbia has paid a heavy blood price to clean up their act.
And as part of the price, the United States helped Columbia to redirect its economy away from cocaine.
If you go to the supermarket and buy cut flowers, those are probably from Columbia.
And cut flowers need to move with incredible speed.
They perish rapidly.
Everyone knows that.
And so Bush negotiated and President Obama signed a free trade agreement with Colombia.
That's one of the last free trade agreements the United States entered into before the era of protectionism began.
So this is an important relationship.
Now, the current president of Columbia is kind of a loudmouth.
And he's quite unpopular.
And he's at the end of his term.
So he's someone, the relationship proceeds around him.
So he can be kind of an isolated figure, and he's very on the far left side of Colombian politics,
and Columbia tends to tilt toward the more conservative side.
He was the first, Petro was the first left being president in like 35 years.
But when he says the Americans killed a fishing boat, if that's not true, that would be a very
big lie for him to tell, because the United States could easily refute it, and there are a lot
of people inside the Colombian political system who would want to make them pay a price for
making the relationship with the United States even worse than it is.
So without having a lot of confidence in Petro, I'm going to guess that that was not a lie.
And if it's not a lie, then you really have to think, well, what about the next strike?
This is not as hermetic.
And although all the strikes are illegal, if you actually are killing narcos, probably the American political system won't give you too hard a time about it.
It's illegal, but these are people who deserve something.
But if you're actually killing fishermen and it looks like the United States is, that's a moral reckoning.
Yeah, well, there's also the story, there's a name attack.
for the first time to a person who's from Trinidad and Tobago who has disappeared that his family
is claiming was swept up in this, someone who is also not a drug trafficker. And then we have
repatriated two Venezuelans that survived these attacks instead of trying them, which would
indicate that we didn't have the goods to be doing this in the first place. And you already
mentioned that this would be illegal. But if you get a narco trafficker, probably people will
turn, you know, a blind eye to it. And I think Rand Paul has been doing a very good job out there
advocating as much as he can for the fact that, you know, there are procedures you're supposed
to go through when you do this, especially if it's not just a one-off, right? This has been
32 people dead, seven strikes thus far. And Trump has been asking for authorization if he wants
to go into Venezuelan land, which obviously has big implications. And the Mexican connection
is very interesting there. Do you think, you know, I guess looping back to what we were saying
about the authoritarian tendencies of this administration, one of the biggest ways that they've been
doing that is subverting the role of Congress, right? I mean, we basically have a unitary state,
right? Is that what you would say? Where the executive is all that matters. And, you know,
there are a lot of members of Congress that are hot and bothered about this, you know, Congressman Adam
Smith, Jim Himes, et cetera. But so far on the Republican side have only really been hearing
Rand Paul screaming about it because you're supposed to be able to get authorization, especially
if you think that the administration has something like regime change on the mind, do you think
that they have that on the mind? And do you think there's any chance that there is some sort
of discussion within Congress about what's going on? Yeah. Well, I don't think President Trump
tends to have plans the way other kind of people have plans. Concepts of plans. He has kind of instincts.
Think of him as like an ooze that oozes wherever it is not met.
with a blockage. He's got various kinds of authoritarian and corrupt and sinister projects,
sometimes just ego, sometimes making improper money. And he's just looking for where's a place
where I'm not going to get a check. And killing drug dealers is a place where he won't receive
too much of a check. But there are only so many things you can do in the realm of counter drug.
You can control demand, and that means punishing Americans, which is always unpopular. You can control
supply, and that means getting involved with foreign countries in various ways, and that's difficult.
Or you can say, we'll control neither supply nor demand and will have some kind of legalization,
and then you get a lot of victims inside the United States.
So it's a triangle.
There are only three choices.
Controlling supply, the United States has been working with that project since the 1970s.
And the basic problem is violence doesn't work.
If you want to control supply, you need a, as happened in Columbia, you need to create
new opportunities for people who are involved in the drug trade, not all of whom want to be
criminals, to grow cut flowers instead of growing co-cut.
And it turns out cut flowers were more profitable.
They were often like serfs to the drug lords.
Cut flowers were a more profitable business.
But you have to protect them because the former surf holders would say,
well, we'll kill you if you grow the cut flowers.
So you needed to protect them.
But the idea that you're going to say,
okay, the way we're going to stop drugs from flowing into the country
is every time we see a $40,000 powerboat with crew who are making a couple of dollars a day,
carrying a load of cocaine that cost dozens of dollars to manufacture,
whatever its street value.
And we're going to send naval vessels and jet fighters,
and we're going to blow them up with a missile
that probably costs more than the entire project of the boat,
just the missile.
That's a losing project.
I'm reminded very much of one of the great stories
from the world of drug lore
that Daniel Patrick Moynihan told in his memoirs.
It's 1971, and the United States
has just made the largest heroin bust
in the history of the world to that point.
This is the bus that was the origin
of the movie, the French Connection,
have you seen that?
Oh, yeah.
Okay, $5 million.
In 1997, Dr. Evil, $9,000, $5 million.
Inflation has been compiled.
So at the time that this happens, Daniel Patrick Boyan is the drug czar, the man in the White House with drug control responsibility.
He's enormously excited, and he's so excited that he summons up at a helicopter to go to Camp David to meet President Nixon and tell him that they have intercepted $5 million to the fair one.
And as he gets on the helicopter, who is also on the helicopter, George Schultz, who was then Secretary of Labor, one of the great figures in American government over the 70s and 80s.
And Schultz has got the big helicopter headphones on.
He's reading the Wall Street Journal.
and he greets Moynihan.
Moynihan is burbling with incitement.
And he says, George, I have to tell you
what I'm going to tell the precedent
about we just had the biggest drug bust
in the history of the world.
$5 million.
Schultz looks up from the Wall Street Journal,
says, good, congratulations.
Not interested.
Moynihan is a little hurt.
George, you don't understand.
This is the biggest drug bust
in the history of the world.
$5 million.
Good.
Congratulations.
And then Moynihan thinks,
and then he remembered,
George Schultz used to teach
economics at the University of Chicago.
George, I imagine you think that so long as there's a demand for drugs inside the United
States, there will be a supply.
At which point, George Schultz folds down the journal interested for the first time and says,
Dan, there may be hope for you after all.
That's a great story.
So blow up the boats, it's going to accomplish nothing.
You're serious about this.
You have to re-educate yourself to plan Colombia.
You have to give people opportunities in the producing countries that are better than
drug-making. You have to protect them. You have to work with local authorities. You have to do
foreign policy. You can't just do Hegg-Seth policy. Just let's blow up something and see what happens.
Well, the administration is not big fans of doing foreign policy that way. And we saw that the head
of Southern Command, General Alvin Holsey, resigned. He was only a year into the job. And there's
reporting that he was pushing back against whatever this plan is and that Pete Hexssef didn't like it very
much. Do you think there will be more pushback from within the rank and file? And ultimately,
does anything come of this back and forth with Colombia and whatever tariffs they're going
to levy and the aid that they're going to cut off? Yeah. I think with Colombia, so Petro's out of
office early next year. The right will return to power in Colombia. And I think probably the situation
will get easier. I think a lot of people, there will be pressure in Congress against the Columbia
terrorists because they will recall that the reason there's a free trade agreement with Columbia
is to keep Columbia out of the cocaine business. And if you blow up the free trade agreement,
you kill cut flowers. I forget how many minutes you've got to move them from place to place.
But you don't have much time. And if you put a lot of barriers on cut flour, you can kill
the cut flower industry as fast almost as you kill the cut flowers themselves. And then what do
the farmers grow? You know, there's a pretty obvious replacement crop. And there are people who are
And the remains of the drug industry and the left-wing insurgency inside Columbia are still there ready to come back to life.
My guess is they'll blow up some more boats.
Eventually, there'll be an undeniably innocent person.
It'll be a scandal.
And then at that point, it will also be undeniable that this whole project is a failure because you cannot blow up your way to a drug introduction.
It's just not, as George Schultz would say, the problem is the demand inside the United States.
It will some and forth supply from somewhere.
And I think the thing will probably tend to fizzle out.
I hope that you're right.
That's less scary than, you know, that we're suddenly doing regime change.
And God knows where I can't even imagine what that looks like with our white house.
Well, yeah, Colombia and Venezuela have been scenes of guerrilla war going back to the early 19th century.
It's just not a good place for certainly not a foreign power to try to impose control on the country by controlling the capital.
City. Well, they also, at least in the case of Venezuela, are so natural resource rich that it's a very different estimation than it seems like based on the actions or what they're purporting the actions are about. And Petro said that as well, which I'm sure pissed the administration off too. He just said this about oil, right? This isn't, and gold, I think he mentioned. Okay, we're going to take a quick break. Stay with us.
Welcome back, and before we go, we already talked about Graham Platner a little,
but we're going to do more plaid and tattoos.
Main Senate race just turned into a headache for Democrats.
Graham Platner, the Bernie-backed oyster farmer, once seen as the party's next working-class hope,
is apologizing for years of offensive Reddit posts about race, police, sexual assault.
Platner blames the comments on post-war trauma and say that he's changed.
She also did take responsibility, which I am always appreciative of.
of and talked about his PTSD, too.
But the scandals dividing Democrats, progressives defending him as authentic, party leaders backing
Governor Janet Mills as the safer choice.
I interviewed Janet Mills last week.
She was definitely on message talking about, you know, I'm the tested candidate and the seat
is winnable if you have someone opposing Susan Collins who actually has a record to run on.
You already previewed your thoughts, but what are you thinking about the race?
So let me say something about people who take responsibility.
I would have so much more respect for you.
If what happened is someone like this in their announcement speech said,
now I have to tell my followers something,
which is when I came back from war, I was very disturbed.
And I put a lot of things on the record that I'm not proud of.
And I'm sure my opponents will eventually find them.
You know what?
Here they are.
Here they are.
Let me disclose to what I said.
And let me tell you why I've changed my mind about this.
If you take responsibility after someone else finds you out,
I don't think you took responsibility.
accountability begins with you being the first to say,
and by the way, you owe this to your backers
to say to them, you know, here are my vulnerabilities.
I'm not trying to steal a yard here.
You know, one of the things that made Barack Obama
so invulnerable as a new candidate
with an exotic name, was he'd written this big autobiography.
You want to find a bad story about Obama.
It's in the book he wrote.
It's in the table of contents.
You can look up like drug use, anti-American sentiment.
Yeah.
All there.
And he works it through.
So it's lost.
power because he said, this is who I was. This is not who I am. This is who I was. This is why I was.
This is why I changed. Okay. And you told us. So I guess the change of heart is sincere.
So that's my question. If you've got these things in the record and you want to be forgiven after
they come out, you have to tell people. And you especially owe that to your supporters, not just as an
active strategy, but as an act of moral authenticity. That's moral authenticity. If you're sorry after
you're caught, you're not authentic.
I mean, for some benefit of the doubt, I think, you know, Grand Platner, I think we're at the same age.
So we're both 41. I am less terminally online than majority of my peers. But certainly, you know, I don't know. I doubt I could run for office based on whatever old tweets or something. Not like racist, anti-police stuff.
Actually, that's not true. I could run for office. Maybe I will. But you should.
You know, there's this discussion now about what it means to be a millennial or a Gen Z candidate and that they are going to come with a lot more baggage than a Barack Obama who had even, you know, written a lot of this stuff in his book does and that people are a lot more forgiving of things that they find offensive or that all of society finds offensive. I mean, we've elected Donald Trump twice, right? And his stuff is on tape.
for someone who doesn't use a phone, or I guess he does now, but, you know, famously didn't use to, you know, ever email or text.
Like, you know, he's on tape talking, we could still grab her by the, you know what.
And I think that young people are so desperate for something different than what the establishment has been feeding them for so long that they are willing to forgive these kinds of things.
Now, Janet Mills' campaign feels differently about that, obviously.
But what do you make of, you know, what the new.
era of candidacy looks like with people who have been online their entire lives?
Look, I think there are people who forgive in a very selective way. So J.D. Vance forgives you
if you say Nazi things. He doesn't forgive you if you say non-Nazi things. He's very harsh.
If you say, I don't think Charlie Kirk was all that, then you have your visa yanked and be
deported. But if you say Hitler was right and put more people in gas chambers and you're 42,
that that's a useful indiscretion that is to be forgiven even if you did it 10 minutes ago.
I think just generally, when George W. Bush, who had kind of a troubled past alcohol and maybe other things too, when he ran for president, he talked about it. And in his acceptance speech, he talked about it in a very eloquent way. And I had nothing to do with this, so that I'm not praising my own work. But he talked at one point about his life. And he wasn't specific, but he said, I understand forgiveness because I have needed it. That once you say, I'm not going to go into every sort of detail, but I'm letting everyone know,
They're things I'm not proud of.
I'm not going to be shy about them.
And I'm going to acknowledge my remorse.
That's a different message.
And someone unearths it and holds you to account.
And then you have a story.
Have the story first.
And not just as a matter of strategy,
because that's also how we genuinely know.
That's how we know you're remorseful.
Is that you bring it to let yourself.
Fair enough.
I mean, he obviously not even told even his highest level advisors about that
because there were people who left the campaign once they saw this.
and, you know, found it obviously to be incredibly disappointing that he had spoken about that,
even if he was in the throes of PTSD.
You know, one more thing, the people leaving.
So if you are someone who, in your 20s, had substance abuse problems, had rage problems,
sexual misconduct, and you've talked to your staffers about it, and you truly are a different person,
they will die in the last ditch to defend you.
They will not quit because they will say, yeah, that was the guy I wouldn't have voted for when we were all 20,
but now we're all 40, and this is the guy or woman, I would vote for, and they have taken
or so everyone's got something, and this person has faced it and taken steps to correct it.
I believe in him or her even more than I would have if they were someone who'd never known
the temptation to do anything wrong.
If people are leaving, it's because you haven't been straight with them.
And if you're not straight with your staff, you're not straight with anybody.
That makes a lot of sense.
And it feels like there's definitely energy shifting away from Platner.
We'll see how the next few weeks shake out because he has been.
you know, he's raised like $4 million already and has been a big source of excitement across the
state. I wanted to get your thoughts on the gerontocracy problem writ large because the Democrats in
particular are obviously struggling with this. You know, Janet Mills is 77. Bernie, who's older than
she is, like, you know, it's time for a change. But this is happening all over the country. And we did have
a few representatives who passed away in office just since Donald Trump came back in. And, you know,
there were seats left open where we could have, you know, taken key votes and needed that.
So what are your thoughts about when it's time to go?
I've a rather dark joke about this, which I hesitate to say in a public place.
No, go for it.
This is a Scott Calloway podcast.
Like you say all the dark things.
If I were like a Democratic senator quizzing a judge for, or certainly a Supreme Court justice,
my first question would be Mr. Justice, Madam Justice, I have one question for you.
Do you smoke?
No?
Forget it.
Like if Ruth Bader Ginsburg had smoked, the whole history of this country would be different.
Yeah.
She would have had a distinguished career and been intensely mentally acute until age 68, 6970.
And then to the great sadness of all who loved her and to herself, but she would have gone to meet her maker and gone to a just reward and have, but the seat would become vacant at an appropriate time.
So I think one of the things that has happened is we've had this extraordinary public health revolution that the baby boom generation and just before have benefited.
from and people are not adapted to it. And what also happens, I think this is more true for men than for
women. You can go off the cliff quite quickly. You can be a very vigorous and healthy 77 and then a
very sickly and feeble 79. And so it's surprises them. They go into that last race at age 77 feeling
I'm more or less the person I was at 67. Maybe, you know, maybe I need a little bit more rest in the
afternoon, but I'm basically the same. And then bang, two years later. It's gone, again, I think
this is more for men than for women. There's a lot of luck of the draw in how this goes.
You know, John McCain savagely beaten every bone in his body broken, it seems, and yet he was
vigorous to the very, very end. Other people don't have that kind of good luck. In general,
society is living longer, and so you should expect the politicians probably will age,
and there's certain advantages to being there for a while. You build more networks. And, you know,
something for voters to think about, but it's not the only factor. And I think some Democrats are
overlearning the Biden lesson and not understanding that the reason Biden's age was such a
problem was because Biden ran in 2020 as the last candidate of the Democratic Center and he won
as the last candidate of the Democratic Center. And then when he became president, his age caught up
with him and he was too feeble to prevent to resist the Democratic left. And so he ran a much more left
wing administration than he had promised both his party and the country that he would deliver in 2020.
In 2020, he promised normal, and what you got in 2021 was basically a Warren Buttigieg administration.
And that's not what Biden had a promise.
That's not what he thought he would deliver.
And I think if Biden had been more vigorous, that's not what would have happened.
Yeah.
There certainly could have been more pushback, I think, against the more activist groups or consultants that were pushing things.
But, you know, I think even purely on immigration, if he had sounded like the Biden of the election, we would not have had those first three years, which.
clearly could have been avoided was just the laws on the books because they were avoided in the
last year of the Biden presidency as a source of great frustration. And one of the other things that
was a big problem was, look, this is probably the single most consequential, most difficult
decision Biden faced was whether to push for schools to reopen in the fall of 2021. And in retrospect,
we can see that there's a balance of risk here because, I mean, there really were dangers
associated with opening the schools early. Kids may not get sick, but teachers get
sick and kids' parents get sick. You had to make a really tough moral choice. What is more
important here? The future of the next generation, because we know these kids are suffering from not being
in school, or genuine risks to older people. How do you balance that? And the Biden administration
basically acquiesced as many of the blue states said, we're going to let the teachers unions make
this call. And I think that is an underestimated fact in why Democrats lost in 2024. And it's an
underrated fact in understanding what's happening to American society, because we think about little
But there are lots of people
were in the cusp
of dropping out of high school
or not in 2021, 2021,
and the closure of the schools
meant they dropped out of high school
and many of them got into trouble
with the law.
The spade of carjacking's here
in Washington, a lot of the people
who did that, those were not
people who had to be criminals.
They were people who were marginal
in school, the schools were closed,
they went out, their parents were working,
they got into trouble and
they did terrible damage to others
and many of them will be in prison
for a long time
and never ever get their foot back on the ladder
that they would have kept their feet on how the school stayed open
and they've been able to finish their degree.
Absolutely.
I mean, the learning loss is astounding and smart Democrats and some Republicans,
but pay more attention, I guess, to the advice the Dems are giving
are, you know, working on programs, like tutoring programs to make up for that.
And I don't want to make this sound like it was an easy call.
It definitely wasn't.
And there were some Republicans who went along with this as well.
But it is the dividing line in society.
And I've noticed that, you know, when I'm talking about
whatever authoritarian thing
Donald Trump is doing
that I get a lot of pushback
like, well, you're the ones
who shut down society,
you're the ones who told us
that your kids couldn't go to school
and New Jersey,
the governor's race
for Phil Murphy's second term
being within three points
or that we have a governor
Yonkin in Virginia,
I think you can draw a straight line
between that and what happened
with the management of our school systems.
And you want to know that
when the call was made,
the president of the United States
really thought hard about it
and heard advice
from all sides and balance the decision.
And of course, look, I have very little
sympathy for COVID second guessing. People will say
things like, well, the scientist said a
different thing in September than they said in May.
Yeah, called science.
You have a completely new problem.
You know what? Month by month, you know more
about the problem. So, of course, your answers change.
I mean, religion doesn't change, but science
does. So I have tremendous
for the imperfect information, for the
real-time pressures, for the balancing
of interest, because teachers and parents' lives,
those matter, too. But
The president of the United States of the internal system has to be the one to say, you know what, the next generation counts most. And if we're going to have a, if we're going to impose burdens, we want to have fewer burdens on the rising generation and more burdens on those who've already been able to enjoy more of their lives.
Yeah. I think also, you know, as a nod to the importance of the transparency of everything and, you know, I'm a New Yorker, we had the Andrew Cuomo daily press conferences, having that kind of access or feeling like someone was actually puzzling.
it out in front of you would have made people feel a lot more secure in those decisions
because there were, you know, huge balance of factors. And Randy Weingarten hasn't, actually,
I haven't read her new book, but I have not heard that it was a massive mea culpa. So I doubt that
that's the case. But she hasn't done that either, you know, come out and really said, I understand
how disappointed parents were in these decisions. I think we could have done X, Y, or Z things
differently. We're going to build, you know, outdoor tents or recruited a bunch of younger teachers
to come in for a couple of years and put our older teachers on Zoom classes and made it more
of a hybrid model. Coulda what or shoulda, I guess. I don't know if that's an uplifting note to
end on, but it is the note that we are ending on. David Frum, thank you so much for joining me.
Oh, thank you. And I wanted to this. You dropped a hint that you were thinking about running for office.
Does that say? Oh, I don't know. I, not really. No, I, maybe it's a, it is a sad reflection on
the state of our politics, but I think that you can actually affect more change on the outside
than you can on the inside, at least the way that our politics works today.
Well, I hope if there are people who are within reach of your voice, they will think about it
and understand the office doesn't mean, there's something weird about people say,
if I'm not a United States senator, I'm nothing, that state assembly, state Senate,
school board, city government, these are all intensely important callings.
And I hope people who follow you will, will be inspired.
by your thoughts to take up that burden business. Every job matters. I love that. That is definitely
an optimistic note to end on. I hope that you'll come back again. This was such a treat.
Thank you. So kind of. Thank you.
