Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #483: Will Hurd, Bill de Blasio
Episode Date: February 2, 2019Bill’s guests are Will Hurd, Bill de Blasio, Peter Hamby, Jon Meacham, Jennifer Rubin. (Originally aired 2/1/19) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices.... Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series, Real Time with Bill Ma.
It's not a secret today why you're happy.
You're in California. It's warm here. I mean, this, did you see what's going on in this country?
We have, people have never been this cold. Millions are trapped inside for days. I mean, it can make you do desperate things.
There are unconfirmed reports of a guy in Chicago who watched Roma.
No, New York is so cold. Today, Louis C.K.
was just describing his penis.
Very cold.
In Washington,
Sean Hannity's lips got stuck on Trump's ass.
It's a very cold...
Ooh, this is it cold.
All right.
But today, I'm telling you,
today the bullshit rose past eye level.
I mean, I've been worried before,
but now Trump is saying
he's already built the wall.
He said, with cash on hand,
then why did we just have this fucking government shutdown?
He said, we are building a wall, a lot of wall.
Let me tell you right now.
Right now we're building a wall,
and we're getting ready to give out very, very big contracts
with some money we have on hand.
But we will be looking at a national emergency
because I don't think anything's going to happen.
You get that?
We're building a lot of wall,
so we need a national emergency
because otherwise we can't build a wall.
I can't tell where the lies end and the dementia begins.
He is basing...
No.
Listen to this.
He's basing his wall policy now on the movie, Sacario 2.
I'm not making this up.
In Sicario, I saw the movie.
They're like, yeah, people have prayer rugs on the border, you know, Muslims with...
This is not happening.
In the movie, there is smugglers who are binding women with duct tape.
He cites this as if he cannot tell fiction from reality.
Today, he announced, we're putting a 50% tariff on vibranium.
Vibranium.
What did I say?
Vibranium, yes.
He said, trade with Wakanda.
Very unfair.
And then he spent the week at war with our own intelligence chiefs.
Did you see this?
He says the southern border is an emergency.
They say it's not.
He says ISIS is defeated.
They say not true.
He says North Korea is complying with denuclearization and Iran is not.
They say the opposite.
He says Russia's meddling is not meddling.
They say Russia is meddling.
These are thousands of highly trained professionals
who we pay to protect and do a great job
to protect this country.
They have human assets on the ground all over the world.
And they're listening to shit.
Remember that we went through that with Snowden and the NSA?
We spent trillions.
What the fuck are we doing that for?
Except to get the intelligence.
That's what they do.
Versus Trump, who doesn't read?
doesn't talk to experts, doesn't even read the daily briefing.
He couldn't be less informed if his head was in a jar.
I'm telling you, it went to a different level this week.
A different level.
I mean, besides the lies and the crazy, he is just aggressively stupid.
I mean, it's Black History Month, so he went into the Rose Garden and pardoned a bucket of chicken.
I mean, he knows nothing about black people.
Today, he gave a shout out to Malcolm 10.
And then he sat down for a lengthy interview with the New York Times.
There were no survivors.
He said to the New York Times,
I came from Queens.
I became president.
I'm entitled to a great story from my hometown paper.
This is this big gripe with the press.
if they could just report how great he is,
instead of obsessively focusing on the things he says and does.
But just in time, a white knight has emerged.
You know this.
Starbucks CEO, Howard Chultz.
He is bringing the country together.
A week ago, no one ever heard of him.
And now we all think he's a giant asshole.
No, nobody likes him.
Democrats don't like him,
We think he's going to help elect Trump.
And Republicans say, you put the Starbucks guy in charge,
and people are going to be coming into this country
just to use the bathroom.
And we can't allow that.
I mean, why the Starbucks guy?
His running mate is a Nora Jones CD.
That's...
But the Super Bowl and the L.A. Rams are in the Super Bowl.
So I betsy you're happy.
That's this weekend.
And now, you know, it's the one thing we all still do together, right?
In this very divided nation, everybody knows about the Super Bowl.
I mean, some people will watch it on TV, some will listen on the radio.
R. Kelly will be streaming.
Yes, sympathy for R. Kelly, right.
Good instinct, people.
Oh, not about R. Kelly.
Look, I don't care who wins as long as the Patriots lose.
Now, I'm actually pulling for New England, because if they win, a couple of weeks from now,
Finally, there'll be some Patriots in the White House.
All right, we got a great show.
We got John Meacham.
We got Peter Hamby and Jennifer Rubin and a little later.
We're speaking with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio's backstage.
But first up, he is the Congressional Representative whose Texas, Texas District, say that three times,
whose Texas District crosses the most land on our southern border.
From Texas's 8th District, Will Hurd, ladies gentleman, congressman.
How are you, sir?
Awesome.
Thank you very much for being here.
And yes, let's talk about your district.
It's, I understand, 820 miles long?
With, of the border.
I represent 29 counties, two time zones.
It's larger than 26 states, roughly the size of Georgia.
It must be nobody in it, right?
It must be very sparse.
There's more cows than people in between San Antonio to El Paso.
Right.
But I'm from San Antonio.
That's the biggest city.
and 820 miles of the border.
It's a 71% Latino district,
and it's truly the only 50-50 district in Texas,
50% Republican, 50% Democrats.
And I bet you the people think you're a Democrat,
but you're not.
Well, look, I'm a proud Republican,
but I try to talk about things that make sense,
like border security.
Since I have more border than any other member of Congress,
I'm the only Republican that represents a part of the border.
There's nine members of Congress.
Congress that represent the border. All Democrats for you,
except for me. And I have the most, almost two-thirds of the border between the U.S.
and Mexico. And you've called Trump's wall a myth, right? The need for a wall, a myth?
Well, I've said that when saying that this hasn't been a problem for multiple
administrations, that's a myth. But I do believe building a 30-foot-high concrete structure
that takes three hours to penetrate from C to shining sea is the most expensive and least effective
way to do border security.
But let's talk about what might be a myth in this area.
The fact that immigration is a big problem, I think, is a myth.
Do you think immigration is even a top 10 problem in America, one of our top 10 biggest
problems?
Last year, 400,000 people came to our country illegally, and that's a decrease of 80% since
2000.
But 400,000 is still a lot of people.
I actually think when you're at 3.9, 4% unemployment, guess what?
You need people to work.
Like, that's why we should solve the DACA problem.
There's 1.2 million young men and women who have only known the United States of America as their home.
These are people that are contributing to our economy, to our culture, to our society.
There are already Americans.
Let's keep them here.
Let's have a permanent fix.
So would it be a top 10 problem?
For the DACA kids or the Dreamers, it's a problem.
But for America...
Because it seems to me like it's not a problem.
It's almost a solution because people...
There are a lot...
Most Americans will not do the jobs
that the people who are coming over the border will do.
That seems like a win-win.
I think it's an opportunity, right?
Immigration is actually an opportunity
to make sure that we have people in...
And when you're at 3.9, 4% unemployment,
guess what? You need workers,
whether it's agriculture or artificial intelligence.
So we should be streamlining
our immigration process in order,
to make sure that we have the workforce that we need
in order to keep our economy. So are you a
Republican, like, through your parents
historically? I'm just asking
why you're a Republican. Like why anyone
is any party. I'm not being
snark. You're why or a party? You got to... I'm a
Republican because I believe in limited government.
I'm a Republican because I believe
in the rule of law. I'm a Republican because
I believe in economic opportunity, right?
You don't do that either. There are some warts.
There are some warts on the party,
but also you can say the same about the others.
But here's where I think we should get.
to, right? Instead of talking about all the things that divides us, let's talk about those things that actually unify us.
Because I've criss-crossed 20- They don't do that either.
But both sides, right?
I'm just asking why you're Republican because they're not good at the debt. That was their big thing.
You said limited government. They don't do that. They took over the Congress in 2011, and they raised the debt a trillion dollars a year.
They're not good at national defense. The president's a traitor.
What? I- I don't know. I just don't know what's in it for you.
What is in the Republican Party for you?
I will say this.
You were in the CIA?
I was in the CIA for almost a decade.
I was the dude in the back alleys at 4 o'clock in the morning
collecting intelligence on threats to the homeland.
That's where they collect him, huh?
It is, it is.
Wow.
I did two years...
By the Popeye's jacket.
But I did two years in India, two years in Pakistan.
I did two years in New York City doing a lot of interagency work.
And then a year and a half in Afghanistan
where I managed all of our undercover operations.
Okay, so what do you think when you see the President of the United States this week belittling our intelligence chiefs?
It erodes trust in our institutions.
I think so.
It makes our...
So, but here's why.
What do other countries think?
When they see us, we're not, we're airing our dirty laundry, fighting amongst ourselves.
What do they think when the president doesn't, they know our president doesn't believe the experts?
They know the experts are right. They're not crazy.
New rule. The president should listen. The president should listen to the intelligence chiefs, right?
And so, so, so, so I would agree with it. But it does erode things because
let's take Russia, for example. Yes.
It did try to manipulate our elections in in 2016. Why?
Something else he denies.
They're trying to erode trust in our democratic institutions.
Yes.
Russia is not a global player.
They're a regional thug.
And they're trying to re-establish the territorial integrity of the old USSR.
And what's getting in the way?
A little thing called NATO.
What's supporting NATO?
A little thing called the United States of America, right?
That's why they're trying to go after us.
And when our president makes this decision or goes on Twitter and criticizes the intelligence community, what happens?
When they're trying to do work in the Middle East, going against ISIS, going against,
against al-Qaeda, which has metastasized
to other parts of the Middle East and Northern Africa.
When we have to work with our partners,
it makes it more difficult for those men and women
that are in those dark corners
in those dangerous places.
Right. I mean, this came about
because every year we get a threat assessment, right?
They were giving us what they say,
and this is great that we do this.
And it's in writing.
Right.
It's in writing.
And televised.
And he said they didn't say it.
Now, aside from the lies,
The threats, I think they identified accurately.
You know, they said Russia is still meddling,
ISIS is still around, all things which he denies.
But isn't the biggest threat, him?
Isn't the biggest security threat to America,
the president of the United States?
I think the biggest threat to long-term stability
in the United States is actually China.
China is trying to surpass the United States
as the global hegemon.
But I will say this.
When we erode trust in our intelligence community,
in our federal law enforcement,
that has an impact through the rest of the world.
The only way that we're going to continue to deal with China
is by making sure we have allies.
When our allies can't trust us,
or they don't know if they think there's a disconnect
between what the executive branch says
and what the working folks, whether it's in the State Department
or the CIA, that is a problem.
That's why I speak out.
That's why I try to articulate these concerns because there's only three of us that have ever spent time in the intelligence community
And that are now in Congress and this is why I speak up and try to articulate what we should be doing
But I feel like if you are really speaking up you would speak out against the president and you would break with him
Do you do? I do I wrote a little op-ed
about the Helsinki decision when he was standing up there next to Vladimir Putin and
and I said I never would have thought at all my time as an undercover
officer in the CIA that I would see a U.S. president getting played by the Russian KGB, right?
And so...
So isn't the next thing you say is we have to impeach this president?
We have to somehow get rid of this president?
Do you honestly think this president puts country first, which is what you did in the CIA?
I mean, more than anybody, because you guys do it anonymously?
My job, I agree when I agree, I disagree when I disagree.
And this is, for me, making sure the men and women that I served alongside with that are still fighting wars,
you know, we've been fighting the global war and terrorism for 17 years.
These men and women, I speak out on behalf of them.
And ultimately, there's going to be an election in 2020 where the American people decide all these issues.
I know that in your first two years of the Trump administration, you voted with them most of the time.
But in this year, you've not voted with them at all, right?
I think 0 for 12?
Well, that number is a little misleading, by the way. Last Congress, we had almost a thousand bills. I think it was like 9,967. And guess what? All but 15 were done in a bipartisan way. Nobody talks about that number. You've probably never heard that number. And so that stat is cherry-picked certain pieces of legislation that you may or may not have voted on. It's not the entire... I was trying to give you an out.
I'm not really with Trump.
Why do you want to be on the side of this asshole?
I said, I agree when I agree.
I disagree when I disagree.
All right.
And we're going to continue to ultimately do that.
And in this issue right now with border security, I think, is a perfect example of that.
Making sure that we're supporting Dreamers is another area that we're going to continue to support.
And I'm going to always make sure that I have the backs of the men and women in our intelligence community.
All right.
Well, thank you for your service.
You're also a brave man to come here.
And I appreciate it all.
Thank you. Thank you. All right. Let's meet our panel.
Okay, here they are. He is the host of Good Luck America on Snapchat and a contributing writer for Vanity Fair, Peter Hamby.
Peter Hamby. How you doing? Good to have you back.
Thank you.
She's an opinion writer for The Washington Post and a contributor for MSNBC, Jennifer Rubin.
Thank you, Dylan.
And he is a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian whose latest book is The Soul of America, the Battle for Our Better Angels.
John Meacham over here.
Don't forget to send us your questions for tonight's overtime,
so we can answer them after the show on YouTube.
Okay, so am I wrong or did it get worse this week?
It seems like we keep saying that week after a week, but it really did.
It did.
Okay, thank you.
I'm not just imagining.
Right, I think exactly.
We're so in it every single day that it's a useful exercise to go back to, like, YouTube,
and watch how Donald Trump talked even two years ago, let alone
10 years ago.
Really?
He just doesn't seem there.
Right.
Right.
Tragically, he is.
Right.
I think he's like the Admiral and Mary Poppins, right?
The guy who thinks he's still got a ship.
Sating off the cannon.
Yeah, Admiral Boom from Mary Poppins.
And it's sort of this reality.
It's actually unfair to the Admiral in many ways.
I think the distortion of reality is the scariest thing.
My favorite part now is that he makes up these conversations.
So he is embarrassed because his security people, his national security people, go on live television,
and they testify that the president doesn't know what the heck he's talking about.
Right.
So then he realizes, oh, I'm being criticized.
So he invents, I think, a conversation at which they say, no, we were misrepresented.
Misrepresented, they were on live television.
How can you misrepresent someone who's on live TV?
I know.
And then they say, he says, well, they said, we were.
really all in agreement.
I don't know how that's metaphysically possible.
I think the border
wall government shutdown
sort of, you know,
undercut his create-your-own reality
strategy in a way
because he kept saying there's an emergency
at the border, there's an emergency at the border.
The media, for all of its faults,
actually did a pretty good job of illuminating the reality.
I just think that this fake reality
he's creating has its limits.
It's that, you know, 39 to 42%
of the country that believes him,
in him at all costs, but I think most of the country realizes the things he says aren't true.
But I, and I think that Nancy Pelosi has become the Joseph Welch of this drama.
Remember, he was, she, he was the lawyer who said, have you no decency, sir, at long last,
to Joe McCarthy.
And by holding him to account on the wall during the shutdown, she forced him into doing
something he really hadn't done before, which was break with that base.
And presidents get in trouble for two reasons.
One is when they think they can put one past us, Johnson and one.
Watergate, Nixon and everything.
And when they break with their base.
And so when we look back on this,
sort of like the planet of the apes,
how did the statue get to the beach?
I think this could be a big moment.
Can I read something from the National Enquirer
because I read the National Inquirer.
I have for 30 years, my friends and showbizzer,
how dare you, how could you?
I'm like, fuck it. This makes me laugh.
And sometimes I need to laugh.
Okay. This page won last week.
they obviously had to do a retraction
because sometimes
usually they'll print anything but sometimes
they got them and they don't want to get sued.
This is exactly what it says.
It says on November 26, 2018
the National Enquirer published an article
concerning Michael Strayhan
and his new afternoon spin-off
from Good Morning America. The headline on the cover
read, Michael Strayhan fired.
The Inquirer wants to make clear to its readers
that it is unintended to suggest Mr. Strayhan
had been fired.
And regrets, if any reader, misread the article.
They were doing this forever.
But now this is the president of the United States.
Right, right.
And he's apparently in some kind of ongoing relationship with them
because they seem to be doing his bidding
and doing his work for him.
You know, Sean Hannity better watch out
because he's got real competition now from the National Enquirer.
The people who were testifying this week,
and we're talking about Gina Haskell,
head of the CIA,
McCabe, head of the FBI,
Dan Coates, head of, I guess, the whole operation.
There they are.
Okay, now in another world, maybe I would have not thought
that these people were the right people in the job.
They're conservatives, but they're good people.
Yes.
What happens when they go?
What happens when he Matthew Whitaker's those three?
Right.
And he just gets people who he doesn't have to have this argument with,
because you know he doesn't like to have these arguments.
We're down to like the C team.
The B team left like a year ago.
So we're down to the C team.
And each time he replaces them, they do get worse
because who wants to work for this crazy person?
So, you know, in some ways,
I do admire these three because they're hanging in there.
They are not enabling him.
They're actually speaking.
And they're normal, sane people
who are trying their best to protect the country.
And they know stuff.
We have facts.
But, you know, it's like what they say in the movies,
the shit got real.
Because now it's about these security matters.
This week he did Putin, another 50.
I know it looked like he didn't when he got, he's pulling out of the treaty with Russia about nuclear weapons.
Putin has wanted this for years.
He's going down the list of what Putin wants.
Syria, check mark.
Fighting with allies, check marks.
Getting out of NATO.
Getting out of NATO.
Check mark.
Creating confusion about democratic elections, check mark.
If he's not an asset of the Russians, he's doing a fine imitation.
I mean the FBI, our FBI.
Our FBI actually thought he was so compromised
that they opened an investigation,
which we don't know if it's still going on,
into whether or not he was a Russian asset
after he fired James Comey.
Like, these things are staring us in the face,
and if it were any other person,
we would say this is obviously someone
who is hiding something.
Literally half of the American people,
according to a Monmouth poll,
think that he has some financial entanglements with Russia
that Putin's dangling over him.
Slightly less than half of Americans
think they have an actual people.
tape. Like half of the country
literally thinks that he
is being controlled by Vladimir Putin. That's remarkable
and outrageous. So what do you think about your media?
What do you... How is the media
handling this? How should they handle this? Because
I feel like in the New York Times interview him this week,
I feel like I want them to be more in his face
when they're actually talking to them. I feel like they pull punches
when they're in the room with him because they want to get access again.
But somebody has to just, whoa, whoa, whoa,
Whoa, sir, that's completely not true.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, sir.
I think day-to-day...
That's Nancy Pelosi, by the way.
Yes.
That was the one who said, no, that's wrong.
Mr. President, you have your facts.
So all they have to do is be like Nancy Pelosi.
Or as he calls her, Nancy.
Yes, exactly.
Tremendous.
Stinging.
That's the thing.
Well, I got her on that one.
More pigtails, too, sir.
I mean, what the hell?
Day-to-day beat reporters.
on the hill at the White House, they have to
maintain some veneer of access, so they do
sometimes pull punches. I do think the media, writ large,
is asking his questions. We're asking him right here.
But I'm talking about when they're talking to him.
I feel like he gets away with his bullshit.
Excuse me, and then he goes on with this, and they go on to the next question.
And he changes the subject and does you something more provocative
that then piques your interest and you follow him down that rabbit hole.
It is true that when the obstruction case comes, not if,
but when. He basically, Lester Holt, he's on tape,
said, yes. I fired Comey because this Russia thing was made up.
So he just copped to it. I mean, we don't even have to worry that much about it.
I mean, the two most important, the intelligence chiefs are important,
but arguably the two most important public servants in the country right now are Robert Mueller and John Roberts.
Because Roberts is now the swing vote on the court, and whatever Director Mueller comes back with
is going to be hugely important to see whether we can actually prove what,
seems to be self-evidently the case,
which is that there is a relationship with Russia
that has put the Republic at risk.
Do you have confidence
that the media will handle this coming
election better than the last one?
I have my doubts.
I think there's...
Twitter is the water cooler
of the political media.
We retweet quickly, move on to the next thing.
I think that it's not going to get better.
We've had these debates for over 40 years
that the political press doesn't cover enough
policy. They cover too much horse race.
I think what's interesting, if you're a candidate,
because there's going to be 15, 20, 25 Democrats running for president,
how do you punch through?
The media love scandal, right?
Think about Trump in 2016.
His scandals, in many ways, were his policies.
So, like, build the wall, right?
Ban Muslims.
If Democrats can find a way to make their policies scandalous in a way,
but also powerful to voters, they can get attention.
Think about AOC, right?
AOC is a master of attention.
She got people talking about a 70% marginal tax rate,
talking about the Green New Deal.
You saw with Kamala Harris this week saying get rid of private insurance,
the media will cover policy if it comes off as sort of scandalous or interesting,
but they're not going to cover it otherwise.
Well, I look at it a little differently.
First, I think it's actually harder to cover a horse race when they're 15 horses
because you can't tell who's in front of who,
and the difference between 3% and 5% is not really meaning.
We shouldn't even be talking about it.
Right, we're, what, 13 months from Iowa?
It's ridiculous.
So my hope would...
Is it though?
Yeah.
I think that you have a lot of people activated and interested in politics in the country who weren't before, and these are the standard barriers for half the country.
Oh, I do agree with that.
I also think that these people actually have stuff to say.
We've had, like, a holiday from reality.
These people at least are talking about the issues.
You may have disagreements with them.
But they are talking about health care and the environment and the rest of it.
My concern is something a little different, which is that the media loves conflict,
so that they will create conflict between non-differences or very tiny differences,
and suddenly it's the Democrats in disarray a storyline,
which is trivial in and of itself.
And you're still not talking about the substance of what they're saying.
The problem with being against conflict as a narrative device, though, is therefore you're against Homer.
You know, I mean, this conflict is, in fact, the way.
But we're not a story. We're reality.
Well, yes.
But at this point, anything that's borderline in touch with reality is going to be an improvement.
So the bar is fairly low.
There's also not a ton of policy differences in the Democratic primary, and usually primaries generally there's not.
And so the fights become about personality, biography, messaging, stories.
And that's where you get those sort of conflict things.
I mean, there are some policy debates going on within the Democratic Party, challenging corporate power,
criminal justice, those sort of things,
but the media will, I think,
fall back on those sort of personality-driven conflicts.
I'd argue that the biography is actually a good thing
because character is destined and you never know
what's going to happen when the phone rings.
And we knew, I mean, I think the country knew
what the character of the incumbent president was,
it was just that enough voters in the right states
didn't care. And so to some extent,
and the other thing about the media
is we're all the media.
Right? This isn't as though the boys are on the bus or Kronkite is sitting down deciding what to put on the press, right?
And in fact, the press, like politicians, far too often, are mirrors of who we are rather than molders.
And I think that's something we have to think about.
But I think the point about character is right.
We want to see, you know, do these people think?
Can they make a, do they have any record?
Just stop there, that's good.
Right. Thinking would be good. Reading would be good.
Are you talking about the media or the candidates?
The candidates, yes.
It would be nice to see if these people have like the qualities to be a president, have they ever led anything?
Do they know stuff?
I mean, how about giving them like, you know, the SAT test or something?
No, no, I have a theory.
So that we have them like actually know stuff.
We don't have to go to the SAT.
My new theory, I want you to adopt this, we should give the citizenship test to every candidate and everyone who wants a driver's answer.
Seriously.
You have less cars.
Do you think it could pass?
Do you think the president could pass?
Oh, the president, definitely.
No, no, no.
No, no.
No, no.
Because the test is rigged.
Right.
Exactly.
Right, it's written in complete sentences.
Right.
Fake test.
Right, exactly.
Also, could we give a break to, like, asking people so early?
Can't we stop doing that?
They're always asking me.
Like, what do you think of this guy?
I don't know who these people are.
Who's this guy Pete and...
Buttigieg.
What is his name?
Pete Buttigachich.
South Bend, Indiana.
Right. He's running for president.
Pete Buttigich.
He's 37.
And how many people are in South Bend?
100,000.
But he's already had a more responsible position
than Donald Trump did when he was right before.
How do I have an opinion on him?
It's like when people ask me about a band.
I only know the one song.
Right. Right. Right.
I...
Kamala Harris announced for president this week
and most people in California don't have an opinion
of her and she's their senator.
I feel like the acid test on how the media is going to
do is if they keep talking about Elizabeth Warren and the Indian thing. That to me is Hillary's
emails of 2020. If they let that go, you have matured media. If you don't, if it's like,
what's the reaction to the reaction to the reaction about the DNA test? Then you're...
Again, to what I was saying earlier, Warren rolled out this Polkahanis response video last year.
She got a lot of blowback for it. Before that, she was one of few Democrats who was out
doing personal name calling against Donald Trump.
She'd call him a two-bit crook.
She'd call him names. When most Democrats weren't engaging in that,
she's backed away from that since she's announced she's running for president.
And she's back out there in Iowa, New Hampshire, talking about policy.
And remember, there is something in the American spirit where we bounce from guardrail to guardrail.
So you go from George H.W. Bush to Bill Clinton.
You go from Clinton to W.
I didn't think I'd live to see a bigger, sharper contrast than W to Obama until.
So maybe we get Aristotle.
I don't know, but we have someone who might be a presidential contender.
Should I bring him out and he can join this conversation?
Okay, we have right with us now.
He is the 109th, 1009th.
Wow, Mayor, that's said he's been around a long time of New York.
Bill de Blasio, ladies and gentlemen.
Mr. Mayor.
How are you, sir?
Great to meet you.
the panel, I'm sure.
Yes, indeed.
Okay, so you're from the greatest city in the world,
is that correct?
That is exactly right.
You know, I lived in your city twice.
And we miss you.
I grew up across the river.
I liked a lot of things about it,
but I never liked that.
We're the greatest city in the world thing.
You know what?
Because it makes everybody else feel like,
what's wrong with us?
Why can't it be just the greatest city for New Yorkers?
Why do you have to be the greatest city in the world?
We're big, we're bold.
We believe in ourselves.
But that doesn't mean we can't love everyone else, Phil.
Doesn't mean we can't love everyone else.
Trump elected. Okay, so you are thinking of running.
I'm not ruling it out.
Not ruling it out. Does it scare you that there's already so many people in this field?
It's a very crowded field.
No, it's democracy. It's people with a lot of different experiences, views, people have a lot of different backgrounds.
It's actually the Democratic Party at its best.
I agree.
There's something good going on here. You know, when it was the power brokers deciding who had a shot and who didn't, that's when we should have been upset.
This is actual open democracy. It's anyone's ballgame.
I know. But I'm not really.
running for president. You might be. That's what I'm saying. For you, you've got to ask yourself,
what do I got that the rest of these people don't got? What do you got that they don't have?
I'm not here to compare against others, but I'll say what I'm doing in my city because I think
that's the important point. We believe in New York City that we have to be bold about progressive
solutions, that we have to stop being apologetic. I'm actually quite sick of Democrats who are
afraid to be Democrats, who are afraid to be bold and progressive. So, for example, we
Last month, I said, let's stop waiting for the things we should get from Washington, like Medicare for all.
Single-payer health insurance. Let's stop waiting.
Let's guarantee health care for every New Yorker.
We're doing that now.
Every New Yorker will have a right to health care.
But that's New York.
You know, I mean, look at some of the red state Democrats who win.
There's not many.
People like Sherrod Brown, right, Amy Klobuchar, Claire McCaskill until recently, Joe Mansion in West Virginia.
They wouldn't say something like that.
I don't think would they?
Maybe they wouldn't have.
Can this play all over the country?
Doesn't the secret to winning for the Democrat
is you have to, the progressives and the centrist,
and you have to somehow convince both of them,
you're talking to both of them?
I think that is a conventional wisdom we were all taught,
and I think it was a lie.
Wow.
The centrist got us nowhere.
By the way, when it comes to the 2020 Democratic nomination process,
centrist need not apply, in my view.
Wow.
The progressive wing is what's a centrist.
right now for a reason, because progressives provide an idea of the Democratic Party that's truly
identifiable. The people will know. If you say we guarantee health care, if you say we're going
to insure that people have a living wage, we're going to address this madness of the 1% taking
all the wealth and power for themselves. People know which side you're on. They can identify.
The only reason Donald Trump had a chance in 2016 was that too many working Americans didn't
know if Hillary Clinton was on their side. She tried.
to articulate a vision, I don't want to take that away from her, but people couldn't tell
if she was a part of the elite that had caused their problems, or if she was part of a process
of change. What we have to do is Democrats is be so bold and so clear that's unmistakable.
Another example, in New York City, we are going to pass a law guaranteeing two weeks paid time
off, two weeks paid vacation for every single working New Yorker. People need time for themselves
and their families.
Because people are working,
they're working harder and harder.
You see what's happening in our society.
People are working harder and harder.
They're getting less and less for it.
We have to show people on their side
and we're going to do something about it.
And this, you think,
change the view of people in the country at large
about Democrats, because just having a D by your name
is so toxic in about half this country
that they stick with a mad king like Donald Trump
or anybody.
They will vote for anybody in at least 20 states
if they are anything but a Democrat.
Why is that? Why is the D so toxic?
What did the Democrats do? Why are they so obnoxious to people?
Well, I think Democrats lost their way as part of why they're so obnoxious to people
because it used to be the party of working people.
It was unquestionably the party of working people.
So when you think about the generations of Democrats, where did you get Social Security from,
Democrats?
Where did you get the 40-hour work week from so you didn't have to take your whole life
and give it over to work six days, seven days a week?
Democrats created a lot of the actual decent benefits in our society,
the way of living that people could have a middle-class lifestyle.
But then at a certain point, they started being afraid to pursue the next step and the next step.
Today, in this country, too many people are not living a decent life.
Working longer and longer, getting less and less back for it,
paying their taxes but watching the 1% not pay their fair share.
And people are upset about it.
And they have a right to be upset about it.
All right.
Let me ask you about something that I care about, pot.
You, sir, are consistent.
Thank you very much.
I like what you said.
You said, we have to make sure that those who bore the brunt of past burdens.
We're talking about legalizing cannabis.
Reap the most future benefit.
That means that a majority of the opportunity generated in this new industry must go to people of color.
So this is like...
Like the way the Indians got casinos?
I hope it's better than that.
I hope it's better than that.
Yeah, it'll be quite an industry.
But that's what you're saying, is that we're going to,
can white people get in this industry or are they cut off?
No, everyone could be part in the industry just a little bit.
Thank you for your contribution.
It's not just about race.
It is about an economic reality, too.
So here's what I'm trying to say.
For years and years, broken laws sent a huge number of Americans to jail.
Right.
Most of them were young people of color.
Yep.
And we've got an industry that now is just licking its chops, waiting to come in and corporatize marijuana,
to do exactly what the tobacco industry did with cigarettes.
To do exactly what the pharmaceutical industry did with things like oxy-cotton.
And what we need is legalized marijuana without corporatized marijuana.
Well, I don't know about that.
I don't think that's possible completely.
But I like the boldness of this.
You're saying this is a great way to do reparations.
It's a way to say we had an injustice.
Right.
Now let's give the very people who are the victims the economic benefit.
So now that we're on a roll.
Yes.
Here's where I want to challenge you on what a lot of Democrats are, you know,
suggesting a lot of big ticket items.
Medicare for All, they're saying would cost $32 trillion in 10 years.
And it's always, well, then we're going to tax the rich more.
You know that's not going to pay for $32 trillion.
The rich already pay quite a bit.
They should pay more.
Yes.
Okay.
Why don't you guys ever say we should cut the military budget in half?
That's where the money is that's being wasted the most.
Okay.
De-coupled defense, the defense contractors from actually protecting the country.
Okay, so I agree with you that there's a huge amount of waste in the military budget,
and I agree with you that we can find a lot of money in the military budget.
But let me make the bigger point about taxation.
There is plenty of money in the United States of America.
There's plenty of money in L.A., there's plenty of money in New York City.
It's just in the wrong hands.
That is the reality.
And that means taxing the wealthy, repealing the Trump tax cuts and giveaways to the corporations and the wealthy.
But look, if you had Medicare for all, then average Americans are not paying.
They're premiums.
They're co-pays.
They're out-of-pocket expenses for health care.
They're deductibles.
The idea of Medicare for all is, yeah, tax to wealthy as part of it,
but also take away from people all those other expenses in their lives.
If you ask them to contribute then to the costs of Medicare for all,
it actually nets out in their favor.
But yes, the military budget is another place we can save money.
Because you know what?
We're not secure if people in our nation are not living a decent life.
That's the bottom one.
All right.
I want to ask about your big competition, panel two,
for the job of president, and that is Howard Schultz,
is Howard Schultz because he threw his cup into the ring this week or he's thinking about it.
And it's so rare that I agree with the conventional wisdom.
And since everybody hates Howard Schultz and I hate him now too,
I'm just going to enjoy talking about this.
And the first thing I want to say is that people have to get over this idea
that because a guy is rich, he's that smart.
He had one good idea.
Boiling water and beans and, you know, coffee.
And tell you the pipebox.
It's addictive.
It's a drug.
people are going to want to like spend time in a nice place to be near their drug.
Okay, it was one good idea.
The fact that it made him a billionaire is a fluke.
All great wealths are flukes.
It's a fluke.
You can throw a baseball 100 miles an hour and you get paid enormously for it.
It's a fluke.
He's not a genius.
In fact, he's not that bright.
They asked him in 2018, they were asking him about raising taxes to pay for the debt is big issue.
He said, I don't want to talk in the hypothetical about what he's not.
what I would do if I was president.
That's the whole thing.
That's the whole thing.
...that's the whole thing.
...is talking in the hypothetical about what you would do.
But this is the point.
Have we not learned the lesson that billionaires who have never served in public office
are not necessarily qualified to be president of the United States?
We now have polling to back up everything you're saying.
A liberal group put out a poll today and Howard Schultz's favorable rating among Democrats.
among independents, among Republicans?
Four percent.
His unfair rule rating is like five times that.
Yeah, 40 percent.
He's deeply unpopular, but like, the issue with him, like, it's funny watching Democrats freak out about him.
I get it.
They don't want to, like, leave anything to chance running against Donald Trump.
But, like, if you're running for president, you should probably have one of two things and hopefully both.
Big ideas, or, like, you are a megawatt, like, personality.
This guy's neither.
He's, like, your pedantic uncle.
And he didn't bring any, like, ideas to the table.
He's reading off these cue cards, I think, that are written by political consultants,
and it's one cliche...
On the side of a cuff.
Right, exactly.
And that's maybe where he got up, exactly.
And it's misspelled.
Right.
But you know what, wait, here's also the problem.
You have Howard Schultz and Michael Bloomberg, two billionaires telling people why they can't
have health care.
Listen to this.
Two billionaires telling everyday Americans why we can't afford for them and their family
to have decent health care. That's bankrupt.
They're going to be laughed out of the race.
He weighed in when there were,
Kamala Harris was asked.
Bloomberg will love it here when you say that.
Look, but Bloomberg has to come to grips with the fact
you can't talk down to the American people
and tell them what, despite the fact
they're working extraordinarily hard,
they don't get to have health care for their families.
Meanwhile, he has all the health care he needs.
Come on, it's a contradiction that he doesn't have an answer for.
Right.
Kamala Harris was asked about this this week, and it somehow got in the press that she was for abolishing the private insurance industry.
And I don't think that's what she meant.
Jake Tapper asked her about, he said, I believe if we have Medicare for all, it would eliminate private insurance.
And she then just talked about how we don't want to go through the process of having to give the insurance companies your approval,
or they have to get their approval, going through the paperwork.
I don't know if your insurance company is going to cover this, which we've all.
heard. She said, let's eliminate
all of that. That's not
wanting to abolish
private insurance. I think a lot of the
conversation about Medicare for
all is pretty silly because no one knows
what they're talking about. What is Medicare
first of all? Is Medicare
Advantage? Is that something else?
What are you buying into? Who's getting
this? Are you going to keep it? So it would be
nice if they actually said what they
were for rather than simply a bumper
sticker. But besides that,
you know, can't they just go back to you?
universal health care.
Isn't that like the point?
Forget about how you get there.
Doesn't everybody in this country you have?
There's a winning message.
Democrats have to figure out a way to talk about it.
You mentioned that Medicare for all
would cost, what, $35 trillion over 10 years?
The current system would cost $50 trillion
over the next 10 years, right?
And if Democrats can find a way to say,
hey, you're already paying this much
in deductibles and prescription drugs
and co-pays and figure out
a way to be like, it's going to be a tax,
but it's replacing what you're already paying.
Well, but Democrats,
to also speak from the view of everyday people's lives.
To the point Bill made earlier, why do they lose touch with people?
Because they didn't talk about their lives.
So what are most people dealing with?
They struggle to get the health care they need, right?
It's hard to navigate.
It's expensive.
We take about the deductibles, the out-of-pocket.
There's all sorts of discouraging realities
that keep people from getting health care when they need it.
We have a system that makes it hard to get health care.
It's like, here's your insurance card.
Good luck out there.
Hope you can figure it out.
By the way, if you're talking about mental health, that's even harder.
People have no idea how to address the mental health needs in their families.
How about creating a universal system, which is easy to use,
and actually gets people to health care when they need it?
That's what we're trying to do in New York City.
History tells us, too, and you know this, Mr. Mayor,
bigger stuff in some ways is easier than incremental system.
Correct.
So the reason not to talk about universal health care is there are two political bodies on that highway,
Secretary Clinton and President Obama.
Right.
If you try to reform something, that's harder than...
What's the lesson of history?
Social Security, GI Bill, Medicare.
What did you get?
You got those if you turned a certain age
or if you explicitly served in a certain way.
That's right.
The history of the 20th century
in terms of significant social policy
is bigger, works better.
And universal works better.
We have universal pre-K education in York City.
The minute it was universal, every parent knew.
I'm in, my kid's in,
I know where to go, I know what to do.
The same is Social Security, great example.
And by the way, look at the buy-in, bipartisan,
people of every region, every background,
believe in Social Security.
When it's universal, it takes away all the mystery.
Obamacare and all those earlier efforts,
people didn't really know what it was
and how reliable it would be
when you tell people it's there for you no matter what.
That's not only morally right, that's a winning hand.
I also think the Republicans don't get to talk about costs of things anymore.
Don't we think that's right?
Right. They are no longer in the fiscal conservative business.
No, never were.
Right. Just take the $2 trillion or whatever it was that they gave back to very rich people and corporations and use it for this.
So really cost? I don't think they get to weigh in on this.
There's definitely two rules. Two sets of rules. All right. Thank you panel. It's time for new rules.
Okay. All right, new rules. Stop hiring weather girls based on their bust size.
Who is this for? Guys who like to spank it?
while hearing the pollen index?
If I wanted to get aroused by the forecast,
I'll just look at the weather map.
Very, very sensitive to the crowd.
New Rule, if you're saddened by the CDC's warnings
that humans who kiss hedgehogs
are at risk of salmonella,
you must take a long, hard look at your love life.
I promise you, you can do much better.
And by the way, I'm talking to the hedgehog.
New Rule, the man who is suing Gwyneth Paltrow
he says she crashed into him while they were both skiing in Utah,
has to admit it doesn't get any whiter than that.
It just does not.
New Rule, a blowjob.
New Rule, clients of the gay conversion therapist
who announced that he's now gay,
must admit the signs were always there,
like how he ended every session by saying,
now that I removed all you're gay, can I have it?
And finally, America, New Rule.
New Rule, America does need to build a wall, a sea wall,
because the ice is melting and rising oceans are going to swallow Miami.
Hey, Marco Rubio, you're from there.
You're the senator from Florida.
In 20 years, you're going to be the senator from Atlantis.
What is it with Republicans and the environment?
They never waver in their commitment to do nothing.
The threat they see is a whole thing.
horde of rapy terrorists pouring over
the southern border. Here's a chart
showing the trend in apprehensions
along our southern border. Here's
a chart showing the trend in global
carbon rise. If you're not a
chart person, let me summarize.
Carbon is
killing us. Mexicans are not.
But ever since the
35-day silent treatment
came to an end last week,
the master negotiator has been
threatening to play his
final card declaring a national emergency. But Republicans don't want another shutdown. So they've
come up with a reason why they can't go along with that. Here's what Rubio said about that.
If today the national emergency is border security, tomorrow the national emergency might be
climate change. Yeah, God forbid we start declaring a national emergency about something that's an
actual national emergency. The right wing has a new boogie woman in Alexandria Ocasio
Cortez and she is being called a hysterical not ready for prime time crazy lady because she
protested for a green new deal outside of Nancy Pelosi's office and also said the world is going
to end in 12 years if we don't address climate change to which I say thank you it's about time
it's about time someone framed the issue with the appropriate level of urgency and when she
cited 12 years that wasn't a number she just
pulled out of her ass like Trump does.
She was referring to a timeline
from the UN's intergovernmental panel on climate change
and they say, if we don't do
a reversal of current trends by 2030,
it will be too late.
Now, I don't agree with that because 2030 is
optimistic.
Yeah, climate headlines in recent years
have a definite theme, which is,
you know that pant-shitting fact we told you a year ago?
We'll shit more.
Ocean warming is accelerating faster than we thought.
Antarctica's ice sheet is melting three times faster than we thought.
Climate change driving species out of habitats much faster than expected.
You see a pattern?
But here's a glimmer, a tiny, tiny little glimmer of hope.
Americans are starting to get it.
73% now believe global warming is happening,
an increase of 10% from four years ago.
And more than 6 and 10, now accessible.
that it's man-made.
Half of Americans say the science
is more convincing than it was
five years ago, which is fucking stupid,
but I'll take it.
I'm placing my...
Thank you.
I'm placing my hope
in how mad people are going to get
when climate change starts killing
not just monarch butterflies
and all the bees and the whales,
but stuff much closer to home.
We may be close to killing
maple syrup.
And wine, the traditional wine regions of France, Italy, and Napa Valley could all be too hot to grow grapes by 2050, and then where will alcoholics go on vacation?
With no more wine, men trying to impress their dinner dates will have to burn money at the table.
Priests will have to get children in the mood with music.
Hotter, drier growing seasons also make it harder to grow hops, which makes beer.
What is Brett Kavana going to drink with squeeze?
And coffee, 60% of wild coffee species
are at risk of going extinct.
Got your attention now, huh?
Without Starbucks, where our unemployed screenwriter
is going to sit around all day?
Where will millennials get free Wi-Fi?
Where will we find our next president?
And look at this. The banana, as we know it, is dying.
I never thought this sentence would make sense,
but yes, we have no bananas.
Coffee, bananas, maple syrup.
We're a breakfast item away from losing the Grand Slam.
All right, that's our show.
I'll be in the barrage in Vegas, February 15 and 16,
the Sanger and New Orleans, April 6th,
and the Marat Theater in Indianapolis, April 7th.
I want to thank my guest, Peter Hamby, Jennifer Rubin,
John Meechon, and Bill de Blasio, and Congressman Wil Hurd.
Greatest down for overtime on YouTube.
Thank you, folks.
Catch all new episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher every Friday night at 10.
Or watch them anytime on HBO On Demand.
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