Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #711: Gov. Andy Beshear, Kate Bedingfield, Michael Steele
Episode Date: October 25, 2025Bill’s guests are Gov. Andy Beshear, Kate Bedingfield, Michael Steele (Originally aired 10/24/25) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series
Real Time with Bill Maugh.
Appreciate it. Thank you so much.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
I don't know where to start.
I'm like the spinning wheel thing in the computer.
Trump is suing America.
The country, he's the leader of.
I'm not making this up.
For the, you know, when he was out of office, the, in between the terms, when they were putting him on trial and tried to put him in jail.
But he didn't go to jail.
America's being sued for attempted karma.
He's an interesting man.
He even said, this is a quote, he said, I'm suing myself.
I was like, I'm just glad it's not me again.
You know what I'm saying?
So, what else?
I'm oldly after a moment.
America was so boring and normal that we have...
What else?
What else is going on?
Yeah, what else?
He's demolishing the east wing of the White House.
What else?
He is demolishing the east wing of the White House.
And he says he won't stop
until he finds those Epstein files.
It's not for that.
No, it's because we're putting in a big ballroom.
One of the greatest in the world, he says.
Did I mention the debt has hit $38 trillion?
Anyway, we're putting in this big ballroom.
Trump, when he first said we're going to do it,
he said it's going to not actually interfere
with the building it's already there.
He said it's going to be near it,
but not touching it.
We're just going to put the tip in, you know.
Okay.
Then this happened.
Hmm.
I'm just going to file this under metaphors that are almost too obvious.
Okay?
Did they see the picture?
There's a picture dependent.
I guess we fucked out.
But the interesting thing about this, presidents have changed the White House from little ways before,
but, you know, they always got approval from Congress.
Permits. This is no permits.
Nobody ever said best anything.
Now, as a constitutionalist, I must say, I find this appalling.
as the guy who took three years to get my fucking solar panels in,
I'm kind of jealous.
I'm kind of in awe,
because I live in L.A.
where you need 13 permits to put a bird feeder on your deck.
So, what else?
What else?
Oh, yeah, he posted a shit video.
The president posted an AI video
as a response to the No King's rally,
which was over the weekend.
Did you go?
people went to the...
Oh, fucking liars.
You didn't know.
You went from your couch to your bedroom
and watched it in there.
I couldn't.
It was so...
It just reminded me of how divided we are.
Democrats are like, no, kings.
And Republicans are like, no, kings.
So, in response to this big protest,
you know, seven million.
people came out to protest his presidency,
he posted this video
where he's flying a jet
with a crown on his head,
dropping reams of shit on the protesters.
As presidents do.
Also, if you're a Venezuelan
in a boat,
you've heard of suicide by cop?
This is kind of like that.
And the president said,
I think what we're going to do now is just kill the people
who are bringing in the drugs. And I think
I speak for all Americans when I say,
which drug?
Because, I gotta tell you,
if you're really that concerned about drugs on boats,
you ought to check out Lake Havasu at Spring Break,
because I think you'll find a lot.
But, oh, and then we've cut off all talking
to the nation of Canada.
Suddenly, you know why?
Because Ontario, they're big province, of course,
they had an answer.
I don't know what it was for, but they showed a clip, a real clip, not a fake.
There was no fakes back then.
Of Ronald Reagan saying he didn't like tariffs.
A simple difference of opinion over a bureaucratic issue
between a fellow Republican who's dead.
But Trump said this was like the most disrespectful thing he's ever seen.
And then he made a video emitting a fart cloud of the Democratic National Convention.
I don't give them any ideas.
they'll do that tomorrow.
I'd be like you. That's a good one.
But, hey, it is the World Series.
L.A. is in the World Series.
Bad timing with the Canada thing,
because they're playing the Blue Jays.
And the winner gets to decline
an invitation to the White House.
One more thing,
in bilateral Nazi news,
because it's always a lot of Nazi news these days.
One Republican, and one Democrat,
there's one Republican, the nominee for the Office of Special
Council, they found out he,
He can't take the job because he was found to have said,
sometimes I have a Nazi streak.
And then a guy named Graham Platner is the Democratic candidate in Maine for the Senate.
He's an oyster farmer in Maine, and he has a tattoo that's a Nazi thing.
Not good.
On the bright side, I think I have found my Halloween costume Nazi oyster farmer.
That's why I'm going to.
But this guy, maybe Senator Platner.
He apologized for his racism and his misogy.
But now they're scrutiny about anti-gay remarks.
So it looks like his days as a Democrat are numbered.
And his days as a Republican are just beginning.
All right.
You got a great show.
We have Kate Benningfield and Michael Steele.
But first up, he is the Democratic Governor of Kentucky.
Wow.
And he hosts the Andy Beshear podcast on Sirius.
XM.
Andy Bashir, the governor.
Great to finally meet you, sir.
All right.
You seem very popular out here.
Warm audience.
Very popular.
Look at that.
I'm curious what that Halloween costume's going to look like.
I'm curious if you're running for president.
You know what I'm trying to do right now?
Thought I'd get right to it.
Yeah.
Right now I'm trying to speak a little bit of reason into chaos.
Well, I hope so.
You know, there's a reason why people are putting you up for that job
is because you have a very high approval rating in Kentucky,
and you're a Democrat.
That's not that easy to pull off.
What is your secret?
Well, I think it's showing up, working hard, and getting results.
It's understanding that when my people wake up in the morning,
they're not thinking about the next election.
They're thinking about their job,
and whether they make enough to support their family.
They're thinking about their next doctor's appointment
for themselves, their parents, or their kids.
They're thinking about the roads and bridges they drive,
the school they drop their kids off at,
and whether they feel safe in their communities.
Those aren't things that move a state to the right or the left,
but they just move them forward.
Well, that is a good speech, but I have heard it before.
I'm giving it before a few times.
Okay, I can tell.
And I'm not saying it can't work.
But, I mean, you've got to have something that's going on because more than that.
They put you in charge, the Democrats did, of recruiting governors.
You're in charge of the whole thing for the country, like trying to find the next Democratic governors.
Recruiting and messaging.
You're in charge of that.
What's your plan?
Well, it's about common sense, common ground, and getting things done.
We've got to find people that are authentic.
They're real.
That they talk to people and not at them.
And then hopefully have a record of creating jobs, of making health care more affordable,
basically of just bettering people's lives.
I think right now people are struggling to pay bills at the end of the week or the end of the month.
And they're not looking for a lot, just somebody that can make their life a little bit easier and a little bit better.
And I think those are the type of candidates that we get.
got to recruit.
Okay.
It doesn't seem like we're getting too specific here.
I feel like there's some elephants in this room that we're not identifying that the reason
why Democrats have not done well in recent elections.
I mean, first of all, you have to go through a primary gauntlet, don't you, in the Democratic
Party?
We like to have spirited primaries.
I'd like to think that when democracy...
If democracy works, well, you have that.
Well, we didn't have any for Kamala.
No.
Okay.
Just throwing that out there.
That's true.
That's true.
Should we have?
You know, with that time period, I think it would have been challenging.
But what you saw very quickly was all the former presidents line up behind the vice president.
And she worked hard.
Now, if she had more time, if the Democratic Party had more time, you know, maybe things would have been different.
But we did the best with what we had.
certainly wish we'd have gotten that over the finish line.
Well, it all came out for the best.
I think she should have had less time, but that's just me.
But you have this very high approval rating in your state,
and yet it's a conservative state,
and you still vetoed two gender bills
that the legislature overrode,
which will do you well in the Democratic primary.
Just briefly describe what those bills were
and what your reasoning is on this.
Yeah, those were both bills.
bills that mainly addressed our LGBT
population. They were mean.
They were unnecessary.
Most of the time, they were meant to score political points
and or hurt me in a 2023 election.
What did they say?
They were trying to eliminate different types of therapies,
both for adults and for kids.
And I think that there can be certain...
You're put about sex change.
Oh, no, certain limitations, certainly for kids, I think, are appropriate.
What about girls in sports?
There was a bill on that, but here,
Here's the thing.
I care too much about sports to want to let government run them.
You look at where we were in Kentucky and we didn't have a single issue that you saw in the
rest of the country.
We had a high school athletic association that had these really great policies that prevented
any unfair advantage.
They were really specific.
The only athlete that we had that was trans in the state was a seventh grader.
And she had started a high school field hockey team to make friends.
we ought to be able to prevent unfair advantages in the high school and the college level
without making life harder for a seventh grader.
Well, I'm sure that's true.
But it does seem like the kind of thing that is losing Democrats' elections,
that the perception of a lot of people in the country,
and if you're the kind of guy who's going to be out there leading the way,
they're going to be saying, yeah, he doesn't quite get it.
We've had too much cultural issues,
and not enough of the stuff you were talking about it,
beginning and the Democrats are not really connected with the regular lives of regular
people and we don't want to go back to that kind of stuff we don't go back to
everything is about white privilege and everything is about gender and who's a
boy who's a girl who knows what I think it's more about focus you know people
want you to be focused on things that impact their lives every day that's
what we're saying the same thing and so I think what you've got to do is spend 80
percent of your time on things that matter to 100 percent of the American population
That doesn't mean you don't stand up for your convictions, some of which they may share or not,
but the next day, be opening that factory.
The next day, be opening that new road that saves 20 minutes each way.
I think people can be willing to disagree with you, even on cultural issues.
But if you're making their life better, if they see the effort and the focus, they'll vote for you.
So I think that last ad during the presidential election was less on being anti-trans,
because I think anyone who was anti-trans was already voting for Donald Trump.
countries not in general.
But I think it was about distraction.
He was saying the vice president was focused on these issues that don't impact you,
and I'm focused on you.
And I'm focused on winning.
Well, what's going to win?
What's going to win, I think, is the restoration of the American dream.
When you look at our folks right now, they're just, they're crying out for help
because they can't afford a house in the same decade their parents did.
They're struggling to pay the phone bill, the premium on their health insurance.
every single thing.
I mean, I talked to a bus driver
who talked about barely being able to afford
the groceries for her family
at the end of the month,
but I hadn't been able to take them on vacation in years.
And people have to believe
that American dream is attainable,
and that's where I think the Democratic Party
has to be, has to live, and where they'll win.
Well, let's talk about another elephant in the room,
which is race.
I mean, in the past, Democrats,
they had to check boxes
before they could go forward
with their ticket.
You know, I asked Democratic politicians this,
and they didn't argue with it.
I said, it's impossible to imagine a Democratic ticket
without a person of color on it.
Maybe that's the right thing to do,
but it is more limiting
than what the Republicans are,
which is we don't give a fuck.
That does make things easier, I guess.
Right.
Okay.
But I'm just asking,
if you were, just hypothetically,
at the top of the ticket,
would you feel that sort of,
constraint, would you say, no, I am the Democratic candidate, and I can't have another white man
on the ticket?
I'd want, number one, to pick somebody who could help govern.
You want somebody who would do the best job, because if you only run for these offices to win,
and trustee, you've got to win to do them, then you're not doing it for the right reason.
And so you've got to think about who can help me do a little bit more for the American people.
Who can add something that I might not have?
Who has some experience that I don't have?
So I think you're always looking both at winning and at governing.
But I think what you're talking about is sometimes the right meaning policies of inclusion can lead to exclusion.
Now, the idea is we should be able to pull more seats up to the table,
not ask somebody who's been sitting at it to get up and to move for somebody else.
What do you think about what Governor Newsom out here,
who you could be hypothetically running against in the primary?
I'm just saying it.
It's a crazy hypothetical.
but who knows what could happen.
He's been trolling Donald Trump.
I mean, he's been doing, he's been, you know,
sort of taking Trump's methodology
and throwing it right back at him.
I think it may have jumped the shark
a little recently. Is that something you endorsed?
Do you think that's an effective technique?
Would you do it? Should we keep doing it? Should we stop doing it?
I think what Gavin is doing, especially on redistricting,
is important. It's needed.
He's taken the fight back.
I wish we didn't have to be there.
I wish we didn't have to do it.
But once Texas changed the rules of the game,
we all have to play by the same rules.
And so I appreciate his leadership there.
Well, that's not trolling.
That's a real issue.
Now, he's pushing back in his way.
It's not my way.
It's just not me.
But I think everybody has to take their style
and do what's best for their people.
But I think he is standing up.
I think he's pushing back.
And I think it takes all of us all in our own ways.
What is your prediction for the midterms?
I think the Democrats actually are going to do very well
because, I mean, if you look at what's going on now,
even among Republicans, the polling is not especially good on the economy.
This is among Republicans who are very worried about the economy
and also think he's overreached.
I think 63% of the people said,
we need to check on this guy.
He is a little drunk with power.
A little, I say.
Wink, wink.
And that has been noticed, I think,
even by sort of the person
who doesn't pay that much attention to politics.
So that's usually when people do really well
from the other party in the midterms,
when they say, okay, there's this guy in the White House
because this has happened before with both parties,
not to this degree, of course.
And drunk with power, we need to check.
You think that's what's going to happen?
I do. I think people don't like extremism.
I think people feel that the country
may have swung too far one way,
and now is swinging too far the other.
And it's impacting their daily lives,
even mental health getting hit by how the news comes out over and over and over right now.
But before we get to the midterms,
the Democrats are going to win the governorship of both New Jersey and Virginia.
We're working really hard to make that happen.
All right.
Well, I know you are.
Thank you very much.
It's been a long time I've wanted to meet you, Governor.
I appreciate you on.
All right.
Good luck with whatever campaign you might be involved in.
Governor Bishop, let's meet our panel.
Who knows what he could be?
He has no idea what his political future.
All right, he's the former RNC chairman
who now co-host MSNBC's The Week Night,
my friend Michael Steele, is over here.
And she's a CAM political analyst
and the former White House Communications Director
under President Biden, Kate Beddingfield.
Kate, great to have you on our panel.
All right, now that he's gone, let's talk about it.
What do you think?
Is he the guy?
Is he the one who's going to be the...
There was a lot less pearl clutching.
I liked that part.
It was good.
Very strong.
I think it was very strong.
Good conversation, engaging with you.
I think, Bill, in a lot of ways, you know,
Democrats are going to have to figure out the sensibility of the country,
they're going to have to align their characters, their characters,
their candidates.
No, you're not right.
With that sensibility.
And I think, you know, you saw someone.
who, he's top in his state right now because he's able to do that.
Yeah.
Look, I thought his answer on the gender stuff was really, really good because the reality
is Republicans are going to continue to try to drive this issue, right?
They played it to great effect in 2024.
They're going to continue to try to drive it.
They view it as an 80-20 issue.
So whoever the Democratic nominee is, they're going to have to have handled this issue,
have talked about it.
And I thought he spoke really effectively about taking a principled stand, but also
making it about the fact that he's actually focused on what people are concerned about.
And I think sometimes, you know, Democrats get so afraid of their shadow.
And I thought he was really forceful about standing on principle without sort of saying, you know,
my entire focus as governor is protecting trans athletes.
I thought he did a really good job on that.
Okay.
Great.
I'm glad we...
Good under the gate.
Providing a forum.
Well, he and I are both part of the Let's Talk to the Opposition Wing.
Of the Democratic Party, oh, there is another wing.
Oh, believe me, I hear from them all the time.
I bet you do.
How fucking dare you talk to them?
I'm sorry, I'm part of the, let's talk to them wing,
because it's on both sides where there's people who believe,
where they're too deplorable on either side.
We just can't talk to them.
We have to own them.
And I think what we're seeing now is the upshot of this strategy,
when you lose.
Yeah.
Because a lot of people on the left want to,
that and still want that. We can't talk to
them. We just have to own them. Great
unless you lose. Then they
completely own you. Because
my question this week is, what
could President Trump
not do? I mean,
well, it's a question
for the country. So in the country?
Well, you know, you got to
No, look,
the reality of it is, in so many respects
we are past in my
appreciation of this, past
Trump. And
sense that at some point this idea of us as a country, as folks who kind of under this pluralistic
umbrella called democracy and we're kind of working our way through it and we're a 249-year-old
experiment that seems to work every once in a while, that at some point we have to put our
foot down too. We've checked out as a country and a lot, a lot of the crap that's happening
happened to us. And so the question becomes, if you know someone's taking away the programs
that are going to feed your kids, that are going to keep you healthy,
and that are going to allow you to live in an environment
in which you can actually breathe and drink the water, all right?
If they're going to take that away from you,
and the only thing you're worried about is your fantasy football picks
or whether or not you're going to go hang out with your boys on a podcast,
then you get Trump.
Then you get Stephen Miller.
Then you get all of that.
So when do we, when do we, when do we,
the people, and I've listened to you for a long
time, and I think people appreciate
the thing about you over
the years that you and I have in this conversation
where we started out going back
and forth on policy, and now we're going back and
forth on what the country is.
And I think that that says a lot
about how we've grown as a country,
but it also talks about the
fissures that have grown with it.
And we have to address those fissures.
Otherwise, this thing breaks,
baby. It ain't coming back. Yeah. Which
is part of the reason that we have to
talk to each other. I'm with you in that wing
of the party. We have to talk to the opposition.
One, we have to talk to them if we want to win
because, as you say, news flash,
Trump actually won the popular vote
in 2024. In terms of people
who turned out to vote in 2024,
there were more of them than there were of Democrats.
So, you know, simple math, you've got to
talk to them. Kind of matters. But
we have to talk to each other
because we are really facing some
existential issues in this country.
And the more we continue
to silo ourselves into
us versus them, the less prepared we are to take this on in a real way and to do it in a way
that helps more people.
I mean, I'm sorry.
No, no, go ahead.
I saw in the news this week that he was about to send the troops into San Francisco, and then he talked to somebody who talked him out of it.
Yeah.
I'm not saying this is the ideal way to run the government.
I'm just saying the more people who talk to him the better.
Yes, absolutely.
And by the way, he's not against talking to people.
He's not.
He's really not.
It's also.
They won't talk to him.
I think he would.
I think he likes having people around.
Oh, absolutely.
I also, I think it's also actually what people want in this country.
Like, we get so, you know, the megaphone on X, the megaphone on TV is so loud,
and we kind of get convinced that we're all just, you know, at each other's throats,
and we're just pitted against each other.
But for the vast majority of Americans who don't follow politics,
who aren't living and dying with the up and down of what's going on in Washington,
they actually look at Washington and say, like, these jokers can't work together.
have to go to work every day and work with people I don't like, why can't these people get it
together? But he is there. I think we're missing the mark a little bit. No, you're right, the people
aren't all there, although millions of the mark, but he is definitely at a place. We are at a place
now where it is sort of getting to be against the law to not be on their side. Sort of against
the law, not to be with them. I think what you have, that's an excellent point to raise in the
context of what this is and what you heard from the governor is that you're really beginning to see,
I think we're at a fork in the road, Bill, where you're Maga or you're not. It's no longer
right or left, red or blue, all right? It's because that paradigm has passed. It is now something
very, very different. And the question for the country, as you face this fork in the road,
is how, where do you turn? Which way do you want to turn? Because,
We watched this week the destruction of a symbol of this government, of our democracy, of our pluralistic society.
Is I'm at the White House?
The East Wing, yeah.
A lot of...
It's a building, Mike.
It's a building.
It's a building maybe to you, but to a lot of Americans, it's not.
And I'm going to tell you as a young kid growing up in D.C., when my daddy took me by that building, it meant something to me as a 10-year-old.
It meant something to me to grow up in a town where every person.
Everybody in this country came and protested and cried and screamed and laughed, right?
And I was a part of that.
So that building for me was my childhood because my daddy stood me out in front of the gate
before Clinton closed the road, right, because of terrorism and all the other threats to the
country.
I used to stand it in front of that building and watch it.
It meant something.
So, yeah, you can say it's just a building and somewhat Donald Trump tore it down, but he tore it down without a talent ability.
He said, that's not to be accountability.
Okay, first of all, I agree.
I said, you know, he should have gotten the permits and the,
but that's how he does things.
It's just a recklessness.
But it's just, it is just a building, first of all.
That part of the building wasn't always there.
I got it.
Presidents do change the buildings.
Nixon put in a bowling alley.
Obama made the tennis court, a basketball court.
I can't get this mad about everything, Mike.
I just can.
I'm not mad.
It's not a question of.
being mad, it's a question of understanding
what the symbolism is and what
the symbolism is he's not leaving.
That's what bothers me about it.
Exactly.
Who puts in a giant bowl room if you're leaving?
He was the only...
Okay, but that's the issue, not the building.
But I'm saying, if this was the only
impulsive, reckless,
driven by his own,
driven by his own desire
for self-aggrandizement, if this was the only
thing he had done on that front,
then I would give you it's just a building.
But it's not.
It's part of a manner of governing that is tearing at some of the foundations,
the institutional foundations in this country, and that's scary.
Well, that's what I'm most more concerned about, those kind of things, the institutional foundation.
No, the institutional foundation doesn't matter.
I agree with you.
But, again, I'm just talking about, for me, it meant something a little bit different than it does probably be a lot of other people.
Look, I don't know what's going to happen because of the no-kings thing, but a lot of people did come out.
It's probably not a lot of actual practical effect.
I disagree.
And some of these people faked it and they said they went and they really didn't.
I'm sure some did.
But it's not like they didn't have a point with the no kings.
I mean, we are, I mean, that is basically a valid point to make about the whole king thing.
Here's a question that I saw, I did not realize until it hit the news a lot, was that it was very white.
What do you make of that?
that the guy in Baltimore, the paper there said,
we struggled to, our photographer, to find a picture of black people in this march.
I'm okay with that.
I didn't go, and I feel like, well, you talk.
Well, we had a meeting.
Yeah, go ahead.
Yes.
And let's just say it didn't go too well for white folks, that's all.
No, look, I look at that.
That to me is, that's a distraction for me to go down that road
because the No King's piece is very different from another piece
that that question I think gets to.
And that is the relationship that broke with Democrats
and the African-American community in the last cycle,
particularly with black women.
And so I think the No King's thing,
I would set that aside because, you know, you look at the fact
that in the first version of that
5 million Americans showed up this version 7 plus
million, that's a trend line that you pay attention to.
There's something that's moving in the country,
so I'm not going to sit there and count
the colors of the skin of the people who are there or not there.
But what I am going to pay attention to
is that as I get ready for the next cycle,
which begins in two weeks,
with the elections that the governor referred to
in Virginia and New Jersey,
that's where it's going to match.
the turnout of the African-American community, which after the Kamala Harris thing,
turned into a real, real bad situation in the way it was handled internally within the party,
the way it was handled externally in a number of communities.
So I'm not going to lump that in with the No Kings thing.
I appreciate the fact what those folks were able to do in galvanizing the American people
around the idea that was part of the formation of the country.
Absolutely.
Well, and especially in a moment where Trump is largely trying to push
in this kind of unprecedented way on our legal system,
on institutions in this country, from a place of fear.
And so I disagree with you a little bit about,
oh, it doesn't really mean anything.
I actually think that people showing up and say,
we opposed this.
I didn't say it didn't mean it.
That was the building.
In an environment of fear.
But the White House in fact.
I said it's not going to have any practical effects.
You know, it's not going to, you don't change laws or, you know.
But yes, it's not.
But the thing I would say.
You don't think, yes.
What do you make of the folks around the country to organize that way?
Well, I think it's good.
I think it's good that people care.
It's good that you show that you care.
On this issue that we were talking about, I also was reading that, you know, a lot of folks thought,
well, if they see me at this rally,
to the point of what a king does.
If they see me at this rally,
or what actually goes on in countries with the dictatorship,
if they see me at this rally,
you know, in China, they see you at a rally,
and they always do because they have cameras everywhere,
and they may have that here,
maybe when I go into work,
I'm not going to be welcome there.
And I think black folks have a greater understanding
than the white folks,
which is why they might not have shown up.
And I don't blame them.
Certainly probably plays a part for some people,
But I do want to give a shout out to the 7 million who didn't give a damn about the candidates.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And I do think to Michael's point about, yes, absolutely.
To Michael's point about what the Democrats have to do to rebuild in places where they have struggled and have lost black support, Hispanic support.
That's, to me, that is largely going to be a question about what they're doing on the economy and what they're saying about the economy.
And I think that while it is, I think that while the No King's piece is important for all the reasons we just discussed, in terms of the work the Democratic Party has to do to get back to better electoral footing in this country, it's winning back over black voters, Hispanic voters, young voters on this question of, we can, we believe there's an economic future for you, we believe there's opportunity and really laying out an agenda. So to me it's really, that's going to be the economic, it's going to happen in the economic space.
Let me give you some more bad news about the Democrats.
way they're losing babies.
You know, Trump is a guy who looks
at everything and says, I want to fix it.
I don't like the way he's doing it usually,
but, you know, whether it's the ballroom,
we got to fix that, that's not right.
You've got to get rid of the dictator in Venezuela.
Everything. We've got to fix everything.
Nothing he doesn't look at says, I'm going to fix it.
Well, that includes now in vitro.
Dr. Oz was out there the other day,
and he said that we're going to have a whole new
bunch of Trump babies.
calls them, Trump babies.
And this is their stated goal
in Project 2025. They said,
we want more babies. They're the baby
party. And meanwhile, the Democrats,
the liberal young Democrats,
don't have much sex anymore. This has also
been reported a lot.
It's true. So we thought as a public
service,
as a public service, we would put out
some posters to try to get the young
people to start fucking again.
Would you like to see them?
For example, turn your phone off and get busy.
It's not like you're going to miss a job offer.
Wouldn't you like a tiny friend to watch SpongeBob with?
We can get through to the kids.
Make her scream about something other than the patriarchy.
Don't think of it as fucking.
Think of it as genital influencing.
Save the planet.
Make more people who recycle.
Oh, here's a good one.
Don't let the trad wives get all the dick.
Yeah.
And, you know, you plug your charger into your phone?
It's like that.
And, of course, an erection is just a penis that's woe.
Okay.
I was going to run out of time with the governor,
But I was going to ask him about a sister soldier issue, which is what has been talking about a lot, because the Democrats, let's face it, they're kind of split now.
There's the far left version that did not do too well in recent elections.
And then people like the governor who say, we've got to come back to the middle, common sense.
And whenever this discussion comes up, this is what you hear a lot.
We need a sister soldier moment, a time when the – something – some issue with the Democrat says, look, I'm not with the far left.
And this is how you know you can trust me that I'm not.
I think I have the issue.
Okay.
And it's the mayor's race in New York.
I think he seems like a sweet guy, mom, dummy.
But I would just like to say, because the election is in a couple of weeks,
this is not just New York that's on the ballot.
I think the whole Democratic Party in the country is on the ballot.
And the whole country will be looking at this race to see which way are the Democrats going to go.
No Andrew Cuomo may not be that exciting and that inspirational
But you know for a party that said we want to get back to normal
He's kind of normal
What?
Well I
He's got some things in his history that I would suggest
You know we did a normal I want to embrace
Well we did a deep dive on that because we had him on the show
A lot of it is kind of bullshit
I mean maybe he was a little too handy a little too Italian
A little too touchy
You know
Did not
A little too Italian.
That's what he said.
You know, yes, you know, did not get the memo.
If you Democrats want to keep doing this,
throwing guys like that under the bus,
because that's not good enough and pure enough,
you're going to wind up with a guy
who did a little more than what Andrew Cuomo did.
Anyway, the point is they're going to have to decide
on this mayor's race.
Now they say it's getting closer.
If it is Mondami in New York,
again, I think this has very important
national implications?
So I disagree with you a little bit.
I both agree and disagree. I'll tell you why.
I disagree that
the mayor of New York sets
the national tone in the way that
New Yorkers maybe think that he does.
I don't think that people living in
purple districts in the middle of the
country actually really care all that much
who the mayor of New York is. I don't think they do.
What I will say, though, is I think that
to your point about Sister Soldier,
I actually do think that those
people should Mom Dani win?
Those people should criticize him.
That's fine.
I actually think that's a good thing.
Separate yourself from somebody who's running in New York City,
one of the most liberal districts, places in this country,
because you represent somewhere different.
I think that's okay and actually creates distance
in a way that I think isn't bad.
But I also think that Democrats, national Democrats,
have, shocker, wrung their hands about this too much.
I think Momdani has a lot of energy.
He's excited a lot of young people.
He's brought a cohort of voters who have been unsatisfied with the Democratic Party into the tent.
And you have to win in order to win.
And I think that Democrats are constantly looking to try to take a loss out of a win.
They're trying to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
And I think that if Mandani wins with a coalition of voters who have been not all that excited
about the Democratic Party over the last few years, I think that's a good thing for the
Democrats, and I think if you're in a purple district, say you disagree with some of the things that
he does, and use that to establish your independent cred.
Well, you make it sound like he's a little more mainstream than I think he is.
I mean, the issue now that Andrew Cuomo is bringing up in New York is that he is a Ugandan
citizen.
Uganda is a country where they kill homosexuals.
So somebody who is a dual citizen can't be mayor of New York?
I would renounce, if I was the dual citizen with a country,
whose policy, government policy, was we kill homosexuals?
Yeah, I would renounce that citizenship.
I don't, and to not, and he also, I think that is buying into a fear,
I think that is buying into a fear framework that is not good,
it's not good for the country, it's not good for the country.
You shouldn't be afraid of that?
And I think the way that Cuomo is closing out this race and really,
and really race baiting and really leaning in on, you know,
what if you're fair.
and something like 9-11.
You know what, just because it's done...
I don't think that's good for the country.
I understand.
But just because something is done by people in Africa
doesn't mean it's always okay.
But you said race, baby.
It has nothing to do with race.
Oh, I'm talking about what Cuomo's doing
suggesting that Mombani couldn't be a leader
in a terror situation
if he were mayor of New York
and, God forbid, something else like 9-11 happened.
Well, he did campaign with a terrorist this week.
He did say, well, but Cuomo was pretty clear,
I thought, in the way he talked about that
in a way that I thought was ugly.
Well, he campaigned this week with a guy,
who was an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing
and served as a character witness for Omar Abdul Rahman, the terrorists, who organized it.
So Sarah Palin used to say Obama paled around the terrorists, which was bullshit.
But I just don't know.
This is a great look for the party.
I really don't.
My take is, I think what's being left out in this conversation is probably the most important ingredient.
And that is the people of New York.
They will decide whether or not everything you just leveled up and every concern that people have put out there about Mr. Mondami is relevant to them when they go to the polls.
When they start, they've started early voting.
And when they go to the polls, New Yorkers will decide just like 78 million Americans did four years after Donald Trump to reelect him.
And here we are.
So if we really believe in this idea that this is a pluralistic society and that voting matters and democracy matters,
then we are not in a position to sit back and second guess and vote shame a community because we outside that community don't like their choice.
Right?
So what we have to do, this is the trick-wire bill for this country right now.
because everybody's gotten a pain about shit that don't matter to them.
I don't live in New York.
I live in Maryland.
West Moore was my governor in Maryland.
And those of us who know West campaigned and who liked them, campaigned for them and voted for them.
Those of us who didn't, didn't.
That's the way the system works.
And so, you know, Mondami, and here's the last piece, having been the lieutenant governor of a state
and worked with every municipality in my state,
with the mayors and the city councils,
he's going to have to govern.
So all of the stuff he's out here talking about
he's going to do in free markets,
and I'm going to give you this, I'm going to give you that.
Wait till the city council has something to say about it.
Wait until the governor of New York has something to say about it.
And all of a sudden, when she says,
well, we're not sending money to the city of New York to do that,
Mr. Mondami will have a different conversation
than the one he's having right now.
And more importantly, the people of the city
when he starts to stray from,
and this goes back to your very first point
in this conversation about Trump.
When the leadership starts to stray,
the people should course correct.
The people should have something to say,
whether it is a march,
whether it is a protest,
whether it's going to City Hall
and sitting out front of his office.
So I'm just waiting, let the voters vote,
and then we can decide what this all looks like.
I don't think it's a bellwether for the country.
I think it's a bellwether for New York.
That's why it's a debate show.
You have every right to this?
No, no, no, but you make the point.
I get it.
I mean, I disagree, but the one thing I wanted to follow up on, though,
is you said it's okay that we don't care about shit that doesn't affect us.
But you certainly don't mean that.
No, I mean, to the extent that some policy that he is the city of the mayor of New York
will have on me living in Prince George's County, Maryland?
Yeah, I'll be concerned.
Well, we came out in 2020 when people came out
for the Black Lives Matters protest.
But that was a national event.
That wasn't centered around.
I know, but it didn't.
It wasn't, to white people, it's like,
this doesn't affect me directly.
I'm doing it because I do care about what affects other people.
Why didn't it affect them directly?
Because they weren't black,
because they weren't the ones who were having their heads.
But that was beyond the point.
It started there, but then the conversation,
I mean, how do Europeans look at this?
How come they were a part of this movement?
I'm just saying, I thought...
It spoke about our humanity.
It spoke about our humanity, how they treat each other.
Humanity is like caring for people beyond just who you are.
Right.
No, no, that's very true.
That's why I agree with it, and that's why I say that Bandami
institutes a policy in New York City that I'm feeling in Maryland,
oh yeah, a brother going to have a lot to say about it.
All right.
I've got to end it there.
Thank you very much.
Time for New World.
Okay.
New Rule, now that over 100 million in historically significant jewelry has been stolen from the Louvre,
the Louvre needs to send a representative to America to find out how we keep our shit safe here.
You lost priceless, Jules, and we haven't lost a disposable razor since 2009, bitch.
New Rule, someone has to break it to the people having relationships with AI chatbots that were about three months away.
from the chatbot's ghosting you.
Your chatbot has a genius level
like you, can speak a hundred languages
and compose a symphony,
you think it wants to listen to your bullshit.
Trust me.
At some point, it's going to say,
I just need to go offline for an update
and never come back.
Now that Lionel Richie has revealed
in his new memoir,
that he's stopped believing,
believing in love.
I know.
He must explain how the guy who gave us
love will find a way.
Love will conquer all.
Endless love. Love, oh, love.
I call it love.
Still in love.
Unsweet love.
Has now decided,
eh.
You're telling me it was all bullshit?
This is like Cardi B. saying
she prefers an arid, well-ventilated
vagina.
Geez, next thing you'll tell me is I shouldn't have tried dancing on the ceiling.
Neural Energizer has to replace the bunny.
This poor fucking thing has been going for 37 years,
and it's not a coincidence that it came along right after the introduction of the rabbit vibrator.
So let's just admit what couldn't be said in a TV commercial in 1988.
It's pink, it takes batteries, and it keeps on going.
Don't make us spell it out.
New rule, now that President Trump is redecorating the White House,
building a ballroom, and hosting brunches at his new Rose Garden Club,
he has to star in a new TV series called Queer Eye for the Authoritarian Day,
in which he transformed Doughty MAGA voters from Frumpy to Trumpy
with the help of his sassy sidekick George Sancho.
And finally, new rule, Republicans have to be honest about who,
these days is more deranged.
They love to invoke Trump
derangement syndrome, and there
is some of that, but Trump really is
doing things when it comes to ignoring
court orders and using the Justice Department
for partisan goals
and deploying the military domestically
that no one ever came close to doing
before, so I don't feel especially deranged
calling that out.
But having
your press secretary
say that the Democratic Party's
main constituency is made up
of Hamas terrorists, illegal
aliens, and violent criminals.
That's deranged.
Democrats...
Democrats have many flaws,
and I point them out frequently on this show,
but Unstoppable Super Monsters?
These are people who let their 10-year-old
pick the restaurant.
Okay?
Now, are there
dumb, college age, useful idiots,
who march for Hamas? Yes, that exists.
As does Democrats,
who stupidly enabled way too many migrants
to enter the country.
But that is a far cry
from the main constituency of the party
being terrorists or being illegal aliens.
And violent criminals?
Well, 7 million people came out last weekend
for the big protest, and there was no violence.
But there was a lot on January 6th.
House Speaker Mike Johnson
called last weekend's
hate America rallies
and said that the kind of people
you're going to find there and who are when you think
about it, the kind of people who make up your average
Democrat. Marxist,
socialist, Antifa advocates,
anarchists, Hamas lovers.
Mike, get a grip.
75 million people
voted for Kamala. So yes, among
75 million there do exist all
types, but Mike, your team
just got caught in a scandal where your
young people were all texting each other
I love Hitler. So maybe we've
both have a dog that needs training.
I will be the first to admit
there is a growing problem
of young liberals who see violence
as an answer. 20-somethings
who throw kisses at Luigi
Mangione and firebombs
at Tesla dealerships and want to
eat the rich. And you have my full
permission to keep an eye on them.
But I'd be more afraid of that generation
if they didn't have a habit of quietly
quitting everything they start.
These are people who won't risk going on
date in real life. I'm not sure they can screw America if they can't screw each other.
So, yes, each side has its crazies. And I'll grant you, at least the right, has found a place
for theirs. Unfortunately, that place is elected government. It should not be the case that the
White House press folksperson sounds exactly like the worst Karen at Dollar General.
But she does.
You guys have got to get a grip.
You're paranoid.
You're fucking paranoid.
I'm telling you, you know I don't lie to you.
Listen to this.
Conservative cartoonist Scott Adams said in 2020
that if Biden were elected,
it would mean that there is a good chance
you will be dead within a year.
Republicans will be hunted.
Okay, but Biden was elected.
And it wasn't that long ago, like less than a year,
when he headed the government
with his people heading the Justice Department.
And he didn't hunt you dead, Scott.
Mike Cernovich is a popular conservative influencer and quite insane, but...
His views among Maga Nation are considered mainstream,
and he says that if Kamala had won, listen to this, quoting,
by now there'd be over 5 million gang members in the country.
Also, Elon is in prison, Trump is dead, I'm dead, or in a gulag.
Your family is being rounded up
About to be murdered
We were that close
Yeah Mike
I'm gonna go sit at the other end of the bar
No offense
Jesus
Forget fentanyl
I want to know it's in the skull
Look
Guys
I'm begging you
If Democrats really were rounding up families
And wanting to kill all the conservatives
I'd be for a right-wing coup myself
But it's not even
the neighborhood of being true.
The Democratic Alliance isn't a top-down
evil empire? It's black
ladies who go to church, white
suburban moms, and gay uncles.
Almost everyone
I know out here in L.A. is a
liberal Democrat, and zero percent
of them are Venezuelan gangbangers.
Am I
just lucky? Is it a zip-cold
thing?
This insane
caricature of the left as
ruthless communists about to force you into gulags where you'll make you saw our lulu lemon
yoga pants by force later. This shit has got to stop. You're not under attack. No matter how many
times you show that video of the insane black guy stabbing the pretty blonde on the train.
There's no great replacement theory. And that 75 million that voted Democrat, they can't all
be drag queens.
And one more thing. Democrats
sometimes do things
without George Soros telling
us to.
Yeah.
He's not our pimp. I promise.
It doesn't work that way. I've been
at the meetings. It starts with a ridiculous
land acknowledgement, and at some
point, there's drumming.
That's it.
I know this tribe.
Not only are they
not in Trend Aragua.
Most of them think Trend Aargua
is George Clooney's latest tequila.
Thank you very much.
You were a great crowd.
I want to thank Michael Steele.
Kate Benningfield and Governor Andy Bashir
Club Random drops every Monday on YouTube
or listen wherever you get your podcast.
Now go watch overtime on YouTube.
Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen.
Thank you guys.
Catch all new episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher
every Friday night at 10.
You know any time on HBO on demand.
For more information,
log on to HBO.com.
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