Real Time with Bill Maher - Overtime – Episode #695: David Hogg, Donna Brazile, Rep. Mike Lawler
Episode Date: May 13, 2025Bill Maher and his guests answer viewer questions after the show. (Originally aired 5/9/25) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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so applicable. Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series
Real Time with Bill Maher. All right, he is the
BNC's vice chair, David Hogg. He is the Republican
Congressman from New York, Mike Lawler, and she's
the political strategist and ABC News contributor
Donna Brazell. I'm the
maker of Dumbo.
All right. These are from
the people. Disney's building its new
first theme park in
15 years in Abu Dhabi.
Wow. What does it say?
that the happiest place on earth is now
an oil-rich autocracy.
That's good.
I mean, Mickey and Minnie should be available to everybody.
What's wrong with that?
I'm all about making sure that
American products, American brands,
and everything else, that we're able
to be in a global space.
And besides, what kid...
I mean, I love Mickey. You know when I first went to a theme park?
I went to got me some dishes? I thought they were real.
So I love Mickey.
Yeah, I do, too.
All right? Are you going to go?
No, I did.
No.
No, I...
I'll be your day?
No, I'm just wondering if I'm going to have the gay days thing,
just like they do in Orlando there in Abu Dhabi.
I wonder how that's going to go over.
That's not going...
I think they may shoot.
They'll skip that, but he's sure.
Okay.
What does the panel make of the reaction to Trump
suggesting we should reopen Alcatraz as a federal prison?
No.
No.
I will say, two of the best movies of all time are escape from Alcatraz and the Rock.
Great movies.
I know, but...
But we shouldn't make policy from watching TV.
Should we, I mean, it's plain that he was watching.
I mean, I mean, it's not that often what happens?
No.
Really?
Oh.
I mean, okay.
And look, is it a big issue?
No.
First of all, it's probably never going to happen.
I also must say, you know, I'm tired of hearing how this is the can't-do country.
No, should we open Alcatraz?
There's no reason to do it.
But I heard the immediate reaction was, it's impossible.
It's impossible because it's a broken down.
It's just stupid.
It's just stupid.
But also, like, it's not impossible.
If you really wanted to do it.
It's not the Manhattan Project.
The bigger issue is not actually opening up Alcatraz.
The bigger issue is holding criminals accountable
across our country when they're actually breaking the law.
And that is something that I think, you know,
as a New York representative,
where crime has gone up significantly,
you're down in Washington, D.C., we see it a lot as well.
That is the bigger issue and the bigger debate to have
about how to deal with actual crime in this country
as opposed to reopening out control.
Can I ask you this, Congressman?
You know, a lot of the people that are being put
in these detention centers, they're run by private prisons.
Do you think that private prisons are something
that we should have in this country?
Good question.
You know, like, I don't think that we should be having
a system that is incentivized to keep people there.
Of course, we need to make sure we're keeping everybody safe,
but I don't want to have a system where we literally have
a prison industrial complex that is incentivizing
keeping people incarcerated.
Which we do.
There's no.
question you can have reform with respect to that.
Should we have them?
I don't have a problem with a public-private partnership in terms of actually dealing with the operations of a prison.
But the issue to me is actually enforcing the law.
If you look at a state like New York where the recidivism rate on people who are being arrested for felonies
and then being released under cashless bail, it is over 50%.
That's insane.
You're putting violent felons back out on the street only to re-offend.
Kathy Hockel just fired 2,000
corrections officers
and as a result is now
releasing prisoners out onto the streets.
That is stupid policy.
So look, we can have a debate
and I, as a member of the state legislature,
had no problem with dealing with some of the issues
pertaining to for-profit prisons.
But at the end of the day,
the bigger issue to me is criminals being released
back out onto the street to re-offend.
But there are two different issues.
Right.
I don't know why we're going to.
But we're not dealing with it.
That's far of the problem.
Well, we're not dealing with a lot of issues.
What really concerns me is, like, we are literally, a lot of these private prison groups are literally funding people's campaigns
and incentivizing keeping these people in prison, which costs us putting aside the moral side of things.
Let's leave that aside for now, even though that's super important, just economically.
It's costing us billions of dollars, and then they're using that money to help fund the campaigns of the people who refuse to regulate them, and it's a huge problem.
Well, that's true.
Of any industry in America, there people are investing billions of dollars.
into campaign.
But it's just like immigration.
We need a comprehensive approach to crime, immigration.
How are we going to grow a 21st century economy?
How are we going to advance science?
And how are we going to be a 21st century superpower
when we're making some dumb, stupid moves right now?
And Congress, as you said earlier,
Congress cannot see there's Article 1 powers.
You must provide the check and balances.
And we can't just detain people
and open up new prisons without due process.
and a rule of law.
America has standards and values,
and we have somehow forgotten that.
That's what I'm saying.
Okay.
What do you think of the speculation
that Arizona Senator Ruben Gallego
may enter the 28 presidential race
with a Latino candidate
helped bring back a key part
of the Democratic base?
I mean, I feel like this is the problem
Democrats keep making over and over there,
that it's always more identity policy.
No.
Didn't you have a fight?
One of your controversies,
wasn't it that you ran against,
somebody who was Native American
and they complained about it
and it sounded to me,
now maybe I didn't get all the information,
it sounded to me like she just lost to you.
But then that wasn't good.
And this is the Democratic Party.
Isn't not the Republican?
We're not a perfect party.
We've got a lot of shit within us
and we have to clean up our own mess.
But I tell you one thing,
if I had to come back on this earth tomorrow,
I would still be a Democrat because of our values.
We fight like hell.
Sometimes we never make love at night
because we fight like hell.
But we have good moral standards.
And you're right.
We've just been a great part of this last century dealing with, oh, you're black, you're gay, you're a woman.
What, God damn it.
So what?
Are you good at your job?
That's what I care about.
That's awesome.
Fundamentally.
Fundamentally.
We're over there.
Let's move on.
Fundamentally, Donald Trump made inroads with nearly every single group in the country.
And it was primarily driven by issues, by substantive issues on the economy and the border.
So I don't think it's a function of let's pick which race or ethnicity or religion, or gender.
That's not the problem.
It is the substance of the issues and what you're going to do to fix it.
So Rubin is a great guy.
He would make a wonderful president if he chooses to.
He just got elected to the Senate.
So maybe he should stay there for a little bit and let a little grass grow on the knee to them.
But what is the deal on the woman who attacked you because you beat her at that job?
Did you beat her fair and square?
Was there any fire there?
There was the election that the DNC held, and I was the person that was one of the people that won,
one of the three positions that they had for the at-large vice-chairs.
So what was her claim?
Part of the claim, so not to bore people, but to get into the bureaucracy of the DNC,
we have a gender balance rule at the DNC because, of course, we do.
Equal position.
Okay.
She's right away.
By the way, the Republican Party does too.
If the chair is a male, then the vice chair has to be a female.
Well, what's interesting is that's even more progressive than our vision,
which is that the chair doesn't count towards the gender balance rule that we have.
Frankly, I don't even know if it makes sense for us to have the gender balance rule anymore in this day and age,
because I want to focus on whoever's just best at the job.
Great.
At this point, that's my own view.
Terrific.
And, you know.
By the way, I support what you're doing with respect to the primaries,
because I can tell you, having been in politics for quite a while,
as an intern for McCain.
Some of these people don't know when it's time to go.
They don't.
Chuck Schumer has been in elected office for 50 years.
1974, he was first elected.
50 years.
AOC will absolutely kick his ass in a primary.
She is the leader of the Democratic Party in this moment,
and will continue to be, I think,
the biggest driver of where the party goes
from a governmental policy standpoint,
and that drives many of my colleagues crazy.
But the fact is, she has tapped into the best,
base of support within the Democratic Party, and you see the juxtaposition between her and
Chuck Schumer, I'm writing a strongly worded letter. Oh, sit the fuck down, Chuck. It's time.
That's why you won in that district that you, that's why you won.
Purple as they come. Well, right, because the people that didn't want to vote for Donald
Trump, but they're not out there on the far left either. No. They want balance, they want
common sense, they want people who are serious about getting the job done.
For my district, my biggest issue, lifting the cap on salt and providing real tax relief to people,
protecting critical services like Medicaid, and we're going through this debate, and I'm fighting
with leadership, and I'm fighting with the administration, and make sure we don't gut these
vital programs.
That's what people want.
They just want you to do the damn job and go home.
Get out the way.
Get out there.
What is it?
There's one thing I wanted to talk about, too, which is a little bit of what you just talked
about, which is there was, there have been a few members that have come out.
that have said, well, you know, if I retire, my life is effectively over.
And what I would say is get over yourself.
This isn't about you.
This is about our country, and it's about your constituents.
Nobody is, I don't care if you've been there for decades or just one term.
That seat is not yours.
It is your constituents.
That is who you're there to serve.
And if they choose to serve somebody else, so be it.
That's all we're trying to do with leaders we deserve is give people the option
to vote for somebody that isn't necessarily the same person.
And Bill, let me just, let me applaud one thing.
I'm glad that David is at the table.
You know, I've been at the table a long time,
and I love being at the table,
because it took me a hell of a long time to get in
and to get a seat.
And once I got a seat and got my folding chair,
I was ready.
I was set.
It comes a day when you can't stir every pot,
and you're going to have to get the, um, um, out.
And I'm glad that David is throwing a rock inside the party.
All I would like to advise, David,
is my 25-e-o,
March on Washington King,
holiday, free Nelson Mandela itself.
Call me what the hell you please, but I know what I did when I was his age.
I wanted to have a role in American politics.
I want to care about my country.
I want to love my country, and I want to give back what my country gave to me.
And if David takes that spirit on the DNC, I'll vote for his ass again.
Let's leave it there.
Thank you very much, everybody.
Appreciate you.
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