The Breakfast Club - INTERVIEW: David Hogg On The Courage It Takes To Fight For Democracy, Gun Reform, Future Leaders + More
Episode Date: May 23, 2025Today on The Breakfast Club, David Hogg On The Courage It Takes To Fight For Democracy, Gun Reform, Future Leaders. Listen For More!YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnyst...udio.com/listener for privacy information.
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DJ Envy is not here today, but we got a very special guest,
the vice chairman of the DNC,
and the co-founder of The March for Our Lives,
David Hodge is here.
It's hard, right?
Hard, like a pig.
It is like the pig.
Yeah, yeah. Okay, okay.
I always see the two Gs, and I don't know if it's hard
or hard, but good to see you, man.
You know, I really appreciate a lot of the things
that you've been doing because you are challenging
the democratic establishment.
And I just think we need more of that.
Yeah, I certainly agree.
I think the fact of the matter is right now,
we have seen, last election, we lost voting share
with nearly every single demographic out there.
And we also lost against Donald Trump, of all people, right?
And if that's not a sign that we need to
Dramatically change I don't know what is so that's really what we're out here trying to do is help to elevate a new generation
And also make sure that nobody feels like you know that they can just be in their position of power forever because ultimately this is
Democracy last I checked right and it's about making sure that we have the best representation
Possible in every district. Do you feel like the Democratic establishment uses young activists as mascots more than
partners?
Certainly at times it can happen.
I mean, I know for a fact when I started running for this position, there were people who were
certainly resistant, who I ended up talking to a lot of the time.
That was actually one of my favorite parts
about running for this position,
because when you're running to be a vice chair,
you have to call people and obviously earn their vote.
And one of my favorite parts about it
was talking to the people who at first
did not want to vote for me at all.
I mean, there was one person who I talked to
who actually said in one of my first calls
that I made to ask for their support that,
I'd never talked to this person before this,
that said that I should not do this, I cannot win, and that there was absolutely no pathway to victory
for me and that they would not vote for me.
That was the first call that I had.
Very welcoming, right?
What I said to them was like, I understand that you're not in a position where you feel
like you're not going to be able to support me, but ultimately I care a lot about the
constituency group that you represent.
So I want to keep talking to you because even if you don't vote for me, I do care about what you care about.
And ultimately they ended up coming around
and supporting me and being a huge supporter as well.
And you were a survivor of the Parkland shooting.
Was that what sparked the thought to get into politics?
Yeah, I mean, before this I wanted to be a journalist
because I wanted to scare the crap out of politicians
that I thought were corrupt as hell
and didn't do anything ultimately. But I realized after Parkland, out of politicians that I thought were corrupt as hell and didn't do anything, ultimately.
But I realized after Parkland, when my classmates and I
mobilized for people that may not remember,
we had one of the largest school shootings
in American history happen at my high school in Parkland.
And my classmates and I were obviously devastated after that.
But I would say just as much as that, we were furious.
Because we grew up hearing
from our politicians, their thoughts and prayers over and over again after these shootings,
but they weren't really doing anything. I think I was in middle school when Sandy Hook
happened. I wasn't even alive when Columbine happened. That's how long this has been going
on for. And we went out there and we didn't say go out and vote for Democrats or Republicans
necessarily. We said go out and vote for more religious leaders that represent you and your values,
right?
And what we saw was one of the largest youth voter turnouts in American history.
We took back the House.
And what we saw as well is after Parkland, we didn't go out there, even though there
was a lot of the pollsters and consultants and pundits that brought the Democratic Party
to the place that it is right now, who told us, no, you can't talk about taking on the
NRA, the organization that stops these gun laws from changing a lot of the time.
You can't talk about banning assault weapons because that's too unpopular because this
is Florida.
It's a Republican state.
Gun laws get weaker here.
Because we did the opposite of what all those purported experts told us to do, we actually
did change gun laws in Florida.
Yeah, because you're not fixing the problem if you don't go after the...
Exactly.
You have to address it.
And because of that, we raised the age to buy a gun to 21,
for context of the shooter at my high school. He couldn't buy a handgun from a federally licensed
dealer because he wasn't 21 yet, but he could purchase an AR-15. And then we passed a red flag
law that can disarm people that are at risk themselves and others. It has been used over
19,000 times in the state of Florida to disarm people that, for example, threaten to shoot up a high school or harm their intimate partner.
And thousands of lives have been saved from that.
And what I learned from that experience is that it's actually summed up well by Dolores
Rieto, who I asked one time at a protest, she's a major civil rights activist obviously
and leader in the farm workers movement, amazing person.
I asked her what
is the most important thing that you need to tell any young person or activist that
wants to make change that they need to know. What she said to me is it doesn't matter whether
or not the change is actually possible, it's whether or not you can make people believe
that the change is possible more than anything. And that's what we did after Parkland and
I think what we're trying to do now is take that generation of young people who have been let down in so many ways by their political system,
whether it's through gun violence inside of school or outside of school, whether it's the
housing crisis, the student debt crisis, or so much more, and show them that there's a new generation
of people coming in that are people like Congressman Maxwell Frost. I don't know if you know this person,
he's the youngest member of Congress. He started, he was working for March for Our Lives while I was in college and he called me up and he
said he wanted to run for Congress. And I said, that's awesome, but you know you're
24, right? You have to be 25 to get elected to Congress. And Maxwell, you know, he didn't
come from some super fancy background. His parents aren't super wealthy or anything like
that. He's just a normal person. And when he was running, he had to Uber drive from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. every night
while running for Congress. And he was running against two former members of Congress, one
of whom was a hedge fund manager while they were a member of Congress, not a conflict
of interest at all, right? And then the other one had committed tax fraud while they were
in Congress. And Maxwell was written off by the establishment so much. They said, you
know, he's a great person, but he can't win, he can't raise that kind of money.
And we helped him raise,
I helped him raise about $400,000 in his first two quarters.
But the thing is, the most important thing
that somebody needs to run for office
is the will, the grit, and the determination to get elected.
But they also need a substantial amount of funding
in order to get elected.
And far too many young people
with that grit and determination struggle to get there.
And that's why we do what we do with leaders we deserve because Maxwell ended up with that
determination and that support becoming the youngest member of Congress that helped to
spearhead an effort to get the Biden administration to address gun violence in a more substantial
matter. And both shortly after I graduated from college, I found myself sitting in the Rose Garden
at the White House with Congressman Maxwell Frost, who I had just, I literally hired from my freshman
dorm room, introducing the President of the United States to create something
called the Office of Gun Violence Prevention that helped to coordinate the
federal government's response to gun violence, and they oversaw about a 25%
reduction in gun homicides over the course of about three years from that
work.
And that's because of the pressure that Maxwell helped to put on.
But imagine if we had 30 Maxwells in Congress.
David, going back to the shooting, you were just 17 when that happened, right?
And I can only imagine like what was, I know you said you guys were furious, but what is
something from that day?
What do you remember most about that day that sticks with you today?
I think what I remember most was just the the sense of anger that I had at what had happened.
But it was more righteous indignation kind of it like the injustice of what had happened
Because I had spent the past four years in my speech and debate classes
Studying you know arguing about gun control for example and having to argue on both sides of it both for and against it
You don't get to decide which side you're arguing on you have to argue on both
And I was frustrated because I felt like I maybe
arguing on, you have to argue on both. And I was frustrated because I felt like I maybe myself and my classmates could have done something before this because of what we knew from that
education that we didn't that could have potentially prevented it. So that's a lot of what I think
about. And of course, too, the fear that one has when my sister was just 14 years old that day
and she lost four friends.
That's really what I was thinking about was for the first time in my life, I, I,
you know, there wasn't anything that I could do to help my sister feel better
other than to try to stop this from happening to other people.
And that sense of helplessness is really what I hold onto.
But I also remember the, the friendship and camaraderie that my classmates and I
and the parents and teachers and other people that we worked with had in order to hold these
politicians' feet to the fire. Because if there's anything that I learned from that
experience, when I originally went out and started talking about it, I wasn't doing it
as an activist. I was doing it as a journalist because I wanted to talk about what happened
that day. But I soon realized it wasn't gonna be enough to do that
because you can't just talk about what's wrong.
You gotta make it better and say what needs to be done right.
And journalists often can't do that.
And what's an even better way of scaring,
I like to say, Charlemagne,
the only good politician is a scared politician
that is afraid of losing their job, frankly.
And we need a lot more of that.
And what's a lot better of a way of doing that
than just writing a bad story
is running somebody against them
or having a massive youth voter turnout
that helps to defeat the NRA,
and that's just what my generation did in 2018.
People told us, you young people are great,
you're really inspirational, but you don't
vote.
That's the problem.
And we said, okay, watch us.
So we did.
And we ended up defeating more NRA-backed incumbents in the US House than ever before
in American history.
And in the time since, we actually passed, just after Yuvalde, the first federal gun
law in 30 years as well.
And it's nowhere near enough.
There are still people every day that live in fear
of gun violence, students that live in fear of gun violence. And we have to be clear too,
what happened in Parkland is horrifying and should never happen again. But most of the young people
that are dying from gun violence aren't dying in school and they aren't getting nearly enough
attention. And we need to make sure that we're providing a holistic solution so that kids don't
feel in danger on their way to school or inside of their classroom at the same time.
But not only just focus on one or the other,
but focus effectively on both.
Have you encountered more resistance
from Democrats or Republicans
when trying to push real reform?
In which sense, in terms of-
Gun reform, just any type of reform, period.
I mean, honestly, I think a lot of the challenge
is that I think the resource
that our party lacks more than anything, it's not cash.
We certainly are good at raising money, right? The resource that we lack is courage, in my opinion.
I agree. I think that's the one strategy Democrats have not tried.
And exactly, what kills me about that is that, think about all the most prolific things that our party has helped to usher in in the past, right?
Whether it's the Social Security system, right? Medicaid or Medicare, which now are getting cut, of course, in part because some of our
members of Congress literally passed away in office and that vote very likely would
not have gone through that, just went through that, is going to cut billions of dollars
in funding for Medicaid and so much more.
And what I think, what I'm always coming back to
is what those people said to us after Parkland,
which is you can't talk about this
because it's too bold, it's too out there, it's too much.
You need to be very incremental.
So.
Who was saying that?
Was it Republicans, Democrats, or both?
I mean, it was a lot of pollsters and consultants
and other people on the Democratic side saying,
you don't understand, this is too controversial, you can't push for this.
What we did though is because we actually spoke authentically
about what we actually believed and went out there
and said, this is what needs to happen.
We got Republicans in our state,
which was a Republican trifecta on the defense
and we changed gun laws and saved lives.
But imagine if we didn't have that courage.
Imagine if we listened to those people that said
that we can't over and over again, right? I think part of the reason why I would say one of the last times
that we were the strongest as a party was shortly after Barack Obama was elected. And
I think part of the reason we had such a massive wave wasn't just because of the recession
that we just went through, but it was because it wasn't because he had a message of we can't.
We can't change you can believe And that is the most powerful force
that we need to tap into,
is we need to reignite the American people's vision
of what kind of country we could be, ultimately, right?
And not just talk about how we're against Donald Trump,
of course we are.
But talk about what are we trying to build
as an alternative, right?
And what I think about is, look, Charlemagne,
I'm not a Democrat,
because I think that we're God's greatest gift gift or we're perfect by any means, right?
It's because I believe in the party that we can be and I believe in what we have done
as a party in those moments when we did have courage, when we passed the Affordable Care
Act so that people didn't get kicked off their insurance for a pre-existing condition.
That's why my father, when he got diagnosed with early onset Parkinson's disease, didn't
get kicked off his insurance.
And then my family didn't go bankrupt because we had the social security system that he
paid into throughout his life to support him and his family should he get the unfortunate
consequences of having a life-altering thing like that.
But what I also think about is how I ended up in Parkland in the first place.
And that's because when my dad was diagnosed with Parkinson's and faced an early medical retirement, we very likely wouldn't be able to continue to afford to live in California,
where we lived at the time, because of the housing crisis out there. That's not because
of Republicans, right? That's because of Democrats. And then we moved to Florida and I love the
consequences of Republicans failure to address gun safety. So I want to make sure that not only are we defeating Republicans,
but we're not just defeating them to defeat them,
but we're actually doing something with that power to address the housing crisis,
to address gun violence and ensure, just more recently,
when my dad passed last September...
I'm sorry to hit it.
Thank you.
When my dad passed last September,
I was reminded of how much more work we have to do,
because when he was on his deathbed, despite being a Navy helicopter pilot with full VA benefits, When my dad passed last September, I was reminded of how much more work we have to do because
when he was on his deathbed, despite being a Navy helicopter pilot with full VA benefits
and a medically retired FBI agent, his cost of care monthly for at-home care was $19,000
a month.
Wow.
I had to make a spreadsheet to figure out how long my family could afford to keep my
dad alive.
Damn.
Despite all of those things.
And the only reason why we didn't go bankrupt
is because he did not live long enough for that to happen.
And that is an impossible decision
that no person in this country should have to make
between caring for a loved one or going bankrupt
or paying for heat or paying for insulin
or getting a college degree
or not having a lifetime of debt, for example.
That's why I'm a Democrat,
because I know the power of what can happen
when we do have courage,
when we fight for what we actually believe in,
and we don't just cower and say,
no, we need to do this tiny incremental thing
when hundreds of millions of people
are struggling around the country right now.
Do you think Democrats are afraid
of upsetting wealthy donors
even when the issue is life or death, like gun reform?
When it comes to gun reform, I don't think the issue is necessarily or death, like gun reform? When it comes to gun reform,
I don't think the issue is necessarily wealthy donors,
to be honest with you.
I think that there certainly are conflicts with that.
I think the bigger issue that I look at
is the fact that we have corporations
that are literally giving money to our politicians,
that are directly incentivized
not to address the broken healthcare system, for example, that are directly incentivized not to address the broken health care system, for example, right?
That are directly incentivized to not do all kinds of things that the American people need.
We need our government to fight against special interests, not be in bed with special interests,
right?
That's why our candidates, when we support them, leaders we deserve and the funding that
we get to support our candidates, they get, we get funding from 200,000 people around
the country with an average donation of $22.
We don't take money from corporations and our candidates, they don't take money from
corporations either.
And we say to them as well, if you take money from corporations, we will find a different
young person to run against you and we will primary you to hold you accountable because
we have to reform the campaign finance system because ultimately that is the thing that is keeping all these issues exist, making them exist at the same
time because ultimately these politicians are able to stay in their positions of power
because they continue to get funding from the NRA, they continue to get funding from
all these special interests that stop us from making progress and having the courage to
address those most substantial issues in the first place.
Let me ask you a question David.
At what moment did you realize you were more of a threat than an asset to democratic leadership? and having the courage to address those most substantial issues in the first place. Let me ask you a question, David.
At what moment did you realize you were more of a threat than an asset to democratic leadership?
I wouldn't say that I'm a...
I would say that I'm still an asset because I would say that this much is true, right?
If you were in democratic leadership, I kind of have a strange metaphor for this,
but if you're in democratic leadership, it's kind of like being the coach of a baseball team, right?
Like, sure, could you go out against a group of fifth graders
and hit a home run?
Absolutely.
But ultimately, if you can't get other people on base, right,
because they can't even swing the bat,
sometimes it's not a matter of what type of bat they're using.
It's a matter of can they swing to actually get on base
in the first place.
And it's a matter of getting new players.
Ultimately, it's not a matter of, oh, can we can we just do more and more training?
And I think what we need to do more of in our own party is, yes, we have to fight
back to defeat Republicans, but we also need to give people something true and
authentic to vote for, where we're showing people how the reason you vote for us
isn't just so that we have a majority, it's so that we use our majority to help you.
Because if we stuck with that politics of cowardice, we never would have passed the
Affordable Care Act in the first place.
We never would have passed so many of the most monumental pieces of legislation, then
now we're helping hundreds of millions of Americans around the country.
So of course there are challenges with democratic leadership, but what I would say is especially in the case
of somebody like Hakeem Jeffries,
let's get him the majority so we can see
what he can actually do with that majority
in the first place.
He's not gonna do anything.
I can see here's the thing,
and I treat it like anything else, right?
Like, you know how they say money doesn't change you?
It just multiplies whatever you already are.
More power is not gonna change these people.
If you're a coward with no power,
you're gonna be a coward with power.
We've seen plenty of Democrats who have power
who are still cowards.
Our king ain't gonna do nothing different with power.
With more power?
I think if we have the right people elected
that are out there, they're gonna be able,
ultimately, sometimes it's not a matter
of what you wanna do.
When you have to get elected to those positions
within the House, for example,
if we get more people elected that are saying,
no, this is not enough, we have to fight harder,
that we're not just gonna stick
in our positions of power forever,
and we're going to say to you, for example,
that if we're gonna vote for you,
this is what we wanna see,
because obviously he has to be elected
to be the majority speaker of the House.
By having some more of those young people
that are on the front lines of these issues
of addressing that, I know in those internal deliberations
that it's not so much a matter of what he wants to do,
it's more a matter of if he wants to get elected,
he is going to have to be able to fight harder.
And I know that those young people will push him to do that.
And if they feel like he's not going to,
then they won't vote for him.
Have you ever been directly warned
by anyone in the Democratic party to stay in your lane?
Mm-hmm.
Like, I'm talking about like, I know some people say things publicly, but like behind the scenes have they like really threatened you?
There certainly are real challenges to the work that we are doing, but I'm not going
to let that stop me.
I wouldn't say necessarily that it's like somebody is directly coming to me and saying,
if you don't stop this, this is going to happen to you or something like that.
But that's not how a lot of these things work inside of DC a lot of the time.
It's not necessarily an overt threat.
It is saying it is essentially a tacit threat that we hear a lot of the
time knowing that if X thing happens then Y could happen to you, right? Why not
call it out though? Because ultimately it is what I care more about
is when there are people that that go against me whether it was for example in
the vice chair race I know the power from my own work in gun violence prevention
of being a bigger person working towards victory. And ultimately when you do that,
a lot of those people start to come around because a lot of the time in DC, we have a lot of wind
socks that go just whichever way the wind is blowing, right? Whichever side that they think
is going to win. And I believe in a politics of being able to reconcile those differences
and work together despite what people say because what's even more powerful
Charlemagne is that when when somebody comes out and tries to go overtly against you, right?
And they know that they did that to you
But they see that you start to win and that's ultimately what they care most about
Then if you don't go out there and start calling them out publicly one
it's not nearly as divisive and two it shows that you're trying to be a real leader, and ultimately they oftentimes feel guilty about it,
and they want to try to make up for it
by working to help you,
because they want to be on the side of winning.
And ultimately, that's what we're trying to do here,
if that makes sense.
How do you respond to people
that say that your work is too political?
Could you elaborate a little bit?
I mean, because, you know, obviously,
like to the point that he said,
how people need to sustain your lane.
Yeah, like you're doing this for selfish reasons
and not because you actually care about, you know,
the whole party.
It's to advance your political career.
No, no, no.
So what I'll say is when I was 18,
I said that I wanted to run for Congress
because I thought that would be the best way to make change.
But I realized when I was working with people like Maxwell and other young people around the
country how hard it is to raise money and get the resources to get elected. Because of course,
courage is that resource that we lack the most. But those courageous people, they need cash in
order to get elected. And I could be one person myself to go out there and maybe I get elected to Congress.
But ultimately, what is going to be more beneficial for the future, right?
One, I often do get physically threatened, not necessarily by Democrats necessarily by
any means, but by a lot of people who don't agree with the things that I say about strengthening
gun laws.
My family and I, we got
probably over a thousand death threats after the shooting, I would say, between online and directly
in the mail. My house got swatted as well. And what I frankly have to think about is that I can't
just be one person doing this, right? And there's a whole movement of people out there that are doing
this, a whole movement of young people that have gone through these school shootings. And what I
want to help do is I don't want to just be one vote that's out there. I want to help
bring in a generation that is truly representative of our generation and not just what, you know,
somebody who's able to raise as much money as possible to get elected looks like. And
that's what we're trying to do with this is look at all the candidates that we supported
last cycle where we helped elect the youngest person in the Georgia legislature ever,
who's a seventh grade algebra teacher, right?
Look at the person who we elected, Dante Pittman,
in North Carolina, who helped to break the Republican supermajority out there.
Look at people like Naderius Clark in Virginia,
who broke the Republican majority in the House and helped pass all this stuff.
So the reason why I'm doing this is because I want to help bring in...
I don't want to just walk through that door myself and close it behind me, I don't wanna just walk through that door myself
and close it behind me.
I don't wanna just keep the door open.
I wanna take the door off the damn hinges
and enable it so that future young people
don't need to have the door held open
for them in the first place.
What they need to do that though
is they need the funding to get elected
and make sure that they have the right values
so that they're able to reform our campaign finance system.
Because what I look at this as ultimately is an insurance policy for the gun safety movement,
where President Biden's generation, they didn't go through school shooter drills, but they
went through a different type of drill.
They went through nuclear bomb drills, and they went on to pass some of the largest arms
reduction treaties in human history to limit those nuclear weapons.
And I think that's in part because they felt the anxiety of what it was like to be told
by your government, just hide under your desk to survive a nuclear bomb and the epic failure
of leadership that that is.
And I believe for the difference from our generation is that the bomb is going off multiple
times a year.
Absolutely.
Right?
So let's get them elected so that they can lead like Congressman Frost, boldly on this
instead of me just being one vote,
because it isn't about me.
It's about our generation and the story of
are we gonna continue having conversations like this
in the future where school shootings remain in the headlines
and gun violence remains in the headlines
and so many issues that we should not have to deal with
in the richest country in human history
remain in the headlines,
or are we gonna leave them where they belong
in the history books?
Give me some other names,
because you keep mentioning Maxwell Frost.
Who do you think is the voice of the Democratic Party?
Or who do you think should be the voice
of the Democratic Party?
Or is there multiple voices?
Well, I think one, there's gonna be multiple voices.
I think one of the great things about our party
that also creates some challenges is,
look, we are not a cult.
We can have-
I can't tell in recent years.
Well, sometimes I understand what you're saying, certainly given some of the responses that
I've gotten to this, but ultimately we are not a party with somebody like Donald Trump
at the top that says, you have to believe every single thing right here or else you
are excommunicated and we're going to try to destroy your life necessarily.
It's not nearly-
I don't know if that's true, David.
Well- I've looked at the way people would really get upset with you
if you had anything negative to say about President Biden
when he was the one that we should have been speaking out about the most.
Right, and I completely agree with you, actually.
I think one of the challenges in that regard
that we have to address in our politics
is that we have created a culture
where people are told repeatedly what they want to hear
instead of what they need to hear, right?
And what I believe happened in that regard is,
look, when you're in the White House,
and I've seen this in different ways,
either in the White House or in other places,
you want to keep your job.
And the best way to do that is ensure
that you get this person reelected again.
And I think what happens far too often in our politics is that people get too comfortable
and they just tell people what they want to hear instead of what they need to hear over
and over and over and over again. And frankly, part of why I'm doing this is because I met
with President Biden in 2023 for an hour in the Oval Office. And one of the things that
happened to you. Well, it was a good meeting and it was after in 2023 for an hour in the Oval Office. And one of the things that...
I'm sorry that happened to you.
Well, it was a good meeting and it was after he created
the Office of Gun Violence Prevention at the White House
that saw about a 25% reduction in gun homicides
around the country.
Part of the challenge is though, you're not gonna hear
about the shooting that doesn't happen, right?
But I was meeting with him in that regard and...
Did you see the decline in him then?
So that was one of the challenges, is I didn't see it personally and
What I wish I had told him though because he asked me how do I win back younger voters?
What I wish I had told him which of course I would have been laughed out of the room if I said this
Was that he shouldn't run for office again?
I know but that's what needed to be said
I was saying that everybody was so mad at me and that but that's what needed to be said. I was saying that and everybody was so mad at me.
But that's part of the problem is we need to have a more open conversation about these
things because we also created an environment where people felt like they were excommunicated
if they dared to say anything about it.
And to some extent, I understand people were afraid about potentially re-electing Donald
Trump, but ultimately look at where we ended up.
We need to build a culture inside of our party
where we are telling people what they need to hear
and not just what they want to hear.
That's what I did when I ran for vice chair.
When I ran for this position,
I said, you know what I'm not gonna do?
I'm not gonna be a politician.
I'm not gonna contort myself into some bullshit pretzel
of whatever you wanna see, of some bullshit mirage.
You know, when they asked me,
should Joe Biden have dropped out?
I said, yes, he should have, obviously. And then when they asked me, should Joe Biden have dropped out? I said, yes, he should have,
obviously. And then when they asked me why we lost the election, I said, why did we lose the election?
Voters told us two things. They said prices are too high and Joe Biden is too old. And we said to
them with the power of $2 billion behind us, no, he's not. Yes, he is. And then we said, no,
they aren't. Look at the stock market. Like, and majority of people don't have fucking stock.
Exactly.
And if you tell people not to believe their eyeballs
or their wallets, you're gonna lose them.
And I think what we need to build in the party
is a culture of addressing the realities
that people are actually going through
and what they're actually feeling,
not just what a chart is telling us
that they should be feeling,
but actually listening to them.
And what we're here to do is build that culture regardless of whether or not people like it
or not.
Because it needs to say, if you aren't going to listen and understand that, frankly, sometimes
people should not be in these positions of power anymore because the consequences are
if you die in office, we may lose a vote like we just did.
That's going to cost billions and billions of dollars and
people to lose their health care because
They chose to stay in power for so long that they literally died
I'm Andrea Gunning host of the podcast betrayal
Police lieutenant Joel Kern used his badge to fool everyone most of all his wife Caroline
He texted I've ruined our lives.
You're going to want to divorce me.
Caroline's husband was living another life behind the scenes.
He betrayed his oath to his family and to his community.
She said you left bruises, pulled her hair,
that type of thing.
No.
How far would Joel go to cover up what he'd done?
You're unable to keep track of all your lies, and quite frankly, I question how many other women may bring forward allegations in the future.
This season of Betrayal investigates one officer's decades of deception.
Lies that left those closest to him questioning everything they thought they
knew.
Listen to Betrayal on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Yo, K-pop fans, it's your boy, BOMHAN, and I'm bringing you something epic.
Introducing the K-Factor, the podcast that takes you straight into the heart of K-pop.
We're talking music reviews, exclusive interviews, and deep dives into the industry like never before.
From producers and choreographers to idols and trainees,
we're bringing you the real stories behind the music that you love.
And yeah, we're keeping it 100, discussing everything from comebacks and concepts
to the mental health side of the business. Because K-pop isn't just a genre.
It's a whole world, and we're exploring every corner of it.
And here's the best part.
Fans get to call in, drop opinions,
and even join us live at events.
You never know where we might pop up next.
So listen to the K-Factor on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This isn't just a podcast, it's a movement.
Are you ready?
Let's go. Let's go.
Let's go.
Amy Robach and TJ Holmes here.
Diddy's former protege, television personality,
platinum-selling artist,
Denity King alum Aubrey O'Day joins us
to provide a unique perspective on the trial
that has captivated the attention of the nation. Aubrey O'Day joins us to provide a unique perspective on the trial that has
captivated the attention of the nation. Aubrey O'Day is sitting next to us here.
You are, as we sit here, right up the street from where the trial is taking
place. Some people saw that you were going to be in New York and they
immediately started jumping to conclusions. So can you clear that up?
First of all, are you here to testify in the Ddy Trial? Aubrey will offer her opinions and expertise
based on her firsthand knowledge.
From her days on Making the Band
as she emerged as the breakout star,
the truth of the situation would be opposite
of the glitz and glamor.
It wasn't all bad,
but I don't know that any of the good was real.
I went through things there.
Listen to Amy and TJ Presents presents Aubrey O'Day,
covering the Diddy Trial on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, y'all. It's your girl T.S. Madison
coming to you live and in color from the Outlaws podcast.
On this week's episode, we're talking to none other
than Chaperone and Sasha Colby.
And let me tell you, no topping is off limits, honey.
We talk about the lovers, the haters, and the creator.
I worked at Scooter's Coffee drive-thru kiosk.
And you are from the Midwest.
And in the Midwest, they told you, well, just be humble.
Like, you've heard this countless times.
You too, right?
Oh, yeah, it's very, like, big in Hawaii. Mine was, I think,. Like you've heard this countless times. You too, right? Oh yeah, it's very like big in Hawaii.
Mine was I think wrapped up in like Christian guilt.
Oh yeah.
We definitely had like some Jehovah's Witness guilt there.
Yeah.
Wait, were you Jehovah's Witness?
Yeah.
So you were Jehovah's Witness?
I grew up that, yeah.
My family still has hate.
Or no, fine.
Ha ha ha.
Listen, she may have been working the drive through
in 2020, but she's the name on everybody's lips now, fine. Listen, she may have been working the drive through in 2020, but she's the name on everybody's
lips now, honey.
Listen to Outlaws with T.S. Madison on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts, honey.
I mean, imagine a scenario like this to your point of what you were talking about.
Imagine we had a scenario where we won a two-seat majority in the house. We would have already lost it because several of our members have died in office.
That should not be the case.
We need to be training up the next generation and passing down that knowledge and not sticking
around so long that they're just there forever.
And I know that's uncomfortable for some people to hear, and I certainly get a lot of heat
for saying that.
And it's not to say that I don't have respect for some people to hear and I certainly get a lot of heat for saying that and it's not to say that There isn't you know that I don't have respect for those people. They've done incredible like work and prolific work
But ultimately we have to figure out how do we train up the next generation?
To build the best Democratic Party possible because I think what happens is a lot of people don't want to train up their successor
Because that is a threat to them because if can be, if you train up somebody well enough, you're going to
train them so well that you could potentially be replaced and that's scary
to them, but ultimately this isn't about you.
It's about the country.
It's about the party and it's about what are we doing?
Not only to defeat Donald Trump.
He, he's like, he's old.
I know Joe Biden's old.
Donald Trump is old too.
I don't know how much longer he's gonna be around.
Why do we keep saying defeat Donald Trump though?
He won.
Right, exactly.
So that's what I'm getting at is we can't just talk about
what are we doing to defeat Donald Trump?
What are we doing to defeat him?
He won.
Yeah.
What are we doing to defeat what empowered him ultimately?
What are we doing to address the fact that right now
he's taking millions and millions of dollars
into his own cryptocurrency that I think it's very likely that foreign governments are buying to buy favor with
him, right? What are we doing to address the fact that his own administration is kidnapping students
for op-eds that they've written? That's horrifying. And the fact that right now, despite all of that,
that our party's approval rating is at 27% should tell us it is an indictment of our
party. My question to the people that don't agree with this is what is the plan to address that? If
it's not new leadership, everybody loves to say it's just new messaging, it's just new messaging.
The problem is in DC, the guiding philosophy that guides far too many of our principals is what pisses off the least people
and what raises the most money.
That's not a winning strategy
because that's what brought us here.
Congressman Jim Clyburn said that,
what do you want them to do, give up their life?
And you told him to get over himself.
What did you mean by that?
What I was getting at more in particular is first
and foremost, I think people like Jim Clyburn
are incredibly important figures in our party and have a
Incredible legacy what I was getting out was not specific to him
What I was getting out was specific to the culture that we have in the party that I've heard
For many members across the board which is to say if if I leave I feel like my life is over and that's why I'm there
And I need to be there. That's not a good enough reason to be in office frankly.
Do you like do, right?
I completely agree.
And I should.
And I love Congressman Clyburn.
Right, of course.
But the question should be,
are you the best representative possible?
And maybe he is ultimately,
his voters obviously reelected him, so maybe he is.
But the question that we need to be facing here
is that it ultimately,
it's not about any single one of us it's about this party it's about what are we doing to make sure that people that
rely on food stamps aren't having funding cut like we just saw what are we
doing to make sure that the tens of millions of people that rely on Medicaid
aren't having Republicans cut funding from that because several of our
members died while in office.
And that is part of what enabled them to do that.
Because ultimately, we need to be focused on those several million people
and the American people more than we need to be focused on ourselves.
And let me be clear, I'm not saying that that's specific to Congressman Clyburn.
Do you regret saying that? Like just that choice of words? Get over yourself?
I think what I wish I was more specific in that regard is that we have a culture in our party of saying like,
well, you know, I feel like my life is over
if I stay here forever.
And that's why I'm here.
And that's not a good enough reason of being there.
And maybe that's not what he was trying to say
in that case.
I agree with that because the American people's life
could be over if you stay too long.
Clearly, a lot of y'all have stayed too long
and y'all have been holding on to those same ideologies.
And like you said, that culture of the Democratic Party
has not benefited us.
The thing that bugs me out the most is 2020,
they told us, vote for President Biden
to stop what is happening now,
and it didn't stop anything.
They didn't fight hard at all when they got in the office
to stop what is currently going on in this country right now.
It's horrifying.
I mean, there were things that I think that we did do
to give them some level of credit, right?
We got the first federal gun law passed in 30 years.
That's pretty prolific.
That's part of what resulted in 25% reduction in gun homicides.
It's nowhere near enough to be clear.
But I'm talking about in regard to stopping authoritarian rule.
Oh, yeah.
I'm talking about in regard to stopping authoritarian rule. Oh yeah.
I'm talking about in regard to stopping somebody that you know wasn't going to uphold the Constitution.
They never acted like, well, they talked like Donald Trump was a threat, but never really
acted like it.
Yeah, and I think what we should have done, if we genuinely felt that way, we would have
made sure that we were building a culture where we were telling people
what they need to hear, including the president
of the United States, and not just what they want to hear.
And frankly, the fact that I didn't say that in that meeting
with President Biden was one of the biggest regrets
that I have, and I will think about almost probably every day
for the rest of my life, is in those major moments,
sure, would the president have listened to me?
Probably not, and I probably would have just been laughed
out of the room, to be honest with you, but and I probably would have just been laughed out of the room to be honest
with you, but at least I would have told him what he needed to hear and not just what he
wanted to hear ultimately.
And that is what we got to change in our party.
And what I'll tell you this much is that comfortable politicians don't change.
They don't.
And I think right now there's far too much comfort in our party in a moment of crisis
in our country with what we're seeing Donald Trump do across the board. I'm tired of seeing strongly written
letters. Right? Strongly written letters with eight strong questions. What I think we need more of is
people that are like Senator Van Hollen, right? Who said, who's a Senator from Maryland that said,
he didn't just sit on his hands and say, I'm in the minority, I can't do anything.
senator from Maryland that said he didn't just sit on his hands and say, I'm in the minority, I can't do anything.
He said Donald Trump disappeared one of my constituents to El Salvador and I'm going
to El Salvador to talk to him.
That's what it looks like.
That's what fighting back looks like.
But it goes beyond that too, as well.
It's about an overall cultural shift in our party because right now, I'm curious what
you guys think of this.
If you ask the average American if the Democratic Party was an animal, guess what the most common
answer is?
A cowardly lion?
You want to take a guess?
Same cowardly lion.
It's a turtle.
Turtles are smart.
You know what it is for Republicans?
They're behind. It's a shark or a lion. Turtles are smart. You know what it is for Republicans?
It's a shark or a lion.
People want somebody who fights for them, ultimately.
And that is what kills me about what we're saying is we are fighting,
I do genuinely believe, for the right reasons and for the right people,
but for far too many people, they clearly don't feel like we are fighting for them, ultimately.
They don't feel like we're addressing their real concerns, and what we need to do is elect people that are there to address those concerns and say,
screw the special interests.
We're here to represent you.
We're not here to represent corporations.
We're not in Congress to help an extremely wealthy group of people like Republicans are
doing right now, where they are literally cutting billions of dollars in funding for
Medicaid and food stamps in order to give a, I think
it was a $5 trillion tax cut to the wealthiest Americans in this country.
They are literally taking from the poorest and most vulnerable members of our country
and giving it to the most affluent and wealthy people.
And Donald Trump likes to call this his big beautiful bill.
It should be called the big bullshit bill.
That's what that is, ultimately, because that's not the art of the deal,
that's just total bullshit that he is pushing there.
And I wonder if Democrats understand,
like you know when Chuck Schumer talks about
how bad this bill is,
but then says he has to support it anyway.
Do they not understand how that mis-messaging
makes me not ever believe anything
that comes out of your mouth?
It is awful, and what I think we need to do
is make sure that we're better coordinated
between the left and the right hands, right?
Where the house and the Senate are properly talking to each other and also if we do have to face a tough decision like that
like that's safe for a second that that Schumer in that position that say like he made the the best of
Two bad bad the least bad of two beds, you know
Right the lesser of two eels. Right, the lesser of two eels. I'm tired of that though.
But ultimately when we're in the minority, unfortunately we don't have the choice of
that a lot of the time.
Yeah, but even when they're in the majority, it's like we're picking the lesser of two
eels.
And it shouldn't be, to be clear.
And I think the way that we do that, it was we change our cast of characters to make sure
that we are fighting harder and showing that we're going to fight to elect people that
are like our first endorsed candidate, actually, Senator Robert Peters in Illinois, who actually currently is in the same Senate seat as Barack Obama
was when he was in the state legislature there.
And the reason why we had him, just as an example of what we need more of to help make
sure that we're pushing our leaders to be better, because leaders are the consequences
of the people that vote for them, right?
Whether that is the American people that are voting for them, or that is the people inside
of Congress that are voting for them.
Senator Peters in Illinois, what he did that was really remarkable to us is it's not enough
just to have the right values.
That is obviously the first and most important thing in terms of fighting new insurer like
he did that he ended cash bail in the state of Illinois.
And they built a system where it's based off
of how much of a risk somebody is to society,
whether or not they get out,
not whether or not they can afford to get out.
But on top of that, he also did things
like increased tenant protections
and made it so that if you have a mental health crisis
and your insurance companies don't love to pay
for therapy a lot of the time.
So part of what they addressed
was prior authorizations for insurance.
What we're looking for are people with the right values
who also get shit done, right?
That's what I care about, ultimately.
And he passed over 120 bills through the legislature
and got them signed into law.
That is what we're looking for more of in Congress.
People that have the experience, that have the grit,
that have the determination and the will to get it done,
and have the lived experience
that far too many members of Congress frankly only pretend to even know
about.
And he knows that himself because unfortunately at a younger age, he lost his parents, went
through the foster care system, and went on to still become this prolific leader in the
Illinois state legislature.
And I think part of the reason for that is because he personally knows the consequences
of what happens when we don't lead on these issues.
And that's what we need a lot more of in Congress. But it's not just any young person, to be clear.
There's lots of young people who suck. There's lots of old people who are great.
It's not as simple as saying if you're above a certain age, you shouldn't necessarily be there.
It's about effectiveness. And the issue that I take more broadly speaking with the party right now
is that it feels like we've leaned so much on this culture of seniority politics, that if you just wait
for the most experienced people, that they're going to be the ones to get things done the
best over and over.
And that's what we said over and over and over again.
But that's what got us here.
If that was the best situation for us to lead us out of these moments, I wouldn't be talking
to you right now because this wouldn't be a problem, right?
Because Donald Trump wouldn't have been elected again
in the first place, but here we are.
And experience matters,
but it has to be effective experience ultimately.
Because if you're just there for 30 years
and you don't know how to get things done,
that experience doesn't mean anything, right?
But if you've been there for three years
and you know how to get things done, that's doesn't mean anything, right? But if you've been there for three years and you know how to get things done,
that's a lot more important to me, right?
So we're not just looking to find any young person,
we're looking to find the best of our generation
to get them elected around the country.
What advice have older progressives
given you privately that contradicts their public message?
I've heard from a lot of members of Congress
that have thanked me for doing this, even some not so young members of Congress that have thanked me for doing this, even
some not so young members of Congress that thank me for doing this and said that this
is dramatically needed, but they don't want to speak out about it because they obviously
don't want to say that some of their colleagues shouldn't necessarily be there anymore.
But look, I'm willing to do that.
I don't care.
I didn't get to this position by saying over and over again, oh, I'm just going to conserve
my political capital and I'm just going to be extremely risk averse.
I know the consequences of what, of that type of politics.
My generation knows the consequences of that type of politics of saying, oh, let's just,
let's just cower ourselves and negotiate against ourselves more and more and more and more
and more to the point that it makes this question, why the hell are we even there in the first
place?
Right?
Because we're not there just to sit in a comfortable chair. We are there to get out of it and get things done,
to show people why they should vote for us.
Not just because of how that we're the less bad
of two options, like you talk about,
but that we're the best option overall.
I'm tired of voting for the least bad of two options.
I wanna vote for the best option, ultimately.
I just got two more questions.
Would you ever consider helping to start a third party of Democrats
continue ignoring your generation's demands?
No, because this is not their party, ultimately.
The people that are trying to, you know, that are against this,
the Democratic Party doesn't belong to anybody in leadership.
It doesn't belong to me.
It doesn't belong to any of the official members of the DNC or the official leaders of the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party
belongs to the American people and the millions of Democrats that are elected around the country
that we are here to try to represent as much as possible. So no, I'm not about to leave
and try to start my own party because ultimately this isn't, you know, the people that are
against this, this isn't their party, it's all of our party.
And it's a matter of what type of party
do we wanna build in the first place.
Okay, my last question,
I'm just gonna throw some names at you
and because these people to me represent
what the next generation of Democrats could look like.
I just wanna know what your thoughts of them are.
Governor Westmore of Maryland.
So, I think Governor Westmore has done a pretty amazing job.
He actually has a really cool program that I don't think has been talked about very much
where he works.
I think it's called like the mid-career program where they take in a class of several hundred
young people and put them into different jobs around the state of Maryland.
And it really helps get them started in their lives and their careers and like help turn
things around.
And there have even been people that have gone into this program that I've heard about
that started out literally homeless, that now have gone on to program that I've heard about that started out literally
homeless, that now have gone on to get jobs and do things like that. So that's great. I love
Governor Westmore. I will say this much. I can't talk at all about any potential presidential
nominees. I'm not saying that he is or is not running, but I can't give any opinion specifically on that. Pete Buttigieg. I think Pete Buttigieg
clearly was a very good Secretary of Transportation given the situation that
we're in right now. And I think with Pete, he represents a level of
sanity that I think people are craving right now. They're tired of the chaos that I think Donald Trump represents a lot of the time.
I don't think people want to have a president that they have to hear about doing something
ridiculous in the headlines every single day.
That is frankly an embarrassment to our country and internationally as well.
So I think Pete could be great.
What I really like about him is that,
and I'm just talking about future leaders.
I'm not talking about anything about presidential
or anything like that to be extremely clear.
That's what I'm saying.
Just the next generation of what
a Democrat leadership looks like.
What I really like about him is I think
he does an excellent job of talking to people
who don't agree with him.
Yes, I agree.
That is what we need more of.
When I was actually in college,
I joined the shooting club.
As you can imagine, I was very popular there, right?
And I didn't do that because I was super popular.
I did that because I wanted to talk to the people who disagree with me most.
And what I realized from those conversations, at least on the issue of gun violence a lot
of the time, is that it's not even for a lot of people that they're super overtly against
this, even if they say that they're against it.
A lot of the time when people don't agree with something on this, it's because
they feel disrespected by you. They feel unheard. They feel looked down on. And when you have
an actual conversation with them and say, okay, why do you feel this way? What can we
agree on? You start making progress with them. That's how I've talked to people who've said
to me even crazy things like people who think that the shooting my high school didn't happen,
who I've engaged with and said, obviously obviously I don't agree with you on that because
they're conspiracy theorists, right?
And it's hard for me to have that conversation incredibly hard, but I'm not
here to have easy conversations and get nothing done.
I'm here to have hard conversations and help fundamentally change this issue so
that no other generation has to live through it in the first place.
And what I learned from those conversations is when they say an insult to me or they say
something like I just mentioned, when I respond and I say, look, I can respect that you don't
agree with me, but I can't accept the fact that you don't want school shootings or gun
violence to continue either.
So let's figure out what we can agree on, even if it's a small thing.
When I do that, at the end of every single conversation that I've had like that, without
fail if they continue talking to me,
they end up apologizing.
And saying, I may not agree with you on everything,
but I respect you.
And then they'll come back a lot of the time and say,
actually I've changed my mind because of our conversation
and I now support you.
And I shouldn't have said that the shooting
at your high school didn't happen
and I was wrong for that.
And I'm sorry.
And that is what the most powerful force to me is,
is how to turn that hatred into hope.
So you didn't get kicked out the shooting clip?
No, I didn't.
No, I was one of the best shots on the team.
Because my dad was an FBI agent.
But that's what I think Pete is really good at representing,
is helping to kind of bring people together
and talk to the people that don't agree
and explain without compromising his values what we believe as Democrats.
And I think that's really powerful.
A few more names.
Governor Josh Shapiro.
You know, I think with Josh Shapiro, he has a huge amount of favorability for a reason
in Pennsylvania ultimately.
And you know, I think it's interesting as a swing state, they have a pretty close state
legislature as well.
And there's been some great work that they've done on gun violence as well.
Jasmine Crockett.
Jasmine Crockett, I love her. She is amazing. I think that people want to see somebody who
fights and calls out the bullshit, ultimately. I think that's what Jasmine does. And we need
a hell of a lot more people that are out there that are willing to do just that and call
people out on their PS and not say, oh my God, Republicans are going to criticize me for saying this. Screw that.
They're going to criticize you no matter what.
So what we should be asking ourselves is what are we really fighting for?
Because we know it matters.
And I think Jasmine is is frankly the type of leader that we're really looking
to support in some senses, right?
Somebody who is out there that frankly doesn't give a damn with the other size,
other side, at least the elected Republicans in Congress say, that say what they believe in. And at least you know,
even if you don't agree with her, you know what she stands for. Because she makes it very clear.
And people are really craving that right now. They don't want more politicians that say talking
points that it doesn't even feel like they believe, or you don't even really know what they mean.
They want somebody who's out there that says what they believe and doesn't care what somebody else thinks about it. They want that authenticity.
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
I think part of what was really great with Gretchen Whitmer and her focus was on infrastructure.
I think Democrats need to do a lot more of finding the issues that nobody likes and addressing
them in a substantial manner. So part of her campaign was addressing potholes, right? Really basic, just saying fix the damn roads. We need more of that,
right? I want to make sure that if somebody is out there, that when we have democratic cities,
for example, that they should be the most efficiently run, safest and clean cities in the
world, ultimately, that are the best run possible. And I think part of our strategy for 2028 and 2026
needs to be talking about, okay, what are we doing to address the fact that it is incredibly hard for
people to pay their rent right now because rents have gone up so much? What are we doing to address
the fact that our roads are terrible in far too many places? Because I think the pathway forward
for Democrats is if we're successful, what I want people to think
when they hear the word Democrat is two things,
competence and integrity, right?
I want them to know that we get things done
and that we have the integrity to stand behind
what we truly believe in and accomplish it
at the end of the day.
Whether that's making sure that you don't go bankrupt
because you wanna go to the doctor,
or that's making sure that you don't pop a tire on a pothole, or making sure that you can actually afford a
home ultimately.
Because the biggest challenges to those things should not be how expensive it is.
Everything is too damn expensive, way too damn expensive.
What we got to figure out is how do we address the cost of all of those things across the
board?
Because the American dream for those essentials, the things that we don't have options of buying,
a roof over our head, right?
Healthcare, insurance, and things like elder care, like for my father or childcare.
Those things are way too damn expensive.
And guess what?
Republicans are not going to fix them.
So the question to us as Democrats needs to be, what are we going to do to fix it? And some of that needs to be making it easier for people to be able to
buy a house. But it's also about addressing why are there so few houses to begin with at the same
time and not treating it as an either or, but addressing the demand side and the supply side of
it at the same time. Two more names, AOC. How long do you have? I mean, AOC has been a huge inspiration to me when I because she got elected in 2018.
And famously, you know, I also want to mention she challenged a Democrat. Right? Imagine
if we didn't have AOC right now going out there and rallying tens of thousands of people.
Imagine that, right? And it wasn't just any Democrat that she challenged.
It was one of the most powerful Democrats in the House.
And frankly, the way that she's been treated
simply for doing that, I find horrible and unacceptable.
I think that she should have been the head of oversight,
frankly, so that she could have gone out there
and spoken out about all this stuff.
What I really like about her is more than anything that you clearly know that she believes
what she's saying.
She clearly believes what she's saying and she knows how to communicate on social media
because she grew up with it, she's young.
And also she doesn't, you know, she's not out there taking money from special interests.
You know, regardless of whether or not you agree with AOC,
at least you can say that she's not owned by anyone.
She's not owned by any special interest
or anything like that that's funding her campaign
because she is saying what she believes in
at the end of the day.
And I think we need to have a lot more of that.
And we need to create a culture
where if somebody does successfully challenge a member like that, that they aren't shut out and kept out because she is a huge asset
to our party that I do not believe is being utilized nearly enough. And we need to accept
the fact that we're going to have challenges in our own party sometimes to incumbent Democrats.
That's okay. That's healthy. Competition is a healthy thing. Imagine if we just said, no, you can't do that.
You need to wait your turn over and over again.
I don't think that we'd be in a very good place right now.
So I love her.
I think she is a prolific leader
and we need a lot more people like her.
My last name, these are people who I believe are the future
and now in the future of the Democratic Party, John Stewart.
John Stewart.
John Stewart.
So what I love about John is I think he and Donald Trump actually have the same greatest
strength.
And this is going to sound controversial.
Is that they're funny?
Yeah.
Right?
Not controversial at all.
So I think what's controversial is some Democrats, right?
But I think what happens-
They don't have a sense of humor. Well, truly, yeah. But that's a whole nother con I think what happens They don't have a sense of humor.
That's a whole nother car. Well, I think John Stewart has a sense of humor.
I think what happens a lot of the time with Donald Trump that we don't realize is that
people in the America in our in America, we don't think of
authoritarians as funny people.
It's very disarming to people.
Because when we're freaking out and saying,
oh my God, he's doing X, Y, and Z thing,
what a lot of normal people see is what do you mean?
He's going and working at a McDonald's
as part of a political stunt.
Or what do you mean?
He's going and, I don't know.
Distracted by it.
Just going and distracted,
making all these weird jokes and stuff or
you know going on and on about it.
And it's very disarming to people frankly in a very dangerous way because he is a dangerous
man very as we're seeing around the country.
But I think what Jon Stewart, what I like about him is the same thing that I like about
AOC. He's funny. He says what he believes in. And he gets shit done. And I
know that because I saw when they were working on the PACT Act.
That's right. Um, that summer, they were, Democrats were working on passing the largest expansion of
veterans healthcare in American history.
And that's in part because of President Biden's lived experience obviously with his son, which
was horrifying.
He died of cancer very likely caused by a burn pit. I got a text from a friend that said,
hey, there are some veterans that are out here
that are protesting because what happened is
Democrats actually outmaneuvered,
to Chuck Schumer's credit, he outmaneuvered Mitch McConnell
with the Inflation Reduction Act.
And Mitch McConnell was pissed about that.
So what happened is they said, you know what?
We're gonna screw over the veterans.
So right before they went on recess,
they killed the PACT Act from passing.
The Republicans did the largest expansion of veterans healthcare in American history.
And I took this personally.
There are, let me count off the top of my head, there's at least four Navy pilots in
my family that we've had between my aunt, my uncle, my grandpa, and my father.
And my dad has Parkinson's very likely caused by being exposed to jet fuel
and other toxic substances in the military. And my friend texted me and said, Hey, there's
a group of veterans that are sleeping on the steps of the US Senate right now. And they're
going to stay out there pulling all-nighters, what they call a fire watch until this bill passes. And I went out there and I was talking to them and I was so inspired
by them because I saw my dad in them. I saw my family members in them. And I said, what
I'm going to do is I'm just going to stay out here and I'm going to interview you guys
like all night. So I took out my phone and I literally just posted directly to Twitter.
I said, tell me your story and why you're here. And I heard so many heartbreaking stories
of veterans who served overseas that then got a rare form of cancer and were denied
their benefits that our country failed to serve. That is why they were out there. And
one of those people that I met, you know, had worked for the federal
government and now he is facing a very real chance that his retirement is going to be
cut by several hundred thousand dollars because of this bill that Republicans are pushing
through right now. And I will never forget when Jon Stewart showed up to support those
veterans and help get that bill passed. And it did get passed, is one of the largest expansions ever,
the veterans healthcare, because in the past,
you used to have to say, oh, you know this very rare form
of cancer that I got?
You had to prove that it was because you were exposed
to all of these toxic chemicals like Agent Orange
or whatever else that might've been in the military
in order to get health care for that.
Why the hell is it on our veterans that have served our country and risked their lives
for their country and sacrificed so much to prove to the government that they served that
their health care, that their cancer is caused by that?
I think it should be on the government to prove why it isn't caused by that.
Because if we're willing to spend trillions of dollars on stupid bullshit wars overseas,
we should be willing to spend at least a couple billion taking care of our damn veterans that
put their ass on the line for the politicians in DC that are way too comfortable right now.
And the fact that Republicans killed that at the last second and we had to shame them
in order to pass that, is disgusting.
But that's part of the reason why I'm a Democrat,
because we do stuff like that.
We got that bill passed,
and we massively expanded healthcare
for millions of veterans around the country.
But what scares me is Republicans
are already trying to chip away at it,
and erode against it.
So yes, John Stewart is an incredible and prolific figure
that I think, I wouldn't even say is the future
of our party, I would say he is a major part
of our party right now.
Yeah, it's my hope and I know you can't say this,
I want him to be president of the United States of America.
I really do, I think that he is such a fantastic messenger
and he actually knows politics and he cares about people.
And for the way the country is now
and where the country is going as far as messaging,
you need somebody like him front and center.
That's my thought.
David Hogg, thank you brother.
I like the work that you're doing, man.
Keep fighting the good fight.
Thank you. That's right.
If they can support you in any way, what should they do?
People can just check out our website at leaderswedeserve.com. And you can also see
on there too, as we create more endorsements, who's out there as well.
Absolutely. It's David Hogg. It's The Breakfast Club.
I'm Andrea Gunning, host of the podcast, Betrayal.
Police Lieutenant Joel Kern used his badge to fool everyone.
Most of all, his wife, Caroline.
He texted, I've ruined our lives.
You're going to want to divorce me.
How far would he go to cover up what he'd done?
The fact that you lied is absolutely horrific.
And quite frankly, I question how many other women
are out there that may bring forward
allegations in the future.
Listen to Betrayal on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Being able to say, I feel like crying, so I will cry.
Today, I'm a little depressed.
May is Mental Health Awareness Month
and Deeply Well is a sanctuary for your healing.
I'm Debbie Brown, healer, wellbeing expert,
teacher, and fellow seeker.
And each week we explore what it means to become whole
through soul expanding conversations and practices.
Today, wow, I feel really powerful and ready to serve and use my skills.
And it's like, that's the heart of what it is to be an authentic woman.
To hear this and more ways to prioritize your piece, listen to Deeply Well from the
Black Effect Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
AT&T. Connecting changes everything.
You say you never give in to a meltdown. you get your podcasts. AT&T, connecting changes everything. You'd never plan your life around their schedule. Never lick your thumb to clean their face. And you'd never let them leave the house looking like, uh, less than their best.
You'd say you'd never put a pacifier in your mouth to clean it.
Never let them stay up too late.
And never let them run wild through the grocery store.
And I want aisle six. And I'll freeze.
So when you say you'd never let them get into a car without you there,
no, it can happen. One in four hot car deaths happen when a kid gets into
an unlocked car and can't get out. Never happens.
Before you leave the car, always stop, look, lock.
Brought to you by NHTSA and the Ad Council.
Hi, I'm Radhi Devlukya,
and I am the host of a really good cry podcast.
And I had the opportunity to talk to Davy Brown.
With women, any kind of thing
where there might be this underlying edge
of self-sacrifice as martyrdom,
if you're never filling, you're telling yourself a story and you're
actually avoiding what you should be doing. You got to get in. You got to get your hands
dirty. Listen to A Really Good Cry on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts. You're listening to an iHeart podcast.