The Bulwark Podcast - Ben Wittes: Who the F*** Are You?
Episode Date: February 25, 2025Trump administration lawyers don't know or won't tell a federal judge who is running DOGE because Elon doesn't formally exist as part of the government he is trying to dismantle. And the administratio...n is likely to lose many of the wrongful termination cases involving forest rangers, researchers, and the like—it will end up paying back wages and not save any money in the process. Meanwhile, we are not exactly confident that the FBI under Kash and meathead Dan will thoroughly investigate the recent bomb threat against Never Trumpers and police officers who defended the Capitol on Jan 6. Ben Wittes breaks it all down. Plus, Lawfare has been crushing it, and it's now out with a new podcast about the history of US-Ukrainian relations, hosted by Nastya Lapatina and Tyler McBrien. Ben Wittes, Anastasiia Lapatina, and Tyler McBrien join Tim Miller. show notes Episode 1 of Lawfare's "Escalation" Lawfare's home page The second episode of the Gen Z FYPod is out!
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Be Zen.
Hello and welcome to the Bulldog Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
I'm so excited to have back Ben with us.
He's editor in chief of Lawfare, senior fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution.
He also writes dog shirt daily on Substack.
What's up, Ben?
Oh, you know, it's just another day in paradise. You know, every time you think you've hit
bottom, you scratch and there's a Dan Bongino underneath. I mean, you know, I got to tell
you, Tim, I've been ready for a lot of things. That one, I was not ready for.
I think it's cute that you think that we were at or near the bottom. No, I-
I don't think, we're not even,
we can't even see the bottom from here, Ben.
I'm just, you know, when you're falling down a well,
it always feels like, not that I've fallen down a well
before, but it always feels like you're about to hit
the bottom and then you realize there is no bottom.
It just goes down into the center of the earth
and there is Dan Bongino waiting for you.
Pete Harsch Huggins Hugging you on the way down, bringing you
down with him. We're going to get to Dan Bongino. We've got so much to get to. I've been binging
on the lawfare part. I'm not alone. Actually, I had a friend that sent me a screenshot of
something and they're, you know, if you're playing on car play, it accidentally
gives you a double screenshot. Have you ever done that where you send a text to someone
and anyway, they were also listening to the Lawfare pod. So many of us want to understand
what's happening in the law.
You know, I appreciated, you know, you and Ezra Klein saying that things must be really
bad if you were listening to the Lawfare podcast again. A lot of people took a break from us for four years.
And, you know, I understand that there were happier times,
but when things really, really suck,
we're there to hold your hand.
All right, well, here's the thing for me
that was so disorienting on my plane flights
as I was coming in and out of dozing, listening to your dulcet tones. It's so strange to have to match
the considered legal analysis that's happening on the panels with what you're responding to,
which are executive orders or decrees by unelected bureaucrats that seem to have been dictated by voice note
while they were playing a first person shooter game, like are written in marker or poop smeared.
And then you guys are like, well, we have to look at the reference.
Could they at least get the apostrophes right?
You know, like the editor in me really bristles at this stuff. You know, it says Anna's like referencing precedent from a 1952 case.
And it's like, is this, I mean, that must be challenging for you to have to figure out
how do you take this stuff seriously?
I guess is my opening question.
Okay, so the first point is you have to bifurcate your brain. If you are talking in politics,
you do not have to take this stuff seriously, and you shouldn't take it seriously.
And the right approach is mockery, derision, expressions of anger, you know, all the feels.
But if you are us, and you're trying to track litigation over it, you're trying to figure
out what the pressure points are in which things can actually be stopped.
We're not the people who are doing town halls, we're not making political ads and God bless
you guys for doing that stuff.
That's not what we do.
What we do is we try to give information
to legal practitioners who are working in this space.
And that means actually cutting through a lot of that stuff
and talking about this in the language
that people are gonna have to talk about it
in briefs challenging it it in briefs,
challenging it in briefs, defending it.
And it means taking the defenses seriously, including the 1952 cases, which you would
quite reasonably reacting to by saying, wait a minute, Elon Musk doesn't give a crap about
what happened in 1952. And I think you just have to be able to hold multiple ideas in your head at the same time.
We're trying to talk in the language that the district judges are hearing this stuff.
And because we're trying to provide a resource that's useful to people who are engaged in or following in detail those litigations.
Yeah, I kind of hated the, I kind of got sick of the buzzword, sane washing, because it
just got overused and misused.
But what you guys are, to your point, the legal briefs that you're analyzing, when Musk
is like, you're fired if you don't reply to my email.
Or there's an executive order, it's like, you must call it the Gulf of America.
And then legal briefs get written defending their positions that like literally, I guess
sane watch isn't even the right word.
It's like they legal wash it, right?
They have to come up with fancy justifications for like Elon's ketamine fueled impulses.
And so I guess that is then the space you end up in.
It is inevitably the space we end up in and I do not begrudge anybody who says, wait a
minute, that's not the space I want to be in.
I want to be in the space of primal scream therapy.
And I'm offering.
For the people who want primal scream therapy, I actually... Lawfare is not probably the
best place for that.
If you want to understand... My colleague Anna Bauer has been on a whimsical one woman quest to identify who the actual administrator of the Doge is.
And this is a really like, it should be like who's the head of a federal agency is something we typically know,
but the Justice Department hasn't been able to answer questions about this.
This is not a one woman quest anymore. It was was a one-woman quest. I was listening to
this on the podcast, but did you see this from yesterday? Judge Colleen Coller-Cotter?
Yes. Well, that was about to come to Colleen Coller-Cotter. And yesterday, there was a hearing
in which Colleen Coller-Cotter, who is an extremely fine district judge in Washington, basically said this question really matters
because there's all kinds of things that presume
that there is such a thing as a doge, right?
And it has a head and we can evaluate that head
under whether that's a legitimate thing
under the appointments clause.
Well, if we don't know who it is, you can't do any of that.
And so our role is to ask the nerdy questions that the
courts are going to end up having to ask and wanting to ask and which
things are going to turn on.
And look, that's not for everybody.
And for those, I don't know if the bat endless screaming is still on Twitter,
but it's a, you know, a little bot that whatever
you tweet at it, it's, it tweets back.
And for those who want that, you know, that's not lawfare.
I love endless screaming.
I appreciate that.
Yeah.
It's different.
They are different types of different strokes.
I just, I launched my podcast focused on Gen Z issues with all Gen Z guests that we are.
Episode two is out today, FYPod.
If that interests you, go subscribe.
But like I've already had some comments this morning from people complaining
about the 24 year olds and I was like, maybe this isn't the podcast for you.
If you're going to be very annoyed by 24 year olds and that's okay.
I want to get back to the judge, uh, Carl Cotelli, cause it was pretty striking.
The New York Times article this morning about this.
Bradley Humphries was the lawyer for the government who just couldn't answer this question, who
is in charge of Doge, who is the Doge administrator.
I was listening to you and Anna talk about that.
Maybe this is just my politics brain on, but the reason that they're aligning this is all
related to FOIA.
Is that why? Because they want, Elon wants to avoid having to have any transparency or
accountability.
And so if he's technically in the office of the president, the rules are
different for him than if he was the administrator of a government agency.
Is that what this comes down to?
Is there something else I'm missing?
That is part of what this comes down to? Is there something else I'm missing? That is part of what it comes down to. So general rule of thumb that if you are the White House, generally the executive office
of the president, a lot of it for a lot of purposes is exempt from FOIA.
It's also exempt from a law called the FACA, which is the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
If you set up an advisory committee in the Department of Homeland Security,
I was on such an advisory committee.
It has to follow certain rules.
It has to have minutes of meetings, et cetera.
If you're just the president's chief of staff,
you don't have to do any of that stuff.
So there's a lot of that, but there's another factor,
which is, I think, what Judge Kohler-Kitelli was getting to, which is something deeper, which is, you know, if you're the Doge,
whatever that may be, and you're sending around orders to the federal government,
then you are actually wielding executive power. You're not merely an advisor to the president like the chief of staff whispering in the president here you know you're not allowed to wield certain executive power without being.
Nominated by the president with the advice and consent of the senate right and so one question is what level of transparency there is another level is.
question is what level of transparency there is. Another level is, you know, pardon me for putting it this way, it's the who the fuck are you question, right? You're not the Secretary of Defense.
You're not the Secretary of Homeland Security. You're not the Secretary of State. Who are you to
You are not the boss of me. Right. Who are you to dismantling USAID or, you know, taking apart, you know, maybe the
answer is the formal answer I think has to be is he's not doing any of that.
He's actually merely whispering in the presidency or in the president is doing
that, but then you have this little problem, which is, you know, what about
these emails, which we all know probably exist,
where he actually is doing things, or the little monkeys under him are, you know, big balls,
or whatever his name is, is actually wielding executive power, is ordering people to do things.
And so there's this question what the formal structure is by which a bunch of
Outsiders show up and wield the executive power of the United States. Yeah, so here's a tangible example
this is in the map eyes story in the Washington Post this morning, which is really
Alarming and good and terrifying all at the same time
but he's writing about the USA ID and the funding and how funds are being
dispersed.
And here it says, Rubio decreed that certain critical programs such as aid to Ukraine and
cost related to the PEPFAR program to combat HIV in Africa would continue to be funded.
Several times USAID managers prepared packages of these payments and got the agency's interim
leaders to sign off on them with support from the
White House. But each time, the Doge employees would veto the
payments. So meanwhile, AIDS clinic shuttered and staff found
themselves stranded in unstable countries such as Congo, etc.,
etc. So like this is an example of what you're talking about.
It's exactly. And so one question is all the transparency stuff.
But another question is, who the heck is the Doge people who vetoed that and what authority
do they have to do that?
And where does it come from?
This is the Secretary of State who ordered something and it's vetoed by, you know, big
balls or whatever his name is, right? Like,
where does that authority come from?
Yeah, I looked into it. It was they named the two guys that when it wasn't big balls,
I guess big balls doesn't I guess this is outside his remit, but it was I think it was
the guy from Nebraska that also uncovered the scrolls. And then it was like one of the
Elon's vaping staffers at SpaceX, one of his interns, I
think.
The point is the same.
I just kind of use the name big balls to refer to all of them.
But
it's a little bit like you're pumping them up a little bit more than I think they deserve
some of these guys.
I think it's it's other Doge Monkey erasure is what it is. Okay, got it. No, look, it's a serious question and there's a reason why a federal judge is focused on it.
It is our job to spot those questions. Anna spent last week being the person who was
shouting about this. I'm sorry, we have a federal agency closing down
the federal government and the United States Justice Department can't even answer the question
who runs it. You know, and so like, yeah, is that nerdy? Yeah, it's really nerdy. That's what we do.
Well, and what we do, what I do here is now take this moment to appreciate because we all need
this the fact that little Marco Rubio is the first Secretary of State in history to get
vetoed by a 23 year old who just has decided that his decrees are not worth the paper that
they are printed on.
So Marco, despite being whatever that is in line to the presidency for. You've been pumped. Yeah, he's also reporting to a 23-year-old Berkeley dropout who is playing Minecraft
while vetoing his statements.
Okay, so there's that.
We're going to come back to, I want you to educate us on these lawsuits that are happening
right now because it's really important, but that's also very thick.
So I want to start with Eagle Ed Martin first before we get back to the lawsuits.
Eagle Ed is the U S attorney from DC.
We've been discussing him a lot.
Uh, he put out a statement yesterday that I think it's worth us breaking down.
It's a legal document.
Uh, he says this as president Trump's lawyers, there's a typo there.
He acts as if the word Trump is plural.
It's T-R-U-M-P-S, apostrophe. So it's a pluraled apostrophe, even though it's a singular human.
It's also a legal error there. He is not.
Well, no, we're going to get to legal error. There are many errors in this. It's a
two-sentence statement that contains abundant errors.
Are we doing like, it's like, okay, stop from the...
You can if you want.
As President Trump's lawyers, okay, we are proud to fight to protect his leadership as
our president.
And we are vigilant in standing against entities like...
Who do you think the entities are that he's vigilant and standing against?
I'll tell you. the Associated Press.
Entities like the AP that refused to put America first.
There it is again, as president Trump's lawyers, we are proud to fight to protect
his leadership as our president.
And we are vigilant and standing against entities like the AP that
refused to put America first.
That was an official statement.
I think listeners might need to know why the AP is not an America First organization, and
that is because it refuses to change its style book to call the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of
America.
And I want to side with Mr. Martin on this, because what does the first amendment mean when it says freedom of the press, if not
the freedom of the press to follow the direction and threats of the president?
And, you know, the president wants us to call it the Gulf of America.
And these lame shit reporters are refusing to do that.
And I just think that that's why we have a US Attorney's
office, Tim, so that he can represent the president in his coercive threats. By the
way, this man is the acting US Attorney. He was recently nominated to be the permanent
US Attorney after threatening multiple members of Congress with investigations for making threats. And I am,
of course, speaking sarcastically when I praise him.
Well, I'll say this to Eaglehead Martin, because they've obviously got nothing else to do as
the US attorney for the Washington DC, you know, prosecuting criminals, prosecuting corruption,
prosecuting terrorism. He doesn't have to worry. None of that is important. So he's been focused on the important things.
So if he wants to stand vigilant against entities that refuse to put America first, I welcome
it.
Yeah, the bowlers, Jared.
I am calling it the Gulf of Mexico, and it will be the Gulf of Mexico. And that is a
fact, Ed Martin. It is the Gulf of Mexico. And I dare
you to come for me. Bring it.
Can I just point out though that, you know, it's kind of insulting that they went after
the Associated Press for this instead of the bulwark. I mean, the Associated Press has
merely not changed a style book. You are out there attacking them every day. You're
insulting little Marco. I mean, you're you're doing so much more
than the associated.
Not only am I refusing to put America first, I was actively
rooting for Canada in the hockey match. Yeah. Okay, so I'm putting
Canada first, actually. So bring it.
Mr. Martin, you got the wrong target here.
Stand with America against the bulwark and particularly Tim.
With vigilance.
Where is your vigilance?
I don't know if this is the law and order they're going for.
I guess so.
In other news, just a couple more things from Ed Martin's department.
You'd mentioned the letter he sent to Robert Garcia threatening him for a figure of
speech used in CNN. In more tangible actions, yesterday we had news that Cory Mills is a
Republican congressman from Florida. He's not one of our finest congressmen. Federal prosecutors
Friday declined to charge Florida Congressman Cory Mills, who was accused of assaulting a woman in his DC apartment.
The US Attorney's Office turned down a request from police to seek an arrest warrant.
Story goes on.
I guess the woman had some injuries, some visual injuries, and her phone had broken,
but then she also was, I guess, backing off of her charge.
So there's that.
I don't know exactly the details, but again, not a great sign when the
DC police go to try to arrest a Republican congressman and Ed Martin's office is like,
nah.
So agreed. I also think there's an issue about the conference that you were at this weekend,
which was infiltrated by Enrique Tarreario and the Proud Boys and later received
a bomb threat that required the evacuation of the portions of the facility that Principles
First was using.
You can get a long way in intimidating your political opponents merely by not investigating thoroughly things like bomb threats
or efforts to intimidate people.
And if you ask me, do I have confidence that the FBI
under Cash Patel and Dan Bagino
will thoroughly investigate that bomb threat?
And do I have confidence that the US Attorney's Office
under Ed Martin will prosecute aggressively
the results of that investigation should they turn up proof beyond a reasonable doubt of
a particular perpetrator?
The answer to both of those questions, unfortunately, is no.
And that is how you build a climate of impunity in going after, you know, the enemies of the president. And,
you know, this is a picture of the Corey Mills example, maybe an example of this. But the fact
that you and I can't sit here and have confidence that the threats that were directed against you guys will be, and against Harry Dunn and the officers in particular,
the fact that you can't have confidence of that
and you would be a fool to have confidence of that
is a, I think, more dramatic example
because it actually affects political dissent.
Thank you for shaking me from the sarcastic posture I sometimes fall back on to deal with
the trauma that is our lives right now.
But you're right.
I mean, like the seriousness element of this, it may be even slightly worse than you're
saying.
Obviously, we could have no confidence that they're going to investigate it.
But as Fennon said at the conference, which I played on yesterday's pod, it gets a feature,
not a bug, right? Like they want Tario to be menacing,
dissidents, opponents to this administration.
Like they want it to happen.
And just to give, I mean, this is something that you know
and you've experienced 50 times,
but just to give your audience a sense
of how it trickles down,
I had a meeting yesterday with some foundation execs who are supporters of lawfare.
And one of the questions they asked me as we talked about their support of lawfare was our physical security.
And, you know, it's something that every organization that works in this space has had to think
about.
You can't just walk in off the street to the Bulwark's office in Washington.
And as we budget for things, one of the things we have to think about is what if somebody
comes after us on some garbage congressional investigation, right?
That's the political investigative harassment stuff.
But there's also what if Enrique Tario shows up and tries to intimidate you?
What if, you know, how do you as a small organization deal with that?
And this is a very picturesque example.
And part of the answer to the question historically is that Merrick Garland makes a speech about
it and says, we are going after people who make threats.
And then they do it.
You take away that protection and you become much more vulnerable to this sort of thing.
Well, this is traditional law and order.
I mean, it's a niche example of something that like people understand in their common lives, right?
Like we hear a lot about how people are frustrated in places like San Francisco or in DC even.
This happened to me in DC just this weekend.
I didn't, I forgot to bring deodorant to DC.
And, you know, because I did not want to instinctify
my fellow panelists at the principles first,
I went into the CVS and it's locked.
Just whatever, you gotta ask somebody to come and unlock it.
And that's annoying, but it is a sign
that the public safety in the area is not such
that people feel comfortable keeping the deodorant
out from behind lock and key.
This is an analogous to that, right?
It sucks.
Small nonprofit organizations that want to protect people's free speech rights should
not feel like they need to have a security guard at the front of their office in a free
country and that is a freedom that I think is not going to be available to people
over the next couple of years. Yes, and there's a physical security element. And there's also,
you know, you and I both know people who've done advising for local election workers, who've had,
local election workers who've had to raise tens of millions of dollars to pay legal bills because they're getting harassed by state attorneys general and congressional committees.
And these are costs of doing business now that, non-political work, let alone the sort of stuff that principles
first and you guys are doing, which is, you know, active political dissent.
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All right, so it's obviously related to the FBI, as you've mentioned a couple of times.
You have friends who have been on the top floor of that building.
The Bongino thing, because I can speak, I guess,
for somebody that is a listener
that doesn't have a ton of experience with the FBI.
I never worked in the building,
never been investigated by the FBI,
never had an FBI contact.
I just, you know, I know what I read in the newspaper
like anybody else.
And so as I've been talking to some people
who worked there over the past few days,
it's actually the Bongino appointment
that has seemed to be more alarming
because the director is kind of a political role,
whether you want it to be or not.
It is a little bit of a figurehead role.
Obviously there are big decisions
that come through the director,
so I had not to minimize that at all.
But day to day, the role that Bongino has been chosen for
is the person that is like managing the Bureau
and managing the agents and managing these big decisions.
And it sounds like that has really shaken people up
in a way that the Patel thing didn't.
Is that fair to say, do you think?
Well, I would not say that the Patel thing didn't shake people up. The Patel thing happened in slow
motion, you know, and so people had a lot of time to get used to it. It also coincided either
accidentally or intentionally, depending on whether you think Cash Patel lied
to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Has he even denied that actually?
Has he denied that he lied?
He's sort of denied it.
He said he had nothing to do with it.
And, but he hasn't really denied it.
He hasn't, and of course he was protected
from being asked questions about it.
But it coincided with this incredible shakeup that happened at the Bureau where they started
demanding that people report on themselves and they fired a bunch of people.
And so, the Patel thing, to a certain extent, I guess, faded into the background of the
turmoil, right? It was like,
it was like, oh, they're trying to destroy us. And one element of that is that they've put this
crazy, unqualified person in charge. And the Bongino thing is different because it's not
a Senate-confirmed position. I mean, you know more about him than I do. He is not...
This is a type of person that you literally need to watch one 20 second clip of his podcast.
You can pick one at random and I think you get it. He's about a centimeter deep. I mean,
he is a meathead and he's exactly what he looks like.
One really, really important thing about Dan Bongino is that he is not a career FBI agent.
The deputy director of the FBI is always a career FBI agent.
He's somebody who comes up through the system.
Traditionally, in the FBI, there is one political appointee, and that is the director.
The message that this sends is is we're going to go
through all your papers, figure out if you're a January 6th
investigator, we're going to fire your traditional
leadership, and we're going to install at the top a political
apparatchik, and we're going to install, as you say, the day-to-day
manager of the Bureau, a crazed
podcaster who's not a career FBI agent.
It could not be more insulting, and it could not be more dangerous.
Now, the part that people are talking about less, but that is, I think, even more concerning is that they have removed the entire substrate leadership.
And so, not only does Cash Patel and Dan Bongino are kind of the one and two of the organization,
but they're going to be able to fill all these assistant director positions, all these executive positions, they're over time
going to be able to replace heads of field offices.
You're going to see a very different FBI, and it is all subject to the oversight and
management of Pam Bondi and Emil Bovi and Todd Blanch, none of whom has behavior, has inspired any kind
of confidence.
And so I think it's a, you know, this is the organization that most directly interacts
with Americans on, you know, with guns, with guns and coercion.
It's much more domestically dangerous if mishandled than say the Department of Defense.
And you know, it has a rest power. I don't want to over dramatize the danger, because I don't want
to be particularly dramatic, but it's kind of as serious as a heart attack. Yeah, it's look,
it's extremely serious. And we're just gonna have to wait and see
how Cash and Dan act.
I mean, I think that any,
that's pretty easy to judge these guys' character.
Like these are not the types of people
that are gonna rise to the moment.
You know, you can listen to Dan Bagino's phone call
with my former colleague, Mark Caputo,
from a couple of years ago,
where he starts telling Mark to fuck himself.
And Mark is laughing at him and
he's like, is that a request? Is that an offer? And Dan gets madder and madder. And it's just,
these are not the type of people that have the temperament for this job. It's just, it
doesn't take a psychologist to determine that. What they actually do with their bad temperament
TBD.
I will say that there's one really encouraging thing that has happened at the FBI. Okay, great.
Which is that you actually do see a state a sort of sagebrush rebellion among what are called the
special agents in charge, the people who run individual field offices, who are pushing back
in ways that are mostly invisible, but you know, they could not get people to self-report.
And that was done with a lot of SAC encouragement.
A lot of people, including the person who was made acting director, Mr.
Driscoll, who had been a SAC for six days in Newark when he was accidentally
elevated to run the FBI.
I mean, a lot of people have been really good because 70 years, 50 years of
cultural reform at the FBI to create a rule of law law enforcement agency at
the federal level has actually worked.
Right.
And you have whole generations.
It's really two whole generations, three sort of, who
have grown up with the idea that there are things the FBI does not do and there are things that it
does do. And that is not going to unplug right away. And, you know, you're going to see a lot of
people get fired, you're going to see a lot of people get fired. You're going to see a lot of people doing courageous things,
and you're going to not see a lot of people doing courageous things,
but you're going to hear whispers about it.
And so I do think there's a, you know, changing the culture of an organization
for bad is actually pretty hard.
It can be done, but it has to be done over time. And the FBI has some
pretty cool resistance to that that has developed over the years, which the left has never
appreciated and never understood, but is very real. So one more on this, which is why I was
going is like these invisible actions that we're not seeing. I guess I was wondering, the folks that you're talking to, what are the worries beyond the political? We'll see if Cash
Patel and Dan Bongino try to arrest Adam Schiff or whatever. You know what I mean? We'll see what
they do as far as politicized revenge. But what about the that it might be getting missed, right? Like when you fire all of these high, mid managers, right?
And when, when there's all this disruption, like what are there
legitimate worries about like actual business of the FBI, like the real
business of our public safety, not getting done, or is that stuff kind of
just going to happen, like people are just going to do their jobs and try
not to let Dan Bongino get in the
way?
Like how are people processing that side of it?
All of the above.
Yeah.
So first of all, this is something that like a lot of people who look at federal law enforcement
really don't understand.
We think like, oh, Danielle Sassoon and Hagen Scotton and these are Supreme Court clerks.
You lose people like that, they're very hard to replace.
With all due respect to the Supreme Court and to the Harvard and Yale law schools, they're
actually easy to replace.
We churn out first-rate lawyers in giant batches every year year and if you get rid of a bunch of lawyers at the justice department there actually pretty replaceable FBI agents are exquisitely crafted overtime right you there is no.
School and Harvard Law School and Stanford Law School that churns out FBI agents. There's Quantico. The classes are small every year. That's just the basic training. These are
often people who have just exquisite training over time in really refined areas like art
theft, which is a really important thing in money laundering.
You need people who really understand the art market, who really understand forensic
accounting, who really have good language skills in Chinese and Russian.
You show me a good counterintelligence agent and I'll show you somebody who's been built over 20 years.
And so when you take those senior managers,
these are cumulatively centuries of experience
that you're losing.
It's very unlike, you know,
I'm not diminishing firing people like, you know,
at the Justice Department.
We tend to be dismissive of it because they're just the cops.
They're actually the people whose expertise is really, really hard to replace.
And the more complicated an investigation is, the more you look to that really sculpted training of very individual agents, and that,
we have already lost an enormous amount of that.
We're going to lose more over the next six months to a year, both because of firing.
I had a meeting with somebody at the bureau who is stepping down.
I asked why and the person said, I just don't want to work for these people.
That is not somebody who's going to get fired.
That's so hard.
You can't blame them.
On the one hand, you want, this is so hard.
I wrote about this.
I felt like this was complicated from political appointments in the first Trump term.
I was on the side always of people should not take these jobs and they should quit if
they're political appointees in the first Trump.
There were other people like, you know, me and Steve Hayes went around and around on
this where he was for staying.
It gets way more complicated in this situation.
Like I feel horrible for somebody that's at the FBI.
Like there's part of me, it's like, I wish that person that you talked to would have
stayed, I think, but I don't, but it's just like like because this is what they want. They want those people to quit. They want those people to quit and
one of the things that they're doing is they're putting people in a situation that they don't know if they're gonna be fired and
So they basically
You know in addition to the I don't want to work for these people, and they might
fire me next week anyway.
Right.
So let's get a safe job.
Yeah.
But they might not.
So, and these are people with families.
They're people who've expected to spend their careers in the bureau.
So look, I think there's going to be a lot of turmoil.
There is going to be loss of, there has already been a lot of loss of expertise and capacity.
There is loss at the top of management ability.
Dan Bongino is not qualified to be the Deputy Director of the FBI, and his boss is not qualified
to run the building. And if you amalgamate that over the entire organization and say, what is
going to be the aggregate loss of effectiveness, it is going to be substantial.
And I don't know how to sit here and tell you how substantial, but, you
know, it matters that we have an FBI, have had an FBI that is very, very elite.
And it will matter that we will now have an FBI that is much less elite.
Well, from people who have a lot of job insecurity right now across federal government, there's
been a lot of people for a president that was elected ostensibly on fixing the economy
and on being a great businessman. Not seen a lot of that. Stock market's down. Prices are still up. A lot of people losing jobs
or having job uncertainty. Not a ton of people gaining job certainty under this administration,
with one exception, Washington DC-based employment attorneys. I was listening to the
Lawfare podcast and I was like, you are crushing right now. If you're a law firm and you represent
wrongfully terminated employees, this is going to be the golden age for you. I don't know that
there's a lot of Republicans in this work, so I don't know if that was intentional for the Trump
administration, unintentional consequences, but I mean, you've done hours on this over on Lawfare.
But so just give us the basic summary of like the state of play as far as
all of the lawsuits about people that have been terminated, particularly with regards
to these probationary employees.
All right.
So I think you can lop group all the lawsuits about Trump executive actions into three broad
categories.
There are some others that are ancillary to it, but almost everything fits into three broad categories. There are some others that are ancillary to it, but almost everything fits into three
broad categories.
One is he announces policies that people think are illegal and those policies are challenged.
So the biggest of them, the most obvious is the birthright citizenship, right?
The Constitution says if you're born in the United States, subject to the jurisdiction
thereof, you get citizenship.
Trump says, I interpret that to mean no, you don't.
And so some people sue.
That's basket one.
There's a bunch of these cases.
This is by far the smallest basket.
Some ways the highest profile.
The second category is the spending freezes.
Congress has said, you'll sometimes hear these called the impoundment cases, Congress has
said we're going to spend X amount of money on A, B, C, D, and the administration issues
an executive order that says we're freezing money to ABC
and D and people who are supposed to get money under ABC and D, either USAID recipients or
Medicare, Medicaid recipients in states or the states themselves, sue and say, no, you
can't do that. Congress appropriated the
money. Third category of litigation, by far the largest, is Trump fires people who have
some statutory protection against firing. These are at very different levels of the executive branch. So at the highest level,
they're the independent heads of federal agencies, right?
He fires all the Democrats who work for a federal agency.
There's also the Office of Special Counsel,
the and the inspectors general, people who have-
The Jags.
Right, exactly.
And then there's a different level, and the inspectors general, people who have- The Jags. Right, exactly.
And then there's a different level, which is all kinds of federal civil service level
employees.
So the Justice Department lawyers who were detailed to the special counsel's office to
work for Jack Smith, they were all fired. The Justice Department junior lawyers who worked on the January 6th cases, they were
all fired by Ed Martin, by the way.
These are going to be very different categories of firings because these people have civil
service protections. And so, all of these present different variations of the
same big question, which is how much constitutional authority does the president have to control
appointments and firings within the executive branch? And generally speaking, the higher
level you go, the closer somebody is to the head of an agency, the more power
the president is going to have and the less power Congress is going to have to put limitations
on that.
But Trump has been so aggressive that he's reached down to the literally junior attorney's
level at the justice.
Well, Elon has been so aggressive, but yeah.
Well, but again, Elon doesn't formally exist, right?
Right, sure.
And so individual forest rangers, individual justice department lawyers.
Anybody who had gotten a promotion at any level, anybody who is an entry level employee
at any department except for a couple that had carve outs.
And so there's going to be a hundred of these litigations.
There's already a million of them.
But each one will present a different question.
Can you fire an FBI manager who's got, you know, because he's politically unreliable?
Can you fire a forest ranger because he's probationary and though he
didn't do anything wrong, you're just getting rid of all the probationary
employees, right? Can you fire a Pentagon Jag because, you know, Jags are kind of
the, the wimp shit people and we want to run a warrior culture here, right?
Yeah. This guy didn't want to let us do perspective war crimes.
Oh, we got to get rid of him.
I mean, if you're a Jag, you're probably, you've probably said no to somebody at
some point and we were pro war crimes.
Now, can you fire all the people who've done Russian disinformation from all the relevant agencies, because now we're
pro-Putin, right? These are all different iterations of a common question. And I think
the answer is going to be the Supreme Court is going to take very different views depending on what level people are,
the reasons for the firing, and also how bad the record is.
And the good news is, honestly, they have been so blunderbuss about it that they have
created in many of these instances terrible records for themselves that are going to be
very hard for them to litigate even in front of a friendly Supreme Court.
Now that seems expensive to me.
I know that DOJ is supposed to be the Department of Government efficiency, but it doesn't.
Doing thousands upon thousands of legal cases to determine whether forest rangers should
be fired doesn't seem to be a particularly efficient use of resources to me.
Oh, and it's so much worse than that, Tim. I know you're being sarcastic, but you're
actually understating the matter. Because they're going to lose a lot of these cases.
And by the time they lose them, these people will have gotten other jobs. And so what they're
eventually going to end up doing is having to pay back wages
for a large number of people for doing no work because the forest ranger is going to go get a
job in eco management from the firefighting. I think a lot of needs. Yeah. And the justice
department lawyers, justice department lawyers are pretty expensive by the way. They're going
to all end up eventually at law firms.
They're going to drain the swamp by moving deep state justice department lawyers from the
government to Washington DC law firms, and then they're going to pay them for not working.
Which is the government.
They're going to pay both the law firms that are suing the government and the lawyers individually.
So that's going to be a lot of money.
Exactly. So you're not going to save, you know, like, you can
say, Oh, look how much money we've saved in wages, we're not
going to spend, you're going to spend them. And you're going to
spend the money defending the lawsuits, which by the way, you
fired some of the lawyers who are going to do so how is like
the Justice Department is going to have, you know, they're
So how is like the Justice Department is going to have, you know, they're quite short staffed now in the civil defense area.
So it's pretty stupid as a way of saving money.
There are ways to downsize the federal government, some of which are not crazy, that are money
saving.
But, you know, if you just fire people randomly, that does not save money.
Okay.
Well, Ben Whittes, we've got more with you coming.
We're bringing in a couple of your colleagues to do foreign policy.
We'll talk about Ukraine and a new podcast you guys are working on.
So you, Ben, stick around.
Everybody else, stick around.
We'll be right back. Do you have business insurance?
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Be protected. Be Zen.
All right, we are back. Ben Whittis is still here. Unfortunately,
he's not exactly been uplifting so far today. And so we're hoping some new blood will help freshen things up.
We've also got his colleagues, Anastasia Lopatina, a Ukrainian journalist, and she's the cohost
of this new podcast, Escalation, which is a narrative series on the history of US-Ukrainian
relations.
Tyler McBrien, managing editor of Lawfare, is the other cohost.
What's up, y'all?
Great to be here.
I don't know if we're going to add much levity to the program, but-
I was just going to say, no good news from Ukraine.
Do you have any jokes?
Do you have any Ukrainian jokes you want to share with us?
Anastasia, anything?
We're not in a joking mood the past few weeks.
It's all doom and gloom.
What about the nuclear codes?
I thought there was a bit of Ukrainian gallows humor that you shared with us earlier.
Right.
That was very funny.
Apparently there is a joke going around Ukrainian Twitter that after Zelensky's fiery press
conference, which happened last Sunday, Trump might want to nuke us.
So it's great that he fired everyone who may know where the launch codes are.
That's good.
That's not exactly an uplifting humor.
It's all we got.
I'm chuckling. All right.. That's a good lifting. That's not exactly an uplifting humor. It's all we got.
I'm chuckling.
All right.
Talk to us about the podcast.
What are you guys doing it?
What was the rationale behind it?
What are you trying to get out of it?
Well, we started this project about a year ago and I asked Tyler and Nastia to host it.
The idea was that the United States and Ukraine have a 30-year relationship of trying to deal
with Russia and a history of misunderstandings and seeing the matter in sometimes dramatically
and sometimes in subtly different ways.
We thought, partly at the time, not because of the presence of Trump, but partly because Republicans were souring in Congress on support for Ukraine, and because the Biden administration and the Ukrainians were so at odds over how weapons should be used, that there was just a real value in telling the story of this relationship. And of course, that became much more urgent in the fall when the Trump
administration made clear that they were first of all, going to come to power
again, but secondly, that their hatred of Ukraine had not abated.
Well, it's pretty disappointed that you had to start the podcast in 1991, rather
than, I don't know, a little bit later because it meant that you took a shot at Poppy Bush, the best president
of my lifetime, who I guess, you know, maybe had a couple of misses.
We all have a couple of misses and maybe didn't get things started off on the right foot.
So what happened in that first episode?
In the first episode, it's titled Cheek and Cave and we're talking about how Ukraine regained
its independence,
officially declared independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, and what was the American
reaction to that.
The US really wasn't on the right side of history there, if you ask me, a Ukrainian,
because the US was very much shocked by the fall of the Soviet Union, and they were just
trying to make you know,
make this as clean as possible, avoid violence at all costs.
And apparently the US government was sure that Ukrainian independence could only come
as a result of some horrific violence.
And so they basically came to Kiev, Bush came to Kiev and said, you know, all of this independence
jazz is cool, but we're actually basically going to beg Gorbachev in Moscow.
And, you know, he said that we are not here to pick sides, but everyone in Ukraine heard him picking a side.
And so this speech then got titled Chikinkiev.
It's named after a famous Ukrainian dish, but of course, it's to throw shade at Bush.
And, yeah, everyone in Ukraine knows about this speech and Americans have no idea.
And this is kind of a theme in the podcast, that there are a lot of hard feelings that
Ukrainians have towards America and Americans have no clue what we're talking about. So hopefully
we're going to fix that with the podcast. Got it. Tyler is a non-Ukrainian. What, you know,
of those hard feelings or other facts did you discover over the course of the project that stuck out to you?
I'll just first say the Chicken Keef speech illustrates this dynamic that we traced throughout
the podcast, which is the US determining Ukraine policy essentially on Russia's terms.
And through the lens of Russia, we spoke to one Ukrainian diplomat who said that the US
always looks at Ukraine through Russian glasses.
I think what we're trying to pull out is this has led to some pretty short-sighted decisions,
both short-sighted looking forward and backward in terms of a misunderstanding of history.
I will say though, this is not an entirely pile on US foreign policy kind of podcast. Another,
I think, interesting contentious period that we look at is the Budapest Memorandum
in which essentially Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons in exchange for assurances of security
from the US, but in Ukraine it got translated to guarantees.
And I will say, I did play the role of a sort of naive American at some points, but Nastya
and I would have arguments between ourselves that
almost mirrored US and Ukraine relations, take the nuclear weapons.
Ukraine maybe couldn't maintain them financially and geopolitically, but of course, looking
back, Nastia would probably prefer that Ukraine had nuclear weapons right now.
So it's an interesting dynamic.
Nastia, take us up to the present day.
It's impossible for me to get in the head of how Ukrainians are thinking about all of
this right now.
And obviously, there can be people with different perspectives.
It's not going to be a uniform response.
But I'm just wondering, when you talk to folks back home, et cetera, like how the mood is, you know, as these kind of negotiations, so to speak, unfold.
There is a lot of shock and outrage and anger just at all the absurdity that Trump is spewing,
you know, talking about Zelensky being a dictator, just lying about Zelensky having 4% approval
ratings, which is blatantly false.
Zelensky's ratings are at 63% this month, which is higher than Trump's, which is important.
But the most interesting element of this reaction for me is Ukrainians have this remarkable
talent at unity when there is this radical threat to us, which is why we survived the
72 hours that were given to us in 2022, and it's now
been three years since they were fighting back.
So, what we've seen over the past few weeks is that the more Trump attacks Zelensky, the
more Ukrainians rally around Zelensky.
Even though a lot of people in the country really don't like him, a lot of people think
he's a bad president, want him out, et cetera.
What are the complaints about him from people that don't like him?
That, you know, he's corrupt, that the guy who runs the presidential office, Andriy Yermak,
that he is this great cardinal who wasn't elected. He's kind of like our mosque.
It's an imperfect analogy here, but he is an unelected official who runs the country for some reason.
Zelensky cares about looking good and doesn't take, doesn't make tough
decisions when necessary, which impedes the war effort.
So there's a lot there, but once Trump started attacking him, the entire country
like started rallying around Zelensky with the message basically that like,
Hey, this is our guy.
This is our president.
We have a right to criticize him.
We have a right to accuse him of whatever democratic backsliding. You, Trump, do not have the right. And you see journalists saying
this whose entire careers are built around criticizing the government. You see even members
of the political opposition in Ukraine saying that. Poroshenko, the guy who Zelensky sanctioned
just a few weeks ago, he's one of our political leaders in opposition.
He said that we are unifying around Zelensky and we think he's our legitimate president,
our legitimate government. So it's a very interesting reaction to kind of protect our
president from Trump.
I want to go around the horn. I mean, obviously this podcast is a look back, but there are
lessons of course from that escalation throughout history. I just, obviously this podcast is a look back, but there are lessons, of course,
from that escalation throughout history. I just want to hear what everybody thinks,
what the echoes are going to be now and where things are going to go from here, because
obviously there's a ton of uncertainty, but surely there's some lessons from your guys' work on that.
So Ben, why don't you go first, then we'll just go around the horn. I mean, I think the entire history of US-Ukrainian relations until a week ago can be summarized
in the theme, two partners, each imperfect, and we've talked about the US failures, but
we haven't talked about, which we also cover, therainian follies which are non trivial but which and which we devote several episodes to two parties who are both imperfect both.
Groping for a way to work together to manage a threat from russia and mostly.
from Russia and mostly doing so successfully with big failures. And then last week that changed and the United States switched sides.
And how decisively it switched sides is going to play out over the next year.
But we fundamentally changed the nature of the relationship to one that is imperialistic,
extractive, and cooperative with the totalitarian regime that we had been previously trying to help
Ukraine keep at bay. And I think the tail of that decision is going to be very long.
It's going to be very tragic and I don't think we should understate it.
And so I think what happened in this podcast is we told the story.
We've done six plus episodes that are all leading up to this decision.
And there is a final chapter of it that is yet to be written.
And that is whether Trump will be meaningfully rebuffed in this effort to rewrite the relationship
from one of partners to adversaries, or whether he will accomplish that.
And I think it's one of the big things other than dismantling the US federal government that
he has tried to effectuate in his first month in office.
Just that, just a few casual things, switching sides beyond the baddies and trying to dismantle
our republic.
Other than that, some minor actions the first month.
Tyler, do you see it that stark?
I do.
To pick up on something Ben was saying, the fact that Trump has seemingly done a 180
for US foreign policy, whether that'll stick or not, I think it's safe to say that there
is a lot of ambiguity.
In looking back in US-Ukraine relations, the US has often trafficked in this type of strategic
ambiguity only to Ukraine's detriment.
It's a situation in which Russia can exploit easily.
Just very briefly,
one of our episodes touches on a period called the Bucharest Summit, which was in 2008, which
essentially gave Ukraine these vague promises of joining NATO and enjoying all the security benefits
of that, but with no real map or commitment to get them there. But it was just enough to anger
Russia and then spark further
aggression from them.
So it's this kind of ambiguity, I think, that the US is continuing to our own and to Ukraine's
detriment.
Yeah.
Nassir, what do you think?
So like both the gentlemen said, I mean, there is some ambiguity here, but if Trump continues
to move down the path that they went down yesterday at the UN, siding with Belarus and Russia, et cetera, against Ukraine and Europe.
Is there the resolve or the desire within Ukraine and within the rest of Europe to go
at it without us?
How do you see that playing out?
It's terrifying to imagine, right?
Because the vast majority of Ukraine's
military aid came from the U S and we see clearly
that Europe just does not have the production
capacity and, you know, seems to have wasted
three years not getting it out there.
And they've done a lot.
They've done equally as much as the U S in terms
of, you know, monetary support, but still
it's not the same.
I think Ukrainians have had some dark moments of history with Europe as well.
And again, that's something that went back in one of the episodes.
The Europeans were one of the reasons why the Bukhara summit that Tyler
mentioned kind of collapsed and was the worst of all worlds, as we say.
And they were also there rockering peace, quote unquote, with Russia after 2014,
when Russia first invaded Ukraine.
And look how that turned out.
So we don't have a lot of trust towards the Europeans either.
And so I think a lot of Ukrainians are feeling like we're being abandoned, like we're being left alone,
you know, and Macron is crumbling to figure out some coalition in Europe calling these summits.
Nothing concrete is happening out of them.
Meanwhile, Ukrainians are like guys who've been at it for three years.
Like that, that should have been enough time for you to figure your stuff out.
And it's just so annoying that like, ultimately, ultimately it's always
going to be us being the price, somebody's children, somebody's parents dying.
It's unfortunately as tragic and as sad as Ben and Tyler kind of put it.
All right.
Well, I hate to leave people with that, but such is the world that we're in. Unfortunately, as tragic and as sad as Ben and Tyler kind of put it. All right.
Well, I hate to leave people with that, but such is the world that we're in.
Yes.
Astasia's sub-stack is called Yours, Ukrainian.
You can get the podcast at Lawfare, so go and check that out.
Ben, Nastia, Tyler, thanks so much for being on the Bullock Podcast.
Everybody else will be back here tomorrow for another edition.
See you all then.
Peace. A flower gone dry, lips to chip, now what do?
All that's left of my pride, could last for a lie
When you attack, you lose
And you say I'm not lost
I'm not lost
I'm not lost
I'm out of my time
I'm lost in the crowd
My lips touch you
And I want you
All you have left is my
My defaults
I'm gonna lie when you
When I say you're lost I'm running out of my time Like a fall from a lie, you wake me inside you
I'm running out of my time, I'm lost in the crowd
You're next to tomorrow too
All there is left of my pride
Like a fall from a lie, you wake me inside you
You The Bulldog Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason
Brown.