The Bulwark Podcast - Bill Kristol: A Pro-Putin America First

Episode Date: November 11, 2024

The Trump team is moving quickly to sell out Ukraine, but it's not clear yet whether Putin would settle for taking a quarter of the country—or if he intends to crush it, so he can plant the Russian ...flag in Kiev. Meanwhile, Elon has been at Mar-a-Lago every day, expanding his oligarch résumé to include helping choose the incoming president's Cabinet and advisors. Plus, key Senate Republicans are already prepping to sacrifice their constitutional duties to advise and consent, and the election denialists on the left have to accept reality. Bill Kristol joins Tim Miller. show notes Charles Gaba's thread on the new 'Stop the Steal' conspiracy Tim's appearance on the "Pablo Torre Finds Out" podcast

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Starting point is 00:00:25 For more tips on recycling, visit toronto.ca slash recycle right. Hello and welcome to the Bulwark podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller, a happy Veterans Day, especially to those who served and their families. I'm here today. It's Monday with Bill Kristol. Bill, how did you survive the weekend? Bill Kristol Okay. Okay. You know, a little bit of rage, a little bit of resignation, a little bit of annoyance, a little bit of drinking. It was fine.
Starting point is 00:00:58 Tim Miller Okay. Yeah, I did a lot of drinking on Saturday. That's for another podcast, though. Bill, you wrote this morning, stop hand-wrigging, start fighting. You're done with the recriminations. You don't want to look back at what happened with the Hispanic vote or the Liz Cheney to town hall. And I plan on having much more hand-rigging to come actually over the next six weeks. But I think that we take a day with your wisdom and focus instead on what's actually happening and going forward. So I guess we'll start with what inspired your Monday missive to dispense with the hand rigging.
Starting point is 00:01:34 Yeah, and I'm not against hand rigging at all and certainly not against recriminations and learning lessons is actually important. I just feel like everyone's learning premature lessons based on partial, in some cases, actually incorrect analyses of exit polls and vote casts and so forth, and others second guessing things that they didn't second guess in real time. And it's not clear to me where particularly mistakes in terms of some of the campaign tactics, other people are going fatalistic, COVID's never went anymore, and it was hopeless anyway, which I'm not quite sure is right either. So I just, I don't know, which I'm not quite sure is right either. So I just, I don't know, let everyone argue about this for a while.
Starting point is 00:02:08 And meanwhile, let's try to stop Trump from doing too much damage to the country. Okay. That's a good mindset. And I do at the end, I want to get into some of the false information that's out there because there is some of our friends are grasping onto some of the data in ways that are not true. I do just want to close by getting a little fact check out there. In the meantime, this was you over the weekend on what we've learned thus far, I guess, for what is coming from the Trump administration.
Starting point is 00:02:39 You wrote, why no cotton or Pompeo? Because they aren't election deniers and they are pro Ukraine. The plan, Susie Wiles as White House Chief of Staff to run operations and Pat establishment types on the head, while Vance, Don Jr., Tucker, Steven Miller staff up on a full America First Project 2025 administration. I mean, it looks that way to me. You know, there was Susie Wiles was her Trump's campaign manager, and sort of an establishment Republican, I think one could say, was appointed chief of staff.
Starting point is 00:03:08 And there was a half a day of, oh, see, Trump's, it's not going to be so bad. Though I suspect, a little to respect to Susie Wiles, who I know slightly, Trump thinks of her as, you know, making sure the appointments get scheduled correctly and, you know, the right people have access to the White House mess and so forth. And meanwhile, on the substantive side, it's pretty clear they were all in on the America first stuff in foreign policy and all in on project 2025. And we're gonna, whether it's the mass deportation,
Starting point is 00:03:35 they seem serious about that. Selling out Ukraine, they seem serious about that. Cotton took himself out of the running like Wednesday. I assume he did that because he knew he wasn't going to get something. He wasn't going to get something because he was a McConnell guy on January 6th, 2021 and voted to certify the elections, the electors. And because he's been pro-Ukraine, Pompeo actually, to his credit, spent a fair amount of time working to get Republicans to support the Ukraine aid package. J.D. Vance was against it.
Starting point is 00:04:02 We know where Musk is on these things. We know where Don Jr. is on Ukraine and we know where Tucker Carlson is on Putin and Ukraine. And I think the degree to which they are all in on that version of America first, which is a pro-Putin version, and they're all in on some of the key parts of project 2025. We shouldn't be surprised. I mean, I'm not surprised, but I just think, don't you think we've seen sort of confirmation of that? Pretty good confirmation of that in the first few days I mean, I'm not surprised but I just think don't you think we've seen sort of confirmation of that
Starting point is 00:04:25 Pretty good confirmation of that in the first few days. Yeah, I think so I'm Nikki Haley We should also mention Trump said was not gonna be getting a role which is also not surprising seeing as they hadn't spoken since June for Nikki Haley, but I'm not surprised about that. I mean look I guess this is what I I sense and we're gonna know more in a month than we do today, but the immigration regime is going to be extremely draconian. And they actually know there's an analogy that people kept using.
Starting point is 00:04:56 If Trump gets back in, like the velociraptors have learned how to, how to work the door handles this time. Like they didn't know what to do. Immigration was the one place where they knew how to work the door handles the time, like they didn't know what to do. Immigration was the one place where they knew how to work the door handles the first time, right? So they're very well prepared to start day one. And there's already been a leak that he might do an executive order ending birthright citizenship, which is probably unconstitutional, but is
Starting point is 00:05:16 meant as an early challenge to the court, to dare the courts to stop him, essentially. So that will just be one vector across many draconian anti-immigrant policies that will come into place. I think on foreign policy, you're exactly right. And this is what we've seen early. Foreign policy is one area where there's a question, like, does he do the thing he did last time where, you know, there's some people who look the part that he brings in, you know, that aren't fully American first. Maybe he hasn't made any appointments yet, but I think it seems unlikely on foreign policy. I think the tariffs is kind of where the rubber meets the road on this. I do think the domestic policy stuff we'll see.
Starting point is 00:05:53 I mean, Trump loves to have, you know, to bring people to heel, you know, that he felt like he was jealous of his whole life. So will there be some Manhattan finance guys who were always on the A list while he was on the C list to get to be Treasury Secretary and call him sir who aren't fully in on the tariffs and the House, if the Republicans have full Congress, which it looks like they will now, will they focus more on the tax increase?
Starting point is 00:06:20 Anyway, so I think the domestic stuff is maybe where some of the agenda gets softened a little bit, but I think immigration and foreign policy points towards full on Trumpism. How does that strike you? No, I think that's, that's right. I mean, he cares about the stock market going up. And if someone persuades him to too much tariff talk would hurt that project or hurt him domestically, or some of the business guys can get to him to me as some debts or wants to keep them on side, he'll rum if he'll do some things with project or heard him domestically or some of the business guys can get to him to me as some Dats or wants to keep them on side
Starting point is 00:06:52 He'll harrump feel do some things with China and he'll announce things and then he'll as in the first term conceivably claim victory and end up not doing some of the real terror stuff and you know Have a fake deal a lot of bunch of things still could do some damage to the economy But that's the one place where reality might constrain them. But in foreign policy, it doesn't look that way. Incidentally, just to be clear, but so Cotton and Pompeo were presumably possibilities for the Defense Department, maybe in Cotton's case for CIA as well. State Department, I saw, I don't know how reliable this is, but some, there was what looked like a fairly authoritative leak of the four names he's considering. Senators Marco Rubio, your close friend there, and Bill Haggerty from Tennessee, who had been ambassador to Japan in the first couple of years, the first
Starting point is 00:07:28 Trump term, Romney guy from before that. So like Rubio, a former establishment, internationalist type. And who else? It was Vivek Ramaswamy. Yep, Vivek and Rick Grinnell. And Rick Grinnell, who is the kind of purer, you might say, Trump type. And Vivek, who is pretty pure Trump type, I guess. So one of them, Secretary of State, and it's funny, so I looked up Haggerty and Rubio, both
Starting point is 00:07:48 of whom I knew back in the day, I looked up and thought, well, they probably were in the majority on Ukraine aid. Remember if I've got the numbers right, something like 33 Republicans voted for it and 15 against. The answer is one of us, less than a third, I recall, who voted against the Ukraine aid. I thought, I wonder if that will block them. Sure enough, we'll be out. I hadn't remembered this. We'll be out and how good he voted against you create aid in that path.
Starting point is 00:08:11 I remember Rubio because I went off on it, but that really is like the aid was for Ukraine and Israel. So they don't, they're not against the Israel aid. I've got to assume. So it's purely not helping Ukraine when it's being, you know, after the invasion, brutal invasion and by Putin. So they were already, I guess, positioning themselves for Trump's party. And incidentally, in the leadership race, Rick Scott voted against Ukraine aid, Thune and Cornyn voted for it with McConnell, kind of old-fashioned types. I wonder if that's
Starting point is 00:08:45 What I'm something reason but that correlates with the Trump world's preference for Rick Scott over the two establishment Republicans, right? Certainly I look Trump jr. Posted on Social media which I guess you're gonna take these missives as official government policy now There's a picture of Zelensky with you are 38 days away from losing your allowance policy now. As a picture of Zelensky with you are 38 days away from losing your allowance. There's something there that feels like a psychological thing that Trump Jr. is dealing with using the word allowance there, as that's like his entire life is an allowance. Back to your point about the Senate leadership race for people that have not been paying attention to this. Essentially, the two Johns, John Cornyn and John Thune were kind of the
Starting point is 00:09:26 stated successors to Mitch McConnell, both in pre-Trump Republican types that went along to go along. Is that how you do it? And Thune more quietly, Cornyn a little bit more ostentatiously at times. So he did Buck Trump also a few times. And Rick Scott has kind of emerged as like the Trumpist choice here on social media from, you know, Elon has said it and you could just go down the list of the usual MAGA suspects. Trump has not decided to weigh in.
Starting point is 00:09:56 I do think that Ukraine has a lot to do with that. I do also just think that kind of control that the MAGA people feel wanting just to, you know, fully demonstrate control over the party is driving a lot of this as well. Though, I don't know, Trump has not weighed in TBD and whether he does, the vote's later this week. At some level, he likes excuses and outs. I don't know if he will actually weigh in because it's kind of like, well, if he can blame stuff on John Thune, that might serve his purposes actually a little bit more. And also he might not want to waste political capital on something that that he doesn't really have control over.
Starting point is 00:10:30 It's a 53 Senate secret ballot vote, you know, so he can't browbeat them the way you would in a public vote. I looked at the list this morning. There's like a shocking number. This just pisses me off actually. There's a shockingly number of like normal actually Republicans in the Senate that you just forget about because they've gone into total hiding. You assume that a lot of them will go for Thune or Cornyn, but Shelley Moore Capito.
Starting point is 00:10:53 Do you remember Mike Rounds is still in the Senate? He is. John Hoeven, Hooseman from Arkansas, Dan Sullivan from Alaska. You literally forget the most these people are senators because they just don't weigh in on anything controversial and just kind of tuck their tail and say, yes, sir, Mr. Trump when they need to, or just don't say anything. Anyway, that's kind of the state of play. I don't know how you assess what's happening in that race.
Starting point is 00:11:18 No, I think that's a good, I mean, I think it'll be an interesting focus. It is a secret ballot. So in some ways, if one wants to maintain the position, which so many people have maintained for nine years now, which I think we've been skeptical of, but deep down, they really don't want Trump and Trumpism and they're just a little terrified to say anything publicly. This is literally a secret ballot. There's nothing public, right? So they can cast their ballot and John Thune can get 31 votes and win and that's it. And no one knows who voted how. I mean, they could try to deduce it, I suppose. But so you'd think that given that the Trump people would have
Starting point is 00:11:50 just backed off and given that they're all capitulating to Trump anyway to show how loyal they are on this issue of recess appointments and, you know, kind of giving up. Yeah, I didn't mention the recess appointment thing. Why don't you explain what you're talking about? Giving up all Senate prerogatives. So they seem to be willing to concede that Trump could just make recess appointments right and left for cabinet and some cabinet positions. They've been used at times in the past. They've been limited at times in the past.
Starting point is 00:12:13 They've been used though when an original appointment didn't go through or there was a reason to go to a recess appointment. There were then quarrels about how much latitude presidents should have in that. Here Trump just wants to do it right away. Elon Musk has tweeted, you know, it takes too long to get all these people through. It's of course ludicrous. It doesn't take that long to get cabinet officials through. When you have a 53 seat majority, they can all get through by January, most probably by January 20th. But recess appointment makes it a little easier and you have no debate,
Starting point is 00:12:38 no nothing, right? No, we, I mean, literally, this is literally in the constitution as one of the checks and balances that we all learn about in 10th grade about how the American government's supposed to work, separation of powers. The candidates for Senate Majority Leader are giving it away. The Federalist Paper says if one reason these checks and balances will be sustained is people will want to defend the interests of their place or however one of the phrase is. Senators will defend the prerogatives of the Senate. They didn't think about, I guess, current party government and especially about party government that is utterly and totally dominated by one man in this case.
Starting point is 00:13:12 I wonder if Trump will stay out of it or not. I mean, he's, I don't know, you never know how much coordination there is in the mega world. They're all in on, for Scott and, you know, I think it will be a defeat for Trump at this point, even if he doesn't personally get involved, if Scott loses, but maybe he thinks that's still different from Don Jr. and Elon Musk weighing in. I wonder how much they're lobbying privately and really trying to get commitments of votes
Starting point is 00:13:36 and then figure out who voted how sort of afterwards. I just don't know how serious they are. You guys don't seem big on that lobbying privately. Yeah, I know. I think, yeah, this seems like people that like to send tweets. Well, no, that could be. And so Scott was in 2022 or 2020, I guess it was the last time 2022 wasn't right against McConnell for leader.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Yeah. And I think he got 10 votes that he was the insurrectionist against McConnell. And that means that large majority of Republican senators have voted for McConnell and against Scott. And if you voted for McConnell against Scott, you probably would want to vote for Thune or maybe Cornyn against Scott. But let's see how many of them change even their secret ballot, because, you know, got to go along with Trump.
Starting point is 00:14:17 We don't want to start off on a bad relationship with him. I mean, the Cornyn and Thune capitulation on the recess of Washington is really shameful. And I can't really quite- To that point, if they're going to totally capitulate, then it isn't really a loss for Trump, right? Like it's like only loss of John Thune plans to act like Mitch McConnell, which is extremely cowardly and to do what Trump wants 96% of the time,
Starting point is 00:14:38 but like on matters of controlling Senate power, preserving Senate power and on matters of national security, those are the times that Mitch McConnell would step out, right? To put a moat around his power. If John Thune or Cornyn aren't gonna do that, and they're just gonna say, hey, all right, whatever, we'll do, just the practical implication of recess appointments for people is like,
Starting point is 00:15:01 there are 53 Republican senators, right? So any four could prevent RFK Jr. from becoming HHS secretary or whatever, Cash Patel running the Defense Department, whatever the worst possible appointments you could imagine. You know, you could have at least, you know, John Curtis who replaced Romney in Utah's relatively moderate. We know Collins and Murkowski,
Starting point is 00:15:22 yet you had several Republican senators didn't vote for him. Todd Young in Indiana, who you mentioned. Cassidy voted to impeach him. Anyway, I'm not hoping for courage from a lot of these people, but in the worst possible, for these outlier bad appointments, four Republican senators could stop it. If Thune says, no, I'm going to just take that power away, even in those extreme cases, and Trump can just recess a point, whoever he wants, well, then there's really no functional difference between him and Scott. Which shows how effective, I mean, already,
Starting point is 00:15:53 we're only, what are we, six days after the election, the intimidations has been. I mean, it wasn't, they originally started with the Scott thing. I thought, this is kind of foolish, his colleagues don't like Scott much, I don't think. And sort of, I assume, they'll all capitulate anyway. So what are you doing this for? But part of the intimidation is to be for Scott, which probably helps. Cornyn and Thune can't afford to have them splitting
Starting point is 00:16:16 with Scott if this becomes the issue on which people vote. So now they've gone over to the dark side. So then, yeah, this is a very classic Authoritarian intimidation move the combination of the recess appointments thing which may not be necessary as you say for 53 senators But still important to make the point that I'm gonna do it and screw you and then to make the point that I'm also gonna Be for Scott or at least be for Scott until the other guys capitulate enough that there's no need to be for Scott Screw you so for six days show a lot of purposeful intimidation and authoritarianism, I would say, from Mar-a-Lago, and not stupid from their point of view. So far, no backlash.
Starting point is 00:16:54 Have I missed all the complaints from the Wall Street Journal and the American Enterprise Institute and from the Constitutionalist at National Review about all the stuff that's happening. Are they defending the old-fashioned prerogatives of the Senate? I guess I don't read all these people anymore, but somehow I haven't heard much about that. No, I haven't heard much either. I think that that's safe to say there's been nothing. You've been beating this drum for a while, but it's just also worth mentioning again, like that six days now, the
Starting point is 00:17:25 difference between this and 2017 is already very stark. You know, just like the difference between like total capitulation from Thune and Cornyn versus targeted capitulation from McConnell and Ryan in 2017. It seems like my former colleague Elise Stefanik is going to be named ambassador to the United Nations. I put this in a category. I'm going to spend some time on tomorrow's podcast is going to be a feelings podcast. So if you're interested in feelings, we're going to get there tomorrow. So I'm going to spend a little bit more time talking about bad people getting rewarded
Starting point is 00:18:01 and how distressing that is. So Elise is certainly getting rewarded for her pretty shameful actions. And that is upsetting. On the other hand, I don't know, like this, like literally this seems just like that they wanted somebody to go to the United Nations who's going to be able to get on their high horse and finger wag the bad countries for, you know, supporting anti-Semitism, which is like fine, I guess. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:18:29 I don't know. I guess as we, as I rank my list of problems and concerns, I think that Elise going to New York to shout down the mullahs and to shout down the UN Security Council for their cowardice that, I don't know, that seems fine to me. Whatever. I think that there's going to be a lot more offensive appointments coming, but I don't know if you have any thoughts on that. No, I tend to agree with that though.
Starting point is 00:18:52 I would say, let's not forget how Elise Stefanik became Elise Stefanik, the modern Elise Stefanik, she went crazy about the Ukraine impeachment and became the great defender of Trump. And then when the rubber hit the road on January 6th, 2021, or right before January 6th, she became an election denier. Something she couldn't possibly have believed. She something that's, you know, she didn't have to go there. Not all of, I guess, two thirds of the house did, but not all the house did.
Starting point is 00:19:17 And only a, what fifth of the senators did without doing that, she wouldn't be in leadership and she wouldn't have gotten this appointment. So the degree to which election denial is core, I think still, to being okay in Trump world, which has all kinds of implications going forward, right? I mean, it's not trivially important in terms of what kind of elections we're going to have over the next four years and how those are to be conducted and of course, 2028 and stuff. So that's the only point I'd add about. Yeah, I agree that in practice, she'll be a kind of good, you know, she can beat up
Starting point is 00:19:51 a bonus to the US and get some, say some things that people like us will agree with some of the time. But still, the reason she's there is that she was willing to be an election denier. Yeah, it's the ante. It was like to be at the table in these conversations, it was the ante, electionlection denial. Obviously, Elise Stefanik did not believe that the Dominion voting machines had been hacked. It's amazing how easily that got fixed this time though. No issues. Although the hordes of illegal immigrant votes, where did they go? Yeah, with Democratic governors running all these states, incidentally, presumably having a huge interest in doing all this stuff. Somehow it just wasn't an issue.
Starting point is 00:20:26 Isn't that amazing? Yeah. Yeah. I haven't heard from Elise about that, but she gets the promotion. So that's great. We're very, we're really thrilled for her. And I hope that, you know, there is no hell. I would hope that would work out in her benefit.
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Starting point is 00:22:05 Go to selectquote.com slash bulwark today to get started. That's selectquote.com slash bulwark. Elon Musk, I want to talk about. He's been seen at Mar-a-Lago every day since Donald Trump won. He's been dining with him on the patio at times, weighing in on staffing decisions and making clear his preference for certain roles. That's a CNN report. I guess maybe it's, is it without precedent? I don't know if it's without precedent. I guess maybe if we go back to the age of the industrialists, certainly it would not be without precedent. So
Starting point is 00:22:41 it's certainly without modern precedent, like in post-World War II times, where there would be a oligarch, a rich person that would have this type of influence, both over the information system, the political system, government contracting, and now direct influence over the president and who he appoints. And publicly, so I mean, in the old days, some of this might've happened quietly, you know, a phone call
Starting point is 00:23:08 to the White House Chief of Staff from a big shot industrialist who also was given a lot of money to the president saying, you know, I really love to see this person in that job. But we're way so far beyond that. And Musk is so much more extreme, honestly. Again, it sort of matters here whether the types weighing in are weighing in in a kind of establishment way. So their buddy John Smith gets the job instead of Joe Jones, but they're basically identical, you know, Wall Street finance types.
Starting point is 00:23:37 It's just that one of them is a friend of someone, as opposed to what Elon Musk is weighing in. For Elon Musk, on the phone with Putin, apparently several times during the campaign joins the phone call with Slavskaya. He doesn't need to even sound so old fashioned. It's like stupid to even say all this, but individuals who have no government position are suddenly on phone calls with other heads of government. I mean, it's so jaw dropping. You can't even, you know.
Starting point is 00:23:57 Yeah. It's like, hey, Baltimore, here's Elon. Good luck. Negotiateated out. It is worth noting that simultaneously Russia has upgraded their drone attacks. They have added additional troops. I mean, I think that the Russians see this right now as an opportunity to maximize their position before the coming, whatever they just tried to call it, negotiation over land and territory. And so while Zelensky is forced to like, whatever, try to suck up to Donald Trump's
Starting point is 00:24:38 oligarch bestie, like, you know, Putin is, you know, moving full steam ahead. And I'm not sure there are going to be negotiations over land and territory. Putin may just have decided, I'm going to just brutally go ahead and try to win this thing without US support and European support. Ukraine will crack in six months or 12 and 18 months, and I'll be in Kiev. I'm not so sure he's even willing to accept what would be a terrible deal from the point of view of international politics and the people of Ukraine that Trump would impose. Maybe he will accept them, it depends on some calculations how much the war is costing him
Starting point is 00:25:11 and Russia, et cetera. But no, it's very, very bad. Those indications, I don't think there was ever much question what the implications of Trump winning would be for Putin and Ukraine. But I think whatever questions there might have been are pretty much being resolved in in one direction only. That's interesting I'm just doing this live here and spent that much time thinking about it, but our colleague Kathy Young is a monitor of Russia state TV and Following her but also others on social media. The response was different than
Starting point is 00:25:43 2017 and on Russia state TV. Like remember in 2017 it was like we're putting on our tuxes and popping champagne and etc. And this time it was more mixed. There was some mocking of Trump. There was a segment I saw that was very insulting to Melania where they're posting all of like the naked pictures of Melania that she did 20, 30 years ago. And that can be something, that can be nothing. You know, I'm not a Kremlinologist, right? But it does raise the prospect of, like, it might not be as straightforward
Starting point is 00:26:17 as it may have seemed, right? That there is like, that Elon and Putin have been backchanneling, Trump and Putin have been backchanneling Trump and Putin have been back channeling, Trump is saying that he's gonna wind this down, there's some plan to wind it down. Like that's like the straightforward interpretation of what we see in the public sphere. And it's interesting, your theory that Putin might not go along with that combined
Starting point is 00:26:37 with what we're seeing on Russia State TV, I guess leaves open the possibility that it's actually worse than that. Yeah, I mean, not to get all Hitler and 38, 39 analogy to overly obsess, but you might have said from a certain point of view, Hitler should have accepted Chamberlain's incredible concessions of Munich. He should have gradually would have been able to absorb a lot more of Czechoslovakia and do a lot more damage elsewhere.
Starting point is 00:27:00 Instead, he swallows up the rest of Czechoslovakia in February or March of 1939, which leaves it pretty impossible to say that, oh, well, it just was a problem with the German speaking, you know, Jackson, the Siena and the Landa, and then of course, the invades Poland in September 1st. I mean, I don't think Putin's quite there, but there is some history of dictators not except, you know, when they see the weakness, they take advantage of it, of course, in the short term. But that's not ultimately the point.
Starting point is 00:27:26 So much depends on what you think Putin wants. Putin want a quarter of Ukraine, or does he want to crush Ukraine? Does he want ultimately to have Zelensky fleeing Kiev, 10 million Ukrainian refugees, and the Russian flag flying in Kiev? From his point of view, that would be a pretty big victory, right?
Starting point is 00:27:44 I want to close talking about the election numbers and doing some debunking, but just circling back to the beginning of the conversation. What does fighting look like right now? I, there is an ongoing conversation about this happening. Well, I mean, at some level, I think it's totally reasonable to say that fighting is like, let's let them fuck up and wait and pick battles in the future based on that and try to, you know, create a backlash in the midterms. And in the meantime, you know, kind of let them do their deal.
Starting point is 00:28:16 There's other perspectives. It's like, no, you know, pressuring those four senators. We talked about Collins and Murkowski and Curtis there's legal, you know, the ways to gum up the works legally to slow them down. He's ostensibly limited to a term. Where do you kind of fall on that? The theme of the missive was less hand-wringing, more fighting. What does smart fighting look like to you?
Starting point is 00:28:37 Yeah, so it's a fair question. It's probably too easy for me to sit here and say, they should fight. I mean, they had need to be somewhat selective. Obviously, they were important fights. So some of had need to be somewhat selective. Obviously there were important fights in that. So some of these personnel appointments, I wouldn't necessarily make, I'd find the worst one to make a huge fight about that if, if you could. Um, somebody really is manifestly unqualified or has a background that shows he shouldn't be entrusted with he or she with serious position.
Starting point is 00:29:00 Others, yeah, I don't, they should vote against it, but they don't need to make a huge issue, the Democrats. I guess I do think though, I don't quite agree with you, just let him do his thing. You can't let him just deport 10 million or 15 million immigrants from this country and round them up. I would prefer not to let him sell out Ukraine. Whether you can stop these things, I don't know. But I think you want to be on record, and not just on record giving a speech, but on record doing your best, lawsuits, state governments doing things, other civil society
Starting point is 00:29:30 type efforts to really say certain lines, certain things are just unacceptable and we're all in to try to stop it. It doesn't mean they'll succeed in stopping it. I was talking to Bob Kagan about this over the weekend, quite a lot, a couple other people. I do think being hardheaded about it is important. This isn quite a lot of other people. I do think being hard-headed about it is important. This isn't a matter of press releases. Where are the levers of power? Well, 47 senators and 212, if that's what it is, ends up being House members.
Starting point is 00:29:54 It's not nothing. You can get a few Republicans, or at least you can pressure some Republicans on some of these issues. 23 governors isn't nothing. States really do have authority in some of these areas. It's hard for the federal government to carry out some of these things. The states don't want to. The red states understood that and caused various troubles for Biden and Texas at the border. I'm for doing things legally, but I think there are things you can do to make life tougher. The courts aren't
Starting point is 00:30:16 going to be as great as they were in 2017 after, say, they've had four years of Trump appointments, then four years of Biden, but now we're going to get more Trump appointments. I do think the Biden administration, I spoke with someone from the Biden administration over the weekend, they need to do what's legally appropriate and possible to make it harder for Trump to do these things. And that might mean regulations that Trump has to go to the trouble of repealing, which sort of can take 30 or 60 or 90 days. That can mean appointments in the civil service, again, done legally, that it'll be a life a little harder for Trump. The Schedule F stuff, thinking about how to stop that, that's very
Starting point is 00:30:49 dangerous, I think. So the Schedule F just for people being, being their plan to do some mass firing to change the rules to make it easier to fire. The top tier, almost entirely political appointees and easier to fire and so forth. As you can tell, I don't, I'm not going to filibuster here, I don't have an easy answer and a lot of it is case by case. But look, there are plenty of experts and think tanks and people who serve in government
Starting point is 00:31:10 and people who know these issue areas who would have thoughts about things to be done. And all I'm saying in that little piece in warning shots is people should be getting together to think about this and plan this, not simply to sort of have big think discussions about, you know, why are we in better touch with Trump voters? I'm hearing that I'm thinking about it. And, um, I will render my verdict later on how much fighting I feel like is appropriate, um, over the next two years, monitoring for sure. Raising alarm flags for sure.
Starting point is 00:31:41 Bill Chris, I'm going to stick around. I want to go through the numbers with people. I've been hearing some people concerned about whether there's funny business with the numbers. I want to debunk that, but I'll do it on my own. Will Crystal, we'll let you go and we'll see you back here next Monday. Okay. Good to see you. Have you thought about a gift for yourself this year? One that has the power to help you grow, learn, become a better version of you, distract you from what's happening in the world?
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Starting point is 00:32:39 ready to talk wherever you go. You know, I'm not going anywhere. I'm not going anywhere. Well, I'm not going on vacation,, I'm not going on vacation. But I'm not leaving this fucking country, alright? Nobody's sending me to French Canada or Uruguay or whatever. But many of you are thinking about it. Many of you are dabbling with that idea. And we all need to indulge in a little fantasy right now. It's going to be nice to do something that would allow you to improve yourself while you're indulging in that fantasy. Imagine that you might be moving to, I don't know, the French Alps or to Portugal and get yourself some Babel where you can learn a little Portuguese or a little
Starting point is 00:33:18 French in the process. If you want more proof that that works and that Babel gets you talking, studies from Yale, Michigan State and other leading universities continue to prove Babel works. With over 16 million subscriptions sold, Babel's 14 award-winning language courses are backed by a 20-day money-back guarantee, so your gift to yourself is risk-free. This holiday season, give the gift of language with Babel. Here's a special holiday deal for our listeners. Alright gang, I want to start here. Obviously Democratic elected officials and leaders have acted just unbelievably responsibly. In the wake of the Trump victory last week, Kamala Harris conceded Donald Trump will be
Starting point is 00:34:11 going to the White House this week. Joe Biden's team is working with his team on the transition. I had a friend inside the White House who had a call with a person for the Trump team. That's not fun. They sucked it up though and did it. This is not something that the crybab babies on the other side did last time. That is honorable and noteworthy and it should be noted and regarded. Obviously it's a low bar.
Starting point is 00:34:35 I wish we weren't at a time where doing your duty as a public servant was something that required getting a badge of merit, but thanks to the way the Trump team behaved last time and Donald Trump himself behaved last time it is. And so full acknowledgement to the Harris team and, and democratic elected officials and leaders all across the country. Uh, that said, there also have been some democratic lefty pundits and regular people that have been questioning the results. I was stopped at a playground this weekend by somebody who they thought that the numbers
Starting point is 00:35:07 didn't add up and were asking me about that. I'm happy to be stopped at playgrounds by listeners to say, hey, but that was a jarring request for me. I've seen a few mentions of it in the comments here at the Bulwark. I saw some prominent grifters on Twitter on the left pushing this. And so I felt like it was worth just clearly demonstrating for you. If you have any questions why there were no actual issues with the account in this campaign, so you can have this data.
Starting point is 00:35:38 So if anyone in your life brings it up, you can calmly debunk it with them. I'm stealing some of this. So with credit to Charles Gabba, I'll put his ex account here in the comments, if you want to give him a follow. So here we go. He breaks it down as such. He says basically there are three main conspiracies, whatever you want to call them out there.
Starting point is 00:35:57 The first is people asking how there could be 20 million fewer votes than in 2020. The next was how could there be 15 million fewer votes for Harris than for Biden? And the third was how could there be so many swing state voters going for the Dem for Senate, but not for Harris for POTUS? So just take these one at a time. That graph that you're seeing about how there are 20 million fewer votes that's been going around on social media, that graph was made on Wednesday morning. I should also mention,
Starting point is 00:36:26 by the way, that there are both MAGA and Lefty accounts, I see pushing this, because the MAGA accounts want this chart to prove that 2020 was fraudulent. And they're like, see, look at all these fake votes that happened in 2020. They all went away in 2024. That is not true. These people are basing this over the fact that on early morning on Wednesday, many, many votes haven't been counted yet. It takes California forever to count, which by the way, is something California should fix, but it takes other states a long time to count as well. If you look at kind of expert assessments, when all votes are counted, we're going to end up with about 1.5 million fewer votes in 2024 than in 2020.
Starting point is 00:37:06 To me, this makes a lot of sense. And there were changes in pandemic voting rules. It made it a little bit harder to vote, particularly in certain red states. Also, people had less availability. If you were just sitting around on lockdown, you aren't a likely voter, all you had to do is drop your ballot off at a drop box. The friction there is a lot less than going to wait in line to vote. Going down 1.5 million total votes from 2020 is totally reasonable and there's, I don't
Starting point is 00:37:32 think anything there that should drive you to think that there's funny business. Number two, the claim that there are 15 million fewer voters for Harris. That number is going to end up being closer to about 5 million fewer for Harris than Biden had, but will be more votes than Hillary had in 2016. Biden had a record number of votes, most presidential votes in history in 2020. That will still be the case after 2024. Trump is not going to pass his number of 81 million. So Harris lost ground in every demographic as we've brought up besides college
Starting point is 00:38:06 educated white women. So it's not hard to understand why she would have 5 million fewer votes than Biden. Just a slight drop in turnout mixed with a greater switch in voters from Biden to Trump than from Trump to Harris, though there were some in both categories. All right. Lastly, this Dem-Senate candidates. Thank goodness, by the way, that the Dem-Senate candidates did better than Harris in a number of these states. As we mentioned earlier, having 53 senators could conceivably create some friction for Trump in a way that having 56 senators would not have. Also would have made it much, much harder for the Democrats to re-control the Senate in the midterms. So these ended up being very important races.
Starting point is 00:38:50 But the most interesting part of the analysis that Charles did that I want to point to is that if you look at the numbers, it was not really the case where there are a ton of people voting for Trump and the Democrat, though there were some. It was mostly the case of MAGA people going into the ballot box, voting for Trump, and then nothing else. Just checking the box for Trump and leaving, the rest of the ballot blank. So thank you to those MAGA voters for their service, because they played a key role in helping the Democratic senators get elected. There's one state where this was not really the case, and that is Arizona, where Ruben Gallego got a bunch of crossover Trump Gallego voters.
Starting point is 00:39:34 This is something that I predicted every time this came up over the course of the last year. There's no conspiracy here, nothing hard to understand. This was working class Latino voters and people that were just really turned off by Kerry Lake combining to vote for Ruben Gallego. So Arizona was the only place where the Democratic Senate nominee ended up getting a lot more votes than Kamala Harris did. In all these other states, the Harris and Dem Senate nominee vote share was vote total rather was basically the same.
Starting point is 00:40:09 And it's just that the Trump number went down to the Republican senators because of those Trump voters that were not voting for Republicans down ballot. So there you go. Hopefully that clears it up for folks. Obviously it doesn't make anybody feel any better, but it's important to know what actually happened. When I find this, you know, I find this exercise kind of funny because I did another podcast last week called Pablo Torre Finds Out. It's kind of a sports and culture podcast.
Starting point is 00:40:31 You can go check that out if you're interested. It was a little bit of a different conversation that I have here, a little less in the weeds on politics. And one of the things we discussed was this notion that the left feels like there needs to be a liberal Joe Rogan. There needs to be a liberal Joe Rogan. And I was making the point that I don't think there can be a liberal Joe Rogan, in part because of what we just did here.
Starting point is 00:40:50 Like a big part of the Joe Rogan appeal is that he's willing to kind of embrace and think about and work through these conspiracy theories or different false views. People like that. People are drawn to that. And that's kind of, in some ways, anathema to, right now, the world view, the dominant world view of people on the left. Maybe that's a bad thing. I don't know. One of my friends emailed and said, maybe you could be the liberal Joe Rogan. I don't know that that's true. I appreciate it. I have no muscles for starters. But I think that there's
Starting point is 00:41:20 some value in being more accessible to people, working through it, responding to people's concerns and conspiracies and thoughts that are counter whatever the conventional wisdom is. I'm open to doing more of that. In this case though, it just ain't it. The numbers are the numbers and the numbers resulted in a victory for Donald Trump. Much more this week to come on how we're processing all this, how we're thinking about all of it.
Starting point is 00:41:48 And we'll do that tomorrow with my longtime friend of me turned friend, John Lovett. We'll see you all then. Peace. I ask one for my resistance For a pocketful of mumbles such are promises All lies in chess, still the man hears What he wants to hear and disregards the rest Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Laying low, seeking out the poorer quarters where the ragged people go Looking for the places only they would know Lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie La la la la la la la la la la la la la In the clearing stands a boxer and a fighter by his trade And he carries the reminders of every glove that laid him down Or cut him till he cried out in his anger and his shame I am leaving, I am leaving But the fighter still remains blue
Starting point is 00:43:33 Lai la la Lai la la la la la la la Lai la la Lai la la la la la la la la la la Lai Lai la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la The Bulldog Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with Audio Engineering and Editing by Jason Brown.

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