The Bulwark Podcast - Bill Kristol and Jared Polis: Send In the Clown
Episode Date: February 24, 2025Trump keeps filling out his administration with the unqualified and the inexperienced, including the recent addition of the borderline literate hack Dan Bongino at the FBI. Meanwhile, Trump's Friday n...ight DOD purge was another step in embedding autocracy in our government. Plus, Elon's and Vance's efforts to influence the German elections seem to have backfired. And before the Proud Boy drama and the bomb threat at the annual Principles First conference, Tim spoke with Colorado Gov. Jared Polis about the right way to cut government waste and build more houses—and how the Dems should polish their prosperity messaging. Gov. Jared Polis and Bill Kristol join Tim Miller. show notes Bill's "Bulwark on Sunday" interview with Bob Kagan Principles First's "Declaration of Principles"
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to the Bullard Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
It is Monday, February 24th.
We are in the Upside Down.
One of my competitors in the podcasting space, the borderline literate, Dan Bongino, is taking
over as the Deputy Director of the FBI. That is our big news for this Monday, and I'm happy to be here with Bill Kristol
to discuss it.
How are you doing, Bill?
I'm fine, Tim.
Yeah, I don't really follow Dan Bongino that much.
I said in one of the shots that I thought he was one of the more clownish of the Trumpists.
Was that unfair?
No, that is not unfair.
We're about to just listen to a little clip from him that's going to show it.
And we're going to get into more in the second part of this podcast. I interviewed Jared Polis at the
principal's first conference, which ended up having a lot of drama and fireworks, more
so in the past five years. So we'll get to that in a minute. But first up, let's test
your theory that Pongino is one of the more clownish Trumpist and listen to a clip from
his podcast. The thing that matters is what?
Chad, what matters?
Anyone?
Power.
Power.
You can see what I'm saying.
Power.
That is all that matters.
No, it doesn't.
We have a system of checks and balances.
That's a good one.
That's really funny. That is really funny, of checks and balances. That's a good one. That's really funny.
That is really funny, having checks and balances.
Then I've got another tweet for you that he sent recently.
The irony about this for the scumbag commie libs is that the Cold Civil War they're pushing
for will end really badly for them.
Libs are the biggest pussies I've ever seen and they use others to do their
dirty work. But they're not ready for what comes next. They never have been. You assholes
wanted it. Now you've got it. Good luck." Does that seem like the temperament for somebody
that we would want for the number two slot at the Federal Bureau of Investigation?
Yeah, it's wonderful. I hadn't heard that clip. That's pretty amazing actually. Yeah, I mean checks and balances all that stuff law rule of law. So, so yesterday really, you know, for Dan there. I say in more translate is clownish, not much about him, but I will defend myself in the sense by saying that I also mentioned the Charlie Sykes used to love to say that still says the clowns with flame from ours can do a lot of damage
And that's the situation we're in right some of them are more purposeful
Some of them are more just loudmouths and clownish and they're all committed to doing a huge amount of damage to our
institutions into our system
Yeah, I mean Dan is kind of and you know when I do my mega
research for all of you and like listen to mega shows
I could I tried to listen to his and
I couldn't because, and it's literally like listening to somebody with a fourth grade
reading level doing the news. And so I just, I needed to at least be challenged, so you
have my brain be moving a little bit, which every once in a while, Bannon or Candace or
one of the Patrick Bett day, one of these other people will at least get my brainwaves moving a little bit.
Dan Bongino was unable to do that.
So I didn't listen to a lot of him, but no, he's a total hack.
He seems unstable emotionally.
One of the reporters tweeted an email that he had sent him recently calling him a dipshit
in making fun of the shape of his head.
Like this really, really childish stuff.
You can see just like when you watch him,
like his temperament is just the opposite of even Kiel.
He doesn't know his way around the building.
I received a text this morning from somebody that said that the top two people
now have no idea how the FBI works.
They don't know the rules and the policies that make the place work.
They fired and forced to retire people one to two levels down.
So all of that, you know, combined makes for a pretty, I think, ominous setup.
And I think like the best case scenario is that they are, you know, that it's just like a comedy of errors.
But that's probably helped them at this point.
It could be. I fight these two different interpretations of my own mind.
One, there's such clowns, it's all going to blow up and they'll do some damage,
but it's institutions are somewhat deep.
They may not have enough time to do huge amounts of damage in a way that the
Trump will be suffered when they all make obvious mistakes and do things that
even the Republicans don't desperately want
to get along with Trump can't quite defend.
That's part of me thinks that.
Part of me thinks, what are you kidding yourself, Bill?
I mean, they're just going to everything.
Republicans will stick with the whole of them.
They confirmed Patel.
I haven't heard, you've been following this more closely this morning than I have.
I haven't heard a whole lot of complaints about Dan Bongino being the deputy director of the
FBI from a party that once claimed to care about law enforcement and so forth.
And again, having people who are unqualified, inexperienced, don't know what they're doing
is in a way a feature, not a bug, right?
If you're an autocrat, you want people who are totally dependent on you, who have no
independent standing, who have no stature, because if they have standing and stature,
they might resist a couple of things.
They might get some of their colleagues to resist.
If General Milley, I remember this from 2020, when he threatened to resist Trump, basically
all the other chiefs said, well, we're quitting if he quits.
Because you know what?
They knew General had known Milley for 20 years.
He was a forester, they were foresters.
Similarly with sort of the senior law enforcement types and senior people in every area obviously and that's why they want people like Patel and Hegseth and Bongino.
Pete Slauson The only push I've seen, and it's TBD on whether this was actually pushback,
there's some reporting this morning on this, but the FBI agents association, the union,
had put out a statement about an hour before Bongino was made public. And so I don't know if it's known at this stage, whether this is,
it was an intentional leak or just very bad timing and bad luck for them.
It's a long statement, but it was talking about Patel and it was a message to agents.
And they said that they had brought two main concerns to cash back in January
when he was the nominee
had not yet been confirmed.
The first was they said that they want the deputy director to continue to be an onboard
active special agent, as has been the case for 117 years for many compelling reasons,
including expertise and trust.
The other thing was they wanted all the agents to be given due process if there's going
to be firings over the Trump investigations.
They write this, on both points, Director Patel agreed.
So noteworthy, I think that Trump announced this, not Patel.
Here we are just again with cash having, I think pretty clearly, it's alleged it's reports,
et cetera, but seems to have lied
during his confirmation hearing about his involvement in the firings and now seems to
have either lied or been unable to follow up on his promise to the people that are going
to work for him about having a competent active agent as his deputy.
That competent active agent probably was not pro January 6th insurrection
and probably not pro would not defend the truth of the big lie about the 2020 election
and therefore Trump and some of his people there insist on those two things I think for any senior
post so it trumps the trumps so to speak everything else I guess. You'd mentioned Milley and then just
reminded me I don't the news is happening so fast.
I guess I don't even know if we got to this on Friday because it might have been after
we taped the pod, but there also was the purge of generals over at the DOD.
We now have a new chairman of the Joint Chiefs.
That was a three-star general with the nickname Raisin Canes, who seems to have been a big
Trump fluffer.
And then there were a couple of other changes made.
There's not been, at least that I've seen yet, any actual rationale for the firings
and the changes.
I don't know.
I wonder if you have any thoughts on the purging over at the DOD.
No.
I mean, I talked a couple of defense types when it happened.
It happened around 7 p.m. Friday night.
I was actually at the principal's first reception and chatting as it happened with a military
officer who was there in his personal capacity and civilian clothes.
But he introduced himself and he was chatting and he was being pretty discreet.
And I remember as I left them, you know, we talked for five minutes and I said, well,
it's about 7 p.m. Friday.
Don't you think this is probably when they fire Brown and everyone else, right? right? I mean, this is like aren't they big on Friday night firings and he he laughed sort of nervously
We agreed well, yeah, I guess nothing had happened at this moment as we were talking
We didn't think and I actually ended up leaving the reception about 20 minutes later and looked at my phone and there was
As Bob Kagan said when I talked to him yesterday on the Sunday will work podcast
It's about the firing. it's not about the hiring.
He says, you know, I don't know much about General Kaine, maybe he'll be fine, maybe
not.
There are a couple of questionable things.
The main thing is he has no independent standing.
He was in the Guard after he'd been in the Air Force.
He went back into active duty.
He worked in the Biden administration, kind of amazingly, as the main military contact
at the CIA.
But he's not a four star.
He's not someone who's had a combatant command or been chief of staff of one of the services.
Those are the two things that the legislation says the chairman should have been one or
the other.
Now, the second provision of the legislation is the president could waive this when it's
in the national interest.
But why was there no one who had been a combatant commander or chief of one of the services who could have replaced
General Brown, why are we replacing General Brown? Anyway, Trump said nice things about him in his statement
So it's all inexplicable unless you assume that they want someone who is much more beholden to them
That any of the actual generals who'd been around for a while who'd served under
administrations of both parties who had a kind of independent
standing would be and then of course they fired the Jags,
which I think people who followed this stuff more closely
than I do thought was maybe even more striking and startling
never happened. Never is how you just wipe out the Jags for each
service. So you then are going to be interviewing and
appointing Jags whose guidance is going to be presumably but I
think I can say this with some confidence, whatever trouble orders is lawful.
So none of that kind of complicated, gee, I have a question about this.
You got to be a little careful the way you formulate this here at the White House.
I think we need to go back, Mr. Secretary of the White House, and say this isn't an
appropriate way to formulate an order to the military.
None of that.
None of that.
Well, just think about the type of resumes you're going to get for the JAG job.
I mean, this is not my area of resumes you're going to get for the JAG job.
This is not my area of expertise, but just using common sense.
It's like you have the new Secretary of Defense that has called them JAG-OVs, that has impugned
their integrity and motives, that said that these legal officers were hurting our war
fighters' fighting capability.
And then it's just kind of a mass firing of all of them.
And now it's like, okay, now we're gonna be interviewing
people to replace them.
The types of person that is gonna want that job
at this point, like I would assume,
is gonna be people that are on board with anything goes.
You know, this is one of the hidden costs,
in a way, second order costs,
with the right way to say it, is consequences of the hidden costs, in a way, second order costs, and what the
right way to say it is, consequences of Trump and Trumpism here is that the kind of people
who are going to be staying in the government, some will stay as patriots, I think, and try
their best to mitigate the damage.
Others will stay, just as they'll stay.
But people who can leave may well leave.
I've heard personally about two mid-career, youngish mid-career officers.
They don't want to serve.
They may stay, because they're patriots and they've risen pretty far in their respective
services, but they don't want to be in some chain of command.
They're not high up enough to be directly dealing with Hexeth, but with Pete Hexeth
and with the kinds of quality officers and civilian types who are coming in to the Pentagon.
The military is going to be a little harder to simply reduce to loyalists than the civilian
types, but they're going to work pretty hard at it.
It's not going to happen overnight, but two, three years from now, the people who will
have been promoted, the people who will have acted in such a way so they can get promoted,
I think it's very damaging.
This is true not just in the military, obviously, but I think the brain drain from the government,
but also the character drain.
That's not a word, I guess, but a term.
But if you know what I mean by that, the quality of people leaving or not coming in is really
going to affect just the quality of our governing institutions and the personnel in them for
quite a while, I'm afraid.
No doubt.
You mentioned your conversation from yesterday with Bob Kagan.
We'll put it in the show notes here.
We're doing kind of the Sunday substack conversations for folks that don't want the two days off,
need something every day.
I haven't had a chance to watch the whole thing yet, but some pretty, I think, alarming
warnings, to put it mildly, from Kagan about the path we're on.
I'm just wondering what struck you the most from the conversation.
Yeah, just what you say that, I mean, we all want to believe it can't happen here.
We want to say, oh, it's worse than I expected, but there's still these guardrails ahead,
and there are, and we shouldn't exaggerate it, I guess.
But boy, I mean, if you had said five weeks ago, was it five weeks now?
I can't even keep track.
Less than five weeks, right?
That all the guardrails that have been trampled would have been trampled and the Republicans
in the Senate would have gone along with these nominees and the kinds of things that these
nominees have said.
Didn't come back to bite them in the lying case, I think, with Patel.
But everything, just everything, everything Trump is doing, then of course the betrayal
of Ukraine. If you had said all of this within five weeks, but everything, just everything, everything Trump is doing, and then of course the betrayal of Ukraine.
If you had said all of this within five weeks, I mean, maybe that's it, maybe everything
else now sort of stabilizes at this level, but why not?
Isn't the safe assumption to assume that the pattern continues and goes ahead?
And that's Bob's main point.
If you think three, six, nine, 12 months out, unless we can really reverse this, stop this
and then reverse it, we are
looking at a very bad situation.
Did he have any tangible recommendations on things in the meantime?
He just was struck, and I say this this morning, I want to add they're very strong, Trump and
Musk causing wrecking havoc. He did win the election, not by a small amount, but they've
got control of Congress. Nothing can be done.
On the other hand, they have control of Congress by four votes in the Senate and two at the
current moment, I think, in the House.
I think it's three when they have a special election.
Is it that impossible for four Republican senators to step up and stop autocracy in
the United States?
Is it impossible for three House members, some of whom care a lot about, just take Ukraine
as one issue, to say, I'm sorry, I'm not voting for an appropriations bill that doesn't fund Ukraine. That's it. You know, I'm mr.
I'm for Fitzpatrick from Pennsylvania. I'm Mike Turner from Ohio. I'm someone serious who cares a lot about Ukraine
I think sincerely it is really invested in it in terms of learning about it and so forth
I don't know. Is it that much for them to do so in a way part of me thinks I don't know
It's a big steamroller, but it's a fragile. This isn't a good metaphor, but you know what I mean, it's a fragile steamroller somehow.
Yeah, I do want, I mean, at some level, if we get into the real dark place, there's some
tension between like the fact that the Congress can't do anything or won't, in the case of
the Republican Congress, does that impede Trump or just kind of actually allow him to
further consolidate power?
There's some discussions already this morning about the budget.
Mike Johnson was supposed to pass the budget today.
We'll see if it happens.
But I don't think that they're going to be able to pass anything.
I'm going to have to believe it when I see it.
I don't think that these guys can pass anything.
I don't think they have the votes for anything.
Maybe I'll be proven wrong on that.
But if that does come to pass and it's just chaos on the Hill, obviously that slows down
Trump's agenda at some level, but maybe not in these power ministries, right?
And maybe not on the democracy, rule of law side of things.
No, that's a good point.
I mean, the chaos is do is better than submission.
Sure.
But there's a limit to what it can do
and what it can accomplish.
And what can accomplish more of is in some of the programs
that can keep current budget levels presumably
or prevent Trump from institutionalizing
some of the changes he wants to make.
But I agree in the power ministries,
he has so much more power because in foreign policy and defense, he has an awful lot of ability to make stuff happen and in immigration and
law enforcement to a slightly lesser degree.
Ultimately, we can't depend on simple chaos and pebbles in the road and molehills ahead
of them.
There needs to be an actual willingness to stand up to Trump at some point and sooner
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So speaking of which, back to the aforementioned principles first conference, folks that were
not on the internet, didn't see the news over the weekend.
The Proud Boys showed up, Enrique Tarrio showed up, and Ivan Raiklin, some others to the conference.
Then the next day, there was a bomb threat that was sent in by somebody that mentioned
you by name, Bill.
Actually, I didn't get mentioned, so I guess maybe they're not a podcast listener.
Mentioned several other folks.
Obviously, that ended up being fake.
The interesting thing about it for me that I think is worth discussing, the January 6th
cops were there.
Keelo Gunnell got the Courage Award and they had a panel with Harry Don and Michael Fanon.
And Fanon said this before the Proud Boys had shown up.
This was him on stage just a little bit before he realized that these guys were going to show up and try to create a stir. Let's listen to Michael for now.
And then Donald Trump pardoned 1500 insurrectionists, hundreds of violent criminals, criminals who
assaulted police officers at the Capitol on January 6th, police officers like you see
up here on the stage today, but hundreds of other police officers who the Capitol on January 6th, police officers like you see up here on the stage today,
but hundreds of other police officers who,
regardless of their political ideology,
were doing their fucking job.
Donald Trump sent them there to assault those individuals
and he pardoned them.
He pardoned them.
And I'll tell you why he pardoned them.
He pardoned them because he wants people to know
that if you commit crimes on his behalf,
he's got your back.
And so now what we have in this country is we have Donald Trump's personal brown shirt
militia.
It's pretty striking that he said that and then Enrique Tarrio shows up like 30 minutes
later and then Cash Patel and Dan Panchino
are in charge of the FBI 24 hours later.
Pretty prescient observation by Michael Fanon.
No, it's fantastic.
And I wish more of our Democrats who were in politics would be as clear spoken and plain
spoken and speak the truth as much as Fanon did.
I was listening to that.
So I was up on the next panel, then you were up after us.
I was waiting to kind of go on, I was running a little late, and I was there with Gary Kasparov and Tom Nichols,
which was our panel, which was kind of foreign policy, and I was struck when Fanon said it.
We've said versions of that, but he said it with such authority, and he has the kind of
authority to say it, obviously.
And then, I guess, when I was on, when Gary and Tom and I were on stage is when Tario
showed up, and I think it was sort of an accident Gary and Tom and I were on stages when Tarrio showed up, and
I think it was sort of an accident that the Capitol police guys were at that point were
kind of leaving, so they had gone up to the lobby and these guys came in and they had
their little showdown, which did not get to violence, thankfully.
But yeah, the degree to which, I mean, it's going to become normal.
Don't you think that the Proud Boys are just, let's just say, pro-Trump vigilante types,
hopefully not indulging in violence, but a certain amount of intimidation and threatening
and making life unpleasant.
It's going to start showing up at every anti-Trump gathering, but not just anti-Trump, right?
At the ACLU and the pro-immigrants organizations and abortion rights.
I mean, why not, right?
And they've sort of got a yellow light.
Again, I was struck that it seemed like Terry, I was pretty careful not to,
you know, break the law. He didn't hit anyone. So they can do an awful lot of making life
unpleasant for people and deterring people therefore, from exercising their rights of
free speech and assembly and so forth, by just showing up with that kind of implicit
Trump has your back behind them.
Yeah, the menacing element of it.
I have a little bit more coming after we finish on the intimidation side of things,
but the free rein to menace people element of this is real.
And again, it's almost you roll your eyes to say it at this point,
but it is just shocking that you do not have even after, you know, something like this,
where these guys, you know, get pardoned, show up, menace the cops that were injured
at the Capitol, there's a bomb threat, maybe under, we don't, we don't actually
know who sent the bomb threat and, you know, I mean, like, there's not like the
Tom Tillis's of the world, you know, who were up there on stage just like a month ago, you know, mocking liberals or mocking anti-Trumpers
who are concerned that this might happen, who are concerned that Trump might pardon
the violent criminals and like deriding them in the Senate.
None of them have the integrity to like even send out a tweet that is like, this is bad.
I might disagree with the folks in that room when it comes to the matter of Donald Trump, but
whatever. I've worked with many of them. They're conservatives. They do not deserve to be menaced.
They do not deserve to be threatened. And it was a mistake for Donald Trump to release the
people from prison that would do this type of thing to police officers.
Like that's a pretty simple statement to send.
Um, there are plenty of those statements that were sent by Democrats when there
was a, I think a non-political attack on Donald Trump, a crazy person in Pennsylvania.
And not only does it not happen, there's just like not even any expectation
that it will happen, right? Like people are like like they've been so beaten down by these guys cowardice
So like I doubt they will even get asked about it on the hill today, you know, no, that's a good point
Yeah, people just assume they're well, they're not gonna say anything weak. That's a bunch of weak weak weak individuals
so anyway good on Heath and
Heath Mayo who hosted that event and all the folks that continue
to show up.
It was good to see a bunch of people out there and these guys cannot be allowed to silence
us with their stupid trouble making.
Lastly, before we get to more from principals first, I'll play some audio from my interview
with Polis and my panelist, Sarah Longwell.
There was, I don't know to call it positive news or not, but the German elections were
over the weekend.
I think it's worth mentioning because it became relevant to domestic politics because Elon
Musk and JD Vance is campaigning on behalf of AFD, the far right nationalist German nationalist
party.
They ended up getting just about 20% of the vote in whatever it is, six, seven way election.
The CDU, CSU led by Friedrich Meurs won the election with the most votes, about 29%.
SBD had 16, Greens had like 11 or 12.
On the one hand, not great that the AFD is now the second party there, the lead opposition party
if you will in Germany, but I guess it's better than them winning.
A lot better.
No, and they went to the bad news is it's the most votes they've gotten.
Maybe they'd gotten 13% or something before the high war mark and they're getting 20,
21 almost.
So that's not great.
On the other hand, they'd been polling at around 20 for the entire election campaign,
which there I think it is about like two months.
So they didn't go up, even though there were terrorist attacks, really in some very bad
crimes in Germany the last two, three weeks, they got a ton of attention, understandably.
And even though Musk and Vance waited for them.
And so it turned out that actually the German voters to their credit, were not particularly
moved by Musk doing videos into the AFD conferences
or Vance speaking in Munich and in effect endorsing the AFD.
And so that's a good sign.
And there'll be a coalition government at the center,
like the current coalition government at the center,
except for the Christian Democrats on top
and the Social Democrats second,
as opposed to the way it is now.
Little bit glass half full and all that,
but I think, yes, the center held.
Actually, in Europe, this is the great irony, right? We're supposed to be the strong country, the bastard of the West, these other Europeans. God knows, when I was a kid,
the Communist parties were getting 30% of the vote there, and then they were all
wusses and they didn't want to fight enough. They don't spend money on defense and blah, blah,
blah, blah. You know what?? Basically in Britain, France, Germany,
Italy a little complicated, but not as pro-Putin.
Central Eastern Europe, certainly the Scandinavian countries
and the Baltic countries, the center is holding.
I wish it were holding here.
Yeah, and the other thing is,
to your point about Musk's campaigning there,
and we'll see, I mean, these guys are going to use
more nefarious methods to get involved in other countries,
elections going forward.
They're going to do more of what the Russians did in our election, to be honest, social
media kind of campaigns, that sort of stuff.
And this was, I think that, I don't exactly know, people that are in Germany were saying
that the X, you know, the For You page on X was pretty favorable to AFD, you know, and so maybe there was some algorithmic monkeying
around and maybe all that stuff will continue or grow.
But in the meantime, these guys aren't popular in most other countries.
They do not like Trump.
They are growing to hate Musk and JD Vance is a zero.
And so you're seeing this a little bit in TBD in Canada.
I've done several interviews with my friend JJ McCullough and other, I was at a conference
with some Canadian political experts recently.
A month ago, the scene was that the conservative candidate Pierre was kind of a shoe in.
Everybody's so upset with Trudeau and inflation you know, inflation and a lot of the stuff that, you know, impaired Biden, but then also just he'd been in for so long and
it's like time for a change.
But like the Trump involvement in Canada, you've seen those polls start to narrow.
And now it's like a little less certain actually.
It's possible that Trump's bullying of Canada might backfire.
I don't know whether him and Musk actually care that much
about whether these other countries have right wing parties
or if it's just like a big social media game,
but it is noteworthy that now we've seen that the trend
of them being like unable to make a positive difference
or maybe even harming the candidates of choice
now in a couple of places.
Yeah, the way maybe I put it, if you include the US
in this is there's clearly a backlash
against Trump, Musk, Vance and what they're doing and how they're doing it.
It's not going that well for them.
And as the results come in, I think it could get, the backlash could get stronger.
So that's the good news.
And it's a healthy backlash.
It's not kind of an idiotic or radical left-wing backlash.
It's just like, could we just have functioning government institutions and a decent liberal
democracy here and support our friends and be hostile to people like Putin?
So the good news is there is that movement, I think here at home and maybe around the
world actually.
The bad news is how much damage can they do before that movement has political effect,
both internationally and at home.
It's sort of a race between the increasing revulsion really against Musk and Trump and
the willingness to begin to abandon him, them maybe, by some of their voters and some even
conceivably some Republican elected officials.
But the damage is being done in real time, obviously, both internationally and at home.
And that's the situation we face.
And I do think, I try to make this point in the morning shots, Larry Diamond, the Stanford
political scientist, makes this point, it's kind of important to move earlier rather than
later.
The autocracy just becomes embedded too much at some point and people say, oh, 20, 26 elections
are going to be good.
Well, I don't know, after 18 months of Musk, of Patel running the FBI and Bondi running
the Justice Department and Christina, running DHS and all kinds of information operations and other use of law enforcement to tilt the
playing field, maybe calling in the military on some fake domestic necessity and so forth.
I don't know.
I think you can't just count on, don't worry, public opinion is going to ultimately move
in the right direction and public opinion will be reflected, you
know, 100%.
That's not the institutionalization of the autocracy.
This is the point Bob Kagan made, is a real danger.
All right.
Well, that's an uplifting place for us to end.
Bill Kristol, everybody else stick around.
I'm going to do a little intro about the Polis interview and talk about my call to arms within
the panel with Sarah Long.
Well, so everybody else stick around for that.
Thanks so much, Bill Kristol.
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All right, everybody.
I got two things for you from the principal first conference over the weekend.
I was on a panel with Sarah Longwell.
You can listen to all of that if you are a Bullock Plus
member, go to thebullock.com slash subscribe. We posted that over the weekend on our sub stack,
but I want to play a short bit from the very end that was a riff that I was doing after
Tario had shown up to the conference and we were discussing, like we did last week, Robert Garcia
getting the letter from Ed Martin
about his comments about Musk on CNN and all these other examples of intimidation that
we've seen.
And I just wanted to offer everybody a reminder that at this point, to Bill's point about
how the autocracy may come, it hadn't come yet.
We talked about this to Adam on Friday, Kinzinger on Friday, and I want to continue to reiterate
it.
There is something to be said for speaking up and speaking out and doing so clearly and
doing so without apology and not editing yourself or censoring yourself.
That's important to do regardless of whether it has a political benefit because it has
other benefits and has
other societal benefits. You know, it might be an eye-rolly cliche, but courage is contagious
and we should all do our part in any way we can, either in our communities or on YouTube, if you're
me. So I'll play you a little bit of that clip from my conversation with Sarah Longwell and then
the full interview with Jared Polis. Before he goes into Jared Polis' interview, I gave him a homework assignment, which was
to read the principal's first principles, the Declaration of Principles, because he
was the only Democratic elected official to come, which I thought was really cool for
him to come.
But he took the homework assignment very literally as a high achieving nerd that he is and he
had read all the principles and was ready to talk about them.
And so if you're listening to the interview, I would assume 99.9% of you have not read
the principles first principles.
So if you want to read them and see what he was talking about, I mean, they're all pretty
good.
It's talking about how integrity matters, it's about the constitution being paramount.
It's the type of thing that you would expect a bunch of norms loving never Trump Republicans,
former Republicans to put as their principles list.
But to give you some context for the conversation, we'll put the link in the show notes or in
the YouTube description so you guys can read those to give you a little bit of perspective
on my conversation with Governor Polis.
So I hope you enjoy these conversations from the Principles First Summit and we'll be back
here tomorrow for another edition of the Bulldog Podcast.
See you all then.
People that are supposed to be speaking out, people that are in the political fray, we
cannot be made to be afraid of these fucking people.
We cannot.
I know these people.
I know these people.
They are cowards.
They are cowards.
Cash Patel would shit his pants if he was in
Fallujah, okay? So would I, by the way. But, like, I know them. I know them. I know their type,
and they are cowards. They are bullies, and they are cowards, and they are trying to intimidate us,
and they are trying to shut us up with their stupid letters that they're sending from Ed
Martin in the DOJ, or from Elon Musk's Twitter feed.
He thinks that he can bully people
and shut them up for his Twitter feed.
No, none of these people are worth fearing, all right?
And when I talked to Kinzinger about this yesterday
and his message to them was, come and arrest me.
All right, come and arrest me.
But until then, I'm gonna say what I'm gonna say.
And I feel like people need to hear that
because speaking out right now is a good in itself.
A lot of times on our podcast,
we talk about what's the strategic thing to do
and what's the smart thing to do.
And I just, as I think about this,
if we are really going,
where I think all of us think we are really going, where I think all
of us think we're going, towards an urbanist type government, like nobody asks the dissidents
in Hungary, like, do you think that it's going to help the polls if you speak, your poll
numbers if you speak out against Orban? Nobody asks that, right? Because everyone understands
that in the face of an autocratic threat,
just saying no is an end into itself. And so to me, we might all go through this principles list
in 2029, God willing, with a new president and discuss how many of them we still agree on and
in the public space get to debate the policies and disagree on them.
But in the meantime, our job is to say no to this, to stand up to them, and to not be
afraid because they want you to be afraid and you have no reason to be fearful of these
little men.
What's happening everybody?
As much as I like Heath's intro, I told him next year I want pyrotechnics like CPAC.
That's the only thing we'll steal from them, you know?
Just something with a little bit of heat to get us going in the morning.
How you doing, Governor?
Good to see you again.
I was soldered me pyrotechnics.
I'm a little disappointed, frankly.
Well, this is your first one.
Next year we're going to make this happen.
This is my home state governor.
Not anymore. I'm in Louisiana now. I'd like to trade them for Jeff Landry but I don't think that's gonna happen
unfortunately unless you're interested are you interested in moving to Louisiana? You know we're
we're interested in welcoming you back to Colorado. Okay you're gonna get me in trouble with my mother.
I gave you some homework before we got here because I believe you're the only elected Democrat here is
that right? Was there any other elected Democrats
who had some candidates maybe?
Sadly, there's not as many elected Democrats these days.
Yeah, okay, it's hard to choose from.
So I think you're the only one here.
And so the homework I gave you
was to look at Heath's 15 principles,
or maybe there were 16, we don't know,
and see kind of where you think our alignment is.
Where are we starting?
Well, first, I mean-
And you did your homework, you got it here.
Well, I had one.
That's part of the problem. There's too many of them and you guys gotta
edit it a little bit.
Cut them down a little?
By the way, how great it would be if the folks here were the governing coalition of our country
and how proud we would be as a nation to create prosperity and peace in the world.
It would be nice.
Someday, someday You'll be back
We could argue about a couple things, you know, there's still this
That was we need EPA reform my goodness so EPA didn't say we might be on the same page I don't know but we need a reform too
I mean, these are things where we hope that Trump administration gets it right. We'll get to that we will
So there's there's too many.
And they're all good.
They're all wonderful.
I look through them.
I mean, we can go through them, but integrity, character, and virtue matter.
That might be sort of a sad wish as opposed to kind of a value because to the voters they
don't.
Now this is important because this is a value.
Every person has dignity, quality, and worth.
Truth is important.
I think you can combine that with no one's entitled to their own facts. So, I mean, look, I mean, somehow Martin Luther did 95 theses, but generally
speaking in marketing and in politics, you got to get it to three or four to kind of
resonate, you know, and I think there's ways to kind of, without sacrificing the value
piece, kind of get this down to the three or four that you can put on a little card
and you can put on a sign and that can mean something to people.
But I'm excited by them all, you know, free and functioning markets deliver prosperity.
I mean, absolutely.
And I think that's been forgotten.
I just heard a tale in the last discussion, the danger of the tariffs and taxes on shutting
down transactions between two people who are inherently better off because they make a
transaction would be devastating not only to the global economy but right here at home shutting down transactions between two people who are inherently better off because they make a transaction
would be devastating not only to the global economy
but right here at home in our backyard.
Yeah, and we also have a lot of policy overlap.
You know, us former, us exiled Republicans and you,
you know, free markets, free people.
Let's talk a little bit about
what you've been doing in Colorado before.
We might have to argue a little bit about politics,
but our agreement is more about policy.
And you've done, I mean, regulatory reforms,
you did the chainsaw before it was cool, I think,
and cutting some red tape, or before it was not cool,
I guess, would maybe be a better way to put it.
We got rid of 208 old executive orders.
Now here is, so I had been working on this,
by the way, you know, the proper way is you work on things
and you plan them, you don't just go by the seat of your pants.
So it took us about six months to figure out,
we were gonna repeal these 208 orders.
And then unfortunately,
because the timing it was during after the election,
people then thought somehow we got the idea from Doge,
but I say, no, no, they got the idea from us.
We started earlier.
But yeah, as an executive,
I can get rid of executive orders dated back to 1920
that were still in effect in our state. Vast majority over the last 10, 20 years.
So that was exciting. And I've challenged our legislature to do the same, to go through
our rules. Because again, unlike certain other executives, I don't think I have the power
to single handedly nullify laws. So I challenged our legislature to go back and look at all
of the laws that require different rules, because sometimes
an executive is required by a law to do rules and go back and eliminate some of that as
well.
Yeah, and as Heath mentioned, we're like building houses.
That's exciting.
We're doing market-based reform for housing.
Yeah, look, it's like get government out of the way.
The market and the price of housing is a function of supply and demand.
The fact that demand is high in Colorado is wonderful.
People want to live there.
You want to live there.
It's great.
You all move out there.
But we have artificial government imposed constraints on supply.
That is the single reason why a home would cost a lot more than its replacement value,
which they do.
In average home price in Denver is about $600,000, which is high.
I mean, it's not California high, but it's high.
And so we have basically allowed more housing to be built,
whether it's town homes,
whether it's multifamily housing,
the kinds of inherently more affordable housing,
which ironically is often the most difficult kind of housing
to get past your local planning board.
The single family homes, they let you build, but the more difficult kind of housing to get past your local planning board.
The single family homes they let you build,
but the more affordable kinds of homes
are actually harder to approve.
So we've made a lot of progress in that,
we continue that work.
Yeah, you cut taxes?
We did when I-
I was trying to warm up all the conservatives.
When I became governor, our income tax rate was 4.63%.
We cut it at the ballot box of 4.5,
we cut it at the ballot box of 4.4, and then we cut it through the legislature to 4.63 percent. We cut it at the ballot box to 4.5. We cut it at the ballot box to 4.4.
And then we cut it through the legislature to 4.25 percent. So that's our income duck stack.
And you're not needlessly mean to transgender people or rejecting people from coming to your
state? No, this is where we say I like this. It this, every person has dignity, quality and worth.
That needs to stay there.
I mean, we value everybody based on the content of their character, their contributions and
who they are and there's good and bad people of all kinds.
You are, there's no doubt about that.
There's some bad gays out there, not on this stage,
but they exist.
I could think of a couple.
Speaking of that, you were in the room yesterday with,
what was it, yesterday or two days ago now,
where the governor of Maine, your colleague,
was kind of getting into it with the president, Janet Mills.
What did you think?
What did you make of that exchange?
Well, I don't, you know, none of us had the context going in
because this was until it was elevated by the president
and the governor, it was an obscure thing going on with Maine.
So we didn't really know what was going on at the time.
But apparently it has to do with following the guidance
around women's sports.
And I mean, women's sports are obviously something,
like in any sports, We want to prevent cheating
I mean everybody wants to prevent cheating in sports. You know and of course
steroids hormones they can all be used for cheating and that has no place in sports and
And of course you know at the same time we want people to be able to participate
It's a really it's a little so you know my
We try we have discussions on our dinner table
I have a ten-year-old daughter and a thirteen-year-old son and we were talking bit, so you know, my, we have discussions on our dinner table. I have a 10 year old daughter and a 13 year old son
and we were talking about this, should, you know,
where's the line and how do you make sure
that you don't have boys sort of cheating
to play in girls' sports?
And my daughter said, I don't understand, we beat the boys.
Yeah.
And she did.
Basketball, you know, it was a girls' basketball team
and they beat the boys' basketball team.
So.
Yeah, no, my daughter beat her boy cousin
in Colorado in basketball
and that caused a meltdown over Christmas.
So we're not gonna talk about it.
Hopefully, Louie's not listening.
The other thing is just, I think, the capriciousness.
Regardless of what you think about where the line is
when it comes to youth, sports, and gender,
the capriciousness of how Trump is acting.
Right.
About all the stuff.
I mean, you just discuss it in a rational way.
Of course, boys shouldn't be in girl sports.
I mean, it's obvious.
And it has nothing to do with cutting Medicaid funding from people in Lewiston.
Right.
And it has nothing to do with people who were born of indeterminate or intermediate genders
or where they play.
I mean, you want fairness in sports,
but you don't want participation in sports.
But it's like, it's kind of,
I think those are broad American values.
You want fairness and you want to provide ways
people can participate.
But yeah, very little of that has anything to do
with the cost of living and the real issues that matter.
I mean, I think after talking to Janet Mills,
after she said there's like one kid that's even effects in their whole state.
Yeah. I'm curious if you got any clarity.
Obviously on a human level, we got to feel bad for that kid that they're in the center
of all this stuff. I mean, my goodness.
So you were behind the scenes. You had to have dinner with Donald Trump last night.
I was at the gay bar. So you guys can decide who had a more enjoyable evening. Do you get
any clarity from the White House
on the kind of random government workers
that are being fired in your state,
whether you're gonna have any funding for Medicaid?
There's no clarity from this.
So that in my limited time, what I talked about,
and I know you came off a conversation of terrorists
like you, I believe in free trade and open markets
and trade is inherently good.
You can see why he's my favorite Democrat there.
We got one clap here, one clapper, me and Jared,
the only ones left.
But my concern was, and obviously we all,
you know, we're hopeful that that's the president
somehow has this master negotiating strategy.
We're gonna wind up with left terrorists rather than more,
but you know, I'm not holding my breath.
But I did say, look, I mean, if you want,
there's less less terrorists, I'll be the first to praise breath. But I did say, look, if there's less tariffs,
I'll be the first to praise that.
But I said, whatever is happening here,
please try to wrap this up in the next few months
because investment is frozen, nobody can plan,
the uncertainty is the enemy of prosperity
and in the business.
So whatever level we're gonna wind up at,
we've gotta figure this out for your own benefit,
Mr. President, in the next few months because if this goes on for four years, the uncertainty alone will cause a recession.
We're not rooting for a recession, right?
No?
No, no.
As I said, I hope that somehow if we come out of this with, I'm not holding my breath,
but less tariffs, less restrictions on trade, that would be wonderful.
Just speaking for myself, I know you're good, Jared.
I'm the devil on your shoulder.
What about the other uncertainty with regards to the cuts?
You had some controversy in your state about, I guess what, forest rangers got fired.
Who the hell knows?
There are government workers that are in every state.
Do you get any conversations about that?
As far as we can tell, there's no rhyme or reason to the cuts. Now, obviously, we
want things that are wasteful to be cut. But an example of this sort of wrecking ball approach
was they actually laid off a lot of the folks involved with fire prevention, park management
in Colorado, which are incredibly important. So, not the firefighters themselves, but the road maintenance,
the road maintenance,
how you get the fires to fight them,
forest management.
So these are folks that are, in our view,
and I think the view of any rational government
on the left or right, small government, big government,
I mean this is like a core function thing, right?
So we hope that they reverse that,
no idea if they will. Yeah, I saw a tweet as I was coming in, a rare good one, from Jessica Riedel, who's a friend of
the principal's first, and shared this. If Mitch Daniels was running DOGE, I think we could replace
his name with yours here. If Jared Polis was running DOGE, they'd have already begun implementing
GAO recs to fix the billions in payment errors, consolidating duplicative programs, auditing thousands of programs for efficiencies legally, competently, and with
minimal disruption.
That's real money.
That's not what they're doing.
That's right.
For every government program, you should ask really two questions.
First is, should we even be doing this?
And there's absolutely things that are being done that are counterproductive that we should
not do at every level of government.
The second is, okay, we should do this,
how can we do it more efficiently?
Let's create a more efficient way of doing it.
It's not just sort of like, who saw?
Destroy it all, like, okay.
Should we be doing it?
And if we should be doing it,
how do we do it more officially?
Yeah.
Yes, Mitch Daniels absolutely would have been wonderful.
Would have been much better.
But we are where we are.
And so I saw you on one of the Sunday shows over the weekend.
And you seem to give them the benefit of the doubt
that maybe they will land in a place
where they are going to actually care about efficiency.
And I guess maybe that was one area where we part ways.
A rare area where we part ways.
Because I don't think that they have any intention
to do anything. Again, let's give them the space to see if they hoist themselves on their own
petard here, right?
Like with trade, as I said, if somehow this leads to like lower tariffs and more free
trade, that's wonderful.
That's wonderful.
Do you think that's going to happen?
I'm an eternal optimist.
You are an optimist.
What about, I mean, what about when it comes to the Doge?
And there's got to be, do you have any, you still have even a hint of hope that this could
end positively?
Well, I don't have much visibility into what's going on, right?
I mean, does anybody?
You're the governor of the state.
Have you gotten a call?
Well, it's not, it's federal, not, you know.
Yeah, but there are people in your state that are losing their jobs.
They're going to tear stuff down,
and again, if there are things that we don't need to do,
let's stop doing them, and then the question on
if there's things that we agree we should do,
how do we do it more efficiently,
DOGE doesn't seem to be answering that at this point.
It seems to just be, you know, stopping the current way,
fine, but then what replaces it
is actually turns out to be very important.
I see that you're hopeful and optimistic. No, and there's another one. They're going gonna get rid of the penny. I'm all for that. I got rid of the penny. All right
I'm with you on the penny. Yep
Taxpayers a couple hundred million dollars a year environmental costs the mining of zinc and copper. So poor people at the penny plant though
Yeah, you know, we'll still make pennies for collectors. Some of those are in Denver, by the way
You know, we have the Denver mint, but we still only make nickels and dimes and quarters.
I had to go there as a kid.
It was a really boring field trip.
We can't use the force of government to preserve horse and buggy manufacturers once the car
is invented.
That's a good point.
I'm with you on that.
So here's the thing, though.
You're optimistic.
You've heard some things that might sound nice that you could imagine you agree with. Have they actually done anything that materially would improve the welfare of a person in Colorado
so far?
It's only been a month.
They've been...
Trump and Elon.
Oh.
Has there been anything that they've done that you're like, okay, Coloradans are going
to benefit from this thing?
What have they done so far?
I mean, it's mostly...
Like a thousand executive orders.
They fired a lot of people, they renamed some things.
Yeah, a lot of them were held up in court.
I mean, I can't think of one right now.
Me neither.
That's discouraging though.
I'm hopeful, Tim, on zoning and reform and permitting reform,
if they get rid of the penny, but no, it's all if.
If they do this, if they do this, if they do this.
But no, I mean, nothing makes Colorado more prosperous that they've done yet or America more prosperous in my opinion
in fact to the contrary the threat of the tariffs obviously is a major drag on
our economy yeah well that's not good if the only thing those are not all threats
at this point aren't some of them in with China they're actually in force
right yeah the Canada Mexico once they got are still a threat I hope they go
that threat goes away but some of those are actually already been implemented, so they're already causing harm.
That's a good reminder that the China one's been enforced.
All right, they've renamed the Gulf, though.
So we have a new Gulf, the Gulf of Trump.
I was wondering if we could split ball.
Do you want to rename anything?
You only got two years left in Colorado.
You've updated a few things.
I'm from Littleton.
That's kind of like a beta name, Littleton. I was thinking maybe we could rename that after like maybe me or Nicola
Jokic or you.
I like that. We should name it after you. Yeah, somebody like that.
Millerton? Jokic-ton? Is there any other naming?
Jokic-ton would be fun. I think Colorado's would go for that. I think that would be awesome.
Did you have any other renaming ideas?
Well, you know, I tweeted on this, but when the, you know, trying to name the Gulf of Mexico,
I said we could do a compromise.
We have a place you know well in Colorado, Casa Bonita.
I said we should call it the Gulf of Casa Bonita.
Because it's a little bit American,
a little bit Mexican, it's good for business.
You could sell me on that.
We could maybe sell the naming rights also.
You could auction them off,
that's what those should be doing.
Auctioning off the naming rights. Close the national deficit them off, that's what those should be doing. Auctioning off the naming rights.
Close the national deficit.
Okay, well I'm interested in that.
You hit on something, why not, not that,
but let's auction off some other naming rights.
Maybe we should do that in Colorado too.
Auction off the naming rights for
one of our towns or something.
I'm up for it.
Maybe in Lauren Boebert's district.
If we're gonna have to pick a place to auction off,
I'd probably start there.
You mentioned the debt and the deficit.
This is another thing I think that is important.
And I think you'd be a good messenger on this,
because some other Democrats don't care about this.
They don't have any plans, actually,
to cut the debt or deficit.
No.
And we all, what the president said during the campaign,
the deficit would go up substantially.
And all this talk of Doge and again I hope they succeed but
This is like this much. I mean, you know, whether it's USAID and these other things. It's not we've got five trillion in material
It's not any material way. Yeah closing the deficit. So
We you know, I I support we in Colorado. We balance our budget every year
I think we need a balanced budget amendment to the US Constitution
I think we need a balanced budget amendment to the U.S. Constitution. And, you know, not because it's good policy, but because it's better than the alternative
of not having one, as we've learned.
So I think we should have it.
I asked several people what I should ask you, and everybody demanded that I ask you about
RFK.
So here we are.
You had some nice things to say about RFK.
He's just an okay. He's okay for me.
He's bad to quite bad, I would say.
That's pretty good for the new administration, isn't it?
I guess.
Bad to quite bad?
He's like top of the...
What do you see?
And what was it about RFK that gave you a little interest?
The picture interest?
Well, I think he's interested in...
Well, he is interested in health and prevention and reducing chronic disease. And that excites me.
Colorado is a healthy state.
We are one of the lowest obesity rates, healthy diet.
We get one of the longest lifespans.
So I'm excited to work with him.
Saw him yesterday and talked to him.
And I think there's a lot of ways we can work together.
And to be clear, and it's a shame I have to say this
every time, but of course I don't believe
in the nutty anti-science stuff.
I'm pro-vaccine and for all that.
And he said that he won't get in the way of that, so hopefully that'll be the case.
You take him with his word?
We come back to our fundamental disagreement.
Eternal optimists.
Eternal optimists.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I'm not feeling that good about that.
What about the other thing about making America healthy again that gets me a little cross ways I think with RFK, which is I don't know how
cutting all research to any infectious diseases in the
future is a very good idea.
I think that's kind of a bad idea as far as on the health
ledger.
We need more research, absolutely.
But did, why, I mean what do you, like, do you feel like
he's, I mean he's serious about that though.
I mean they're already, we're already seeing
real ramifications to like programs getting cut, right?
Look, I mean, you look at the life-saving research
that's been done in our generation, the previous generation,
we all have healthier, longer lives,
and we need more research.
Okay, I'm just doing my best to just poke your optimism here.
I'm trying to do it.
I like, you're like an optimism balloon, and I'm just gonna keep pinning until I find optimism here. I'm trying to do it. You're like an optimism balloon,
and I'm just going to keep pinning until I find a spot where
we can let the air out.
What are you the most worried about?
It's not like we voted for this guy.
We're just saying we hope we're best wishes for the country
here.
I mean, he's got to get something right out
of the 20 or 30 things he's involved with.
Are we sure?
I hope so.
With broken clocks?
What worries you?
And we've mentioned the tariffs. what else worries you the most?
You know, like if he called you tomorrow and he's like, we had a great dinner, you seem
like the only Democrat that is normal, you know, and he gives you a buzz and he's like,
Jared, what do you think I should not do?
What would you stop him from doing besides the tariffs?
We've mentioned the tariffs.
I'm obviously very concerned about abandoning our European allies and the fight for freedom
and democracy.
Again, don't know where that's headed, but very concerning remarks about the conflict.
We cannot embolden Putin on the world stage and I'm worried about that.
Yeah.
Let's talk about the Dems for a minute and just going forward. I'm wondering how you think the Democrats can try to recapture the mantle of appealing
to working people, to people that don't really like the status quo, to the types of people
that RFK appeal to.
Let's just be honest.
What are some ways that you think the party can not have to be to, you know, sort of be the establishment, right? Like how can they, how can the party embrace being reformed?
Well, I'd like, first of all, I think these principles that you have are a very good
underpinning. Again, there's too many of them, but they're promising. And
really talking about prosperity, abundance, economy, I mean, you know, we
are deeply concerned that this president's economic agenda could lead to less prosperity rather than more if he does what he's saying
He's gonna do and I think we need to offer the alternative and the Democrats have not always been you know
Pure on these issues there, you know, they've been portrayed President Obama and President Clinton
You know led us into many more trade agreements brought down terrorists brought down non-tariff barriers to trade
We've you know in large Trade agreements brought down tariffs, brought down non-tariff barriers to trade.
We've, you know, in large significant pro-growth tax policies, but you know, these are things
that we should lean into because it makes a difference for people.
The Democrats did quite poorly in most blue states, like not swing states this past year,
lost a lot of ground in the Northeast and the West.
Two places where the Democrats lost a little ground,
but not too much was Utah and Colorado.
Is it just luck and the fact that there are a lot
of Mormons there, you think?
Or was there something that, Mormons, hell yeah.
Or is there something that you did that you think
might be worth looking at if you're a governor
of an East Coast state?
I mean, just trying to meet the needs of Colorado.
So we've been focused on, we talked about reducing taxes,
removing barriers to housing.
We also eliminated sales tax on a number of products.
We implemented free universal preschool,
which is a very big priority for us,
preparing all kids for success.
You know, it prepares kids for success.
The long-term longitudinal studies show that.
I love your data point that data is important.
It also saves families $6,000 a year in the here and now.
Four-year-olds, preschools, very expensive.
So really just trying to meet the needs of folks
where they're at and grow our economy in prosperity.
So do you not see that happening in the coastal states?
Like what are you doing that they're not doing in California and New York?
I mean, the Democrats lost 10 points in New York.
I get ton. It was not just on the margins, right?
It was not just conservative.
I'm not an expert in coastal politics, so I can't.
You got a sense.
I can't say all the factors.
You're in the NGA.
I could talk more about what we did do, right?
So, I mean, we also, in addition to cutting income tax,
we cut property taxes too,
and we capped any future property tax increases of 5%.
So, you know, really just trying to address
people's costs and concerns.
We've had a thriving economy in Colorado,
and that's kind of, in fact,
what led to the run-up in housing prices, right?
Along with the artificial constraints on supply
that we're trying to systemically disassemble and allow more housing to be built.
Do you look back at COVID and feel like that, you know, there's like a lengthy backlash
to kind of how that was managed at all. How do you reflect back on COVID? We first met
actually because I watched your press conference during COVID and it was around mask mandates.
And you said, you had some reporters were giving you trouble and you were like I sat and read
the studies and I read the studies and I decided that we didn't need to we should
wear a mask wear a mask yeah yeah we encourage you right we it's like right
we encourage but we didn't have we said the mandates didn't make sense and we
did we just looked at all the data in the studies and people are perfectly able to be agents in determining their appropriate risk levels
for themselves. And I was glad that, you know, my parents who are now 80, you know, did stay
home a lot. And when they went out warm-ass and that was, that was very important.
Do you worry about that with regards to RFK? If we have a bird flu outbreak and kind of
how, how we are prepared to manage another pandemic.
I don't honestly remember what he was saying during COVID.
I don't remember if he was responsible or what he advocated during that.
But as I said, on reducing chronic disease, improving health, diet and nutrition, these
are the huge upside for the American people if that's what he focuses on and there'd be downside if he were to focus on
making vaccines harder to get or reducing our vaccination rate.
All right, final one. Next year we don't want you to be alone as the Democratic elected here at Principles First.
So could you nominate a few other Democrats you would like us to Heath to recruit?
Yeah, I'd be happy to grab a few. Let's strategize about that.
Nobody comes straight to mind? I'm just worried that they're
gonna fall asleep before they make it through all 16 of your principles.
What about Wes Moore maybe? He's just ready to go to bed.
Anybody else? Abigail Spanberger? That would be great to get her.
Absolutely. So we'll strategize. I think we absolutely, this is not partisan.
We should have a lot of great folks,
and whether they are Ds or Us or Rs,
they ought to be part of this,
because this is just on the heels
of another little conference called CPAC,
you may have heard of it.
And I said, you want to be bigger than CPAC,
so you got to grow next year, that's the goal.
You got to be bigger, bigger than CPAC.
Thank you, that's my man.
It's Governor Jared Politz everybody.
If only we had 50 like him, we'd be in better shape.
We'll see y'all.
Well I'm about to get sick
from watching my TV
been checking out the news
till my eyeballs fail to see I mean to say that every day
Is just another rotten mess, sure enough
And when it's gonna change my friend
Is anybody's guess
So I'm watching and I'm waiting
I'm hoping for the best
Even think I'll go to pray
Every time I hear them say
There's no way to delay that trouble comin' every day Wednesday I watched the riot I seen the cops out on the street I watched them throwing rocks and stuff and choking in the heat I listened to reports about the whiskey passing around.
I seen the smoking fire and the market burning down.
I watched while everybody on the street would take a turn
to stop and smash and bash, crash and slash and bust and burn
I'm a watcher and I'm a waiter
And I'm hoping for the best
Even think I'm on a break
Every time I feel upset, oh yeah
There's no way to delay that trouble coming every day
There's no way to delay that trouble coming every day
Okay!
The Bullard Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.