The Bulwark Podcast - Bill Kristol: Rally Around the Flag
Episode Date: June 3, 2024This is a good moment for Biden to proudly raise the flag right-side up, and share his love of America—even as his Justice Department's prosecution of Hunter gets underway. Meanwhile, the extremism ...from the country-in-distress crowd continues to be over-the-top, including Felon 45 emboldening vigilante groups to act on his behalf. Bill Kristol joins Tim Miller. show notes: ABC News video of WWII vets arriving in France Other footage of US vets at Charles-de-Gaulle Airport Vets arriving in Normandy James Carville on Bill Kristol's pod
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your first month. That's BetterHelp, H-E-L-P, dot com. hello and welcome to the bulwark podcast i'm your host tim miller it's monday june 3rd and
finally we're back with bill crystal he had a little holiday then we had a memorial day
and i know you guys have been missing his always uplifting takes and historical anecdotes
welcome back.
Yeah, that's nice of you to claim that people have been missing it. I've gotten sort of the opposite impression, but it's good to be back anyway.
Oh, I don't know if that's true. Come on. We have the Trump verdict, which we discussed on Friday
with Ben and Ron, but I guess I'm just curious about your top-level thoughts here, having had
a weekend, let it all settle, and what you think about both the, you know, political and substantive fallout from the verdict?
So on the political side, I think the people who said this could have some effect
are a little bit vindicated, or at least for now, having a little bit better of the argument than
the people who just poo-pooed it all. There are three polls, all of them have Biden getting a
point or two, which, you know, is very small, it's much of error, but they're all in the same direction. I think the reaction of the Trump
campaign, and you've talked about this, and we should talk more about it maybe, is it has been
so over the top, they're over the top on everything. So it's hard to maybe make too much of a
conclusion from this. It's not something they're relaxed about, I guess I would put it that way,
you know, and they feel like, it feels to me like they're very worried and that people, some weak Trump supporters, you know, not that he's a great party guy, but still would want to have a Republican senator if possible there,
even if he's not going to be totally reliable.
The ferocity with which they jumped on him when he's issued a perfectly anodyne, vanilla
statement about respecting the rule of law was pretty striking.
And it was Lisa Vita, you know, who's, that's Trump.
He's not just doing that as a random, you know.
No, let's just talk about Larry Hogan.
Let's just do that right now. we have the audio of what lara trump who's you know the
trump family member in addition to uh las vidas said about his as you mentioned anodyne statement
that we respect the justice system let's listen does the republican national committee support
larry hogan for senate well i i'll tell you one thing. I don't
support what he just said there. I think it's ridiculous. And I think anybody who's not speaking
up in the face of really something that should never again have seen the light of day a trial
that would never have been brought against any other person aside from Donald Trump doesn't
deserve the respect of anyone. He doesn't deserve the respect of anyone? He doesn't deserve the respect of anyone. He doesn't deserve the respect of anyone?
He doesn't deserve the respect of anyone in the Republican Party at this point.
And quite frankly, anybody in America, if that's the way you feel, that's very upsetting to hear that.
So are you willing to cede the Senate seat in Maryland to the Democratic Party and not support Larry Hogan?
What I'll tell you is that we, of course, want to win as a party, but that is a shame.
And I think he should have thought long and hard before he said that publicly.
That's insane.
I mean, that's harsher than any Republican official said about any of the, you know,
January 6th, like, you know, condemnations.
So what does that say to you about where the GOP is at?
There was some poll, again, take all these polls with a little bit of, several grains of salt at this point, but it's like 55-35 people saying they agreed with the verdict. That's mostly capturing just the partisan split, but it's capturing the
fact that maybe there's 10% of those voters in the middle who are Trump-inclined, assuming the
race is 45-45, right? But who are sort of willing to say, yes, that verdict might have been correct.
Now, a lot of them are then going to say, but it's not a reason to vote for Biden. But the more it seems to me that
La Cevita and Lara Trump and these people make this a sort of defining issue of Trump loyalty,
if you're one of those voters in the middle, don't you think, well, if this is a defining
matter for Trump, what does that say about Trump and about, you know, can I really continue to
rationalize my vote for Trump? It's not really about any of these other things that I don't like about Trump. So I think it's had a little more
effect than people expected. Biden's statement was very good on Friday. I thought the 90 seconds he
added to his Middle East speech, I was sort of down at the dumps early Friday morning that,
oh my God, Biden's going to give a long speech on the Middle East and not even mention this.
And there were people apparently counseling that in Democratic circles. He did choose to mention
it. I don't know if that was because he thought it was the right thing to do, which it was, in my view, as president, or whether they had some polling and focus group data that suggested it was, you know, confirmed our sense, my sense, or the other data's sense that it's not a bad thing to sort of issue to use against Trump. Now, they haven't followed up much over the weekend. It was the weekend. But I am nervous that they will do what they've done in this as I know so many other instances
have a one shot, little offensive and not have a sustained effort. Look, there are a lot of issues
that Biden's on the losing side of fairly or unfairly, you know, inflation and immigration.
This is an issue he's on the winning side of he's basically with a majority of the American public.
You've got to hammer that kind of issue home in a close race,
I think. Yeah, let's talk about the Democratic side of this first. I've got some more Republican delusion to get into. But you tweeted this morning, I noticed, Michael Tomasky over at the
New Republic. He read, says, Democrats, the ball's in your court. You can buy into the lazy
and apparently wrong conventional wisdom that says the verdict will make no difference,
or you can create a reality in which the verdict makes a big difference. And that's, you know, sort of supporting
your point. It's not just him out there, Dan Pfeiffer, making a similar argument. Others,
I was on MS, we're hashing this out with a few different people that had differing views. I was
making the Pfeiffer and Tomaski and Crystal argument. I think that they're going to do this.
I think that they have to.
To me, what this really comes down to is, is one, you know, I think that there's a substantive case,
let's just take the politics out of it for a second, that this should be made, that we,
that America doesn't want to have a convict as president, that we shouldn't have a felon as president, that if Donald Trump wins, then I think it contributes to the idea that he won't leave
if he thinks that there's jail on the other side of the presidency. So I think that there's some
real substantive concerns here. And then on the political side, the people that Democrats need to
get to are the people that aren't listening to the Voter Podcast, right? Like the people that are
lower. Every poll says this. The people that are paying less attention to this race is who Joe
Biden's underperforming with. This is something that can break through with them if they carry the message. So to me,
on both the substance and the politics, they have to lean in and not be worried about the
bad faith Republican attacks that they're politicizing the justice system or whatever.
What say you to that notion? I totally agree. And I would just add one foot on the political
side. I think there are some of those also swingish let's call the middle class upper middle class college educated republican voters
who voted for haley and aren't crazy about trump yeah i think it's the kind of thing you know
convicted felon they're not used to in their businesses having ceos a convicted felon they're
not used to hiring convicted felon you know i think it's great to have a convicted felon as
the coach of their little league baseball team or or, you know, focused on that because I went to so many little league
baseball games this weekend, but, you know, or pastor of their church or whatever. I just feel
like it's something that could hit home a little bit. It should be put in a broader context of his
general loathing and contempt for the rule of law and his promises to violate it in 10 other ways.
But it is a kind of a proof, isn't it? That, you know, it's not just the tweets, right? He actually carried out a conspiracy to violate the law.
And, you know, I think that also they have to make sure that they win this argument
over whether it's politicized. And in some ways, maybe this feels counterintuitive,
right? I could understand why some in the Axelrods make this argument and others like,
boy, you don't want to play into the Republicans' hands and make this seem like it's very political
and that Donald Trump didn't deserve this, right? That this was some kind of
persecution. Then the thought there that'd be put forth by Axelrod, et cetera, is like, well,
if you don't talk about it as much, then maybe it doesn't seem like you were politicizing this,
like you were staying above the fray. They have to actually win the argument that this wasn't
political. And to me, that means going't political and to me that means going out
there and reminding people that yeah donald trump is a convicted felon in this case by the way
there are three other cases where he's been indicted where grand juries came in he was found
liable in civil court for sexual assault and for fraudulent business records then there was the
trump university case from before he was even a politician where the business was found liable for fraud.
And by the way, he's surrounded by a bunch of criminals.
You know, there are a bunch of other criminals that are in his orbit.
So they have to go out and make that case so that people have the armor, the rhetorical
armor to push back against their friends.
When this comes up over a beer or on the sidelines of a little league baseball game,
and they're like, this seems politicized.
It's like, no, actually, this is just a guy that has a long history of criminal activity
like the democrats have to make that case to people because a lot of people don't know that
or they don't think about it that deeply maybe don't know they don't think about it that deep
right well or you know they're willing to put it aside i agree with you some don't know some are
just willing to put it aside gently to focus on what they don't like about Biden, immigration or inflation or something else.
He's old.
And you need to drag it back into front and center stage.
I very much agree with that.
You don't have the choice anymore.
If different circumstances, a year and a half before an election, I don't know, you could
choose.
I'm not going to highlight this.
I'm going to highlight something else.
It's June.
What is it?
June 3rd.
I mean, this is an issue.
We're three weeks away from the first debate.
Yeah.
And I think your point is I hadn't really focused on the downside of not making it a case.
If Trump gets away with this, the whole raft of legal and ethical issues almost gets undercut, it feels to me like.
You know, you're not going to make a big deal of the fact that an actual jury convicted him of 34 felonies.
But we're very upset that he used, I don't know used a term about uniting the Reich or whatever one of those.
That stuff is not as important, actually.
And it is more just beating him up for idiotic things and offensive things.
Don't get me wrong that he's saying and dangerous things sometimes.
But still, it's more speculative, you might say.
This is real.
So I agree, if you don't do this, you're sort of seeding that whole mess of ethical and legal issues that should be used against Trump. There's another
point that Joe Biden has that I think he's going to be reluctant to use, but his allies should
related to this conversation with the politicized justice department. As we were talking today,
Hunter Biden is going into a courtroom in Wilmington,
Delaware, named after J. Caleb Boggs. It's the J. Caleb Boggs courthouse. And Caleb Boggs is the guy that Joe Biden defeated in a shocking upset that got him into the Senate in the first place.
So, you know, everything comes around in politics. Hunter Biden goes in there today.
He is in separate trial. This is on the gun charges where he lied on the document about whether he was using drugs
when he got a gun.
And then he has a separate trial later this year on tax fraud charges.
Yeah, it's almost like do I have to say it?
It seems pretty silly that we spent a whole weekend listening to half the country and
even some like quasi respected people arguing that Joe Biden is masterminding some DOJ plots to target
his political foes while his only surviving son is walking into a courtroom today, a federal
courtroom. Joe Biden put out a statement about this this morning that was mostly just about how
he loves his son. And so Joe Biden's not going to be making this case, but shouldn't the Democrats
just be banging the drum on this as loud as possible?
Yeah. And I, you know, I cringed a little bit over the last week when he was,
partly this was the anniversary of Bill Biden's death, you know, was with Joe Biden a fair amount.
And then I think he and President and Mrs. Biden wanted to be with Hunter Biden last night in
Delaware and it was at the state dinner. So I thought, could he just maybe, you know,
doesn't have to see his adult son every two days, you know?
You know what?
He loves him.
He wants to show support.
And in a certain way, you could even say that strengthens the fact, doesn't it,
that he's letting the Justice Department go ahead with no interference at all
in a case that he probably, certainly deep down believes is unjustified.
And a lot of respectable people have qualms about.
But again, he doesn't raise that.
So in a way, he deserves even more credit, I i'd say because it's clearly very painful to him it's not
some distant relative or brother he hasn't gotten along with for 20 years or whatever kind of thing
about the black sheep or whatever yeah yes i think others could make this point you know i think that
what you kind of alluded to there even for those who think that the brag case was weak or frivolous
or whatever i think ben would have made a pretty strong argument against that on the friday podcast
but but even if you were to say that it's like okay this is sort of frivolous that you would
charge a former president with this it does feel like there was some politics they're like hunter biden is not
on trial for like drug smuggling he is on trial today for a paperwork error you know even if you
want to diminish the trump conviction you know and use rhetoric to diminish this as much as possible
you can say it was a paperwork error it was a misfiling right of business records and it
shouldn't have been taken so seriously that's all the Hunter thing is. That is just how the justice system works. It's particularly how the justice system works
if you volunteer to put yourself in front of the cameras every day, you know, and like,
it's part of the risk of doing business. But it was, there was a long time where we expected
more from our people in public service and that scrutiny comes with it. And that was,
you know, part of what was commonly accepted in political life.
That is just another thing that's been debased.
Incidentally, the stronger cases or the more important, I will say, the gets fairer cases,
January 6th, the classified documents.
It's not like those of us who believe in the rule of law wanted the grad case to come first.
We didn't control it.
It's a federal system.
Biden didn't interfere. But why aren't those other cases up there? Because Trump and Trump-friendly
judges, but leave aside even the judges, Trump himself has tried to delay those cases as much
as possible. That's not like a theoretical statement or a fancy argument about how,
if you look in the details of his pleadings, he's cleverly moving off. He literally has asked
that these cases be
put off time and time again, whether it's the Supreme Court with the January 6th case or with
Canada. And that's what he's actually arguing. Now he's entitled to argue that as a legal matter.
He can say, this one isn't ripe yet, or I need more time for this, or this has to be adjudicated
before we can do that. But he is the one who's responsible for us not dealing with the quote,
more serious cases, not the anti-Trump forces, which, of course, the Wall Street Journal and all these Trump enablers and apologists. And can I say, incidentally, they are worse than ever, the Wall Street Journal. We have not spent enough time criticizing the Wall Street Journal editorial page, even though you and I are slightly obsessed with this and do criticize them some. And sophistry and dishonesty and just apology for terrible things that they're peddling is really extraordinary and doing real damage.
Anyway, but it's Trump who wants us not to be able to judge his behavior in the, quote, more important cases.
I'm going to be a crazy person.
Everybody just has to deal with this podcast over the next three months.
Just speaking to everybody like idiots because I want everyone to be able to have this language with them because you know sometimes it's just hard to navigate you know the farrago of bullshit that
these guys put out about you know what is happening you know with the justice bar and
how Trump's being targeted how it's so unfair and even like Susan Collins is like convinced by this
if Joe Biden was masterminding this if the never Trump forces were masterminding this
we wouldn't have picked the Brad case to go
first. You know what I mean? If Joe Biden was the puppeteer behind the curtain, the Jack Smith case
in DC would be the one with Judge Chuck in. But this has gotten delayed thanks to Trump's buddies
on the Supreme Court and other interference. To the Wall Street Journal thing, if you aren't
reading JVL's newsletter, the triad, you really should go to thebillwork. if you aren't reading jvl's newsletter the triad you really
should go to thebore.com and sign up here was peggy noonan last week she wrote this the tragedy
of this campaign is that one of two old men neither of them great neither of them distinguished in
terms of character or intellect who are in each way an embarrassment and whom two-thirds of voters
do not want as presidential candidates will be chosen in this crucial historic moment in which the stakes could not be higher then she goes on when was the last time you saw anyone try
to address the other side with respect and understanding this is like you do feel like
you're in an insane asylum right where you're like what is the comparison here exactly between
trump and biden on these points and the journal editorial itself what is the comparison here exactly between Trump and Biden on these points?
And the journal editorial itself, that is the editorials on the editorial page, not one of their regular writers like Peggy Newton.
I think this was on Thursday or Friday.
Bob Kagan called it to my attention.
It was like, I can't really read it anymore.
It just gets me too annoyed.
The journal editorial said with a straight face, Mr. Bragg might have opened a new destabilizing era of American politics,
and no one can say how it will end. Really? Alvin Bragg opened a destabilizing era of American
politics? Didn't some stuff happen before Alvin Bragg decided to bring this case in 2023 that
was kind of destabilizing? That's the editorial page. That's not one columnist. That's presumably
goes through some process where they look at each other's work and so forth i mean how pathetic is that take some
accountability you know criticize joe biden criticize alvin bragg all you want but like
this notion that it is like just broad attempt to wave hands and muddy the waters and be like boy
you know look at how the democrats have been breaking the norms too did you see the politico
story last week about the alito thing, about how Joe Biden hadn't
weighed in on Alito and how progressive groups were mad at him for not attacking Alito harder?
This is the position that Joe Biden is at, right?
He can do what all of these folks at the Wall Street Journal Ed Board claim that they want
him to do, you know, and rise above it, not engage in petty partisan bickering.
And they give him no credit.
There was no one editorial on the Wall Street Journal page.
It's like, good on Joe Biden for not going down in the gutter on these San Alito attacks.
So he gets no credit for it when he rises above.
And then he gets attacked by us, like the left, for not being more aggressive.
It exposes how bad faith these attacks are from them.
But like, there's nothing you can do to get
credit. They only just look for opportunities to try to smear him to make it seem like he's the
same as Trump. Incidentally, I think I wrote this last week in one of the morning shots that
he would be entitled, in my view, not to go down to the gutter or anything, but to make a point
about the kind of jurisprudence that Thomas and Alito believe in, that it produced Dobbs,
along with the Trump nominees, those two plus the Trump nominees to the court, and that it's going to produce other
things in the next four years if Trump gets another four years to appoint maybe Supreme
Court justices and certainly federal court judges. That is a totally legitimate argument for
candidate Joe Biden to make and for President Joe Biden to make about the future of the country.
Maybe you shouldn't say Alito and Thomas by name. You should just say the kinds of justices Donald Trump likes and whom he will appoint. But it's perfectly
legit. And the moment he does that, the Wall Street Journal editorial page and every high-toned
conservative columnist and anti-anti-Trump type and Ross Douthat will all be pearl-clutching about
how, oh, this is terrible. He says he's the institutionalist, but how now he's criticizing Supreme Court justices. But if he does, to his credit, he's done a little,
but not as much as he could have, incidentally, make a big issue of Dobbs. But the way to do that,
honestly, is a forward looking, that's already happened, Dobbs, and states are doing what
they're doing, is a forward looking argument about contraception, about all the implications
of things that Thomas and Alito have said they care about. And I worry a little that Biden is holding back from making that criticism, because he's worried that he will look
like he's politicizing stuff, but it's totally unfair criticism. He's very much entitled to
raise the issue of what kinds of court appointments is the next president going to make?
Speaking of things he could raise, I'm just throwing this out there. I agree with you,
your high-minded points, but, you know, could they not do a 15 second TikTok video where Joe Biden's raising
the flag right side up? Unlike the insurrectionist court justices, unlike my opponent's son,
unlike the Heritage Foundation, I still love America and think that the flag should be raised
in the proper manner. This is great minds working alike was in the morning shots this morning.
I say something like, we shouldn't Biden just stroll out of the White House today and gesture to the flag and say, you know what, it's a wonderful thing to, I'm so proud to be in this
White House and to represent the American public. I'm so proud that we fly the flag every day.
And he doesn't even have to say right side up, though he could say those words if he wanted to
really dig it in a little more. But yes, I agree that they do bend over too much backwards in my opinion garland never says anything obviously
biden has a real sense of restraint about it and they don't have many surrogates either who are
very much you know who are more than just random not to insult them but you know members of congress
or whatever so there's no one who kind of has the weight to get a lot of coverage if he says a
version of what what i just said or what you just said yeah i think the upside down flag is really appalling and you maybe have discussed this already
five times on the podcast i don't know but um i went to the little league games on saturday and
there was the flag flying i thought you know what america's a great country and it's nice they have
a flag and it's nice these kids are playing many in my area it's maybe 60 percent biden 40 percent
trump but plenty of the parents and coaches and umpires on these teams are not Biden supporters necessarily.
A lot of them are Republicans, and some of them are Trump supporters.
And you know what?
They're playing Little League, and it's a great country.
And it's not a country where the flag should be flown upside down because we're in horrible distress because Trump was convicted by a jury of his peers after a five-week court trial.
Anyway.
Exactly.
This is the thing.
People should do political protest all they want.
But these people are denigrating America and turning the flag upside down over a total lie.
Here's some of the right wing.
We did a little bit of this with Phil Kowski on Friday, but here's some more since then.
The Montana Republican Senate candidate, Sheehy, is out with a new ad today that says Donald
Trump is suffering,
quote, state-sponsored political persecution led by Joe Biden. That's just a lie. TV stations
shouldn't air that. That's just a lie. Tim Scott was saying Joe Biden's two-tiered injustice system,
injustice system. He's weaponizing the justice system against his opponent. That's a lie.
Ten Republicans now, since we last spoke in the Senate, have said that they're
unwilling to pass anything else this year besides national security related stuff. So that's
appointments. It's approving people to jobs, administration. It's any bipartisan legislation.
It's things like the farm bill. They're working on a farm bill right now. I guess we're not going
to do the farm bill because Valvin Bragg based mike lee is leading that effort i guess they think this is a political winner for him again i think this can be used against
them do people really want this like they want the whole government to stop working because
because of a jury verdict in new york just from a conventional political analysis point of view i
think everyone has been saying kind of correctly that if this election is about biden's job
approval biden's in deep trouble because it because he's underwater as the incumbent president.
If the election is about Trump's favorability, he's in some considerable trouble because
he has always been unfavorable, had a majority viewing him unfavorably, and that remains
the case.
Doesn't all this hoopla make it more about Trump than Biden?
Again, from a very practical but legitimate political point of view, not low road, just kind of political thinking. Don't we want three weeks here of
discussion of the trial and of the Trump world's reaction to the trial, which does bring out,
we discussed this a little recently, I think, which does bring out the extremism, I think,
of MAGA. It's not just, you know, that there's a whole movement here, which is just willing to say
at the drop of a hat, the justice system is illegitimate.
Everything is corrupt.
The country is in horrible shape.
Let's fly the flag upside down.
That is not where people are.
And so I think this is the right thing to say, to argue, the right argument to have,
but also a politically wise argument to have.
Yeah, and unwise for them.
And I do think putting some meat on the bones of like you know
in dc the smart set is like well it's an auctioneer that people aren't going to do anything
anyway this is all for show who cares about the mike lee thing this is where your congressional
surrogates can work you know this is where chris murphy's and brian schatz's and you know the folks
that have social jasmine crockett who's on last week can't go out and say no actually there's
stuff we could do this year like you know a this immigration bill that donald trump killed um there
are things we could do to make the border better we are working on the farm bill right now that is
important for working class people who need their snap benefits for farmers that need to know what
the new rules are going to be going forward so like there are things we could do we're going to
need to appoint people to you know know, various positions at the government
that do have real jobs, real responsibilities.
And like these guys say no, because they're having a temper tantrum.
Like, I think that there's a way to kind of take the middle ground there and educate people
about like the real ramifications of the crazy.
Donald Trump was on Fox and Friends.
Did you suffer through that?
Have you seen any of that?
No, but I saw little clips of it, you know.
You watch these shows, Tim, so I don't have to.
That's my view.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
I do have to say, I was flying home from New York, and Delta, this is a free ad for Delta.
They do a nice job.
You know, you've got the live TV.
If you're a SkyMiles member, they give you free internet.
They're not nickel and diamond yet like these other airlines. So I was just flipping through all those Sunday shows and just
really reveling in watching all these guys squirm. Anyway, here is Donald Trump's plan for the
military in the next term. Are you going to fire those generals, the woke generals at the top?
Because people have been talking about it. Yes, I would get rid of them. Yeah. But see,
now I know them. I didn't know them before. I know i came in what do i know i was a new york real estate
person but no i'd fire them i would fire them you can't have woke military joe biden's off to france
on thursday to commemorate the 80th anniversary of d-day donald trump's uh planning on firing the
generals in the military because he thinks they're too woke i don't i don't know he thinks that they
care too much about black people or something. I don't exactly know what the
substantive criticism is there. What say you on that split screen?
I mean, again, the wise people in DC say foreign policy doesn't matter. I still think at the end
of the day, Commander in Chief, if Biden looks, which he will, I think sober and serious and
behaves appropriately in France, and Trump is saying these things. On the other
hand, Biden is going to stay
high road when he's abroad, as he should. There should be
surrogates, and that would be, again, they could
do two things at once. They can do Trump's conviction,
but they can also have people who've
served in senior positions, including in Republican
administrations, out on TV
saying, this is dangerous, what Trump is
saying. It undercuts us.
I mean, at home obviously to start
firing generals for political reasons also countries abroad people abroad will look at this
and say this is a serious country and so forth so yeah i i think it should be i i suggested on
i think on twitter that biden also he's most of what's happening is in normandy and then he has
i think a state visit he presumably has a dinner with Macron and all this, but he should think about going, I think it's 50 miles from Paris, to the cemetery that Trump didn't go to
when it was drizzling or maybe raining. I don't remember, in 2018, where he made his comments to
John Kelly about suckers and losers, the cemetery that's right near Belleau Wood where Marines
fought in 1918. He could just say, I'm just going to pay my respects. You know, we did Normandy for World War II.
I also want to pay respects to the Americans who fought in World War I.
Never mention Trump, obviously.
It would be kind of a nice, maybe it's a little too troll-y,
but I don't know.
I just feel like it's apparently a very beautiful cemetery, too.
I've not been, so, you know.
Maybe.
I think that, at minimum, just an explicit case about this commitment to our allies commitment to democratic
principles commitment to the things that you know those who died at normandy fought for you know
i was watching your uh conversation with james carville carville makes kind of an aside point
because he's known to rapid fire points but one of them was kind of an aside and i don't know if
you guys ever go back around to it but if you look at the numbers one of the groups that biden is doing better with than expected
is older voters particularly older white voters i remember this for 2016 too that that group was
kind of the slowest to come along with trump and And I do think that there really is, you know, a,
at least maybe only on the margins, but it's somewhat like a recognition for people that
either, you know, as we saw some veterans that are traveling over there, they're still alive,
or their family, their younger siblings, their kids, a lot of them have kids when they're 18.
So their kids are pretty old. So they're kids that look at Trump, and the echo
is just a little too loud for them to the bad times, to the Mussolini's. I don't know. Am I
overthinking that, do you think? No, you're totally correct. And again, I think the smart,
you know, is how many voters is going to move? Well, I don't know, 1%, 2%, 3%. Plus, it's the
right thing to do, obviously. It was very moving. I thought there was a little of the video of the
100-year-old, really, soldiers landing at Charles de Gaulle Airport and being applauded by, I guess, some
expat Americans, but I guess mostly French men and women waving American flags, right-side-up
American flags, to thank these people, what, 80 years later. It's kind of amazing, isn't it?
I mean, for D-Day. It wouldn't be bad for President Biden to quote President Reagan's very famous remarks, obviously, on the 40th anniversary.
He doesn't have to say anything about I'm being bipartisan here, but it would be a nice,
put him in the tradition of Reagan, so to speak. And there are people, there are still some Reagan
Republicans, some of them, unfortunately, a little bit tempted to go to Trump. So I don't know. I
think this trip could be a plus for Biden. And I mean, obviously, it's important for the country in all kinds of ways in terms of NATO and
what he says abroad and hopefully think for a president to do. But particularly because
the Trump trip to France that got the most attention was where he refused to go
to a cemetery with American Marines in that case.
It really was a moving video of the vets. We'll put it in the show notes if anybody didn't see
it over the weekend. All right, one more clip from Donald's appearance on Fox and Friends. Maybe the only
interesting question that the trio of Fox hosts asked him was whether the American people are
ready for the reality of what the biggest deportation in history would look like. Let's
hear what Donald Trump said about that. Do you think the public will have the biggest deportation in history would look like. Let's hear what Donald Trump said about that.
Do you think the public will have the appetite, the stomach,
for watching deportations on their television screens?
Well, that question is so great and so tough.
Because, you know, the radical left is going to start saying,
oh, look, so you'll get rid of 10 really bad ones.
And one, you know, beautiful mother who they think is guilty
of something and maybe she is, maybe, and it'll become a story or a family that's a
good family and came in wrong and, you know, they're going to show it.
Then it's going to always be tough.
It's not going to be easy.
And we have to use a lot of good judgment.
But the way you get rid of them is the local police. You know, the local police know these people by their first name, their middle name, and their last name.
The local police are great. They're just not allowed to do their job.
They're afraid of losing their pension. They're afraid of losing their wife or husband.
They're going to lose their house. They're losing everything.
And one of the things I'm doing is giving local police immunity from prosecution.
Okay.
A lot to unpack there, Bill.
But the one that really jumps out to me is Trump's little aside.
Maybe she's guilty of something.
Maybe she isn't.
And here he is.
The whole interview, the whole discussion is about how the justice system is so unfair to him.
Even though a jury of his peers convicted him unanimously.
Now, here he is saying, if I get back in by presidential dick tot, I'm just going to start
sending people on buses out of the country. Maybe they're guilty of something, maybe they aren't,
but whatever, it's worth it because we'll get the 10 real bad guys.
That cognitive dissonance didn't seem to sink in with anybody on set.
No. Weren't too struck also by there
is a way in which trump is smarter than a lot of his supporters he is a salesman for 40 50 years
he's a fraudster and a grifter and all that but he sort of knows what plays and what doesn't and
he has the sense i think you could tell from that right that there's some downside to all this macho
yes you know insane nativism and deporting a bunch of dreamers
who've been here 15 years and a mother with three kids who were working hard and so forth
and haven't committed a crime, except for came here, which was a crime exactly, but
they're undocumented.
And they've been trying to get documented and working hard and paying taxes.
I think Trump has, again, Trump sort of has more of a sense on this issue as on others
like abortion, that public opinion isn't quite where he is or quite where his, where MAGA is.
One point, Carver always makes so many interesting points in passing on these conversations.
In a way, the main theme is honestly.
We know what James's main opinion is about this campaign.
Yeah.
And they're not that different from a lot of other people's main opinions.
There are only so many themes to go around.
But the real little insights that he has at times are very good.
I think the one about Trump at the end of the day, 45% of the country supports him.
Hopefully you can knock that down a little. But MAGA really isn't supported by 45% of the country.
And polling, for whatever it's worth, it's got like 25% support. And it's counterintuitive to
people who've been fighting Trump maybe for seven or eight years to say this. But being a little
less Trump-focused, a little more MAGA-focused,
a little more extremism-focused might be wise for the Democrats. But I think, again,
tied back with what we've been talking about, the reaction to the verdict in some sense that the Trump verdict is as damaging, could be as damaging as the Trump verdict itself, right? I
mean, the kind of craziness, the flag stuff, the kind of anti-american stuff that maga is into and i think same here
yeah i agree it's kind of why i think he's been so distracted by the trials it's kind of why i'm
surprised that trump and lasavita and them didn't crack down more on project 2025 because he is
smart like he doesn't want to carry all that baggage around his neck of every specific policy
item that like the some random far right
weirdo and the bowels of the heritage foundation thing so that what stephen miller's like what's
happened in his warped mind like donald trump doesn't want to have to carry all that as part
of his actual platform and he has had to now and when he is actually talking extemporaneously he
tries to wiggle out of that stuff as much as possible. I will say the one other substantive thing, which he says repeatedly, which I think that in his mind, he thinks is just, oh, I'm just supporting the cops.
Not the Capitol Police or the FBI, but the good cops, the cops he likes.
In practice, again, it speaks like what what his proposal is when just put directly instead of in his like roundabout Queens way of talking is, OK, we're going to give the green light to deport as many people as possible.
I'm going to empower local police jurisdictions to do that.
And then we're going to give them immunity.
So if they do anything that's improper, they don't got to worry about that.
They're going to worry about all the paperwork.
They can rough people up.
They can take people.
They can you know, they can fudge around the edges and and
you know in certain jurisdictions won't be in all jurisdictions but in certain jurisdictions
you know like where they have crazy sheriffs like in arizona and stuff we're going to give
these guys carte blanche like that's very ominous yeah totally and he wants i think immunity for
police and law enforcement period not just on immigration issues.
So, I mean, that really is crazy.
I mean, really, we want police forces.
No one can be disciplined for anything they do when they're wearing the uniform of a law enforcement official.
That's not healthy.
They already have too much immunity. We had a good piece on this at the Bulwark about a week ago, the quote, qualified immunity, which is pretty close to absolute already, frankly, and allows for an awful lot of bad police behavior. But that's always a difficult line to exactly
where to put that. But certainly the absolute immunity is a terrible idea. Trump really has a
1989 New York mentality about this, right? You know, you can't go wrong being on the side of
the cops against the criminals. And that was certainly true for Rudy Giuliani in 1993. And
it's been true in New York politics for a while and a lot of politics for a while.
What happens, though, when the cops are the criminals or when the candidate is the criminal?
And it's, again, it's one thing to be sort of to react against excessive left wing, you know, criticism and micromanagement of cops or whatever the semi-legitimate cases were in the 80s and 90s.
That's, again, the immunity issue.
Maybe, again, I'm sure Biden's advisers are nervous about taking that on because you don't want to appear pro-criminal and
anti-cop, and Biden's always been actually pretty pro-police in a legitimate way. But I think
precisely because he has been pro-police, saying this is really a recipe for authoritarianism.
And this is literally saying, do whatever you want, and the president's going to make sure you
pay no price if you beat up some innocent person, kill him, whatever, right?
Do all kinds of other things as a law enforcement officer. I don't know whether this is a wise one
to highlight or not, but as an actual governing matter, it's very scary. You have a guy who's
willing to embolden vigilante groups to act on his behalf. You have a guy who's willing to give
every law enforcement officer in America, there are almost a million, I think, apparently absolute
immunity. You have a guy who's willing to pardon people who commit crimes. We know the J6 hostages. You put all that
together, that's authoritarianism. All right. Final topic. I saved this one for the end. Dessert.
Our friend Dean Phillips says this. Donald Trump is a serial liar, cheater, and philanderer,
a six-time declarer of corporate bankruptcy, instigator of insurrection and a convicted felon who thrives on portraying himself as a victim that's good dean
i like that next sentence though at kathy hokal should pardon him for the good of the country
i don't know i'm not like this is absurd where i fall on this is if i thought that we were dealing with a counter party in a democracy where the people
on the other side would acknowledge and give credit for that type of action then i would maybe
think that it'd be worth listening to but i don't i don't know that that's true i think that then
the republicans and trump would just say this shows that it was politicized from the start
they're pardoning me because they know right so to So, to me, I just don't think there's any argument for it.
But sometimes you're contrarian, Bill. So, I thought maybe you and Dean might agree on this
one. No, not on this. If two years from now, there's a jail sentence and Trump's been defeated
and is sort of retired and Kathy Hochul wants to commute the sentence to good behavior or,
you know, whatever, wearing an ankle bracelet at Mar-a-Lago, I could live with that.
But not now.
And what about these other pending cases?
Again, these guys all want to be kind of clever, contrary.
Does Dean Phillips believe that all the other cases should just be dropped?
The January 6th case, the classified documents case,
which is an absolute clear-cut case of his misbehavior, illegal behavior,
breaking the law, and then trying to cover up breaking the
law and getting others incriminated in that. I don't know. So no, I think at this point,
there are times when, you know, Ford Nixon kind of thing. Yes. If Trump loses, retires from politics,
says he's never going to do it, you know, dissolves MAGA as it were, you know, and goes into some
grumpy, you know, golf playing retirement. could there be a case for not letting every prosecution go forward
and not letting jail terms go forward?
Yes, but we're not anywhere near there.
Indeed, we're not.
We're so not near there.
I had this dark thought over the weekend.
I was like, even if we beat Trump,
then the 2028 Republican primary campaign
will still be totally run on whether you'll give blanket
immunity and pardon to Trump.
Like that will be an anti, you know, willingness to pardon Trump if you, you know, beat whatever,
whoever the Democrat comes out to be.
So like we have a minimum of, where are we?
2024.
We have a minimum of like four and a half years left of Trump pardon discussions.
No matter what happens
is november anyway uh unless he dies bill crystal thank you it's been too long good to be back if
you want more bill crystal we'll put his conversation with james carville for agent
cajun in the show notes it was 51 minutes i don't know if it was an uplifting 51 minutes but uh you
know teach their own uh you might enjoy it we'll see you back here next Monday. Thanks so much, Bill. Thanks, Tim.
Alright, we will be back tomorrow.
We got a double header, so it's going to be a good one.
Check you all in. Peace.
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...... For 120s and a small silver speed
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And diet Coca-Cola
And only cigarettes I wonder why we're missing the boats
And nobody gives a fuck
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the bull orc podcast is produced by katie cooper with audio Die if I could come back now