The Bulwark Podcast - George Conway: Crazy in a Bad Way
Episode Date: August 2, 2024Donald Trump checks all the boxes of a person with narcissistic personality disorder, but the mainstream press goes out of its way not to cover his apparent pathologies—and ends up normalizing them.... George Conway wants to change the media narrative to stop the guy who only cares about himself from getting back in the Oval Office. Conway joins Tim Miller for the weekend pod. show notes: George's Anti-Psychopath PAC Rolling Stone piece by Alex Morris that George references Post story on whether Trump took a $10 million payout from Egypt Tim's playlist
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Hello and welcome to the Bullard Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. I'm excited to be here today with a contributor to The Atlantic, board president of the Society for the Rule of Law,
co-host of a sister podcast
here, George Conway Explains It All to Sarah Longwell, and now the president of a new political
action committee, Anti-Psychopath Pack. It's the man, the myth, the legend, George Conway himself.
How you doing, man?
Good. How you doing, Tim?
I'm doing wonderful. Thank you for doing this. Before we get down to business, I do have to
ask you about the most important family member. You know, we stand Claudia here at the Bulwark podcast, and I'm hoping that she can just take over our
TikTok feed. And I'm just wondering if you think that's possible, how she's doing just quick update.
She would charge you exorbitant fees. What's her rate? She's a capitalist through and through.
I'm a capitalist. That's fine. She'll just basically say,
no, you tell me how much you're willing to pay and then she'll just say more.
And then more and more.
I mean that's the technique she does
with fathers. Okay.
Well that's a sign of good parenting probably.
Yeah. I'm not so sure about that.
Yeah you know kind of self-starter.
No she was born with the
self-starter in her.
Here's a story. You can cut it out if you don't like it.
Please tell us one story about Claudia. We can do that. She was two and a half and Kellyanne
and I took her to the Rye Playland. I don't know if you know the Rye Playland. It's a public
amusement park in Westchester County. She and her twin brother, George, were with us and they were
our only kids at the time. And we sat down at one o'clock to have McDonald's at the concession there.
And all of a sudden, George starts screaming.
Claudia, hit me.
Claudia, hit me.
And so I go, George, are you okay?
Claudia, hit me.
And I say to Claudia, Claudia, did you hit George?
And she looks up at me with this look.
Not yet.
Two and a half.
Okay. It was all there we it was all the programming was all there to begin with okay well we'll send her our love big big fans here um all right you've got
some new ads out with your new group this uh anti-psychopath pack and i want to i want to
play those for people and talk about the strategy and what you're doing but for folks who haven't
kind of heard your your bit on this i sort of want to just go back to the real origin story
about kind of identifying oranges, the oranges story of identifying the malignant narcissism
traits, because it just if you just think about him and what he's going to do purely within the
context of what would a malignant narcissist do, it opens up a lot of doors for people. And so
so just talk about that part first,
then we'll get into the pack. Well, it was sort of a personal journey for me. I mean,
I didn't know anything about this. I really, you know, I took a high school course in psychology.
I don't consider myself to be an expert in any way, except now I kind of know a lot about a
couple of different things. And the psychologists tell me and psychiatrists tell me, you explain it
better than we do. It started with trying to figure out what the fuck was wrong with Donald Trump.
And I thought going into 2016, like, okay, he's not my first choice.
He's pretty much my last choice.
And he'll have to learn.
There'll be cringeworthy moments.
But deep down, he wants to do the right thing by the country because that's what we all want.
And he'll have people around him who are experts in things.
And he'll have a lot of help.
And he'll get the hang of it because, you know, obviously, he's a successful guy.
I might have to object to obviously on there, but you can continue.
But no, that was, look, it was delusional.
It was self-delusional on my part.
Got it.
It was like, it was wishful thinkingful thinking because what else do we got?
Yeah, sure.
Fair enough.
And my wife was running the campaign.
So, I mean, I wanted it to all work.
Rationalization is very powerful.
Well, yeah, some people are still doing it eight years later.
So, he becomes president.
And I'm wondering, like, what the fuck is his problem?
Why does he keep saying stupid things? Why does he do this stupid stuff? I was lined up to be the
head of the civil division in the US Department of Justice, which is the biggest law firm in the
world. And I turned it down because I decided that this guy is just running a shit show,
and it's always going to be a shit show. but I couldn't quite figure out what was his problem. There was something wrong with him. And long story short, at some point, I read an article in Rolling Stone, of all places, and it was written by a great writer named Alexa Morris, who basically says, does Donald Trump, the title of the article was, does Donald Trump Have Narcissistic Personality Disorder or
something like that? Does it explain him? And I read this article and they went through,
there's this thing called the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders that's
put out by the American Psychiatric Association. And we're on the fifth edition of it. And she
went through the criteria for this disorder, this personality
disorder called narcissistic personality disorder. And you go through all nine diagnostic criteria,
and I think only like five or six of them, I forget how many, are required in order to have
a diagnosis. And he's like, checks every box. And, you know, pathological narcissists, they don't
care about anybody else. They don't care about anybody else they don't believe
in anybody else they they're only in it for themselves they have no empathy i mean he
checked every single box and i realized okay this is his problem and then i started reading more and
the people who had figured this all out mostly and who had had the best handle on it in 2016 early on were the historians because the
historians could tell you the kinds of personalities that led countries to ruin in the past and the
psychiatrists and psychologists who basically knew this character they both knew this character type
because they see them either in their practices or they see them in the history books also the
third category people that just know this fucking guy okay yeah a couple some of us just know this
fucking guy in our lives and maybe i didn't have i didn't have to know mussolini's characteristic
traits or psychology it's just a sense you know the success yeah no this like and then but it's
nice to put some details around or you know some yeah no i mean the other the other people actually
who did were people who are who have been you, like spouses who have been abused by narcissistic spouses.
They figured that out really fast.
Yeah, there you go.
Yeah.
If you had a narcissist in your life, you can figure it out.
But anyway, so I started reading up more about it.
And I read what all the shrinks said.
And I read about sociopathy, the antisocial personality part of the dsm and he was he's a
sociopath also he's a malignant all of these things he is and once you understand that
it explains everything about him he's a sociopath he has no no honesty no ability to he doesn't care
about anybody else he has no remorse he has no conscience no nothing he's a pathological liar
he checks all those boxes as
well and you only need three out of the however many criteria there he checks all of he is a
quintessential narcissistic sociopath and with that basically you you understand where everything
about him you understand his racism you understand his misogyny you understand his authoritarianism
you understand his criminality you understand his his erny. You understand his authoritarianism. You understand his criminality. You understand his erraticness.
You understand everything about him once you understand his personality type.
And that's the short version of the long story.
I got so into reading about this once I kind of understood it and realized, okay, now I
understand Donald Trump, that I wrote an 11,000 word article.
It was originally like 17,000 words for the Atlantic.
I made it through about 3,200 words.
And I was like, I got it, George.
I got it, I got it.
If there's anything good in that last like third,
you know, let me know.
There's some good stuff.
No, I basically made the point that
if somebody with these personality traits
can't be president,
because the presidency is, it is what lawyers call a fiduciary position. Fiduciaries, we think of people with trust
accounts and who are managing money for somebody else like their grandmother or whatever.
But the biggest fiduciary position in the world is that of president of the United States because
you are in charge with protecting the Constitution and laws, and you got the
button.
Okay?
You've got a lot of stuff going on there, and we have to be able to trust that person
to do what's in our best interest and not his best interest, even though sometimes those
might align because we will be nice to somebody who does the right thing by us as a people,
and historians will do that. And that's how I
thought it normally worked for him. It's all about him, his generals. He thinks he can make the law
up and applies only to people he doesn't like and not him. Everything, everything about him can be
explained through the narcissistic sociopathy. Reporters have to be nice to him. Can't ask him
a mean question. Mean question for me. Oh, you were asking me these questions and all they did was ask him things about
things he actually said.
Oh, that's mean.
You know, so I've realized that this guy is the last person you'd ever want to have as
president.
I came to that, I'm sure a lot later than you did, but I came to it by pretty, pretty
clearly by 2018 and 2019.
And I've been sort of banging that drum ever since.
And I think one of the problems that we have is that Trump is graded on this unique curve.
I mean, he has such an advantage over other political figures that he,
the perfect example was Biden in the weeks after the debate. Biden slurred words and he was slow and
he said some things that didn't quite make complete sense, but nothing like Trump. Trump is much worse.
He slurs his words all the time. He's completely incoherent. He just does it at a higher volume.
And yet somehow there was this double standard being applied where, oh, Joe Biden is old. It was
like, well, what about this 78-year-old guy who's talking about Hannibal Lecter
and slurring, we'd say, about Revolutionary War airports?
Where have you been about this guy?
And the answer is, he's so bizarre, he's so weird,
that they've accepted all this weirdness from him.
And the most important aspect of the weirdness
that they've accepted, that the media
and, frankly, large segments of the American public
have accepted, is that he's psycho. He is psychologically unwell. He is psychologically unfit. And the fact
is that the press will not talk about it for the most part. In fact, there's a book that I point
to in our launch video, written by Marty Baron, who was the executive editor of the Washington
Post for many years. And he basically said that he made a conscious decision not to have his
reporters write about Trump's obviously deranged mental condition because he didn't feel it was appropriate
for the press to do that. Meanwhile, they can speculate all they want about whether President
Biden has dementia, that we can talk all we want about a singer gets laryngitis, a football player
breaks his leg, and we can talk
about all that, but we can't talk about whether the guy with his finger on the button is a crackpot.
That's the double standard that has arisen over the years. And the fact that we don't treat his,
you know, Trump's obvious pathologies as pathologies means that we normalize it.
We have normalized this.
And what we're trying to do is to point out,
it's like, this isn't just weird.
This is crazy in a bad way.
It may be funny sometimes.
It's clinical.
It's clinical.
He is pathological, right?
And I think one of the advantages that Trump has had
is that people think he's such a buffoon
that he couldn't be that malicious.
It's like, yeah, he is a buffoon for a lot of the same reasons why he's very malicious right okay and that doesn't
make him not dangerous okay and so anyway that's the whole spiel and that's the whole shtick and
that's the reason why i formed psychopac andPAC, the object is to explain his pathologies, to explain why his pathologies
are dangerous and why they matter, to get the press finally to talk about it, and to
trigger him into displaying those tendencies.
Kudos to Alex Morris, by the way, who I love.
She's great.
Who wrote that first article.
I want to go find it and put it in the show notes and get her on the podcast sometime
soon.
She's a really good journalist over at Rolling Stone.
Okay, so the PAC, I think there's another thing.
Even when it jumped out, you have to forgive me, George,
because you're a troll.
You know, you like trolling.
We like trolling.
I say that as a compliment.
We are the trolls of America.
Yeah, so it pops up on my feed.
And I'm like, oh, this is fun.
George is doing this fun thing to kind of trigger him online.
And, you know, then I talked to our friend Sarah and others.
I was like, oh, wait, no, no, no. you're doing a real thing here actually this is a troll and a
real thing real advertising real money behind it you're advertising in palm beach to get inside
trump's head but now also in the swing states it's up in atlanta starting this weekend around
his event so let's just play one of the videos so so folks can take a listen here's the most
recent ad that's going to be up this weekend. I want anybody running for president to take an aptitude test, to take a cognitive test.
I think it's a great idea. We agree because you're insane. She was Indian all the way. And then all
of a sudden she made a turn and she went, she became a black person. What does it mean to turn
black? She failed her law exam.
She didn't pass her law exams.
Mr. President.
I'm saying she wouldn't pass, just to be clear.
I'm just giving you the facts.
He did crap the bed today.
The only question is whether he's gonna roll around in it
or get up and change his sheets.
Chuck Schumer has become a Palestinian.
He's become a proud member of Hamas.
He did crap the bed today.
They couldn't get their equipment working or something.
They have bad equipment.
And the mics are really in lousy shape that happen to be taking black jobs.
You had the best.
What exactly is a black job, sir?
A black job is anybody that has a job.
It goes on.
It does go on.
So talk to us about the thinking behind that.
Why do all the doing these ads? Because we want to point out the weirdness and the abnormality,
and then we want to give people a framework in which to understand it. And these particular ads,
but by airing them where he can see them, leads him to respond. He trashed us the other day
on Truth Social. And then at his rally the other night, he started talking about cognitive decline, which was the topic of the ad that he was mad about, and about Hannibal Lecter being a psycho.
And of course, you know, our ad was Psycho Pack ad.
That's a good thing.
Whenever he's talking about cognitive decline, that feels like a winner for those of us who want him to lose.
Of course.
And that's part of the object is the more you bait him with things.
Look, narcissists are insecure.
They are the most insecure people in the world.
That's why they are narcissists.
They have to pretend they put up this false bravado and false, I'm a stable genius.
I am the most, I know everything. I am the smartest and the most
powerful and the greatest. And that is overcompensation on a massive scale for deep
insecurity for this kid who was just, when he was a little kid, his father used to berate him for
being incompetent, which he is. And so deep down, he bears those scars and he protects himself by putting out
this image of invincibility. And when we show these ads, they get right under his skin.
And he starts talking. He wants to be defensive. He wants to explain that he's a stable genius,
that he can figure out what an elephant is on this senility test. And he gets crazier.
And we're just showing you,
it's like, you don't want anybody this crazy and this insecure in a position of power over
your life. So, that's what we're trying to do. We're trying to provoke him to show him that.
We're trying to explain to people what his problem is. And we're going to have fun doing it because,
you know, mockery, I think, is the best thing that you can do to drive a narcissistic sociopath
crazy. Yeah. And you can see it, I think, already.
And I think maybe it ties a little bit to what's in the ads, a little bit to Kamala getting all this attention, a little bit to the next topic I want to get into, which is potential legal. he lashes out in these situations and why it's important to provoke him so that people that
aren't following this stuff obsessively get reminded of the worst elements of his narcissism.
Absolutely. And it's just weird. And that's the thing. We don't necessarily have to educate
everybody into the myriad elements of the diagnostic criteria of cluster B personality disorders in
the DSM, we just kind of point out, this is weird. Use your instincts. This is weird.
We just want to get the discussion, the public discussion into this territory. So the people
start talking around the water cooler is like, I don't know about this guy. I've forgotten how crazy he was and hope that just sort of takes off. And I think it dovetails with what the campaign is doing, talking about weird. They can't really go as hard as we can on this because they don't want to offend people. But we can create running space for them by going the whole nine yards and explaining this guy is unwell. Yeah, one more thing. I just
his psychopathy and what I think could be effective and talking about it just to get
through to people. Because somehow, around the January 6 hearings, you know, people really
engaged in this. But I do think there's a category of folks who are like, yeah, January 6 is bad.
Like, just don't kind of think about it that deeply about like what actually was happening the level of sociopathy that you have to have to sit and watch it on tv yeah and like be happy
that these people are like fighting for you and not care about the suffering i thought that
actually the most revealing part of that the national black journalist interview was not the
there she turned black thing which is you knew he was going to play that card but was when they asked him about
how he's supposed to back the blue but all these cops got injured at the capitol and his response
to that was like what about the limestone that got defaced like this is somebody that has a
personality disorder he does not care about the suffering that he caused. He actually enjoyed watching itLago, and then some guy slips and falls and bangs his head, and there's just blood all over the parquet or whatever the fancy flooring he had.
I think that's the Boston Garden, the parquet floor, so I don't know if that's Mar-a-Lago.
Yeah, yeah, parquet floor.
Yeah, yeah.
That's not Mar-a-Lago.
I don't know.
Whatever.
I'm not an interior decorator.
And he was upset.
He later admitted he was upset. He later admitted
he was upset about getting the blood cleaned up and he never called the guy. He says,
I'm just not that kind of person. He didn't care about what happened to the guy who clearly was
stroking out or something on the floor. All he cared about was his floor. And he admits that.
He admits that. And then it's just like after 9-11. Did you ever watch the interview that he admits that and then it's just like after 9-11 did you ever watch the interview that he gave
on 9-11 and they were basically asking him did you see all the destruction and he goes i have
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he's lashing out and what you talked about with sarah over on the other podcast is the legal side
of things and so i just wanted to kind of pick your brain on this i forget if it was in the interview or in the rally unfortunately i've been watching
too much trump lately and so that's turning me into a psychopath yeah that's one of his recent
interviews he kind of betrayed that he's thinking about jail again he just kind of made a stray
comment about how these people are trying to put me in jail and there's just something about it that
kind of hit a the light bulb flickered for me,
that he really, I think, was freaked out about this for a while. And then immunity happened,
and Eileen Cannon happened, and then he's winning against Biden. And all of a sudden,
he's like, oh, great, I've already, I'm clear. And now it feels like that's hanging over him
again a little bit. So talk about what you think the kind of statuses of the Jack Smith stuff given
the Supreme Court ruling. Well, let me just tell you, I mean,
it is not new for him to be concerned about criminal liability. I'm going to tell you a
couple of stories here real fast. One is I flew down with him and Kellyanne and Hope Hicks down to
Washington two days before the inaugural on his plane. We were the only people on there. And what
he wanted to ask me was, should I get rid of Preet Bhar, the US attorney for the Southern District of New York?
I had no idea. Why is he asking me about whether he should get rid of Preet Bhar? But the reason
was he wanted to have his own prosecutor in there because he's afraid of prosecution. I figured that
out years later. The other thing was in 2020, Maggie Haberman was reporting that one of the
reasons why he decided to run for reelection in 2020 was he's afraid of being prosecuted. Okay. In 2024, you mean? No, 2020. One of the reasons why he was
running was because he wanted to keep control of the Justice Department so he wouldn't be
prosecuted. This has been a continual thing. This is about his freedom. He knows he's at grave risk
here. And in terms of the immunity thing, temporarily helps him because it slows things down.
But the case is going to go back to Judge Chutkin in the next day or so, maybe today.
And she can basically go through the record and she can say under the Supreme Court's
test, even though the Supreme Court's test is complicated and messy and stupid in a lot of ways. There's plenty of stuff he did,
particularly with regard to the false elector certificates, that is chargeable. And so he's
not going to be able to get off. I mean, maybe it'll take a few years, but he's not going to
be able to get off on that. And then if you go back to the Mar-a-Lago documents case,
I mean, he's dead to rights there. That's like a penny ante drug
bust. They come in, they go into the crack den and they go into the basement and there's all
the crack making equipment. Well, that's what he did. He had all the documents there and he has no
legal basis to avoid. There's no immunity for that because all the obstruction that he engaged in,
the hiding of the documents, the lying about the documents, he wasn't present at that.
So he's got big problems and he still has the conviction in New York that I don't think is going to be overturned because I don't think, even though there's a statement in the court's
opinion about how evidence of official acts can't be used in any way, even if the charge doesn't
involve official acts, none of this involved official acts because it involved his own
personal funds and who he was directing checks to, A payment of hush money that was paid before the election was
designed to get him elected president and wasn't part of any official duty that he ever had.
So he's got a lot of different problems. I think in the end, if he doesn't get elected president,
and I felt this for a long time, he's likely to spend a good chunk of the rest of his life in jail, if not the rest of his life in jail. And so he knows that. And he deeply is
afraid of that. And that's why you hear him talking about that every so often. It weighs on his mind.
And it adds to the stress on his already belaguer personality.
Just crossing my fingers over here. Every time I hear you say that, George, I just hope you're
right. I've never hoped you were right more.
Just on the Supreme Court thing we were talking about, do you have any thoughts on the proposed
Biden Supreme Court reforms?
I mean, obviously, they're not going to come to pass, but I'm just curious what you think
on the merits of them.
On the merits of them, I mean, look, I'm absolutely for anything that tightens up the ethical
standards.
In terms of what people are calling term limits, but you can't really limit the terms of Supreme Court justices.
It's complicated how they can do it, but they probably can do it.
I've always thought that was a good idea, frankly, because I have always held the opinion for many, many years, and particularly long before Trump, that the Supreme Court is too powerful a body.
And it has sort of accreted a lot of power because for lots of different reasons.
One is Congress has-
Doesn't want to be the decider anymore.
Doesn't want to be the decider.
And also because they sort of got ahead of themselves.
I mean, like Roe v. Wade, I wouldn't have overruled it, but I thought it was wrongly
decided to begin with because the court basically just got into a business that it didn't have
any business getting into and then did it, created basically a statutory framework for all time and answered all sorts of
questions it didn't have to answer. Once even Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote a great article once saying,
you know, they should have just decided the case before them. But these people just think that
they are so important that they have to set down a rule for the ages to quote Justice Gorsuch at
the argument on the immunity case.
And so they decide, they're deciding all sorts of issues for all time that don't need to be decided,
and they're not really behaving like judges, they're behaving like legislators or gods.
They should think of themselves more like glorified traffic court judges and less like
gods. Yeah, somewhere in between. They can do better than traffic court judges, but they really,
you know, they just really have to stick to calling balls and strikes and adjudicating the specific case in front of them instead of trying to figure out, you know, what the perfect world
is going to look like, you know, and decide the next 50 cases instead of just deciding one.
And I think part of that comes with the fact that, you know, you can get on the court at age 45 and be there till 90.
I do think that having some system whereby presidents get to appoint more judges,
a certain number of judges per term, justices, and then you basically have the panel,
the Supreme Court sit in groups of nine, where we have the youngest nine sitting most of the time.
I think there's some kind of
play there that would actually improve the functioning of the Supreme Court and depoliticize
confirmation hearings, which have gotten out of hand for 40 years.
Yeah, I'm glad to hear you say that because I agree with that instinctively, but I'm not a lawyer
and wasn't schooled in the FedSoc ways you so i was like is this just me being a
you know a casual or a lib it's out of control it's been out of control for a long time pete put
this out when he was first running and i just thought the reforms people to judge i just thought
that they're reasonable his point was like we need more consensus choices you know shorter terms
consensus like just figuring out a way to do that and which that i think is much more defensible and makes more sense than sometimes the people
that are like, pack it.
Like we need to rebalance it the other way.
Like the ideological arguments are less compelling.
Right.
That just makes the court into more of a political football than it already is, which is bad.
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A new article this morning. I don't know.
It's pretty long,
so I don't expect us all
to have read all of it today,
but I just think in general
it's important to talk about
a Washington Post piece.
Carol Lennig is on it.
A $10 million cash withdrawal
drove secret probe
into whether Trump took money from Egypt.
I'll just take the nut graph for you here.
They learned through interviews
with the candidate's closest advisors
that they had pleaded with Trump to write a check to his campaign for a final blitz of TV ads.
Trump repeatedly declined until October 28th, roughly five weeks after meeting with Sisi, you know, autocrat in Egypt.
He then announced that he would allow for a $10 million infusion of his own money into the campaign. In the context of the Egypt intelligence, investigators considered the amount of point of interest because they were looking into a withdrawal from a bank in Egypt
of like 9.98 million, which is pretty close to 10 million. Investigations ongoing, Mueller looked
into it. But I want to get your take also, because it reminded me of something that I think has been
very under covered, which was John Bolton during his book tour gave a private speech where he said
that he thought Trump made decisions based on business interests. And he particularly cited covered, which was John Bolton during his book tour, gave a private speech where he said that
he thought Trump made decisions based on business interests. And he particularly cited Turkey,
Saudi, and Egypt as the countries that he was interested in. And he was the fucking
national security advisor. So I don't know, open room for thoughts on any of that.
Well, I mean, there's a really dramatic description in that Washington Post piece about people at an Egyptian bank loading up that cash into bags.
It weighed about 200 pounds, supposedly.
And it consisted of a good chunk of Egypt's foreign reserve in US dollars, reserve currency.
So you have to wonder,
where did that money go? I don't know that we'll ever know. I think there are going to be a lot
of things that we're going to learn about the Trump years over the next many years,
that we're just going to keep learning stuff as the onion gets peeled back. And I mean,
maybe someday we'll get to the bottom of this. It certainly very strange but you know bolton was right i mean trump is a guy who basically didn't know what pearl harbor was right he had to have
remember that john kelly had to say uh pearl harbor that's where the japanese
bombed us so in the surprise attack and that's how world war ii started you know that big war
you see it on tv sometimes there are movies and he had to see it literally had to fucking
explain this to donald trump also john kelly was like his second chief of staff so he's well into
the presidency yeah he's well into the presidency this wasn't during the briefings in 2015 like the
you know if trump shows some special interest in turkey which he probably couldn't find on a marked
map you have to wonder something's going on here. And you got 2 billion
reasons why Jared Kushner was interested in Saudi Arabia. And we're going to be finding stuff out
about this crew for a long time. As a sociopath, he has absolutely no moral compass whatsoever.
If he could take cash, he would. If he can get away with it. The question is, does he think he
can get away with it? And now he's pushing crypto. There's something going on there, right?
He's pushing crypto the last few days.
There is something going on there.
The crypto and the TikTok thing.
Oh, yeah.
All these crypto VCs are on board.
I've said this like three times recently.
I'm like, I want to do an episode on this.
Unfortunately, there's been a lot of politics going on,
so it hasn't been really appropriate for me
to have a side episode about crypto.
But I do want to bring in crypto people
because it's eyebrow-raising
how quickly all of the top crypto people have just glommed on to trump and i
think that i mean the answer is just just basically the trump's like i'll let you do whatever you want
and and i think that maybe there's some side money potentially involved there let's do a little
kamala talk uh not a psychopath you were at a fundraiser uh recently and uh maybe had a brief
interaction i'm just wondering what your thoughts are on on the vice president state of the race and anything that
comes to mind yeah i mean i got into this fundraiser in pittsfield massachusetts on saturday
and she gave a great little stump speech and it was very she was great she did a great job
and she has this wonderful riff that I hope she keeps riffing on.
I think she will.
And maybe it's even expanding on about how, you know, she was a prosecutor.
She was a district attorney in San Francisco.
She was attorney general of California and she prosecuted people who ran scam schools.
She prosecuted sexual predators and she prosecuted fraudsters.
And, you know, Donald Trump is all of these things.
So I know Donald Trump's type is the these things so i know donald trump's
type is the punchline and it's just it's just terrific i mean the contrast between her and
trump it's great and she's getting the young people interested because they don't see two
old guys running against each other that they've been sick of that they've seen their entire lives
you know she's she's really moved the needle and I think that's one thing that the Democrats really have
done really, really well over our lifetimes is that they are the best at rolling out
bright and shiny and new. Remember John Kennedy, Jimmy Carter was bright and shiny and new. He was
like nobody had ever heard of him. He was like 40 something years old, 48, 50, 51. I don't know
what he was. Bill Clinton, of course, at 43.
Barack Obama, I don't remember what his age was.
But, you know, they really thought these were people who had not been well-known until they really ran for president.
And they do this really well.
There's this excitement on the Democratic side now that we haven't seen in a long time.
You know, these things, this little photo line. She's walking by, you shake hands.
You know, you have 15 seconds with Kamala.
You want to tell her, give her a piece of advice.
What kind of advice are you giving to her right now?
Well, I did chat with her for like 15 seconds.
It was the photo line, in fact.
And I walk up to her.
She's funny.
She just smiles at me and she says, I've never met her before.
I've met Doug before.
And she smiles at me and says, hey, you're famous. I look at her and I say, not like you are. And then I just say,
you know, just keep hammering. Just don't let up. Don't ever let up. And she said,
as she did during her speech, her stump speech that, you know, we're the underdogs. I said,
you know, that's good. Keep it like that. Keep it like that. Being the underdog and feeling like
you're the underdog with a chance to win is inspiring. People love underdogs, that's good. Keep it like that. Keep it like that. Being the underdog and feeling like you're the underdog with a chance to win is inspiring.
People love underdogs.
And that's that kind of spirit that actually, you know, is infectious.
It is absolutely infectious.
And she's bringing it with her.
And she has great, great political skills.
You know, she behaves the way she behaves, you know, because it's real.
If she laughs, it's real laugh.
Trump can't laugh because he's a soci she laughs it's real laugh trump can't laugh
because he's a sociopath he's this is like this is a real human being she's been pitch perfect
i agree and there's something about assuming the role of the top job you know my big piece of
advice to her and people around her which i gave privately so i'm having to get publicly back when
she was on the vp ticket was your advice you just said right there keep hammering him i was like i
want the prosecutor.
I want you to hammer him more to be unafraid.
And there was something about being VP.
I don't know whether it was not willing to overshadow Biden
or whether it was something about you don't want the black woman
to be the tough one out there.
There was racial or identity kind of related stuff.
I don't exactly know, but she felt a little bit cautious on that.
And literally since the moment
that she's taken the top swat,
like whatever caution that was,
has been totally gone.
And I think that she's been really strong on this stuff.
Yeah, no, I think that's exactly right.
People understand,
they like authenticity in politicians.
And she's authentic.
I think she's truly authentic.
She's having a good time.
And if, you know, being the happy warrior
can go such a long way in politics.
And if you can deliver the brutal punchline
against your opponent,
but then smile and look happy
and you're telling the truth
because you're telling the truth
and you know you're right.
I mean, it just goes such a long way.
Speaking of happy warriors, my final topic for you,
can't let you go without talking about Kellyanne a little bit.
We had an article in the Bulwark about how the people are mad at her
on the campaign, Chris LaCivita and them.
They're blaming Kellyanne for the J.D. Vance bad coverage.
I don't know.
Maybe you might have a conflict of interest here,
but I blame J.D. Vance for the bad J.D. Vance coverage,
but that's just me.
Yeah, that was my view. You, but I blame J.D. Vance for the bad J.D. Vance coverage, but that's just me. Yeah, that was my view.
You're going to blame her.
She's just, you know,
my view is,
how do you not respond
to anybody saying,
what do you think of J.D. Vance
without saying something
not really positive?
I mean, if you're being honest,
and she, you know,
she basically, I mean,
I think of the Bulwark piece,
basically said,
look, people are calling up and they're asking you, what think of jv jd vance it's like i'm
not making those phone calls like there's a reason why those people are asking the problem is jd vance
sucks and i don't know why you should get in trouble for saying he sucks because he sucks
he sucks so you know i'm with kellyanne on that one a horrible pick but just at the broader uh
without kelly in particular there is signs of fraying over there i mean you have to notice that somebody has been in the in these
fights before the the loss of loss of vita uh who's the the top strategist over there was like
tweeting out a picture of himself as tony soprano yesterday with a middle finger you know people are
attacking each other the leaks are happening just the fact that 12 people
leaked to the bulwark about kelvin i think it's a sign that there's some that there's some concerns
you know you're not seeing that in the comical work by the way i don't know you know yeah i know
i wonder it's not you're not seeing that in the kamala campaign you're not seeing any articles
where it's like 12 kamala staffers are pointing the finger at david axelrod because they're too
busy counting all the campaign contributions
that are coming in like millions of dollars a second.
So they've got no time for backbiting.
There's some concerns down there, I think.
And so I'm glad that the anti-psycho pack is continuing to drive that wedge in Mar-a-Lago.
Any other final thoughts, Lucia, for the weekend?
No, I think we've covered everything
It's been fun
George Conway, I appreciate your work
Anti-psychopath pack
Everybody go check it out online
All the social media feeds
And donate, George is putting his own money in there
And we're just doing the work out here, brother
We're doing the work, I appreciate you
Glad to be here
Alright, we'll be back on Monday
With Bill Kristol.
If there is a Kamala VP leak this weekend,
probably won't do a bonus podcast unless it's Pete.
If it's Pete, I might have to do a special bonus podcast if it's Pete.
But if it's anybody else that leaks this weekend,
I might hop onto YouTube.
So check out the Bulwark YouTube page and subscribe.
George is on there sometimes too.
Really appreciate you all.
We'll see you on Monday with Bill Kristol.
Thanks to George Conway.
Peace.
Can't seem to face up to the facts.
I'm tense and nervous and I can't relax.
Can't sleep cause my bed's on fire.
Don't touch me, I'm a real live wire.
Psycho killer.
Casca say. Live wire Psycho killer Cascade Kis-kis-say, fa-fa-fa-fa, fa-fa-fa-fa-fa, far out there
Run, run, run, run, run away I passed out hours ago I'm sadder than you'll ever know
I close my eyes on this sunny day Say something once, why say it again?
Psycho killer Cascassee
Fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa
Better run run run run run run away
oh
oh The Bulwark Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper
with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.