The Bulwark Podcast - Mark Leibovich: The Oracle of Washington
Episode Date: May 10, 2024Mike Johnson may have seen the light in the SCIF, but is he scheming with Trump for Jan 6, 2025? Plus, imagining Gavin Newsom 2028 if we get to keep our elections, Biden's age still makes every suppor...ter nervous, Kevin McCarthy's vendetta, and Nikki, the wild card. Mark Leibovich joins Tim Miller for the weekend pod. Show notes: Mark's "Thank You for Your Servitude" Mark's "This Town" Tim's playlist
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Hello and welcome to the Bulldog Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. It's the weekend. I got Mark Leibovich.
Leibo, he's formerly at the New York Times. Now he's at the Atlantic. There are a lot of good people at the Atlantic.
He's the author of five books. His most recent is Thank You for Servitude.
And we might talk a little bit about 2013's This Town.
In the green room, we were discussing the Nuggets, Futility, Bob Seger, Office Atlantic gossip.
So we're kind of screwing you guys over about leaving everything in the locker room.
How are you doing, Lee Bell?
Great.
It's great to be with you, Tim.
We'll come up with good material for the crowd, too.
You know, I do have to say, you know, since this is the first time, you've been on with
Charlie, first time on with me, is when I called the editor, the guy that was going
to edit my book, his first question for me was,
it's like, what are some political books you like? And my answer to that question was,
I pretty much only read fiction. And like the only political book I've read that I've liked
in like the last hundred years is This Town by Mark Leibovitch. And he's like, great. He's like,
well, there you go. So, you have one model to work for. And then he gave me five other books
that I should read. So, now I have to read political books all the time it's the burden of this job and even with that model i had for you
i still struggled until we sat at an indian restaurant together i forget the name of it
you'll know because you wrote this town and you did a diagram on the table for me of how you
organize a book the long and short of it was basically you can organize it however the fuck
you want and the readers will go along with you because you are the god of the book.
And that was like the one piece of advice I needed.
So there you go.
So I just wanted to appreciate you for that.
Well, first of all, thank you.
And it's great to be with you, Tim.
I'm a huge, huge evangelist for not only Tim, but also for your book, Why We Did It.
Why We Did It.
I have it right here.
You got it.
That's right.
But also the bulwark in general.
The Bulwark is a minor miracle every day.
Every year I do a kind of audit of the things I subscribe to online.
I'm thinking, is this worth it?
And Bulwark always like immediately, like this is worth it.
Amazing.
There you go.
You go to bulwarkplus.com slash free trial.
Listen to Mark Leibovitch.
Get your free trial for bulwark
plus i i just cut the athletic yesterday sorry athletic friends i was doing an honor oh i love
the athletic and part of the reason i love the athletic is because espn plus has completely
screwed me ever since my email changed from the new york times i left the new york times they
took the email away from me i can't get back into my account and yet i pay for it and you can't get like a human being anyway this is like get off my lawn talk complain to the credit
card company you can do this you yeah you you call the credit card company say screw you disney who
owns disney plus disney no i can't get into my account anyway we have some disney listeners
somebody give mark leibovich his money back all right and by the way this town is not fiction it's non-fiction i mean it's great that you yeah right no you are the
counter exception to the rule i was like i only like fiction books except for this town oh i get
it we're going to talk about this town at the end we need to talk about actual we got to talk about
the news all right a little bit news-ish your most recent piece of the atlantic charles james
uh gop bozos on campus um house republicans showed up at a campus protest of course that was
your actual headline my my my proposed counter headline was gop bozos on campus i love this
you're on my alma mater you went to a real lot of people think i went to lsu i didn't my actual
alma mater of gw and um you know i've spent a lot of time, too much time, according to some people who've provided feedback, discussing the gross behavior of some of these protesters on campus with their
anti-Semitic chants and their desire for intifada, etc.
But I have not spent very much time discussing the gross counter-protesters and the gross
politicians trying to take advantage of these people.
And so, this is our moment to do it. Lauren Boebert was there. People were trolling with a Beetlejuice sign,
apparently. Byron Donalds was getting shouted down by January 6th. Paint a picture for us
at the GW Quad. Were you on the Quad? Yeah, well, the protests were on the Quad. The press
conference presided over by Jim Comer, the head of the Oversight Committee,
was about, I would say, about 100 yards off the Quad.
It was mostly just a chaos center.
So, yeah, so because we are based in Washington, or I am based in Washington, we have George
Washington University has the advantage of hosting a lot of great guests who just sort
of come down from Capitol Hill for
cheap grandstanding opportunities. And what better opportunity was there? I mean, it's a pretty big
encampment of protesters. It's been going on for a while. Pretty peaceful, pretty chill. I was
walking around there before. I mean, it was the chance for kind of quiet, free food everywhere.
I mean, one thing I learned just going there is like a lot of free food.
I mean, pizza for everybody.
They treat the kids well at GW.
I will say that.
But, you know, people were offering like James Comer pizza.
Like he was walking by the free food table and everything.
I think there was a sign that said food like Palestine must be free.
All right. You're turning me off from the, like Palestine, must be free. Okay.
All right.
You're turning me off from the protesters again.
All right, Mark.
Okay.
The communist protesters.
This is not, you know, from each according to their ability, to each according to their need.
This is not winning me over.
My old Republican muscles are flaring.
A hundred percent.
I will say this, though.
The pizza was terrific.
I bet.
It was donated.
I don't know who donated it but
shout out to whoever that pizza provider was anyway i show up comer bobert donald's florida
crazy luna was there sources say she might be crazy wild-eyed luna yeah a couple of others
and they were just taking their turns you know trying they were getting shouted down
comer kept saying help is on the way to george washington university they're going to shut down these encampments
once and for all because while peaceful protest is great we're all for peaceful protest this is
trespassing and it's time for house republicans to get tough on trespassing and so that's what
they were there for you know they seem a little lighter lighter on the January 6th trespassers.
That does seem to be a kind of a big conflict.
There was a lot of real time heckling back and forth, but that's what they wanted.
I mean, they could they had some nice little morsels of confrontation with the students to go back to Fox News with. And the whole thing lasted, I would say, about maybe 10 minutes.
Their little press conference thing.
Then they all could not get back into the van soon enough.
They were fully protected. I mean, it was a little little chaotic no one's heart was really in it but they
got their photo out did they feel like they had a substantive complaint you know do they have any
substantive feedback or uh you know thoughts uh concern humanitarian concerns about gaza they were
worried about anti-semitism very worried about anti-semitism of course they all went back and
voted like against whatever anti-semitism bill was on the floor that day butemitism, very worried about anti-Semitism. Of course, they all went back and voted like against whatever anti-Semitism bill was on the floor that day. But they were
very worried about trespassing, also the safe environment for students. I don't think any of
them had ever set foot on the George Washington University campus before. I don't think they'll
be back anytime soon. It was kind of a hodgepodge of campus protests. I mean, there was a lot of
signs saying, you know, there was a big sign that said,
Lesbians for Palestine.
You know, Trans for Palestine.
A lot of groups, a lot of identity politics were represented here.
I do struggle with that.
Yeah, I do struggle with that.
I do.
I just, I want, that's great.
If you want to be a lesbian for Palestine, I support you.
I would also like for you to be a lesbian against Hamas.
Correct.
Because all Palestinians are in Hamas.
That's fine.
And so every sign doesn't have to have Hamas on it.
But like one sign, you know, if there's a group of queers for Palestine protesting Israel,
it would be nice if like, you know, maybe there's like an eight to one ratio where eight
of the queers were for Palestine and against the IDF or whatever.
And one of the queers was also against Hamas.
Just, you know, just to just FYI,
we realized that this is not really,
they're not really great either, particularly for us.
Correct.
And to take that a step further, to credit, we're due,
and I can't believe I'm saying this,
Lauren Boebert herself seized on one of these signs or chants or something
and said, all right, lesbians for Palestine,
or take that to a Hamas rally, see how that goes for you. You know, fair point.
I don't know if that's really credit where due, though, because I mean, I don't think Lauren
Boebert has a long track record of pro-lesbian advocacy herself.
I think that that's probably true.
I think it's called concern trolling. I think that's what Lauren Boebert's doing.
Concern trolling. And you could even say that kids call this concern trolling by whoever wrote
that line for her or something and they literally each had 30 seconds to talk and yeah it was a
little circus i kind of figured a little bite-sized morsel of life in washington circa right now the
only interesting thing about the house republicans for at this point, you've been covering these guys for decades, is Mike Johnson.
Because this guy was pretty indistinguishable from Byron Donalds five months ago in his rhetoric and his behavior and his voting habits. And he gets in and has managed to like do what all the people pretended they,
they thought Trump might do grow into the job,
you know?
And now when he talks,
he's like praising Tip O'Neill.
It seems like him and Hakeem Jeffries have a little bromance now.
He's like,
I went into the skiff and things got,
I don't know if he found,
you know,
if God is speaking to him,
I hope so.
Maybe that is it.
I'd be happy to credit that.
But in some ways, Mike Johnson's new tone and just showing how easy it is to flip the
switch into being a responsible conservative leader actually makes these clowns look even
worse in a lot of ways.
Does that make sense to you?
It does.
I would like to have a hopeful view of him. I do think, and I've heard
over the years, that exposure to the skiff and to the intelligence, which only a very, very small
slice of elected leaders like the Speaker of the House get exposure to, can be an extremely chilling
experience. You see in real time what's at stake, when it could happen. And also, to be
in the room with the president, to be in the room with other leaders, to be in the room with
McConnell, with Schumer, I mean, it's pretty rarefied air. And it's, I imagine, fairly coercive
in some ways, or especially when you're the outcast in there, you're sort of seen as the guy
who is leading the real clown show. And look, you're the one impediment to progress here.
Can you please go back and do something?
It's a little harder to do that when you've been in, you know, been at that level and
hearing that.
So I would like to think that that he kind of had a little talk with himself and said,
OK, I'm going to do the right thing here.
There's another part of me that thinks, what is he actually talking to Trump about? Did he actually say to Trump, look, I got nowhere to go here. There's another part of me that thinks, what is he actually talking to Trump about?
Did he actually say to Trump, look, I got nowhere to go here. It's a bad look for us, for Russia to
sort of route Ukraine, Ukraine to be seen as being left out in the cold by us. Can you like,
give me a little leeway on this and I'll be there for you on January 6th, 2025 or something.
Because that's really all that Trump cares about. I mean,
I'm sure Trump cares about Russia on some level, but I can't begin to understand that.
I do wonder if... You think he's scheming with Trump.
How worthy or how reliable a steward of all this Mike Johnson will prove to be when the chips are
really down for the country. I just think that whatever he's talking to Trump about is probably
as important,
if not more so than whatever, you know, is going on in his meetings. I'm with you on this, but I
guess, again, nobody is more surprised than me that this has become a Mike Johnson fan podcast.
And I guess one person is more surprised than me. Mike Johnson's communications director,
a former colleague of mine that I ripped mercilessly for years on twitter when
he went to work for donald trump raj shah oh so raj in the white house yeah i saw his name out
there yeah yeah raj is pretty smart well i've been very harsh on who was who used to work for
me and then went to work for trump yeah and uh and so we haven't talked for years yeah and he
messaged me the other day and he's like what's going on i'm like i've been telling you for years if you do the right thing i'll say it i'll say nice things like it's not
that hard anyway here's what mike johnson said i'm gonna pull this up and in politico to uh to
ryan liza the person on the other side of the aisle is not an enemy they're a fellow american
the founders anticipated that you have people with very different philosophical ideas very
different principles and ideas about government but the point was that we would come here sit around a table and arm wrestle together
and kind of get to a point of consensus so that we can govern as a country i mean maybe he's full
of shit but like it's a breath of fresh air to go back to a time when we have people that are full
of shit talking about bipartisanship i'll take that bullshit i don't know what what do you think about that i i think so too
look even if it's just a feint i mean i think first of all i just want to say that the reagan
tip o'neill friendship thing is is bullshit like johnson also mentioned this in the same political
interview he said tip o'neill goes to the hospital and kisses him on the forehead johnson said you
know like they didn't agree on almost anything but they had respect for one another i think we
got to get back to that there we go okay but you're you're saying that that's
apocryphal a little bit they were not close they did not love each other tip and reagan they they
were not as close as everyone said the people there's this gauzy uh nostalgia that people look
to it's like oh you know you can reach across the aisle after hours you know tip o'neill and
ronald reagan would have beers together not really true because ronald reagan didn't drink a lot of beer it happened maybe once and
the kissing on the head thing i'd never heard before i don't know if that's made up how do
you do that like you're you're visiting the president of the united states after he's been
shot and you kiss him on the head like what why i mean it's cute i didn't buy that i'm calling
bullshit on that we have really we have a really high educated audience and listenership and a well-read listenership.
So I'm going to have people dig into the tip on the Ronnie kiss.
And we'll report back on Monday's podcast about the providence of that kiss.
Was there a kiss on the head?
I mean, I am actually old enough to remember when Reagan was shot.
I was, I guess, like 15 or something like that.
And I was in my mom's belly.
Okay. I mean, I maybe a kiss on the head was taking place at, I guess it was George Washington
University Hospital or wherever, wherever it was. But larger point, people worked across the aisle,
people work together, which is true. I mean, there were there were actual deals that were cut between
liberal Democrats who ran the house and conservative Republicans who ran the White House. I mean, there was much more dealmaking that went on back then.
And look, I want to say Kevin McCarthy is basically a back slapper too, right? His impulse,
I wouldn't say is bipartisan, but his impulse is survival, but also just sort of hail fellow,
you know, he loves the idea that he and biden when biden was vice president and he was
leader of the house leader for the republic they used to have breakfast you know at the vice
president's mansion and like he was like i remember once he was like showing off pictures of him and
biden eating breakfast because he thought that was really cool but you know put put mccarthy aside i
yeah i know let's not put mccarthy aside actually i'm very happy you brought him up. You spent a lot of time with Kevin.
You were in Bakersfield with him?
I was in Bakersfield, yeah, a few years ago.
He was not speaker yet, but he was leader.
I think another part, just psychoanalyzing myself of why I'm so free with praise on Mike
Johnson is the schadenfreude of Kevin McCarthy's failure brings me a lot of joy and kevin mccarthy not only was egomaniacal and narcissistic and
confident that he was good at what you're just talking about he was a good back slapper he worked
his way up from being a car dealer or whatever the fuck he was to being speaker of the house and i'm
good at this and i'm and here we have mike johnson replaces him he gets overthrown by matt gates who
mccarthy's still leaking against like weirdly
out of the speakership he gave a quote to i think politico the other day about how matt gates was
doing cocaine and sleeping with underage chicks or something which is it seems a little petty so
anyway he gets overthrown by matt gates he gets replaced by a simple country lawyer from northwest
louisiana who he has no respect for and all of his friends are trash talking him
you know and about how mike's in over his head and he doesn't realize how hard kevin had it
and then mike within a couple months achieves everything that kevin was totally unable to
achieve by employing the simple trick of just like having a basic level of decent treatment
of the democrats on the other side like that's really all he did differently and it works and and now kevin is jobless whining having temper tantrums
to news reporters and i i get a lot of joy out of that trajectory i don't know i'm not asking you
if you get joy out of it but am i am i overstating the case here of the fall of kevin no i mean it's
kind of i don't quite know what he's doing now. I mean, he seems to have time on his hands.
He's talking a lot to a lot of different reporters.
Uh,
yeah,
this vendetta thing he's got against,
you know,
Nancy Mace and Matt Gates and who else?
Tim Burchett,
all the,
all people who he feels screwed him.
I don't quite know where it's all headed,
whether he has any,
I mean,
I guess he's fielding candidates and so forth.
Does he call you ever?
Just a vent?
No, no. I mean, he's got my number i got his number um no i haven't haven't talked to him i don't think he likes me seems like you picked the right time of night like after a couple pops are
in there you call him i'm sure he'd have a lot to say you know sure i might try who maybe tonight
maybe depends at i guess the nuggets game after the nuggets after the Nuggets game, I'll do it. It's going to be on late.
I will say this about McCarthy.
He actually, the thing that kind of lost him his job or seemed to really hasten the loss of his job is he actually did kind of do the right thing on a couple of important things, like the debt ceiling.
He cut that debt ceiling deal.
He cut the budget deal.
He kept the government open.
And then the motion to vacate came after. Now, I'm not saying that, well, he followed his principles and that cost him his job. So, you know, he's like the second coming of Liz Cheney or something like that. No, I mean, I a backbencher like Mike Johnson, especially when you are considered by your colleagues after like all this chaos and like, yeah, let's give this guy a shot.
So I don't know.
I mean, I guess apparently McCarthy wants to work for Trump again.
I mean, it makes sense.
I guess he still talks to Trump.
Did you see him like kind of soft float himself for VP in the New York Times?
Yeah.
Did you see that?
Yeah. He called up Michael Bender. Did you see him like kind of soft float himself for VP in the New York Times? Yeah, I did see that.
He called up Michael Bender.
This is why you got to maybe call him after a few problems.
You never know what kind of material he'll give you.
And he's like, you know what Trump needs?
Trump needs a guy that knows his way around the hill.
Yeah.
A guy that he knows is going to be loyal and knows his way around getting it.
It's like, okay, Kevin.
Just like that's what they said about Pence.
But in some world, he could be like a legislative liaison kind of thing or chief of staff it could be like a rights could be a friend right rights lasted six whole months in that job and rights
is running the convention rights is uh very busy these days also tim where'd you go oh there you
are i was pulling up my notes about one of my favorite columns that you wrote was about Reince.
And it was, will Trump swallow the GOP whole?
This was in 2016.
And you and Reince, what, had like a weekly meeting?
Weekly therapy-ish session.
Weekly therapy session.
It's interesting.
So, this is the summer of 2016.
To put people in this spot, it's interesting to think about the comp there about like kevin becoming chief of staff
versus reince and and how how things have changed over the course of the eight years well i guess
reince did the rnc at that point but then he becomes chief of staff but he's the chairman
of the rnc so it's kind of a similar position and reince is so tortured in that role right
like he literally is hoping for a health event to get out of it.
Like it's so bad.
Like he was privately telling people, I hope that I have a heart attack.
Not one so serious that I will die or anything, but just like a little one so I can get out of this.
And that was the situation with all of those, all of my old people.
They were all so tortured then.
That's gone now, right?
I mean, do you have republicans doing therapy sessions with
you anymore like could you do the rights thing again or everybody's pretty kind of found acceptance
on their life as if they're still there right yeah or hiding it's certainly harder to find
people to have therapy with you hear it less often you just like people are either better
keeping their head down or a lot of them have just went away. But yeah, 2016 was interesting because Reince was RNC chair. He was kind of the normie Republican, but also the institutional Republican who had to somehow safeguard the party from this insurgent monster who was just running roughshod all of them. And I would go up to the RNC every week and we would talk and Sean Spicer was
his communications director there, his deputy, I guess, whatever it was.
And I mean, we would just sort of sit around and he would say, yeah,
it's really, and he would kind of fetishize his beleagueredness and it was kind
of fun.
And I kind of made him the main character of this piece that was,
that ran in the Times magazine.
And we kept talking after that.
I remember we spent some time together at the convention that year in Cleveland.
And then I was so kind of amused by this, but also kind of amazed by his willingness to continue to kind of unburden himself to me that we did like a brief Tuesdays with Reince column online at the New York Times.
In which I would get him to sort of weigh in on the latest Trump outrage week after week.
And he completely played along, at least until someone I think might have gotten to him and said,
you know, this might not be the best look for the RNC chair in like August, September of 2016.
You might want to stand down for a little bit. And so eventually, yeah, he kind
of shut me down. Was it a self flagellation type thing? Like, do you think that he was punishing
himself? Or do you think that he was he thought that he could he could win you over? It was a
test of his own ability to rationalize? Or what was he challenging himself or the kink? I actually
think on some levels, he was quite amused by the situation too i think he was
kind of flattered by the idea that he was the kind of guy in the hapless job who somehow was the good
guy who was trying to be the grown-up here i remember talking to then speaker paul ryan who
you know they're pals from wisconsin who said you know i'm glad that reince is the grown-up in the
room like that was the big like scott Walker, all the Republican, like Wisconsin kind of
group, they're all pretty tight.
That was Reince's job.
I mean, thank God we have Reince to sort of do this dirty work.
And yeah, so I think, yeah, Reince was kind of, in a way, he was flattered by that too.
And he kind of warmed himself into Trump world and got to be chief of staff for six months,
which he's been dining out on for,
you know, eight, nine years since. It's just a life lesson that I always share with college
students when they, when I go to their class and ask them about my life career. I'm always like,
if you feel like you're the grownup in the room where everybody else around you is doing bad
shit and you're the one that's like, you know, trying to keep the rails on the tracks. Actually,
that's not a good place. Like that's, it's flattering to tell yourself that that's like you know trying to keep the rails on the tracks actually that's not a good place like
that it's flattering to tell yourself that that's a good place to be but actually what you're doing
is you're enabling and helping the bad people around you it's a really there's this big parallel
between me and rights that i wrote about because he basically pitched me on playing his role with
regards to the gay marriage oh interesting i worked for him i was quitting and i was quitting partly just for careerist reasons but a sub reason was gay marriage i
don't want to be an rnc spokesperson at that time and be like the gay on on record like you know
being like well on the one hand the state should have rights like nobody wants to be that guy
and and me and ryan had a big meeting where i told him this i was like i'm quitting because of this
right and and he spent like eight minutes being like no we need somebody like you you'll make sure our statements
aren't aren't homophobic you know it'll be good to keep people in line and to signal that we're not
and i like always looked back on that convo and was like he took his own advice like four years
later with trump right which is like you we need somebody like me to make the statements a little less crazy.
And anyway, he shouldn't have taken his own advice.
That was dumb.
That was autopsy rights, right?
That was like the era.
That was the era where he was trying to like have a really clear headed sort of view of like Republicans trying to talk like 21st century people.
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I want to talk about your most recent, is it your most recent, or maybe your second most
recent article, Gavin Newsom Can't Help Himself? Yeah, I think that was the most recent big one.
I mean, the Palestine one was, that was last week. I was quick. So you were in Sacramento?
I was in Sacramento. Iifornia so much i'll
even go to sacramento i actually think sacramento is underrated i completely agree sacramento is
totally underrated good weather you can get a good meal there and you know it's not it's not
paris but like it's it's pretty good it's not i stayed in the bay area though and there was no
traffic um i mean everyone leaving california has really helped with the traffic this goes to my
first question about Gavin.
I'm of so many different minds about him because in one hand,
on the one hand,
there's certain traits that you just can't deny.
Like he's good at going on Fox and arguing with the Republicans.
He's compelling.
You know,
he was really early on a lot of social justice issues that he was right about gay marriage in particular but some others
too so you have to give him credit for that but also there are some equally obvious flaws in his
personal traits and in how california is being governed right every time i would read a profile
of his and i was hoping the great lebo would would help unpeel under. Like, does he get his flaws? Does he see the flaws either in himself or in California
and the governance philosophy?
And it kind of seems like no.
What say you?
I think he gets the political vulnerability of California.
Definitely.
I mean, he's lived with that for a long, long time.
I mean, he's wanted to be ambitious.
He's wanted to be a national politician for decades.
And, you know, when you're mayor of San Francisco, which has a pretty limited, you know, traveling purview, right?
I mean, it's very, very much kind of a bubble world in some ways.
But you get to kind of find yourself on the national stage all of a sudden with same-sex marriage.
And he was like definitely a pioneer, if not the father of same-sex marriage and he was he was like definitely a pioneer if not the father
of same-sex marriage i mean he was the first politician to really boldly go there in a very
you know high you know high profile way you know my husband says he will always be with gavin for
that because he remembered it's just it was formative i mean it was i was a teenager or
something that was happening or maybe middle schooler and it's san francisco so you know
and harvey milk and like so within a bit on a national level to be like i'm gonna marry people yeah yeah and well it's
one thing yeah you can say it's san francisco but it also i mean that's where the wildfire started
i mean that was a national policy you know within a few years from that and that's where it all
started so yeah no there were a lot of people like that i mean i think his place in history
is assured that way look cal, California is an easy target.
I mean, I also think there's a romance to California.
I might just be like some coastal elite who loves going to California and loves going to San Francisco and loves going to L.A.
And that's boring.
And who cares?
You self-identify as the Don Draper.
And the Mad Men is like when you're on the East Coast, it's dreary, Mark.
And then you go to California, you have a new outfit.
It's like pastels, Mark. The Coast, it's dreary, Mark. And then you go to California, you have a new outfit. It's like pastels, Mark.
You know, the filter on the camera is a little different.
Yeah, I wish.
I don't actually own pastels.
But if I did, I would.
I love it.
I look boring.
Okay, who cares?
Mark loves California.
But so, Newsom is, he gets California thrown in his face all the time.
The homelessness, the crime, San Francisco, the way it looks,
the way, just the whole look and feel of the big cities there.
So he's used to that.
I think on a personal level, he definitely has blind spots.
I mean, he is extremely talented.
He can be very dazzling.
I think he knows that.
And one of the drawbacks to that is it's hard to be a surrogate, which is ostensibly what
he is being called upon to be now for Biden. He's supposed to go out and say, you know, we worship this guy. We think this is the
greatest president like ever. And I am all in for him. I mean, I think he is all in for him because
he doesn't want Trump to be president. But I think it's hard for Newsom to he's such a performer.
It's hard for him to subvert his own performance impulse to that of the greater cause of Biden, because I don't think he, at the end of the day, really believes it.
And I think he believes Biden is better than Trump, but I think he probably also believes he could do a better job making the case.
I'm just attracted to people who are a little bit tortured in certain ways, you know, and he doesn't feel that.
I don't know.
Is there any depth there?
I think there is.
He does go very deep into these issues.
He has this really weird, but I think very compelling way of learning.
He had terrible learning disability growing up.
He had terrible dyslexia.
He stuttered.
He got terrible grades and terrible SAT scores.
And he had to really learn to process written material in a different way.
He did a lot of memorizing.
You know, he kind of learned to be a consumer of information as a performer, which, you know,
yes, you can say that there's lightweightness behind that because he doesn't like spend like hours upon hours reading stuff. But look, I mean, he masters a lot of the bullet points,
a lot of the main points. And look, when you're're on tv it's obviously a big asset but he also he does the work he works extremely hard he stays up extremely late and
does he actually care about the social justice because that's the other thing that i see with
that i wonder sometimes it's like you're doing the interview with them and and you'll ask a
question that's kind of personal and and you know and he'll be like well you know i just i do care
about the plight of the whatever group you know, in a way that sometimes a little feels a little phony.
Can't speak to his level of sincerity, however.
You kind of can.
No, you're an observer of the human condition.
I am an observer, but there are limits to observation, you know, as far as one's inner commitment.
I think he can certainly sound like he cares.
You know, it's kind of what politicians need to do, first of all.
I mean, I think so.
I mean, he legit was pretty badly bullied growing up.
I mean, he definitely has had a lot of vulnerabilities in life that I think would make him or make someone like him more appreciative of what it's like to be beaten around a little bit and maybe have someone have
your back. Again, very easy to be cynical with him. And I am. And I think many people can be.
I think it hurts him. He appears very showman-like, very, he looks like an operator. He looks like
kind of a short timer, someone who's just sort of blowing through and on his way to the next thing. But I find him effective. I find him somewhat sincere. And look, I mean, politics is,
it's largely about, you know, what you can get done and what you can get away with. And,
and, you know, he's obviously had a pretty long career at this point.
So, yeah. Did you ask him about the picture?
Which one?
Him and Kim Guilfoyle laying on the rug together.
Oh, I didn't ask him about the picture, but we certainly talked about Kim. Yeah. Kim Guilfoyle laying on the rug together. Oh, I didn't ask him about the picture, but we certainly talked about Kim.
Yeah, Kim Guilfoyle, his first wife, and who's now the future wife of Donald Trump Jr.
So if Newsom does run for president, as I think he probably will in 2028, and Don Jr.
runs as the heir to his father's legacy in 2028, assuming, you know, elections aren't canceled.
I think it's actually more likely that Donald Trump Sr. will still will be running again.
Probably. Okay, take the leap of faith and say Jr. actually steps in. You will have an
unprecedented situation in which both the Republican and Democratic nominee have been
married to the same woman. I don't think that's ever happened. I mean, I don't think Mondale
and Reagan were married to the same woman. I mean, I'm not a historian, so I can't think that's ever happened. I mean, I don't think Mondale and Reagan were married to the same woman.
I mean, I'm not a historian, so I can't speak to like the 1800s or anything.
But I mean, Kim Guilfoyle would become the most interesting woman in America like instantly.
That's one reason not to hope for that is because the last thing we need is Kim Guilfoyle to become one of the most favorite people in America.
I was just doing a quick Google to see if we have any any other examples of this and i'm not
seeing anything i was pulling up the 1876 election hayes versus tilden they came from ohio new york
i don't think that there's a lot of overlap there yeah i think adley stevenson was dating
mamie eisenhower for a bit but i don't think they ever were married yeah got it sorry to the eisenhower library i'm
kidding all right fine if you can't be a psychologist you can be an observer of people's
political talent and so like where do you fall on get could gavin really be the nominee like do you
think that gavin's got it or is he is he more of a desantis or more of a reagan he's not a desantis
and he's not a reagan i mean reagan i mean had much more sort of stage presence frankly he was much less in a hurry he played
a long game he was he'd been at that a while and he was a trained actor and but he's not desantis
i mean he first of all he hates desantis the two of them genuinely hate each other which is kind
of fun the interesting nugget in your piece actually was when they did that debate was the off stage yeah gavin it says a lot about both of them right gavin tried to like be chummy do the
deal um and and desantis wouldn't talk to him he said he put his hands in his pocket i had no idea
if he would like talk out of school about like what happens backstage because you know i don't
want to talk about private discussions but he had no problem with that i mean he had no loyalty at
all there are no desire to protect desantis yeah no he did a great kind of imitation of DeSantis's posture,
just kind of looking right at his shoes. Someone had sent Newsome a bottle of wine called DeSantis
wine. Sour? Well, he didn't open it because I asked him, I said, so are you still drinking,
governor? Because he stopped drinking for a while in the late aughts, I guess. I think he still partakes of wine, but he said, you'll notice that the DeSantis wine was unopened. And it was, but I have a picture of the DeSantis wine in Newsom's office.
One other thing from your interview that ties to a different subject I want to get to, which is Biden, is the age issue came up. And I guess Newsom made a joke about Prevagen.
Yeah.
And that got you into a pretty awkward exchange, it felt like.
Yeah, it was awkward, but it's good for the story. I mean, basically, Newsom was doing his
Biden is FDR, Biden is JFK, I've never seen a greater leader kind of thing, blah, blah, blah.
And I said,
well, you know, if you look at these polls, if you look at Biden's polls, you know, in addition
to his low approval ratings, and if you look at, you know, the concerning head to heads with Trump,
voters in both parties and independents overwhelmingly think that Biden shouldn't
be running at this age, isn't age at this point, just the intractable issue for him.
And I thought he was going to just sort of like say something like, yeah, no, no, Biden has never
been more vigorous. He's great and everything. But no, he said, maybe we can get him some Prevagen
or something. And I didn't know what Prevagen was. Newsom pronounced it Predagen with a T.
But it's, I guess, one of those vitamins or, I don't know, extracts that promotes
brain health or something like that, that advertises on Fox a lot, which Newsom watches
all the time. So he was familiar with Prevagen and I was not because I don't watch Fox. But I very
sarcastically said, well, do you think that someone should maybe put the president on a
more vigorous notion of Prevagen, at which point I thought
Newsom would realize that, hmm, maybe I've gone out a little over my skis here and I
shouldn't be joking about the president of the United States taking this anti-aging or
pro-brain health kind of supplement.
And then he kind of dissembled his way through that.
And I heard this and I was thinking, oh, well, one, make sure the tape recorder is working. And two, that'll be in the lead somewhere. I don't think the White House
loved that exchange, but it was big on Fox. Jesse Waters was a big fan of that. And the five had a
whole segment on that, apparently. Well, this episode is sponsored by Prevagen, which is
formulated with apocorin which was originally
discovered in jellyfish it's safe and unique and supports brain function yeah we're not actually
sponsored by them but uh yeah that's that's what it says right here prevagen.com jellyfish that's
the kind of that's kind of brain eating it sounds like yeah well the jellyfish are very smart
octopus very smart very sentient i know yeah have you ever been bitten by the jellyfish are very smart. Octopus? Very smart. Very sentient. I know.
Yeah.
Have you ever been bitten by a jellyfish?
No.
Jellyfish, they really hurt.
That really, really hurts.
They can also be fatal.
I was in Florida last year, and I stepped on a jellyfish because I didn't believe that,
like, okay, it's a big blob of jelly.
How much damage could it do?
And it did damage.
That was kind of your hand on the stove moment at age 52?
Definitely.
Yeah, although actually
it's funny i i think i had a hand on the jellyfish moment when i was like five or so so maybe that
moment only works for 50 years maybe i need a reminder it was a booster shot of you know having
religion on jellyfish i had a smooth transition until we got off into octopus and jellyfish but
um i want to talk about your original Biden story on his age.
June 16th, 2022. Why Biden shouldn't run in 2024. You're arguing mostly that it was about the fact that he'd be 86 at the end of his administration. So in recent weeks, you've spoken with 10 official
and unofficial advisors asking them about how he's holding up and what kind of responses were
you getting back then? And how do you think that article is holding up and uh what kind of what kind of responses were you getting back
then and how do you think that article is holding up here may 10th 2024 yeah i mean i i stand by it
i i did i break the story that biden is old i don't i don't know i mean kind of actually kind
of it was i was talking with this band at the time for something that i was working on like he was
calling you like the dam is broken once the oracle of washington mark leibovich who
is who is wined and dined at the washington parties and it was the the scribe of the town
once he says it now people can talk about it so you know in some ways some people thought that
you kind of opened up the convo which i'm sure some of our listeners don't appreciate yeah no
they really don't appreciate it now i mean mean, I've written subsequent stories to the
same theme. I mean, I think others have, obviously. Look, I think he's too old. I think he
shouldn't have run. I think a lot of people think that. But I think at this point, you know,
that ship sailed. He's the candidate that can beat Trump. So his one job is to win. I mean,
you could argue that his one job was to win
in 2020. And he did that job. And, you know, anything he's accomplished as president has been
gravy. And, you know, he brought calm to the nation and non chaos to the nation. But now I
think still, it's a it's a huge problem. And it has shown to be a huge problem in poll after poll
after poll, no matter how taboo the subject might
be now around the White House. And yeah, people get pissed off at you all the time, pissed off
for mentioning it. But I mean, it doesn't make it any less true now, just given that the die is cast.
When you're talking to people around Biden, I mean, so you still live in Washington,
you know, you're still this town man, not like me, I've decamped out to real America,
you know, the Caribbean. Are there things that they say that you can't they can't make it into the atlantic because of editors that can make it into a podcast you know
where we have lighter uh you know lighter rules on sourcing i mean what what are the what are the
vibes from the people that you talk to on this that are in his circle incredible nervousness
yeah i mean i can't i can't name names um no it's like you hear. Incredible nervousness. Yeah. I mean, I can't, I can't name names. Um,
no, it's like you hear the same nervousness around the white house, around the DNC, around the
reelect about his age, you know, the state of the union was, I guess, a good moment for him,
but he still looks old. People will say that. And they will say that, you know, even people who see
him on a fairly regular basis. And that's a problem. That's a fact.
He might win anyway.
But yeah, I mean, it's something they continue to deal with.
I mean, I think it really, really helps that Trump has been such a gobbler of attention.
And Biden has been very much the second candidate in this race and very much in the background.
Hopefully he doesn't step on a jellyfish.
I guess my pushback is the one counter when i think about this i shared concerns about biden's age i just wasn't sure that
the alternative was any better and i still not because you know i just imagine this gaza situation
which is just a total you know problem for him a conundrum for him as as it is as the president
but imagine if he's the lame duck president and there's a democratic nominee
who is trying to either angle to his,
probably to his left,
who the hell knows,
you know,
if it's Kamala,
I mean,
that would have just take what is already a cluster and make it a cluster of
epic proportions.
So I don't know that the alternative was much better,
I guess.
I don't disagree.
I was definitely comfortable saying,
uh,
he's old,
he's too old making that argument.
I was less comfortable saying yes. And if they nominated so-and-so, you know, that so-and-so would win.
Everything would be fine. It'd be a Reagan-Mondale answer. it like Whitmer. I mean, none of them do any better than Biden usually. Although I'm also of the belief that a vigorous campaign in which, you know, Newsom and Pete Buttigieg and Josh
Shapiro and, you know, Raphael Warnock and Gretchen Whitmer were running across Iowa and,
you know, a winner was anointed. I mean, you can't, I mean, that, that, that is a very,
very enlightening process and definitely an elevating process if you can get through it,
obviously. You were out with Nikki Haley a lot on the campaign trail. What do you think she does?
She's been quiet. Yeah, it's a great question. It's a wild card. I mean, I'm surprised she
hasn't just sort of folded her cards and just said, I endorse President Trump. It's very important
that we have his policies and Biden is terrible and blah, blah, blah, like done what Sununu did.
And what I guess DeSantis did. I mean, DeS, like done what Sununu did and what I guess
DeSantis did. I mean, DeSantis has been kind of clunky, but I guess they had a detente recently.
I don't think she's holding out for some deal with Trump. I don't think she said, you know,
look, make me secretary of state. I mean, that's not going to happen either. The only thing I can
sort of say is I think the longer she holds out, the worse it is for Trump, which feels obvious.
But I think, as we've seen in these numbers in the primaries that have happened after she's
dropped out, this still seems to hold quite a bit of sway with her voters or her potential voters,
either as a place for protest Republicans to go, or at least, you know, this is kind of a
cliche at this point. I don't like this word, but I'm going to use it anyway.
A permission structure.
Don't you think that's a bad word?
Is that a neg on Sarah Longwell?
She loves talking about permission structures.
You're right.
I love Sarah Longwell.
I do too.
No shade intended at all.
There are people that you love that sometimes use annoying phrases.
That happens for me.
Sarah has become so influential and so widely listened to that she has made permission structure a cliche.
So that is a sign of her power and the awe in which I hold her.
So anyway, Haley's staying in, staying kind of on the outside has been helpful.
I mean, I would love to think, and I guess Jonathan Martin wrote this a few weeks ago.
I would like to think the White House is reaching out to her in some way.
I don't know if the Trump people are.
I mean, they should, but she can certainly be a bit of a power broker, you know, if non-Trump-y
Republicans are a wild card in this.
I agree with that.
I promised that we'd end with some nostalgia.
So we're going to start in the 80s with kind of like an angel and devil nostalgia.
Jack Quinn died recently of the quinn gillespie power firm unfortunately still with us paul manafort of
manafort and stone yeah is back in the picture big washington post story about him today
about being poised to rejoin trump's world and he did a deal with the chinese media company which
is i'm sure totally on the up and up i want want you to take us through that kind of 80s, 90s lobbyist corruption heyday,
and then we're going to do a little this town era and take us to present day. So,
talk about Quinn and Manafort and that side of the Washington swamp.
Yeah. So, Jack Quinn, who died this week at, I think, 74, 75. He was in his 70s. He was a minor character in this town. He
was the general counsel or the White House counsel for a brief period under Bill Clinton in the 90s.
He was tied up in the Mark Rich scandal, which feels very quaint in retrospect. So Mark Rich
was this financier who had some criminal problem and was a fugitive. He was in Europe somewhere.
And Clinton pardoned him at the 11th hour, right before he left office.
Jack Quinn was Mark Rich's attorney.
He was seen to have kind of brokered the pardon.
And there was a few weeks of pretty, you know, there was hell to pay for this.
I mean, it was like, wow, what a terrible abuse of the pardon system.
And like, how could Bill Clinton do this?
And the guy just left the White House. And, you know, they treat it as a real crisis. And like, how could Bill Clinton do this? And the guy just left the
White House and they treat it as a real crisis. And it kind of was for a while. Of course, you
know, Trump has made like a like orders of magnitude greater mockery of the pardon system
than anything Bill Clinton ever did. But so Jack Quinn, who I interviewed a bunch of times for
this town, he taught me the expression, you're going to have your time in the barrel. Because after Mark Rich was pardoned and he was Mark Rich's lawyer, someone said to him,
I forgot who it was, you're going to have your time in the barrel, Jack, and you're going to
come back. So Jack felt great shame for a while. He was getting terrible press. He was seen as
corrupt for somehow brokering this, and this is how Washington works. He eventually started a
pretty significant and pretty well-known lobbying firm with Ed Gillespie, who was a longtime Republican operative, RNC chair, worked in the Bush White House.
Where's Ed Gillespie, by the way?
I'm going to start adding him to my list of people that are just so cowardly.
Could Ed Gillespie be for Joe Biden?
What's he doing?
Where's Ed Gillespie?
He ran for governor or something failed in Virginia
and was always one of the quote-unquote normal Republicans just add him to the list of the MIA
put him on a milk carton anyway sorry I'd forgotten about Ed Gillespie sometimes these
names come up and I'm like fuck that guy too actually where are all these people anyway sorry
go ahead Mark continue but it was a classic sort of okay here's the RNC here you got your Clinton
guy and here you got your Bush guy and they're teaming up and like both their
names are on the building, Quinn and Gillespie. And boy, they're bipartisan. It isn't great. They
can get things done. So Jack, I remember talking to him once and he taught me another expression,
which is now much more commonly in use, which is the thing about Ed that I liked at Gillespie is
he got the joke or he gets the joke. And I'm like, what do you mean?
What is the joke?
He said, you know, the joke that like, you know, I might be a Democrat and he might be
a Republican, but we all kind of get the joke, meaning at the end of the day, it's all about
the Green Party, the Green Party being money.
So that's kind of the joke here.
And I was like, oh, well, all right.
So I had all this umbrage and outrage.
And that was kind of the whole theme of this town, which is this is kind of this one party system here, which is dedicated to everyone getting rich and people
getting elected and never leaving and, you know, just leveraging their public service for some
kind of self-service, usually financial in nature. And of course, that was 10 years ago. And then I,
then Trump came in. And in a weird way, I have this kind of gauzy nostalgia, you know, pseudo quasi like, wow, that was what the outrages looked like then.
And, you know, Trump has just turbocharged the outrages of the swamp and self-dealing and corruption.
So the question, though, then that I grapple with is, OK, yeah, obviously that stuff seems like small potatoes compared to you know the end of
american democracy that said like are we just all so self-obsessed and myopic that we think that
everything that we did played a part in this but actually it was global forces or did it kind of
play a part like did the phoniness the getting the joke the oh oh i'm a republican i'm a democrat
and we're going to pretend like we're on different sides for the, you know, cameras, but actually, we're all on the same team. Did that
like contribute to Trump and like, give him this sense of authenticity and like, give him the,
oh, you guys are the uniparty talking points that allowed him to merge. And so in that way,
yeah, sure, maybe the corruption was not quite as great, but like the consequences were very serious oh 100 i mean like trump ran
against that i mean that was the whole drain the swamp circa 2016 thing i mean it's a joke in
retrospect given what how he purified paul manafort's back given that paul manafort was
like the fucking king of the swamp the swamp preacher you could go down the list right but
um no i mean he very deftly ran against that. He ran against like, look, these guys are all weak clowns. I can totally roll over these guys, which, of course, he proved to be true in the Republican Party. I mean, he found the right party to roll over because he could have been a Democrat. I mean, I guess he was a Democrat. So people have been running or presidential candidates have been running quite
effectively against the one world government of DC. I mean, Obama was like, we're going to change
this. I don't hate Republicans. You know, it's there's not a red God or whatever that line was
at his keynote speech. I mean, we're all red states. There's no blue states is all the United
States. We're no red states or blue states. Yeah, we're all like, Bush was like, yeah, I come from Texas. I mean, the whole outsider trope. But Trump was much more forceful
on this. These guys are phonies, and I'm going to totally like stomp them. And that was very
compelling. I mean, very unsubtle, but it was compelling. And it was obviously complete bullshit,
but it worked. And that's what he did. I have one more nostalgia for you. You wrote in 2012 that that presidential race,
Lillard Mitt Romney versus Barack Obama, was, quote, the most joyless of your lifetime.
Yeah.
Is there a life lesson we can take from that? You know, perspective, gaining perspective on things.
Is there a life lesson you take from thinking that 2012 was joyless?
It's embarrassing that I wrote that.
I mean, look, it's...
My whole life is embarrassing things that I wrote in 2012.
So, okay.
So, just welcome to the club.
All right, Lita?
I hear you.
I hear you.
I mean, it does speak to the wisdom of age.
And it's all relative now as we head into what I think will be...
I think joyless is probably a pretty innocent way of talking about what we
might have in store for the next few months.
I'd love for it to be joy.
I mean,
I would like for the end to have joy,
but for it to be merely joyless would be a gift.
I think it's going to be much more grotesque than that.
Could be.
Yeah.
I mean,
it sounds likely be nice if it ends well,
though it would be speaking of joylessness Celtics loss last night.
Nuggets are down to a,
we were planning a hang.
I don't know if you know about this yet,
but I was mentally planning a hang for Game 1 in Boston
because I would love to have seen the Nuggets in the Garden.
We talked about that.
Or we talked about something similar.
Yeah, it's not out of the question.
Doesn't seem like it might be happening.
Not out of the question.
Not out of the question.
I mean, the Nuggets need to win tonight.
By the way, complaint to the NBA.
Why such a gap in the Nuggets series?
This is actually the one series I cared about other than the Celtics.
Actually, the Knicks series is interesting, too.
But, you know, I thought we had like a one-day gap.
But now it's like, when was the last Nuggets game?
Tuesday?
Now it's Friday or something like that?
Come on.
Monday.
Yeah, we needed the four days.
Hopefully, Jamal Murray's calf gets better.
Okay, hopefully it's
not a joyless night thank you mark levitch by popular demand by specific request actually
by a future guest um we've brought in lebo back to the podcast so good to hang with you the scribe
of the swamp i've thought about what our weekend song is you're gonna have to listen to the end of
the episode to find it out yourself oh i can't wait okay it won't be bob seger though please
come back again soon anytime
tim love being on thanks to mark lewis of the atlantic uh subscribe to the atlantic go get his
books if you haven't and we'll see you back here on monday with will salatan will salatan mondays
are back because bill crystal's on vacation we'll see you all then peace Then Emily has a plan A bag of bones in his pocket
Get anything you want
No dust
No rocks
The whole thing is over
All those beauties
In solid motion
All those beauties in solid motion
All those beauties, they're gonna swan you
Let's go The Bulwark Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper
with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.