The Bulwark Podcast - S2 Ep1028: Cory Booker: A National Crisis and a Global Crisis
Episode Date: April 24, 2025Donald Trump is trying to foist the worst peace deal in the last 100 years on Ukraine, as he gets repeatedly played by foreign leaders on the world stage. At home, he's turned JFK's "Ask not" upside d...own to 'Ask what you can do for Donald Trump.' But when will the cowardly law firms or CEOs groveling for a tariff exemption stand up for patriotism, our core constitutional values—and America's better vision of itself? Plus, Tim challenges an 11-year-old block from Twitter's golden era, and Booker shares diet & exercise tips. Sen. Cory Booker joins Tim Miller.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to the Bulldog Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
It is Jazz Fest.
So we'll be seeing y'all out there for Goose this afternoon.
And yes, that's a new podcast theme.
Shout out to New Orleans own John Michael Rochelle and our producer Jason Brown for their effort on that.
Today we've got Democratic Senator from New Jersey.
He recently delivered the longest speech in US history,
a mere 25 hours and five minutes,
breaking Strom Thurman's record
for his filibuster against civil rights.
He was mayor of Newark from 2006 to 2013.
It's Cory Booker.
How you doing, Senator?
I'm doing really well. It's great to be with you.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you for doing it.
I want to get to filibuster talk, but unfortunately there's a lot of news.
Last night, Russia launched 70 missiles, about 150 drones, and one of the
largest attacks on Kiev yet, there are attacks all over Ukraine.
Our president Trump said he's not really happy with the Russian strikes on Kiev,
but his
harsher words for President Zelensky and saying that his inflammatory statements are making
it difficult to settle the war.
I'm wondering what you think about the state of play.
I think this president has betrayed American traditions, American allies, and frankly,
the incredible people of Ukraine.
His leadership over the last
hundred days has almost been like an invitation to the Russians to continue
what is been roundly condemned by the international community as a unjustified
war of aggression and that allowances and coddling of Putin has endangered
democracies across the world and endangered the world order.
The way he's conducting it and this most recent peace proposal he has, the treatment of Zelensky
and the demeaning and degrading way he discussed talks about him as the dictator and coddles
Putin. All of this is so offensive, not just to Democrats, but to the traditions of the
Republican Party going back to the strong stands that Ronald Reagan took against the then Soviet Union. Yeah. I'm going to have this question for
you across several topics, but are you talking to your Republican colleagues? Half of them
voted for Ukraine aid. Where are they on this? You know, I have very direct conversations with some
of my best allies around the war in Ukraine for the past years. And, you know,
in private they'll be very strong in their criticism. Some of them will say some things,
but as you said, across the board, the crisis right now is not what Trump is doing simply.
It's the silence, inaction, complicity of people who know better. And this is a moral crisis in
our country where people are afraid, understandably.
Many of the Republicans that have stood up and spoken truth to power, they're gone. Cheney,
Jeff Flake, I could go through the courageous Republicans, many of whom I have very different,
myriad disagreements with. But when it came to a moral moment in this country where you had to choose
patriotism over party, they chose patriotism and have suffered for it.
So it does take a profile and courage right now to condemn this president in a
full-throated way with the threat that he is posing in this case to the rules
based world order, but unfortunately we're not seeing that kind of strength of conviction.
Yeah.
Speaking of strength, you know, I hate to be this reductive, but these guys, they
love talking about masculinity, like who's tough and who's strong and who's weak.
And have you ever seen anything weaker than Donald Trump's treatment of Vladimir Putin?
I mean, he's asking him nicely, like, please stop bombing, I'm trying to give you everything
you want.
And it is like the opposite of strong,
confident American leadership,
masculine leadership on the world stage.
Wouldn't you think?
First of all, strength comes from moral clarity.
Donald Trump has no moral guiding force.
It is simple, resolute.
This is what we stand for as a people.
Donald Trump is violating, as I said, from the strength of the Ronald Reagan,
the evil empire, tear down this wall, Mr. Grobyshev.
He's violating the moral clarity of a Kennedy, ask not what your country can do for you,
but ask what you can do for your country.
Donald Trump is ask what you can do for Donald Trump.
He seems to respect people that are amoral, like he respects when asked, you know, who
his favorite world leaders are, he constantly refers to strongman dictators, people who
have eroded democratic norms and principles.
So I think strength comes from having a moral core and standing up, regardless of where
the political winds might go, is having that kind of conviction.
And Donald Trump does not have that.
In addition to that, the way that world leaders play him, the way that world leaders manipulate
him is, to me, so obvious.
People know the playbook of how to flatter him, how to give him sort of a false sense
of confidence and ease, and then clean his cloth.
The great deal maker seems to not know how to really make a deal that's in the best interest
of this country.
And watching him continually get played on the world stage is very frustrating.
I guess that's like my last question about this deal and the great deal maker.
This seems like a silly question, but unfortunately it isn't.
You're in the US Senate.
Is it clear to you which side our government is on in this negotiation and
this deal, like who they want to get the better end of the deal between Russia and Ukraine?
Well, again, not only the deal they put forward, but then Donald Trump's almost
childish tantrum after Zelensky didn't take a deal that no objective observer would
say the Ukrainian
people should accept, tepid security guarantees, a ban on joining the alliance, which is one
of their biggest points of leverage, a surrendering of land in which Ukrainians have suffered
and died upon, bled for, gave up a tremendous blood and treasure for, just capitulating
and rewarding the aggressor.
All of this is offensive on its face.
And for Donald Trump to make this the beginning point of his negotiations, he went into these
negotiations surrendering without the Ukrainians there, but surrendering their positions and
leverage capitulating to Putin.
This will go down in history as one of the worst negotiations and peace proposals made
by any American president of this last century, going back to World War II and World War I.
The kind of aligning yourself with the people that are upending the world rules-based order is such an offense.
I had a foreign minister of a European country sit in my office, asked to meet with me, close
the door.
This was days after we, the United States of America, in a UN resolution sided with
China and Russia against the European Union, against our NATO allies, against other free democracies,
failing to support Ukraine and condemn the war. It was around the anniversary of it.
And the guy just looked at me with a sense of bewilderment and astonishment and saying,
is this real? Is this real? And that's really what we've done. We've left our allies perplexed that America isn't just turning its face inward.
It is actually actively undermining the democratic nations of the world, upending the world economy,
upending global security issues, leaving global alliances for everything from climate change
to mutual security.
This president is so destructive that most of the major nations of the world, our normal
allies are trying now to figure out how to move forward.
Nations committed to values and principles we used to once adhere to, how to move forward
without the United States of America.
That includes our closest allies like Canada,
that he demeans and degrades calling the 51st state
the nation that more than any other
has stood with the United States war after war,
stood beside us, bled beside us, sacrificed for us,
and frankly, to both of our mutual benefits
has strong economic ties.
It's kind of remarkable that Marco Rubio
is the chief diplomat for that foreign policy
that you just laid out, your former colleague.
Not only my former colleague, but my former partner
on so much good work on USAID foreign aid.
I mean, you could play quotes from him a few years ago
and lay them next to what he's doing right now.
And it's almost like he's turning his back
on things he stood for and fought for
when he was a United States Senator. He is, I know this man again. I know what he values,
what he's fought for. I've heard him with moral clarity condemn Donald Trump in his primary fight
against him. And then suddenly fall in line with Donald Trump. I know what his record in the Senate
has stood for.
And now again, he is doing things directly.
Maybe he didn't know him though.
Like maybe he really just wanted power and influence.
And that was really what was motivating him the whole time.
And he thought that, you know, the more Reaganite path was the way to do it
until it was clear that it wasn't.
I don't know.
I mean, that's maybe ungenerous,
but I'm not sure what else the facts would bear out.
This isn't just policy.
This isn't just aspirations for power.
We are seeing both the world and our nation
change in such fundamental ways.
We are in such a state of global crisis
and such a state of national crisis
as who will America be in the world
and at home?
There is such a trashing of global democratic ideals and here at home, the values, ideals,
and principles of both sides have committed themselves to that not to understand the gravity
of the decisions people are making right now and the erosion of who we are and what we
stand for and the erosion of who we are and what we stand for,
and the consequences of that.
The problem with the way we talk often about these things
is we belittle or normalize them
as if it's just the day-to-day political scorecard.
This is not politics.
This is really a crisis of morals and values
that have real-life consequences on security of nations, preservation of democracies,
and frankly here at home, the well-being of hundreds of millions of people.
There's no issue where that's more clear and where Marco has also not flipped more dramatically
than on immigration issue when it comes to the temporary protected status of people fleeing
communism that we're taking away in Venezuela and worse in the situation in El Salvador. We've taken some people that have fled communism, come to America,
looking for safety as so many of in the past.
And we have now sent them to a prison dungeon in a foreign country because of
their tattoos with no due process.
It goes further than that.
And again, their idea is to flood the zone.
And I want to just give you an example that it's just not getting enough attention.
There are people here on temporary protected status from Afghanistan.
Many of them are Christians who fled the Taliban, who killed Americans, who have brought
about such savagery against women, really the people that were our enemy over there.
And Donald Trump has sent them letters saying that we're sending you back, that you need
to leave our country.
People who have a record of supporting the United States, who we, again, in a bipartisan
way, worked to secure here, he's now upending.
And so his immigration policies are such a violation, as you said, of core constitutional
values that we've seen the Supreme Court now know affirm, things like due process. immigration policies are such a violation, as you said, of core constitutional values
that we've seen the Supreme Court now know affirm, things like due process, but also
a deeper, our commitment to being a nation that is a light of hope and freedom and opens
its doors to people escaping persecution in the case of Afghanistan, persecution that
we know all too well and have lost American
lives in fighting against.
We're not that though now, right?
I mean, I hate to be this blunt about this sort of stuff, but we can't say that we're
a nation that it's a light of hope and freedom throughout the world when we're sending people
back to communist countries, to Taliban run countries, sending them to prisons in other countries to rot.
And that's what the country is now. And I just think it's important to say that. I mean,
you're in the Senate, like John Thune is the leader of the Senate. Where is John Thune on this? Well,
we have just turned off the light of America, I guess, would be my question.
This is where I've got to not disagree with you, but help you understand, like,
my parents came up in a time where the laws of this nation, the laws of this nation,
denied them equal dignity and equal rights. I mean, literally, my parents were stopped from
buying the house that I grew up in based upon this legacy of housing discrimination in this country.
And so understand this, like, my parents, my grandparents believed in this nation,
believed in it, and the values that Donald Trump is trashing, even when this country didn't believe
in them, they love this nation, even when this nation didn't love them back. And that's the
tradition that we have to call upon right now, the tradition that made LGBTQ Americans fight
to make America live up to its promise and its hope,
or women or immigrants, Catholics, back in the time
that there was an entire political party
called the Know Nothings.
This is a time that I can't surrender
to cynicism about America.
I can't allow the demagoguery that echoes the past from Father
Conklin to McCarthyism to the Japanese internment to turning away of the St. I think it was St.
Louis that brought Holocaust survivors and then they were sent back. All of these things are
wretched dark corners of our history, but people didn't give up in believing in who we are.
As the great poet Langston Hughes said,
America never was America to me,
but I swear this oath, America will be.
And so this is that kind of conviction that's needed.
And I refuse to stop believing in us.
And just because we have a demagogic leader
who is such an affront to the values
I think this country most adheres to.
This is the time that we should be speaking
and affirming with even greater conviction of who we are
and fighting against the forces
that have been there since our beginning
that seem to wanna undermine the highest ideals
and values of our nation.
And even our founders, these imperfect geniuses,
these guys who called
Native Americans savages and blacks fractions of human beings and didn't even refer to women.
The humility that they had and understanding what it would make to make an imperfect, more
perfect union and their appeal to the highest virtues of mankind.
Read George Washington's farewell address, who almost said that history is going to judge him harshly.
And he understood that his imperfections and mistakes, the humility that Donald Trump has
an inability to show, but always they were ascribing to the higher angels of our nature.
And this idea that America, though not there yet, was on a journey towards greater justice,
that future generations would advance. That's the traditions right now that I feel that it's often out of the darkest
moments, the most painful moments that we somehow not only find a way through them,
but find a way to more advance towards the truth that I think is the calling of
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I need this pep talk sometimes, Senator Booker, code bulwark. I need this pep talk sometimes Senator Booker.
So I appreciate it.
I need the pep talk.
I listened to your guys' podcasts.
I think that you all do a really good job and I'm sorry, you're not asking me for this.
I know my cultural traditions.
Black radio here in Washington, DC.
This is where my parents came from, both from HBCUs to chocolate city is what it
used to be called before so gentrified and
It was so much injustice going on here
But blacks and whites how my dad got his job being the first black salesman hired by IBM and then crushed it for the company
That's how I got to New Jersey as he was promoted because he was the top 5% of global salesmen
My dad got that job
Because of activists in the black community, the white
community, put pressure, talking about DEI hires, put pressure on companies to hire qualified blacks
who then help that company further advance. But I say this to tell you that people like you,
who were willing to entertain, inform, engage. They became the most valuable voices
during some of the most tumultuous times.
My dad told me about the urban upheaval here
when King was killed and the agony people felt
and how much they held onto voices like yours.
And I'll remind you,
it wasn't just to curse the darkness.
It was also people who understood,
who have roles like yours that are not in the left right poles of our country, but
provide voices of
Strength part of it was about how much they lit fires of hope and I think that that's the moment that we're a little bit
Missing and especially the Democratic Party I think is missing right now and I just take you to a moment my mom
Volunteers she used work
We used to work for the DC public schools
before she herself took a job with IBM.
It's one of their first black women
in the position that she took.
But she worked for the DC public schools,
had the summer off, so she worked to organize,
help organize the March on Washington.
Mandate booth on the mall,
helping people who needed housing
if they couldn't get transportation back
to where they drove in from bust in from
And she told me that the remarkable thing about that day for her besides the fact that most people forget that it was about
There were more pillars that day about economic justice than about racial justice
But what she said was remarkable that day is that when martin luther king had his moment
He did not unfurl a list of grievances against the demagogues of the day.
He didn't talk about George Wallace and his darkness. He didn't talk about Bull Connor.
He took this moment where children were dying in church bombings, where people were getting
beaten on their marches and on their freedom rides with billy clubs. We know bloody Sunday.
The rhetoric of those days speaks to the horrors that blacks were experiencing and many whites
who were sitting in solidarity with them, like Goodman, Cheney, and Schwerner, black,
white, Christian, and Jewish who died together in Mississippi.
Amidst all of that, King stands up and does not simply speak to the darkness.
He ignites a vision of America that was so compelling
and inspired the moral imagination,
not just of Democrats of the day, but of all Americans.
This is one of those moments.
And I'll tell you, Shiva is the God of destruction,
but in the Hindu faith is revered
because you cannot have rebirth and renewal
without the God of destruction.
And King in that moral moment didn't say America is lost,
called America to find its way back to its north star.
And so I think that that's the other half of this moment,
was we have to check Donald Trump everywhere.
We have to amass the urgency amongst more good people
who are doing not enough, including myself.
It is about the fight, but it's also about in this moment,
more than any other moment, we need to start talking about
who America is and will be on the other side
of this darkness, what's compelling us,
because too many people have given up on the idea of America.
Too many people don't believe in the promise of America.
We do not feel the kind of common calling and common cause.
And I think this is the very time that we need to also be talking to that as well.
This is a helpful sermon for our listeners.
I get it.
I feel this way.
I have the humility.
And this is not the only time that I've been ranting, shaking my fist against the dying
of the light and having
somebody who, you know, comes from a tradition like yours, having a black person or somebody who is
from another marginalized group say to me, man, Tim, like, we've been through this before, right?
Like, this is just happening to you now. We've been through this before. And I appreciate that. I truly do.
I also have a tradition that I come from, these normie, supposed normie, white Republican
men that are your colleagues.
And while I respect and really do appreciate the lack of cynicism when thinking about the
American people and the American idea, I don't know how you cannot turn to anything but cynicism
when you look at the people down the hallway from you.
And I don't know how somebody like John Thune, who's running the Senate, can sit by idly as we sell out
Ukraine, as we put people in cells because they wrote an op-ed, as we send people to a torture
dungeon in El Salvador. Like none of this was in the tradition that he came up in when he was running
for office for 20 years. And he's going along with it. And I get a little frustrated that these guys
just get a pass
for what they're doing.
You gotta go to the gym with them every day,
as Chuck Schumer said.
And I don't know that I'm satisfied with them complaining
about it in the gym.
I'd like a little bit more.
Yeah, and again, okay, now what?
Like, I'm not gonna disagree with you.
Yeah, now what? Great.
But now what?
Like, okay, you've described what is, and now what?
And I will tell you the now what is, how have people changed in the past?
How did we win the vote in 2017, when tens of millions of Americans were about to lose
healthcare when we were about to go back to a nation where if you had a pre-existing condition,
you couldn't get insured and being a woman was considered a pre-existing condition. How did we fight that? Describing who they are is, in a sense, implicating us,
because you are not defined by what happens to you or who other people are. You decide how you
choose to act. And the way we won in 2017 was people realizing they couldn't just condemn the
Republicans who weren't working.
They needed to stand up and do something to persuade them, give them pathways to redemption.
And I loved those days. Maybe I love them now in retrospect because we won,
but I was overwhelmed by the American people. I would like to think-
What about pressure though? I hear redemption. What about pressure?
Look, are there not 67 votes in the Senate for Ukraine aid?
I think there are.
Are there not 67 votes in the Senate for blocking us
from sending people to El Salvador?
Maybe there aren't, I don't know.
But none of these guys have to answer for it.
So like-
Yeah, but how do we get those votes?
And I would love to tell you right now
that it was my eloquence and persuasive power
that I marched into John McCain's office,
slammed the door behind me, got up to him with all of my former six, three solid two,
60 pound muscle and got in John McCain's face and intimidated him.
I'd love to tell you some glorious story about how I persuaded John McCain, but it was not
me.
It wasn't one of the Democrats in the Senate that persuaded John McCain.
You know who persuaded John McCain?
It was thousands of people from his state coming here
and telling their stories.
It was little lobbyists, these children with disabilities,
beautiful children rolling up in their wheelchairs
with such moral clarity and telling him what would happen
if he dares to take away their healthcare.
It was the power of the people
overcoming the people in power.
And so we are in that moment.
And as King said, what we will have to repent for,
especially if we lose this fight coming up
in this work period where they're gonna try to tear away
$880 billion from Medicaid,
what we will have to repent for, as King said in his time, it's not the vitriolic words and violent actions of the bad people,
simply, but the appalling silence and inaction of the good people.
You're wondering why they're not changing their mind.
I'm not wondering why they're not changing their mind.
I know why they're not changing their mind.
They're cowards.
But I'm wondering why it feels, and I'm kind of on your side of this,
it feels like people want us to do something, you know,
and that's why I think you're filibuster spoke to people.
But there's this pressure, like, why aren't Democrats figure out more? Why aren't they doing it? Why aren't they doing it? I'm wondering why it feels, and I'm kind of on your side of this, it feels like people want us to do something, you know, and that's why I think you're filibuster spoke to people.
But there's this pressure, like, why aren't Democrats we got more?
Why aren't they doing more?
Why is Trump doing this?
Why isn't the media doing this?
It's like those guys down the hall from you are the problem.
John Thune and John Cornyn is the problem and nobody talks about, I mean, like they're not
feeling the heat.
I guess that's my point.
Maybe they'll never crack, but I'd like them to at least feel the heat.
I'd like them to look at the dead Ukrainian kids and the gay guy
that we've got in a basement.
I'd like them to have to look in the face of their family members and say,
no, you know what, I'm scared of Donald Trump, so I'm not going to do anything.
I would like for that.
So I'm going to talk about myself in a second, because I feel like I am
implicated in the current crisis that Democrats are implicated in the current
crisis. We may not be the blame for this moment, that Democrats are implicated in the current crisis.
We may not be to blame for this moment, but we helped pave the pathway to this present.
But I'm going to tell you that I'm upset about the CEO of a company right now that is groveling
to Trump to spare his company and knows a larger picture and context in which we're
not, but fails to stand up and tell the truth.
So be it. The universities that are caving to him,
the law firms that are caving to him,
when is it enough when they come after the law firms?
That's not enough, okay?
What about when they come after the nonprofits,
Catholic charities, UNICEF?
Is that not enough for you?
Okay, well, what about when they come for the marginalized
and they come for the weak?
Is that not enough for you?
Okay, well, what about when they come after academic freedom?
And the average American moderate are gonna say,
this is so outrageous and unusual,
I'm gonna leave my comfort zone
or my own particular pecuniary interests
and stand up for patriotism.
Because you look back at the chapters of American history
and see the people that said enough is enough.
They have crossed the line.
And this is a call for me to stand up for it.
Those are the people that I'm also frustrated with
who don't see it unnecessary
or who are just looking out
for their own financial interests.
The top 25% of their country has made such enormous wealth
in the last 25 years.
Such enormous privilege.
The 4% of humanity that is Americans and the top 1% of that 4% are at the top of the pyramid.
You can't give a damn enough about others in your country or in Ukraine or in Sudan
to do something right now.
If this president is pulling embassies out
of African countries that desperately need
the American president, when is it enough for you
to know that your grandchildren are gonna look at you
and wonder in this period, what the hell did you do?
So I'm with you, but now let me talk about myself.
Democrats have got to find more ways of fighting.
And I'm seeing great signs of that in Democrats that are inspiring me and encouraging me.
And I sat down with my team after that CR fight we had in my caucus, the most contentious
caucus meetings I think I've had in my years here in the Senate. And I pulled my team together and I said,
we have a leadership role amongst the caucus,
but I have a leadership role as an individual
and we're gonna find new and creative ways
to do good trouble.
We've got ones coming up,
things that I'm gonna do that are unorthodox,
because my heroes-
What's unorthodox you're gonna go up on?
You're gonna go up on one of Jeff Bezos' rockets?
Like, what are you gonna do? Cl' rockets? Like, what are you going to do?
Clown nose?
Like where, what's the plan?
TikTok filibuster, 26 hours on TikTok?
Lousy would tell you not to, uh, the art of war, not to, you know, tell
your fellow opposition what you're going to do before you do it.
But I guess I'm telling you here is I challenged my team to begin to come up
with ideas of ways we can fight that are different,
ways that we could take risks.
Let's look back then actually, because if we're going to do your failings, I've got
one failing and not you personally, but the Democrats broadly.
You don't have to tell us what the tactics are going forward, but let's look back.
Part of the reason why we're here is the Democrats really struggled with particular demographic
of working class Americans, particularly
I mean, this time, and it's working class white folks been a problem for a while now
going the wrong direction, but working class voters of color, particularly men, Democrats
really struggled with this time.
How do you reach those folks?
Like I thought the filibuster is great, but like, is the guy working 10 hours a day and
like going home and having two beers and, you know, watching MMA?
Did he see the filibuster?
Probably not.
Right.
Maybe a clip, but what, what are your thoughts for why Democrats have kind of
failed there or maybe not failed, but lost ground there?
Well, I'm going to first start with you with a, I think a guy, idea in leadership
is so important is you can't lead the people if you don't love the people.
And I'm sorry that there are a lot of people in this country that don't feel
like the Democrats give a damn about them,
that they're not connected in them,
that they don't feel like you're out there in the arena
every day fighting for me.
And if you don't solve that,
you're not gonna get loyalty from any demographic
or base in the party.
People don't care how much you know.
We got bright and brilliant people in leadership
all across the country.
Don't care how much you know
until they know how much you care.
And it just starts with something like that.
When I was mayor of the city of Newark,
my city, overwhelmingly the number one issue was crime.
My pollsters said in all their life,
they have not seen a singular issue in my city.
So I said, look, I have a lot of great plans and ideas
when I became mayor that we're gonna bend the violence curve
and the crime curve, and we did. I'm really proud of a lot of the progress we made when I became mayor that we were gonna bend the violence curve and the crime curve, and we did.
I'm really proud of a lot of the progress we made,
but I knew that from, number one,
my city needs to know I'm fighting for them.
And so, as soon as I got elected, I said,
I'm moving into the sector of the city
with the most shooting, the most dangerous sector
in the city by police statistics,
I'm moving myself in there.
And then I said, I'm gonna work full-time
as your mayor from sunup to sundown.
But in sundown, I'm gonna get into into a car with my security detail who are in charge
of protecting me, but I'm going to start answering calls in the queue.
I'm going to be doing patrols till four o'clock in the morning in the most dangerous areas.
We just were out there chasing down literally in foot chases with a bank robber, you name
it.
We knew that by the time the third month came in my mayorality, we saw that people
got it in their gut, that we were fighting for them. They saw me out there, they saw my priorities,
they saw my focus, they understood that I was fighting for them. And so-
I guess my question, so what's though the gap from that to now? I mean,
Kamala only won, the vice president only won in New Jersey by six points, you know?
Biden won it by 16, a huge loss.
Because people are hurting and we have not yet.
And by the way, I just want you to know, I don't want to discount the incredible
things that happened in that election that don't get enough attention.
Like I only saw once in my 12 years where a Senator won in their state, where the
president of the other party also won, that was Susan Collins, but we did it in multiple places. Tammy Botbell, Winslotkin,
Gallego, these are people that their brand.
Losing 10 points in New Jersey from one election to another is not, and that's one in 10 people
flipped who should have to vote.
Yeah. And so this is a time that in many ways, the Democratic Party has to
This is a time that in many ways the Democratic Party has to get back focused on people, period.
The reason why during my 25 hours,
we centered the voices of Americans,
the very Americans you're talking about,
that said, hey, Booker, you stood for a day?
Well, I have two shifts at a diner.
I'm on my feet all day, or I work in a hospital,
and I'm around the clock 24 hours,
emptying bed
pans cleaning floors and doing that Booker. Hey, I'm a first responder fighting fires
in the West because of climate change are getting worse and worse and worse. My shifts
are 16 hours. So those are the folk that we said we're going to center their voices and
read their letters. And I'm so happy hearing back from people that we spoke of and read their letters. And I'm so happy hearing back from people that we spoke of and read their words on the Senate floor
to hear now back from many of those folks and others
about how meaningful it was,
then instead of a bunch of what they think of
as just legislative processes going on,
that the voices of Americans,
that somebody found a way to break through with them,
we need to do more things that show people
that we're centering their struggle and
that we're going to fight for them and that we actually have ideas now once people feel like we
are fighting for them that are so much better than the bankrupt ideas of this president who
just wants to again give outrageously great tax cuts to the wealthiest people who've already done
so well in this last quarter century by taking away fundamental programs from the very people we're talking about. I'm with you on trying harder. I'm with you on this administration being
a disaster and that might end up being enough. I do wonder though, do you look back and say,
man, on some policy things we missed? I don't know. Maybe we didn't do enough.
This isn't going to appeal to me, but maybe it would appeal to voters. More economically populist
ideas. Maybe on crime,
we went too far the other way on some of the policing issues. I don't know. Are there any policy issues that you feel like undergird that big drop among working class voters?
I just want to say, again, as a guy who is a bit of a policy nerd and who fought to get things
into the agenda of the Senate and the president, like me, Bennett and Brown on the
Senate side, some great House leaders as well.
But we lobby before he swore his oath of office to include an expansion of the child tax credit.
Talk about a populist idea.
It is the largest middle-class tax cut in my lifetime.
Between 80 and 90% of New Jerseyans got thousands of dollars more.
It cut child poverty almost in half and had profound impact.
We were one vote for making it short.
That's a real delivered policy.
When you talk about crime and my mind's going to explode, in fact, I think I'm the only
person in the United States Senate that lives in a community, number one, that's at or below
the poverty line, that has shootings in my neighborhood, had somebody
shot at the top of my block.
And if you pulled my city after George Floyd and said, do you want more police, less police
or the same amount of police, you would have probably gotten 80% of new workers to say
we want more police.
Now we don't want them violating our rights, but we clearly need more safety and security.
And the Biden administration, most people don't know this,
put more money. Our listeners know it. Okay. Yeah. Put more. Donald Trump is defunding police right now. You talk about what's going on in the ATF, the very people that are supposed to be
enforcing our gun laws. Donald Trump is the defunder. Joe Biden put more money and can I
say Joe Biden, credit to the Senate Democrats, House Democrats.
We put more money into programs like the COPS program,
burn JAG money, over and over and over again.
I champion that as a guy who is in that space
of creating a transparency with policing,
accountability with policing,
things that better professionalize that force,
that help them with their mental health issues.
I'm a big champion of police, but I'm also a big champion of making sure that we're using
Obama's 21st century policing task force, which had police leading, had incredible ideas
that we have still failed to implement that would create higher professional standards,
more transparency, and stop the silliness like, hey, I can get fired from a job in Cincinnati and then apply
for a job in Patterson, New Jersey.
And Patterson, New Jersey has no way of knowing that I was fired
for police misconduct or was encouraged to leave.
And so they're common sense things we can do to make
policing better.
Most of the major police organizations know that and support that.
Donald Trump's own executive order that put limitations on no-knock warrants and chokeholds
and the like.
This is a false argument.
There's nobody in the Senate that was calling for defunding the police.
Every Democrat in the Senate has a record for increasing funding towards local policing.
So what we're talking about here is more,
not that we didn't have the policy ideas,
not that we didn't fight,
but we had serious gaps in communicating,
communicating authentically that connected
with people's heads as well as their hearts,
and making people understand that we are fighting for them.
As I've watched for my 12 years in the Senate,
when we get into these scrums
and are talking about like tax extenders,
it's like boring policy stuff,
but I will never forget,
Claire McCaskill was sitting next to me
at a Senate caucus lunch, I'm new in the Senate,
Harry Reid puts on the board this column,
the tax extenders we're fighting for
and the tax extenders that they were fighting for.
And this is a negotiation Harry Reid was talking about.
And I could understand in plain English
what we were fighting for.
It was an expansion child tax credit,
earned income tax credit.
I understood everything on our side of the ledger.
But I'm again, the worst thing that you often do
when you have people perceive you as being really smart
is you fail to ask the stupid questions.
But here I was in a private moment. I turned to Claire McCaskill and said, Claire, I don't understand what these things are in
this gobbledygook.
And she goes, oh, Corey, that's allowing corporations to get a bigger tax cut for when they offshore
this and this.
And she started, she's this really smart person who had been in the Senate.
And I'm like, why doesn't America see this?
I looked at her and I go, like they are fighting
for the rich, powerful, record profit-making corporations
to get more advantages,
and we're fighting for the average American.
Like, why don't people understand
that this is the moral math that has been going on
for 25 years, as from the Bush administration,
all the way to Donald Trump
has been getting more and more tax cuts out,
putting our country more in financial crisis because Republicans build up debt and deficits.
Democrats from Bill Clinton to Obama to even Biden are cutting deficits.
Why don't people understand?
Okay, okay, okay.
Biden didn't cut any deficits.
No!
Are you kidding me?
I'm sorry.
I can't do this.
It was a less, okay, a less of a deficit than Trump did in his last year.
It's not a cut.
It's still going up by a trillion.
There was still a deficit, but he reduced the overall deficit.
Donald Trump was a profligate deficit creator.
We're going to have to reduce it a little more.
My old Republicans coming out, Cory, my former Republicans coming out.
We've already got-
Pound for pound, president for president.
Who created more jobs, Democratic presidents? Who created more debt by funding? My old Republicans coming out, Corey, my former Republicans coming out. We've already got- Pound for pound, president for president.
Who created more jobs?
Democratic presidents.
Who created more debt?
By far, Republican presidents.
Who did the stock market perform better under Democrats or Republicans?
By far, Democratic presidents.
I could go through who's created more shared wealth, who presided over more empowerment
for working class people. This is a real debate,
but I will defend the policies of the Clintons, Bidens, Obamas against what two terms of Trump
and Bush have shown us in terms of wealth growth in this country.
Two of us can filibuster each other for three hours. I had to throw out my whole show map,
we're just rolling, a bunch of stuff we didn't get to we got to go rapid fire a couple fun things at the end
I'll let you go. Okay
I noticed you only went 25 hours on the filibuster and I was thinking about why and I think it's the veganism
Like do you think that if you're eating some meat you could have done 28 29 30 hours
How can you say that when everybody from Tom Brady to Olympic power lifters are vegans?
Tom Brady in season eats a vegan diet. This is not even controversial anymore.
But we're in crawfish season here. Are you allowed to have a crawfish in the vegan diet?
How does that work? Does that count? Do bugs count?
I'm not pushing my diet choices on everybody, but all the evidence says, I mean, we eat so much more
highly processed meats and more than our ancestors. We have chronic disease that has run amok on our country.
Our diets are killing ourselves.
Even people like me who are junk food vegans
and are eating processed foods,
we need to have a larger conversation
about why our nation has the need for so much healthcare.
One out of every $3 almost in government is for health.
Majority of that is for chronic diseases
that are preventable and diet related.
So we have a lot of work to do about
why we have half of our population now
that's diabetic or pre-diabetic.
We have serious health problems.
I am trying to be the change I wanna see in the world,
but whether you're vegan or paleo or what have you,
unhealthy diets are unhealthy diets
and they're across the board.
But to prep for my 25
hours, I prepped like I was back in my athletic days, prepping for an athletic competition.
Oh, so I want to ask you about, what's about the workout side of things? You know, we have to watch
RFK, you know, get shirtless and do his bench presses. I noticed you're kind of huffing and
puffing sometimes on those TikTok selfies. Like, what are you, are we running? Like,
what's our workout routine to prep for the filibuster?
You know, I started, it's now been almost a year, but I, I was able to do
770 days in a row of running every day and it had its incredible benefits to my
health.
It had some bad benefits.
Like I got plantar fasciitis of all things.
Yeah, how are the knees doing?
We're getting old.
Knees are fine.
That was not, not an issue.
It was weirdly plantar fasciitis that finally really slowed me down. of old. Yeah, the knees, how are the knees doing? We're getting old. Knees are fine. That was not an issue.
It was weirdly plantar fasciitis that finally really slowed me down.
But look, we know that you get vibrant by eating right and exercising, especially when
you're like me, you're younger than I am, especially when you're a middle-aged African
American male.
We have some of the worst health out, us Native American men, Latino men probably in there
too, worse health outcomes in America
I know that I have to if I want to be around for a while longer in this fight
I got it. I got to take care of myself. So you're not benching anymore. So you're saying no max bench
Well, I am definitely bench. Okay. Why do you have a max? We got a max bench?
I just got this new machine that's being delivered this week and I'm dying to just get on it because I'm this gamification. This is why things like these new, you know, bikes that
have those computer screens on them are so good because they get into your mind. So I
got a tonal. Have you ever heard of this? Okay, I've heard of it. I don't, you know,
I haven't done it. Yeah, I dropped a large part of my sentence salary on it, but little
brah, Jane talks about it. It's. It's basically resistance training, but they measure everything.
It seems really incredible.
One of my former chief of staff turned me onto it, and I'm excited to compete against
him and others on this new machine because resistance training for testosterone, for
joint strength, everything.
I can't-
We're low on sperm according to RFK.
You got to get your testosterone up.
We have a sperm shortage.
Yeah, well my family and my mom is rooting for me, still hoping that I become a dad.
So I got to think about that.
I got to think about that.
Okay, last thing, last thing.
Do you have your phone on you right now?
Your phone?
Somewhere around here.
Yeah, I have my phone right here in front of me.
Yeah.
Can you pull that up?
Do you have Twitter on there?
You got Twitter on there?
I do have Twitter on there.
Okay, I want you to open it up. And you find out how ticked off I am that I do not follow Elon Musk,
but every time I open up my Twitter, which I do far less, Instagram is my platform of preference,
it goes right to a tweet by Elon Musk. I'm also ticked off about that, but I'm ticked
off about that, but I'm also ticked off about my guest. I want you to pull up your Twitter right
now. I want you to look at Tim ODC.
Now remember I used to be a Republican rapid
response guy back when you were running for Senate.
You know, I had some thoughts about some of the
things you were doing.
I think you got upset at me.
Did I really?
You blocked me.
You blocked me on Twitter 11 years ago.
11 years ago.
I've been trying to get unblocked for 11 years.
I messaged your staff, nothing.
Are you serious? I tweeted at you. I tweeted, Cory Booker, get unblocked for 11 years. I messaged your staff, nothing. Are you serious?
I tweeted at you.
I tweeted, Cory Booker, please unblock me.
I'm an undecided voter.
I could not make it happen, but we are now live
and I want to get it live on YouTube.
I am on my Twitter.
What am I searching for?
Tim O.D.C.
Tim O.
My parents called me Timo.
That was the original T-I-M-O-D-C. That was me.
T-I-M-O-D-C, yeah. Tim Miller.
Tim Miller, that's me. I'm blocked. I'm blocked.
You're blocked.
I'm blocked. I know I'm blocked. I've been blocked for 10 years.
I think I was going after you over T-Bone. I think that's what it was. There was a
national review story back in the day and you blocked me. And it's been a decade long
struggle to get back on there to do research
for this podcast. I had to use my husband's Twitter to look at, to see your tweets.
I cannot, I feel a sense of this is a redemption moment. I don't know if this is you or for
me. One of us is being redeemed right now in this unblocked.
Both of us, the country, the country needs to come together. Senator, this is a great
example.
I can't believe I blocked you way back when.
You way back? Well, I was an RNC step. It's okay. I was kind of a bitch. I was, I was,
I still am. I still am. I'm getting blocked by MAGAs now is the only difference.
I can't believe you're now unblocked on my...
Thank you, Senator.
Yes. That is, that is really kind of cool. This is a powerful moment.
That is. We of cool. This is a powerful moment. A decade later. That is, we're friends again. I'm not going to unlock you.
Hold on, I got to follow you.
Yeah, you start DMing me.
I can follow you now.
Yes, I am now following you.
You can start DMing me?
That's so exciting.
All right, that's one of my favorite stories.
Let me tell you my favorite story.
One of my favorite stories.
Please, we'll end on that.
Back in those days on Twitter,
I used to live on Twitter.
I did so much back in the good days.
Got on early. Used to tell on Twitter, did so much back in the good days, got on it early,
used to tell my constituents, tweet me things,
and I'll address them, so I used to respond all the time
with two words on it, getting potholes filled in minutes,
not like months like it used to for the previous, anyway.
I remember.
I get to the Senate, and I'm still living on Twitter,
doing a lot on Twitter, but one of the things
I used to love doing is taking a troll,
somebody yelling at me and just saying, look, I don't agree with what you're saying, but I love you, things I used to love doing is taking a troll somebody yelling at me and just saying look
I don't agree with what you're saying, but I love you
Never let you pull me so low as to hate you or I'd say something nice this guy
Viently attacked me. I said back saying hey respect you your right to your own opinion
I wish you the best that I just something really nice back to him
I'm walking through my front office and they say my staff loves no
No
I'd love to take the phones when they're taking constituent calls people won't expect to and they say, my staff loves, no, I love to take the
phones when they're taking constituent calls. People won't expect to get their Senator. And my
staff said, you want to take this? And I got on the phone, it was this guy saying, is this Cory
Booker? He goes, I tweeted at you. And I remembered his mean tweet. And my daughter saw your response.
And I was calling to apologize. I don't agree with anything you say or do,
And I was calling to apologize. I don't agree with anything you say or do
But I want to apologize for how I spoke to you and I said sir your daughter sounds like she's better than both of us and
I'm so grateful for the apology and for your service
He was a veteran and I said but now can I challenge you on one thing if you'll be so generous that we don't agree on?
Anything and then I started just telling him all the stuff
that we were doing for New Jersey veterans.
And he said to me, I didn't know any of that.
And before you know it,
we have a really great constructive conversation.
And so that to me was one of my favorite moments
because living behind our Twitter feeds
and just hurling things at each other,
just widen the distance and undermine the truth in America
is that we do share a lot of common ground and common cause and these
attention machines competing for our eyes
their corporate models are highlighting our differences and
Really creating outrage machines telling us that we're morally superior than the other side
I tell the story all the time about Van Jones going on. What was it called crossfire and
Sitting with newt gingrich and bernne Brown has this wonderful thing where she says it's hard to
hate up close so pull people in and the two of them got together they don't agree on a lot but
they agree on some things and they realize they like each other and they go to the producers and
say hey let's do a final segment and call it Ceasefire and talk about where we agree and
Republicans and Democrats agree. Pro agree producers let them do it,
but then they stopped them after a handful of shows and said,
you can't do this anymore. Ratings are going down.
The corporate model does not work.
People are turning off ceasefire. Yeah. Turning off ceasefire.
I could get over. Okay. I want Fox instead.
Yeah. So, I mean, that's the problem we have is we all have to work through
this.
People who only know me through Republican lenses
have a certain opinion of me,
and I've met these folks in airports, at restaurants,
and they're kind of surprised that I'm like,
I have some decency about me,
and because we create such horrible caricatures
of the other side that it makes it almost impossible
for us to believe that we have shared humanity
and shared dignity and the basis with which to advance our country.
Cory Booker, thanks so much.
We got to do three hours next time.
I got a bunch of other stuff to get to.
We'll do it at a protest or something.
I appreciate you.
I appreciate all the work you've been doing.
Come back and see us again soon.
I look forward to it.
Again, I'm happy that we're Twitter friends.
We're back.
We're back, baby.
We're going to be DMing. You never know where this is gonna go.
You're not turning me vegan.
Besides that, you never know what's going on.
Not losing my crawfish.
I'll tell you what, if you see me causing some good trouble
that you think is in any way worthy,
let's call that an admission on your part
and an agreement that we will meet at some vegan place
and share
like a vegan you know donut or something like that. I bet you I can make you like
some vegan place. That's a deal I look forward to seeing the good trouble.
Everybody else will see you back here tomorrow for another edition of the To the rhythm of life I was walking on by
I fell straight down, my shoes were untied
I don't wanna get up high again
So the feeling down here I've got to get
Down on the ground
Sometimes fun, but you wouldn't have found
If you'd get down on your own Don't let you lie
Now I see what I just then felt
Trying to hear what's trying to Maybe if I don't try so hard
I understand why I fell so far
Oh baby, there's nothing back up
You gotta go down If you wanna be alone, it'll all come around
And oh, what for now? What to do?
If you take a, if you take a tumble If you take a spill
There's a lesson to learn, a helicopter refill
Well if you stumble, if you're balance you lose
For all eyes ahead, to tie up your shoes
Well if you tumble, if you take a spill
There is a lesson to learn, a helicopter refill If you stumble, if you take a step
There is a lesson to learn and a card to refill
Well if you stumble, if you're balance you lose
The road lies ahead, so tie up your shoe The Bullork Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.