The Daily Beast Podcast - The Reason Why Trump Keeps Getting Worse: Wolff
Episode Date: July 8, 2026Michael Wolff and Joanna Coles break down the latest clues to what's really driving Donald Trump, from his attempts to influence FIFA and his obsession with being at the center of every spectacle to t...he staggering financial windfall he's reaped from his crypto empire while hundreds of thousands of investors have collectively lost billions. They also unpack the scandal engulfing Democratic Senate hopeful Graham Platner, Trump's instinctive defense of embattled public figures, the changing rules of modern politics, the future of NATO as Trump heads into another high-stakes summit, and why Michael believes Democrats still haven't figured out how to capture the country's moral attention in the Trump era. Start your free trial today at https://shopify.com/dailybeast #ad Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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On July 16th, the hawk lands on Netflix.
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When an iconic pro golfer.
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They have not at any point of the Trump,
the Trump grift, which is now 10 years running,
getting worse and worse and worse and more lucrative
and more lucrative for him.
And we are inured, I think.
If you like Donald Trump, then you have to like the griff
because they go part and parcel with the man.
He's a businessman.
Of course he's going to take advantage
of every opportunity that comes his way.
Remember, the other thing about Donald Trump,
Trump, extraordinary thing, is he's transparent.
Because he says people don't care, but it would be interesting to know if we get.
Yes.
He has specifically said that no one cares.
How do we call the country to moral attention?
We don't know how to do that.
Michael?
Joanna.
For those of you who haven't watched this podcast before, I'm Joanna Coles of the Daily Beast.
And I'm Michael Wolfe, not of the Daily Beast.
Well, you're sort of of the Daily Beast.
A visitor to the Daily Beast.
A partner of the Daily Beast.
A partner.
Author of four books on Donald Trump.
And other books on other people.
Yeah, but nobody is interesting as Donald Trump.
We have so much to get to Graham Platner, Belgium.
overturn this.
What a great troll.
We've got the president on Usha Vance's podcast.
I will be doing a deep textual analysis of that conversation.
So we should just, for new people joining the podcast, we should just take 30 seconds to, A, ask them to subscribe and be, explain what we're doing here.
We are doing something that I think, think virtually no one else does because no one else has, for the 10 years, people like me and Joanna and the media everywhere has been covering Donald Trump.
It is from the outside looking in.
Here's a guy, why does he do what he does?
Agassed everybody when he does what he does.
Permanently outraged.
We are permanently outraged.
And our method, and I've been doing this through four books, is to think of this guy as singular.
I mean, he's not part of a political process.
He's not like any politician.
He does things independent of even the people.
around him of his advisors. And it all comes down, A, that this is a government of one, and this is a
government of one, which is motivated by whatever is motivating him at any given moment. And that often
has no logic, no purpose, no gain for him even. And it is all instinctual. It is all mercurial.
it is like a performer.
He's responding at any given moment to his audience.
And actually, sometimes he's not responding to his audience.
He's just responding to whatever somehow got inside his head.
And that's where that's our challenge to go into that head.
So there's so much to poke around in today.
What is inside his head over the spectacular Belgium win and the knockout of the US team after last night?
We're recording this on Tuesday morning.
As we know, he called Gianni Infantino, the head of FIFA, several times to get him to overturn the red card that the referee had given to one of the US players, Balagan.
and he was supposed to be out of last night's game.
Trump intervened.
They quoted Article 27 as if it was the UN or something,
which allows you to overturn a referee's decision.
They rescinded the red card.
Out went Balagan onto the field.
And Belgium, having appealed the decision and FIFA said,
well, we're not overturning the decision now,
one decisively for one.
I mean, it was an extraordinary game.
And it was as if the U.S. were defeated before they even got on the pitch.
And I can't help wondering if they just didn't want to be the center of all that attention.
Well, I can tell you who does want to be the center of all that attention.
And that's Donald Trump.
Right.
And does he care about that the U.S. team was defeated?
You know, just, yeah, sure, only in a passing sense.
I mean, Trump is a sports guy.
Murphy, maybe more than anything else, maybe more than a real estate guy, he's a sports guy.
That's what he likes.
And he likes to be the guy, he likes to be the manager or the team owner.
And he likes to be reaching down, making decisions, overruling everyone else.
He likes, it is for him, a power move.
Right.
Has he ever owned a sports team?
Yeah.
Yeah, he owned the soccer team.
in New York.
Right.
Yes, he did, didn't he?
And that was the sort of game and went.
And he likes rich guys who own teams.
As a matter of fact, I have a story.
I have a story.
Go ahead.
And this is that kind of thing.
If he has Uber control over moving the pieces, the sports pieces around.
So in this, in this.
This would be in the first administration, his friend Bob Kraft, who owns the Patriot.
The New England Patriots is in trouble because he's been busted for frequenting Korean massage parlors in Palm Beach.
And it's not a good moment for Bob.
He has legal difficulties.
But even more importantly and more threatening to Bob is that he has difficulties with the NFL.
Roger Goodell is threatening.
His head of the NFL, right?
Is threatening, you know, whatever a commissioner can threaten sanctions or removing you from team ownership.
Just that's his big.
Over the sex scandal?
Yes.
I mean, this was a, you know, a major moment.
Yeah, yeah, I remember because it was a sort of strip mall thing, wasn't it?
And everybody was like, why does a guy who's so wealthy have to go to a strip mall for sex?
Yeah, no.
And just in the background, remember of Jeffrey Epstein in West Palm Beach.
And Jeffrey Epstein saying, you know, Bob Kraft gets takeout and I get take in.
Ugh.
At any rate.
So his friend, Bob Kraft's friend, Donald Trump, is on the phone with him, Donald Trump, the president of the United States.
So this is Trump won.
Yes.
And Donald Trump is advising him on his how to handle a sex scandal.
Right, because he's got lots of experience.
Some experience.
And Kraft says, yeah, yeah, no, I think we got it.
my lawyer is this, that, the other thing.
But, you know, what I'm really worried about is the NFL and Roger and what he's going to do.
And Trump says, don't worry about Roger.
I'll take care of him.
And what happens?
Well, nothing happened.
So he went on and he still is, he has returned, has returned to being a respected member of the billionaire.
community and the owner of teams.
Right?
He married a shrink, much younger than him, and they live happily in the summer in the
Hamptons, because from time to time I get invitations to go to his house.
Okay.
Well, there you go.
But in this conversation, actually, no one else knows about this conversation except the
principles to it and me, because there were several other people on the phone and having this
discussion about Bobcraft and his problems, and one of them shared this with me.
Okay.
Well, that is an interesting story.
It's boys helping out boys, right?
Well, it's even beyond, of course, it's billionaires helping out billionaires.
Right.
But even more importantly, it's Donald Trump in this sports mix.
You know, that's, you know, Dana White is one of his close friends.
Yeah.
You know, that's, he comes alive in this thing.
It really is what he would have probably in another life preferred to be doing.
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So that brings us neatly, sex scandals, to Graham Platner.
I am prepared.
I was not expecting to eat crow quite as far.
Let's do the background here.
I mean, Graham, this is not good news.
He's going to have to step aside.
What is Trump thinking about this?
Because Trump is going to enjoy this.
Trump is very much going to enjoy this, I think.
Well, let's go.
I think you should eat a little more crow here.
Well, I was excited about Graham Platner's candidacy.
I thought he seemed energetic, exciting, authentic.
Yes, there was stuff in his past, but he seemed to have addressing.
it, this is, yeah, this is kind of disqualify.
Did I say?
Well, you didn't know that he was going to be accused of rape by a ex-girlfriend.
But I did not see his path as...
As straightforward.
And it's too risky a seat and what's at stake is too much for the Democrats to take the risk on this.
So a couple of things, I think it's interesting what's in what's in Trump's head because he's going to be conflicted about this.
I mean, he likes having any Democrat damaged.
And this is damaging, and this may help him hold the Senate.
Right.
On the other hand, he is always on the side of anyone, of any man accused of sexual abuse in almost any shape or form.
So he's going to be maybe on the phone with Graham Platner giving him.
No, I'm sure he is.
It's a horrible accusation to, you know, he turns up drunk in the name.
night or, you know, she lets him in and then he's just intoxicated and determined.
No, no, totally.
But and then let's balance this against everything.
And this is, I mean, an interesting perspective, everything that Trump has been accused of,
which is actually vastly more than this.
He's been, courts have found him guilty of, of.
Well, and the numbers of women who've come out with almost identical stories.
Okay, but, you know, yes.
So what is it, 28 at this point?
You know, serial accused, sexual abuser, court found for E. Jean Carroll.
But that's not the situation Graham Platner's in.
And this was a hasty, you know, it was a hasty rush to get him in.
They didn't do enough background checks.
Just clarify that.
You mean that's not the situation Graham Platner is in.
It sounds actually very close to the situation.
Graham Platner is, although there aren't 28 women.
No, I just mean that Graham Platner isn't.
But there are a handful of women, certainly.
Right.
I guess what I meant was that Graham Platner wasn't a celebrity,
that Trump has a sort of, Molly has a sort of teflon exterior, it turns out.
Graham Platner doesn't have.
Well, we didn't know that.
You know, I mean, that's an interesting, and that's the question I'm going to ask you.
But we didn't know that, you know, Trump,
Trump's Teflon exterior is because he, you know, he, he, he didn't go away.
He didn't, he didn't, when faced with this and the grab them by the pussy moment.
Right.
You know, that was the nadir of his campaign.
The Republican National Committee came and said, you have to withdraw from the race.
And he didn't.
And that's what the fact that he was then elected is what gave him the Teflon coding.
But he had to get elected first.
So my question.
Well, and that was because Melania said, oh, it's locker room talk, locker room talk.
Well, I mean, it's a lot of things, including Steve Bannon then at the subsequent debate with Hillary Clinton.
The front rows were filled with the women who had accused Bill Clinton.
So, yes, you can say that this is handled in a, they handled this in a politically astute way.
But even more importantly, it says Donald Trump, you know, never, never admit, never confess.
Right, well, like the queen, never complain, never explain.
I don't know these women.
Who are these women?
I don't know them.
But so, question for you, do you think we are recording this on Tuesday morning?
Graham Platner has until next Monday to withdraw, which would give the Democrats the ability to nominate someone else.
If he doesn't, then he's on the ballot and I guess going forward.
Do you think he will withdraw before next Monday?
I do.
I do think he will withdraw.
I'll probably be proved completely wrong and he'll be encouraged to brazen it out.
but I don't think he will win against Susan Collins if he brazenes it out.
And I think he has to step aside.
I mean, that's perfectly reasonable logic.
I don't know.
I mean, I think we're in a new climate, new politicians, new behavior among politicians.
And I don't.
And we can go to a Trumpian model.
And remember, Graham Platner is, although a Democrat and a progressive Democrat, also exists in a Trumpian model.
You know, that he's not from politics.
His life story is not at all a political life story.
His rough edges are what gives him his credibility.
Right.
His appeal.
And his attractiveness.
And from a personal standpoint, he,
really only has, you know, two choices to hang his head in shame and to be never heard from
again or to get beyond this by going through it. I don't think he can go. Not that I'm at all
advocating that that's a good idea. I thought, you know, I'm, my feeling has always been that he's
was an odd and probably inappropriate candidate. Yeah, you always said that. And I, you always said that. And I
I was charmed by him. I interviewed him. I told you he was in Norway at the time. He'd gone
there for IVF because it was so much cheaper to have IVF in Norway than it is here,
although you can get IVF, or at least you can get the meds now at Costco at massively
reduced prices. But at the time, he was in Norway. He seemed to have thought about all the
things he'd been accused of, you know, totally inappropriate comments on Reddit, you know,
an alleged Nazi tattoo, which he'd got when he was drunk. I mean, he's clearly someone who has
or has had problems with alcohol, which, you know, if you go to an ER room on a Friday or Saturday,
half the problems there are to do with alcohol. This country has such issues with alcohol,
and we really don't deal with it at all. All the emphasis goes.
on drugs and opiates and things.
Anyway, that's a different thing.
But Graham Platin has a problem with alcohol or he did have a problem with alcohol.
It's led to all sorts of unfortunate behaviors, clearly has to step aside and let someone
else who is a better candidate take on Susan Collins.
It's too risky for the Democrats.
Well, it's too, I mean, he was risky.
I mean, risk for the Democrats is a kind of odd variable here because he was always risky.
Yeah, he was.
Now he's more risky.
Yeah.
But I'm just, I'm.
I don't know.
I think I suppose I agree with you that in all likelihood he will step aside because he should step aside.
But it doesn't mean he might not.
Yeah, in this new climate.
Yeah, in this new world.
And is this actually where he gets his attention that he brazenes it out?
He's denied the allegations.
The woman seems very plausible.
She was very plausible on her interview on CNN.
Completely.
And I think, and I was thinking about this.
And this morning, as I was thinking about this, I was thinking that there is a good book in about
scandals, modern scandals, beginning with Bill Clinton.
So the two most successful politicians of our era, era defined broadly, are Bill Clinton
and Donald Trump, each accused, I mean, each is surrounded by such scandal.
And then you have Barack Obama, also very successful.
successful, two-term winner, not a whiff of scandal-free.
Scandal-free? Why are you being so silent? Are you going to come up with an Obama scandal?
I don't think so. I'm just trying to think. I'm just trying to think also in terms of, in terms of
success, you know, I mean, Obama is certainly has been a successful democratic politician, a
successful president, re-elected president, but the kind of, but with a coolness in a distance
and in a loofness, and in a remoteness that I think in this political time didn't, doesn't serve him
well, doesn't serve him well, and that the connection that people have felt to Bill Clinton and
Donald Trump has been palpably much more direct.
Right.
And they have charisma.
Well, it's also the sense that you know these people.
Right.
You know, you really deeply believe that you know them.
You know what's, you know, it's interesting that we do this thing inside Donald
Trump's head because many other political commentators don't.
But much of the country actually feels they know what's in Donald Trump's head.
And they like it.
And they like it. A lot of them like it because they feel that he says it like it is.
Okay, well, I still think Belgians overturn this was the best troll of the week.
If we're giving awards this week, overturn this.
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So I wonder if anybody is watching and invested in Trump meme coins.
900,000 people did and they've lost collectively $3 billion.
$3.8.
So $4 billion.
You're rounding up.
Rounding up.
So what I wonder is what's in their head.
I mean, wouldn't you say that there should be a collective revolt at this point if you
were among the 900,000 people who lost this money?
Because remember, they lost this money.
Trump made billions.
Well, what did he make on it?
I wrote it down.
1.4 billion.
1.4 billion.
And on his meme coin alone, I think he made 600 million.
I mean, so what are these people thinking?
Are they thinking?
Are they thinking I just got in too late.
If only I got in earlier, it's my fault.
I'm a terrible investor.
Yes, I'm a terrible.
Or are they thinking it's going to come back.
It's going to come back.
It's just low right now.
Bitcoin's low right now.
At least I'm in the crypto game.
Because obviously this is a crypto grip.
I can't fathom it.
I mean, first thing, who are these people who would invest alongside Domestic?
Trump. I mean, this is like, this is the classic rigged market.
Right. Of course Donald Trump, the House is going to win. Of course, you're going to lose.
Now, having said that, of course, many people are already, there's a whole industry of people
of betting against the House, and they don't revolt. So I guess I've answered my question.
Well, it's sort of, it's a bit of a legal scam, isn't it? Because what Trump did with setting up
World Liberty Financial, which also sounds like one of those things. It's just been, it's like
Megan Markle's American or what was it, American Riviera Orchard, or was it American Orchard
Riviera? It was just a name that had come up on AI, I think. This also felt like they put it
into AI. Come up with plausible name for, you know, crypto grift and the Trump meme coin. And
of course, people lost money on Melania's coin too, the Melania coin.
I mean, it's so shameless.
It's just extraordinary this grift.
And it's the president doing it.
No, well, it's the 900,000 people.
Yeah, we are still outraged.
I mean, people say that everybody's over Donald Trump's outrage.
We are still outraged by this.
Aren't we?
Aren't you outraged by it?
No, actually.
I mean, in principle of course.
principle, of course.
But the other point of outrage is a real emotional, moral reaction to, to, to what is,
grievously wrong, unfair, and corrupt.
And, you know, Watergate, I remember Watergate, when one was.
Actually, that was a moment which J.D. Vance just excused this.
Right. He said it would be a 12-hour new cycle.
In which the country came to moral attention. And clearly, they have not here, they have
not at any point of the Trump, the Trump grift, which is now 10 years running, getting worse and
worse and worse and more lucrative and more lucrative for him. And we are in your word, I think.
Or do we accept it as part of Donald Trump, which is the other thing. If you like Donald Trump,
then you have to like the griff because they go part and parcel with the man. He's a businessman.
Of course he's going to take advantage of every opportunity that comes his way. I wish I could
take advantage of every opportunity like that, not I-I, but, but the man on the street.
Right, but do you think the man on the street looking at Donald Trump thinks, oh, that's amazing.
He's such a good businessman. He's made $2.2 billion. He's an amazing businessman. Thank goodness he's
my president. Apparently, depending upon which side of the street you are on, yes, that's what you feel.
And do you also think all politicians are corrupt, at least Donald Trump is successful and corrupt?
First thing, I do not think politicians are corrupt.
No, I don't either, but do you think the public thinks that?
I mean, you know, there's been so much about Nancy Pelosi and all the Congress.
I think depending upon which side of the street, actually, on both sides of the street may feel this.
I mean, politicians are obviously not a favored class at the moment, like journalists.
So, yeah, I think that that is also part of it.
Remember, the other thing about Donald Trump, extraordinary thing, is he's transparent.
Because he says people don't care, but it would be interesting to now if we get.
Right.
And he has specifically said that no one cares.
Right. Well, I wonder if people do care and if the Democrats will be able to use it as part of their, you know, part of their strategy to win back their house and possibly the Senate.
I'm sure they will try, but this is the kind of thing that also can backfire. You know, you focus on an issue that people really don't, it doesn't resonate with them. Yeah, okay, sure. Donald Trump is, tell me something I don't know.
Right. And wouldn't it be better if things.
the Democrats were talking about this in Maine than Graham Platner.
Because Susan Collins has also had some good investments, I believe, along the way.
I don't know.
And the Democrats don't know.
What do we talk about?
How do we present something that is, how do we call the country to moral attention?
We don't know how to do that.
Well, we should, if you're listening to this, send us your comments on this,
because this is the kind of thing that gets viewers and listeners really excited.
And we would love to know, do you think people have lost moral outrage about Trump?
I mean, when we hear from our commenters abroad, no one can believe this is happening here.
And of course, Trump is at the NATO summit right now in Turkey.
We had photos of him taking a walk with President Erdogan this morning.
And we're, you know, we've still got Iran going on.
Which we will get to, I hope.
Well, we can get to it now if you want.
Well, no, just I want to make another point because in this moment of what's the issue,
what's the where the Democrats focus, you know, what seems to be going on is that it's not about,
it's not about issues.
It's not about focusing on these kinds of this political script.
It's about looking for a new kind of person.
Well, new kind of person, let's talk about Nigel Farage,
new kind of politician in the UK who today announced over money.
I mean, similar.
And of course, Britain's saying, oh, it's Trump levels of money.
It's absolutely not Trump levels of money.
For Nigel Farage, he took...
Well, remember, levels of money in the...
in the UK are, you know, $100 in the UK and people are scrambling on the floor.
Well, because there's still a sense of moral outrage there, even after Boris Johnson and Liz
trust as prime ministers. But Nigel Farage, it came to light, had taken a $5 million gift
from a businessman. And there are several other points of corruption around Nigel. So it would
seems to be converging in on him.
Yeah, he's clearly on his own kind of Faragian grift.
But in a really interesting political stunt today, he's resigned his seat and is then
standing again for the same seat, Claxon in East Britain, East England.
So he's basically saying to his constituency, to the voters, people are accusing me of all
this stuff.
Yeah.
Do you care and you can register whether you care or not by voting me back in?
Yeah.
It's a really, really clever stuff.
Which is relevant to the Graham Platner thing that I think that he may take this position
too.
Well, he may not.
And I don't know what he's going to do, but it would be to the same effect.
This is who I am.
This is what I've done.
do you care about this more than you care about having me elected to represent you for affordability?
And again, that goes to the thing. And it's not just about affordability. Again, I think it's a wrong thing to put this on issues. It's about the new political man. I am the new political man. You know, we were just... So my only thing about Plattern and Farage is that it's one thing taking money and people are going to think, oh, Farage has got rich friends. I want someone in power who's... I totally agree.
A rape is different.
That's what, it is, obviously.
But I'm thinking, I just wonder if this other thing is about the person.
Yeah, it's about the person standing.
It's about personality politics.
It's about characters.
There's a point that I want to get in here because in thinking about this
and thinking about all of the Democrats who have recently overthrown the establishment,
people coming out of, we don't even know these people, who are they?
And suddenly they're winning elections and they're going to go to Congress.
And I thought, what do they have in common?
They're all good looking.
That's interesting.
It's kind of a weird kind of thing.
contrast to standard issue politicians who generally look from terrible to we don't notice what they look like.
So it's from sort of Mitch McConnell at one end, admittedly he's older now, but Mitch McConnell to Abdul Al-Said in Michigan, who's upsetting things there.
We saw a moderate candidate dropping out this week.
Also, that him against his opponent, whose name does not come to me at the moment,
who is standard issue looking, she's not the incumbent.
Haley Stevens, she's not the incumbent.
She's a, it's an open seat.
And she's perfectly, you know, perfectly, not someone who would be, who would be,
particularly noteworthy in the looks department, fine.
You know, just a, you know, and in not long ago, that would not have been a consideration.
Politicians look like politicians.
They're not movie stars.
Right.
But now they have to be, and AOC has talked about this, you have to have the ability to communicate on social media.
And so it helps if you're attractive.
It really helps if you're attractive.
Yeah, well, I don't know.
I mean, I myself do okay on social media, so that would run contrary to that view.
That's a fair point.
That's a fair point.
But you're not running for office.
You're not running for office?
I am not running for office.
Perhaps you should run for the Hamptons.
You could run to represent.
You'd have to win in the Blue Collar District of Huntington, right?
Very, very, you know, not.
liberal other than the Hamptons.
But at any rate, I'm too old to run for office.
I would say that.
Not according to Ed Markey, who's going to be 80 when he goes into the Senate with his 50th
year of public service behind him, or Janet Mills, who was the candidate that Graham Platner
won over for the primary in Maine, Democratic primary, because they're too old.
But this is part of the point.
Why are these people running?
They're good looking, partly because they're young.
Right, no, but they're good looking because they're good looking. And they're also good looking
because they're good looking. Because they're good looking. Yeah. Well, Maloney, Georgia Maloney is
quite good looking and there was, I mean, I hate to say it because it's nauseous, but
this is the Italian prime minister. Yeah, the Italian prime minister, but Donald Trump
truth socialed a picture of her looking adoringly at him and said, restraining order.
And of course, you know, this is because he claims that she demanded a selfie last time they met and that she was obsessed by him.
She was like, why are you doing this completely untrue?
Why are you doing this to your allies?
Do this to your enemies.
And now he's trolling her even further.
I mean, she must just want to slap him across the face when she sees him.
She would not be alone.
Right.
No, that's true.
I mean, just remarkable what those poor euros have to put.
up with America. And of course, Pete Hexeth's doing his six-month review of American troops in Europe,
the Pentagon. That's not. Well, what is that? Just threatening and noisy and doesn't mean anything.
Well, I mean, just one of those other digressions in in Trump land, in Trump world, inside Trump's head.
What is it with the Europeans? Why would you go after after Europe? Why would you create that schism?
And just a digression at the Roman Catholic Church just had a schism last week.
I was trying to explain the nature of schisms to my 10-year-old daughter.
And I lost her interest.
Well, I'm sure she's figured it out by now.
She seems very smart.
But nevertheless, I mean, the European thing is meaningful.
It will be one of those things.
And I think we can start to make a list of what are the things that Trump is going to leave us with.
And the kind of reshaping of the world, the reshaping of politics.
And one of the things is this is this schism with this ever-increasing schism with Europe.
And remember the importance of that, that that has held the world in its sense.
semblance of peace and prosperity for 80 years.
Yes.
80s.
And now that is we are clearly at this point because of Donald Trump moving beyond that.
We don't have that anymore.
It's almost disappearing.
I mean, the NATO meeting that begins today.
Today.
You know, NATO probably won't survive this, certainly not.
in the form that we have known it, in the form that has, relatively speaking, maintained the peace
for so long.
Is there an argument here that Europe should have been paying more for their own defense?
Of course there's an argument.
It's always good if somebody pays more, but that's never been, by making that the chief criteria
of this relationship misses the point of this relationship.
Well, of course Trump's missed the point of the relationship because he doesn't listen to what the point of the relationship is and he probably doesn't understand what the point of the relationship is. And it also actually is more basic than we think it is. It is Trump being the center of attention. Right. And he needs to be. I'm the center of attention of NATO because I'm going to ruin it or I'm going to make these demands on it. I'm more important than these Europeans. Actually, it's an interesting thing.
thing that, you know, during the first administration, AIDS would say that these, that those European
meetings were annoying to Trump because he had to appear as one among this group of people
when he was so much more the United States and him as the president of the United States were
so much more important. And he kept trying to reconfigure it so he would be in the front
And they would be behind him.
Right.
Yeah.
It's all about billing.
Right.
Of course it's all about billing.
And his name has got to be first.
Yeah.
But the middle powers, as Mark Carney refers to them, are, you know, creating their own defense mechanism now.
Yeah.
I mean, there was, so there was a good story in the Wall Street Journal this week.
A great story actually, actually going into some detail about everything that had kind
of kind of fractured in the European relationship, in the European friendship, anyway, I recommend
it.
I read it.
And in fact, that's where they described America, or a British intelligence source said America
was now like the crucible meets Wolf Hall.
All right.
Do we want to talk about the Ayatollah's funeral?
Do you remember Ayatollah Khomeini's funeral in one of the one of the Uyotla?
say the late 80s. I remember watching it and it just felt so different to any kind of state
funeral that I had ever seen. I mean, the sort of wooden coffin got passed along from people.
There didn't seem to be any official pool bearers. It's just like the crowd carries it along.
Do you remember it?
A funerals are particularly important in the Shia culture.
They're so dramatic. Everybody's spanging their heads.
The book that we've been recommending King of Kings is it's actually kind of extraordinary on describing these kind of mourning rituals.
Well, I mean, I was rewatching this actually.
And they become political too, which is the other thing, that that becomes a kind of central principle of political organization is these funerals, which happen on a regular basis.
Well, and the other thing that's so noticeable about them also different from, at least the culture I'm used to, is just how noisy they are.
So people are wailing.
They're banging their heads.
Even the Brits.
The Brits don't wail and banging their heads.
No, when Diana, Princess Diana's coffin came along, complete silence.
When the Queen's coffin went past, complete silence, the crowd silences themselves, as opposed to the wailing that goes on in, well, certainly in Iran.
and actually in African funerals too.
Anyway, it's just the difference in culture.
We wail in New Jersey.
Yeah, of course you wail in New Jersey,
but you wail in New Jersey and you don't even need a funeral.
But did you happen to watch the Ayatollah Khomeini's funeral this week?
Well, I wasn't glued to the television, but yes.
I mean, again, just it's sort of.
No, no, and it's, no, and it's extraordinary.
And it also goes to the point.
What was the point about this war?
What was the point about actually killing this guy?
It was to overthrow the regime.
So now we have this demonstration that not only is the regime not, has it not been overthrown,
but it appears to have mobilized the country.
Right.
And they didn't rise up as Donald Trump.
instructed them to, having promised that help was on the way when they did rise up in January,
by the time he decided to vomit at the encouragement of Benjamin Netanyahu, they decided not to.
No, and it's still, there's a thing. So we still look on this from the outside. We literally
don't know what's going on. We have no idea, and we have no idea where the new leader is living.
And Donald Trump doesn't know what's going on there. And, you know, there were two stories,
conflicting stories this week, one of the New York Times One in the Washington Post.
In the Times story said momentary unity at a funeral mass, deep divisions among Iran's leaders.
And the thrust of this story was that it's all on the verge of coming apart, basically.
The Washington Post story was Iran's regime survived the war and is now savagier, ruthless, and more hard-law.
line. Right. So completely conflicting stories. And I think that that goes to the point, A,
no one knows what's going on. And to the further point that we've just had this, we've just had
this war and we don't know what it means. We don't know what it's accomplished. We don't know,
we don't know what it has left us with. I don't even know if ships are moving in and out of the
straight of Hormuz now on everybody's lips.
Are they?
Is traffic back to normal in the straight of Hormuz?
Well, it's certainly not back to normal.
And it's certainly, you know, I think it's a day-to-day business.
Right.
Do you get bombed?
Do you not get bombed?
It feels like it's going to be, I mean, it's a different scale.
I mean, it's a negotiating.
I mean, it's essentially the negotiating point here.
Right.
And then is it just going to end up?
a kind of series of skirmishes that happen from time to time, and it's basically a forever
war, the very thing he campaigned against?
Yeah, I think yes.
How could it not be at this point?
I mean, he has, I mean, nothing has, the more important point is nothing has changed,
or little, little of importance has changed from before the war till after the war.
It is still the same situation of an Iranian regime that has enormous amount of power and influence
and that is intent upon using that power and influence in ways that necessarily continued to make it our enemy.
Right.
And totally destabilized the region, which was beginning.
to settle down, so nothing improved by it.
I want to go to my favorite podcast.
My favorite podcast, which, as you know, is story time with the second lady, because when we read, we grow.
Because when we read, we grow.
She does an incredible grin after she said that.
Someone, her producer has obviously said, you must smile more.
And I think there is someone on set holding up something which says smile, because she's
she goes from completely solemn, straight face to suddenly a half moon of a smile, and you know
she's been told to smile more.
This is a podcast that may have an audience of one, that one person may be Joanna Coles.
I'm obsessed by it.
And of course, this week she had on the president.
She had on the president.
And she asked him.
I mean, just to set the scene here, this is a podcast theoretically about books and reading.
Four children.
Children are, but their fantasy is when children are watching.
Here's the thing that Donald Trump has literally zero interest in, books and children.
Right, and reading and reading.
Well, yes, that would be.
So she asks him, do you know, what books do you read?
Do you have any time to read for fun these days?
So I end up reading mostly newspapers.
I usually read stories about myself.
He doesn't even read about anything else.
So he would never have read those two complaints.
and the Post and the Times about what's going on in Iran.
As we know, he has a resistance to information.
Can I go back to when I asked him this question?
Go on.
So in the spring of 2016, he's running for president,
begins looking like actually he might get the nomination still.
That seems preposterous and totally preposterous that he would be elected president.
But I'm interviewing him and I ask him the question that that
that all presidential candidates get asked, what's your favorite book?
And I can see, I can still see now the look on his face, which was the kind of ship you got me.
God, how did I, how am I not?
How could he not have a book?
How am I not prepared on this?
And, you know, most politicians, of course, say the Bible.
But even that, I think maybe he had, he said, that's not credible.
that I could say that.
Right.
So you could see him search and then suddenly, and literally his eyes light up and he says,
all quiet on the Western front.
Oh, I remember you saying this, right, which you'd obviously had to read at school.
Yeah, yeah.
It just came out from somewhere.
He just brought up a title of a book.
Yeah, but a good book.
Very good book, if only had read it.
Well, she asked him that.
He says he reads about himself and then each visitor to Ush,
podcast is asked to read a book for the children. Last week, it was J.D. Vance reading
Winnie the Pooh, which he overcomplicated. I mean, it was absurd how he overcomplicated
it and he over explained it. But Donald Trump didn't do that. He chose a children's book,
which is produced by the White House Preservation Society, I think, and it's about how,
it's called Presidents play, and it's about how presidents relax when they're in the White House.
President John F. Kennedy enjoyed sailing on the water while President Grover Cleveland relaxed by fishing.
And so the bushes relaxed by playing horseshoes.
Let me just go a little background on what would have happened, that this would come out.
He's going to do this.
We need a book.
Yeah, of course.
And everybody in the White House would have been running around madly.
What book is he going to read?
It's a picture book, so he doesn't even need to read it.
Yeah, well, that's another thing, too.
Does it have any?
Did he just describe it?
No, he just turns the pages and he describes it.
Well, then that would be a big thing.
You know, because always the discussion within the White House is, and this is from the
first administration, what is the level of his reading dysfunction?
I mean, no one quite knows this, but they understand that words reading, say, you know,
All of this kind of thing is a problem.
Well, he talks people through.
So, you know, Nixon is bowling.
Jimmy Carter plays tennis.
And these things are so inadvertently revealing because he then gets to Obama,
who's turned the tennis court into a basketball court, a basketball court, sorry.
And then there's a picture.
There's a painting of all the presidents.
There's a painting of Obama looking tall and lean and popping a ball into a who.
And he goes, now, here is Barack Hussein Obama.
He's playing basketball.
I don't think he's any good at basketball.
It's probably not any good at basketball.
And he like fixates on it.
And then he must have been fixating on, I think, the Obama opening of the library and all
the ex-presidents together hanging out without him.
And I'm sure he was thinking out they all having fun hanging out without me, which is a very
good title of a Mindy Kaling book.
But he then says, wouldn't it be interesting if I got all the ex-president.
We went to a football game. We could all sit together, watch the football go. Wouldn't that be great? And you're like, what are you talking about, man? What are you talking about? Anyway, obviously, it was the most watched podcast they've done. He scored higher than JD and he scored higher than Cheryl Hines, who, as I constantly remind you, read a book about the wolf and the three little pigs and when asked why I said, I like pigs.
speechless.
I'm speechless.
It's totally worth 10 minutes of your time.
The whole enterprise here.
I think it's just.
Why would they have, why would they have done?
What is the point of this?
It's subversion.
I think it's Usha's way of encouraging something that clearly Trumpians don't really care about,
which is encouraging children to read.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, she seems like such a captive in this thing that I can't imagine that she's
totally held captive.
That she's doing this willingly.
So somebody must have gotten this idea that she should do this.
And I, my guess it's JD, that this is a JD production.
Hey, sweetie, because at one point when he does it, he reaches over and taps her knee.
And he's like, hey, sweetie.
Maybe it was his idea.
I think it's you got to get out there.
We got to find something for you to do.
We want people to like you.
We need people to like you.
Yeah.
This is part of the JD campaign.
And I think this is probably a measure of the JD campaign.
Okay.
Well, it's not looking good.
It's not looking good.
But more to the point, Usha looks miserable doing it.
She's clearly very uncomfortable in her.
of the camera, and this is a woman who, as I keep saying, was a Gates scholar at Cambridge.
I mean, super smart.
That obviously has nothing to do with YouTube.
Doesn't translate.
No, of course not.
It doesn't.
But why isn't she doing something with her skills?
Why is it instead of this, which makes her look plainly uncomfortable, is not playing
a super smart woman.
And she's been relegated to sort of this silly podcast.
I bet it doesn't come back up to she's not her baby.
I mean, I imagine this is by choice.
She doesn't, you know, if your husband is running for president, it's very hard to hold a job.
Because you, especially at that level, if she's a lawyer.
You know what?
She could visit military wives.
There's tons of stuff she could do.
She could go and see children in hospital, children who've got cancer.
There's so much she could do that would be more beneficial than this nonsense.
And also what's also fascinating is this...
I can see you've thought about the job of First Lady.
What I did think is funny is they have...
They have a pile of books.
Did you ever think of herself in that role?
No, I would have thought of myself as president, except I can't run as president.
Can't run as president.
But the thing that's interesting is they have for her set a pile of books which are stacked
to look as if they are real books.
And, of course, they've just carried them into the Oval Office, which is where they do the interview and plumped them down right next to Trump's chair.
And Trump can't sit still either.
So he can't just sit and read the book, which actually J.D. could.
He's sort of all over his chair.
Is he behind the desk?
No, he's sitting on a chair next to her.
And he keeps saying how fabulous and fit she looks and how popular she is in the White House and people really like you here.
And then actually, again, he's kind of appealing in that he.
He looks at himself and he says he doesn't play golf at the White House, which I think
Harry Truman had done, because he wants people to know that he's working for them.
He's working for the American people, despite the fact he spent, I think, a quarter of his presidency
playing golf.
But he then makes a joke about he doesn't want to be the least fit president ever or the
fattest president ever.
I think Taft was bigger than Trump.
But it was clearly on Trump's mind.
Yeah.
Well, Trump has got to be.
I mean, he's a 300-pound guy, whatever he says, that's 300 pounds.
And he's 15 pounds heavier this year than he was last.
I mean, you have no idea what it is the sense of his massiveness when you're with him.
I mean, it's daunting.
Right.
I'm sure it's daunting.
No, and I'm sure it's a very helpful tool when you're in the room with someone.
Yeah, no.
I mean, even I was, on the times that I've been, on the multiple times I've been with,
him is the thing that you are most aware of.
His physicalness.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I don't think John Thune's intimidated by his height because he's taller.
It's not just height, however.
No, it's his mass.
He's like a bison.
He's physically like a bison.
Maybe something else about the way he animates.
I mean, it's a, it's a presence.
It's a presence.
Any updates in your case against Melania Trump?
Well, I think you're up to date.
We were in court last week and the judge reproached the other side.
But there's no decision on that, and there's no, now the other side.
We're just waiting to see whether they go forward with their threat.
to file sanctions, which is just something that you do to make us spend more money and
and wait out the clock.
Cause more delay.
And actually, the interesting thing about this is, as this is outlined to me and by the lawyers
and how it plays out, that if they will go, if they go forward with this bid for sanctions,
this is how much this can cost.
They go forward with this bid for sanctions.
It will then be the judge has pretty much said that she will throw this out.
But then they will appeal that to the Second Circuit.
And then the Second Circuit will throw this out.
And then they will appeal it to the Supreme Court.
Now, this is not even the main focus of this case, but this is then a tributary of this case
that will end up costing, that's probably all in.
And that's a, you know, that's six figures, certainly.
Right.
Well, as someone pointed out, one of our comments pointed out, this is like John Dice and John
Dice in Dickens's Bleak House, where they spend so long on a case over a estate that they
all run out of money.
The whole thing is spent in the court.
Right.
The only problem here is that, of course, the Trumps and the United States government will
not run out of money.
Right.
Whereas, whereas I might.
Well, you're hugely supported by people that.
You raised a lot of money on GoFundMe, and I'm sure people will be prepared to help you if it gets to the point where you've run out your initial fund.
But they must be banking on that.
It's just how people use the law.
It's remarkable.
Yeah.
Now, I'm not sure.
I told you that.
So when they were in court, my lawyers saw on their screens, the opposing counsel's screens,
as the judge was admonishing them so they didn't get to use this material.
But they had us up there ready to use snippets of our...
Of inside Trump's head?
Yes.
Aha.
Well, I wonder which part it was.
Do you know which bit it was?
I don't.
I don't.
Intriguing.
Intriging.
Well, if you have been...
Thank you for joining us.
We'll be back on Thursday.
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