The David Pakman Show - 6/27/25: Trump approval collapses as people are speaking in tongues
Episode Date: June 27, 2025-- On the Show: -- Cory Booker, US Senator from New Jersey, joins David and Jesse Dollemore on Capitol Hill to discuss Democratic resistance to the Trump regime -- Donald Trump's approval rating ...is in free fall as poll after poll shows a dramatic collapse following repeated humiliations and unforced errors -- Trump’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt launched an unhinged attack on CNN while backing Trump's debunked claim of “obliterating” Iranian nuclear sites -- Joe Rogan feigns surprise at Trump’s mass deportation tactics despite years of warning signs and his own role in normalizing them -- Members of Trump’s official Faith Office were caught speaking in tongues at the White House, echoing theocratic extremism while holding real political power -- The Friday Feedback segment -- On the Bonus Show: Reactions to today's Supreme Court decisions including a ruling against nationwide injunctions, and much more... 🛡️ Incogni lets you control your personal data! Get 60% off their annual plan: http://incogni.com/pakman 🛌 Helix Sleep mattresses: Get 27% OFF sitewide at https://helixsleep.com/pakman ⚠️ Ground News: Get 40% OFF their unlimited access Vantage plan at https://ground.news/pakman 🩳 SHEATH Underwear: Code PAKMAN for 20% OFF at https://sheathunderwear.com/pakman -- Become a Member: https://davidpakman.com/membership -- Subscribe to our (FREE) Substack newsletter: https://davidpakman.substack.com/ -- Get David's Books: https://davidpakman.com/echo -- TDPS Subreddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/thedavidpakmanshow -- David on Bluesky: https://davidpakman.com/bluesky -- David on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/davidpakmanshow
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the show, everybody.
You know, it's very easy to despair in this current political environment.
And I don't have any solutions for you today in the sense of saying the long national nightmare
is over.
I don't have that.
We're just not there right now. But
one thing that can be nice is seeing public opinion correctly assess what's going on in
the world. And to a degree, the strongman act of Donald Trump is falling apart. You
can see it in the numbers. You can certainly hear it in his voice. You can feel it in the
air. Trump losing altitude hunched over, dejected at the NATO summit. But what has been going on with polling since the
Iran fiasco started and gaff after gaff at NATO and all of it? Well, poll after poll is showing
a collapse. Ipsos Reuters has Trump at a minus 16 favorability. American Research Group has him at minus 21 favorability.
Morning Consult, which is usually a softer landing for Trump, still has a net favorite
favorability at minus eight.
And then you even have others where Trump's approval is starting to kind of dip down into
the mid 30s to a degree.
And this is it's really not about one bad moment.
It's an accumulation.
It's the kind of slow motion humiliation that you can't do a rally and fix it.
You can't, you know, do another all caps post and erase all of the problems that you've
caused for yourself.
He bombs Iran.
He slurs out a word word salad about peace. He's sort of like a drunk
guy yelling no hard feelings after breaking your nose. And everybody's kind of confused as to what's
going on. And then we had the MAGA military parade, this taxpayer funded narcissistic ego trip,
which didn't really work very well. It ended in pure cringe and poorly attended Trump's handlers pumping out graphics of him
saluting jets, his press secretaries on TV declaring nuclear sites obliterated when it
doesn't actually seem that that's what the reporting and the data say.
And the polls aren't reacting like they used to.
I mean, the base is still there,
but there's a lot of glazed over eyes. Of course, I don't support what he's doing at
this point in time. Now, we've had a lot of people now familiarize themselves with this
act and the script really hasn't changed. Polls show that people are sick of the act.
It's of course, Democrats.
It's a lot of independents and it's even some Republicans.
You don't get numbers this crappy without some Republicans saying, I don't like it.
The ice raids in the suburban parking lots, they're not playing well.
Elements where even on Fox News, you get little inklings of people saying, I don't really
like this.
It's not helping him.
The truth, social tantrums about fake pollsters and conspiracy theories against the king not
helping him.
And meanwhile, you've got people like Steve Bannon and Tucker who kind of inched away
around Iran.
Although Tucker now says, I did speak to the president.
We're cool.
Everything's good. We've got this building situation for Trump as he unravels on the world stage in humiliating
fashion.
The mask of competence, if it was ever there, I don't think it was, but some people thought
it was that mask of competence is slipping.
And underneath, you've still got a guy bragging about tariffs while inflation is eating people
alive as they didn't get the
price reductions that Trump promised Trump.
You've got Trump bragging about all of the success in Iran, although the assessments
say, we've maybe said Iran and their nuclear ambitions back just a few months.
But the part that is sort of a buzzkill, but is important to mention is that none of this
crap matters unless Democrats figure out how to use it to win again and to get power.
And so far, I'm not really seeing that.
Democrats are holding heads above water, but just barely in some of the same polling that
show Trump way down.
You see Democrats not polling well either.
And Trump's dropping bombs, losing allies, melting down on truth social every single
day. And meanwhile, Democrats bombs, losing allies, melting down on truth social every single day.
And meanwhile, Democrats aren't really polling much better.
Now, it's important to understand that oftentimes the out party, especially when they've just
lost, isn't going to poll well no matter what they do.
So Trump's cratering.
But the alternative has to look like a lifeline.
The alternative can't be we're not Trump.
It has to be something real. And we
spoke about this with members, members of the House and Senate in D.C. this week. We're going to
look start looking at some of those interviews today. It's not enough to watch someone fail,
has to be the takeaway. You've got to give people a vision of what's actually better about what you
will do. And that part can sting a little bit bit because even with Trump unraveling, I don't believe at this point that Democrats have figured out how to step
in and take the wheel. We're going to talk to Cory Booker next. We'll see what he has to say.
But to me, the messaging is muddy, the energy, I don't know. And when we always think, oh, this is
the last straw, Trump's approval is going down to 18.
It never happens.
And Democratic polling is really not anything to write home about.
So Trump's cratering support.
But the question now is, can the Democratic Party figure out a way to take advantage of
it for me right now?
The answer is I don't yet know.
Caroline Levitt, White House press secretary known to some as Soviet Barbie.
I kind of am unsure whether my audience wants me using those nicknames.
There's definitely a misogynistic aspect to it, but that's the one that's floating around
now.
Soviet Barbie.
Let me know if that's sort of like unbecoming of a progressive show or whatever you think
at it.
I don't know whatever we nickname her or not, she does presentations
on camera, both in the press briefing room and on TV, usually Fox News, that would make North Korean
and Soviet propaganda anchors blush. This is a lot. Caroline Levitt flipped out on a CNN reporter
saying she is merely motivated by her hatred of Donald Trump.
And there's a lot underlying this.
Take a listen.
But that reporter is a sheep and she's a mouthpiece for people who don't like Donald Trump.
And she only gave the White House an hour to respond.
And that's, again, the same playbook we've seen the fake news media play time and time
again.
But this story has now been debunked widely by not just the United States, but also Iran
and Israel as well.
You might be wondering what is this about?
Why is she so angry?
Well, she is following Trump's lead, as Caroline Levitt always does.
And Donald Trump posted the following to Truth Social before this interview, quote, Natasha
Bertrand should be fired from CNN.
I watched her for three days doing fake news.
She should immediately be reprimanded and then thrown out like a dog.
She lied on the laptop from Hell Story.
And now she lied on the nuclear site story attempting to destroy our patriot pilots by
making them look bad when, in fact, they did a great job and hit peter. Total obliteration.
She should not be allowed to work at fake news, CNN. It's people like her who destroyed the
reputation of a once great network. Her slant was so obviously negative. Besides, she doesn't have
what it takes to be an on camera correspondent, not even close fire.
Natasha, I assume when Trump says she doesn't have what it takes to be on camera, that Trump's
saying she's not attractive enough physically.
That seems to be Trump's big currency.
And so what we are seeing is that when the dear leader says jump, everybody says how
high and when Trump attacks a particular reporter, Caroline Levitt goes
right into it as well.
The likes of which anyone with familiarity with authoritarian regimes should understand
the risk of.
It's now that they've been doing it for a while.
They did it to Jim Acosta in his first term.
They sued George Stephanopoulos.
We've seen it in Inglings, but they are really targeting individual and specific members
of the media.
They want Natasha Bertrand fired and we'll see if he succeeds at that.
Now back to Caroline Levitt.
She also is claiming that even within the Intel, the intelligence community, there are
actors who want to make Trump look bad. And therefore, you've got to be really careful about what comes out of the intelligence community, there are actors who want to make Trump look bad.
And therefore, you've got to be really careful about what comes out of the intelligence community
to Trump's intelligence community, by the way.
No other president in history could have ever dreamed of such a success.
And that's exactly why the fake news media is now trying to demean and undermine the
president.
And we've seen this playbook be run before.
You have hostile actors within the intelligence community
who illegally leak bits and pieces
of an intelligence assessment to push a fake news narrative.
And that's what the CNN story was yesterday.
And it's not a coincidence that it was written
by the exact same CNN reporter who wrote the original story,
falsely alleging that the Hunter Biden laptop
was Russian disinformation.
The American public are smarter than this and they should know the truth.
President Trump completely and totally obliterated the capability of Iran to produce a nuclear
weapon and the world is safer today because of his historic efforts.
Yelling something doesn't make it true. Repeating a something doesn't make it true.
Repeating a lie doesn't make it true.
This is truly both a dangerous and insane lie because we now know nothing was obliterated.
Iranians are going to be able to regroup.
They're going to be able to continue where they left off, probably within just a few months, all because the
Orange leader tells fantastical lies.
And people like Caroline Levitt need to go along with the lies.
But at a certain point, at a certain point, we have to be able to say they're just not
telling you the truth, but they're able to construct their own reality, common of authoritarian regimes.
And if you don't say that you buy into it, you are exposed as being outside.
You're not on our side.
And then they attack you and then they demand that you be fired like they're demanding with
Natasha Bertrand from CNN right now.
The clampdown may come on any of us.
And as we see the demands for Natasha Bertrand to be fired, we have to remember it could
be us too.
And so I encourage you to get on our substack newsletter, David Pakman dot substack dot
com.
It's the one place we own our data.
If the clampdown does come and we don't know if and when that will be, it's the only way
I'll be able to get a hold of you and let you know what's going on.
You can also email info at David Pakman dot com and say, hey, David, get me on that
newsletter. We've got a great show. We're going to talk to Cory Booker and so many other great things. points in time. And I stood in a very particular spot that people watching see on their screen
right now. This is it's one of the many entrances. I believe this one is sort of like between the
White House and the Eisenhower executive office building. When I was there, no one was speaking
in tongues. No one was praying. But this is a very different White House. A group with Donald Trump's faith office was
indeed praying and speaking in tongues at the White House in the same spot I've stood a few times
before. If you've not if you're not familiar with what it means to speak in tongues, it's also known
as glossolalia glossolalia'm not totally sure about the pronunciation.
And this is a sort of speaking in a language unknown to you.
They go scab it.
I'd be better be better.
But you know, stuff like this.
And it's often Pentecostal Christians that do it or in what are called charismatic Christian
traditions charismatic as a specific meaning in this context.
It's not like, wow, what a charismatic person. But the idea is that the Holy Spirit is inside of you and it is forcing these utterances
in a language, scabbit the bat, bat, you know, stuff like this.
So this is what happened at the White House.
And this is this is the White House under Trump.
It does sound like a medical event.
It does sound like a stroke of some kind.
So you'll hear the two women sort of primarily leading the prayer.
And then in the background, you'll hear people who I guess are not having a medical emergency.
They are speaking in tongues.
We just thank you right now, Lord, from the east, the west and north and the south.
You will shake America with your power and your glory.
We cancel every assignment of the enemy. You hear that?
That's that's the I know it might not sound like it if you got sad about about about
a that is the Holy Spirit inside of you forcing out these statements.
One nation under God and we are standing on the soil of the White House and we are declaring
your word every
place that our foot will trod, you will give it to us.
And we are taking the land.
We thank you, oh Lord, you have brought us to the kingdom for our time.
And this is the time.
And so we declare right now for the capital of our nation.
Not later, mind you, they're declaring it right now.
That America will come back to God.
We will come back to God. We will come back to God.
Nothing will stop this nation.
And we speak right now by the authority of heaven.
You told us to bring heaven to earth.
Heaven is being released from your people.
This is not a parody.
I know there are people in my audience who just will say, David, I'm just listening today.
I don't believe those people are really at the White House.
I believe that this is some kind of SNL skit.
This is not a sketch, a skit or a parody.
This is the White House under Donald Trump.
Now I don't.
You know, the irony is not lost on me, but it seems lost on these people that Iran, which
has been in the news so much this week.
Iran is run by radical theocrats, religious extremists.
It is. But these people would turn the United States into a Christian version of that radical Iranian
theocracy.
They're.
It's just another flavor of it.
These are not just visitors, by the way.
These are these women, this group that it panned to.
This is part of Donald Trump's religious outreach officially tied to the administration, the
faith office.
And this is what they're doing in the seat of American government.
Now, if you've ever been around charismatic Christian rituals, this it sounds like these
are medical emergencies, a seizure, a stroke, something that warrants a call for help.
But this is something being celebrated by Donald Trump's faith office.
And you know, for all of the discussion as to do we have separation of church and state
or don't we?
When we criticize Iran for being run by radical theocrats that suppress dissent and enforce
religious morality and claim that their power comes from God.
Then we say this is OK when it is just a version of Christianity that wants to enforce religious
morality, morality, a civil law and says that their power and their motivation and all of
it also comes from God.
What's the difference?
OK. What's the difference? OK, but this is a little bit of a different administration in the sense that these people
don't just believe the United States is a Christian nation.
They believe that God literally put Trump in power, that Trump was quite literally selected
out of anyone to be the president.
And they want laws on abortion based on their religion.
They want laws on LGBT rights.
Education should be based on their religion.
Immigration should be based on the religion.
Let's let Christians come, but not others.
All of this is dictated by that belief about civil law.
This is why Trump's administration slash reproductive rights banned books, erased trans health
care protections, declared that church groups should have more political power rather than
less.
It's not just because of policy, but there are people who believe Trump is doing God's
work.
So this is absurd.
This is ridiculous, but it's also very dangerous because these are not random people in a church
basement.
This is the faith office at the White House in power.
They don't want a democracy.
Or if they do, they want a democracy where Christians are the ones that get votes, which
isn't really a democracy, is it?
They want a Christian version of Iran.
And that should scare everybody who believes in what the founders actually intended.
Hey, it's been a while since I spoke about podcaster and M.A. commentator Joe Rogan.
Joe Rogan has suddenly discovered that Donald Trump is arresting immigrants inside of Home
Depot.
And he's shocked, shocked. I tell you, as if nobody saw this coming, as if Trump and Tom Homan and all of them
didn't tell us exactly that this is what they were going to do.
Here is Rogan explaining his shock.
Ice raids are fucking nuts, man.
Watch this protest on television.
It's like doing the raids or nuts.
The pro the. Yes. I think protests are taking it a little too hard. this protest on television. It's like Doing the razor nuts the prot the yes
Well, I
Don't think if they the Trump administration if they're running and they said we're gonna go to Home Depot and
We're gonna arrest all the people at Home Depot. We're gonna go to construction sites and we're gonna just like tackle people at constructions
I don't think anybody would signed up for that
They said we're gonna get rid of the criminals and the gang members first. Right. And now we're
we're seeing like Home Depot's get raided. That's crazy.
This is really common. People pretend they didn't see it coming with authoritarians.
It happened specifically like it's this big surprise when authoritarianism shows up in
real life instead of just, I don't know, on X on your YouTube feed.
But we told them and Trump told them Trump campaigned on this stuff.
Trump called for mass deportation forces check.
He said he would use local police.
He said he would use the military if he needs to.
The military and the National Guard if he needs to.
He said he was going to do the largest domestic immigration crackdown in American history.
He said immigrants were invaders, animals poisoning the blood of our country.
It wasn't subtle language.
And it's happening.
I mean, they're just doing it.
Now, ISIS dragging fathers off job sites, people just working to feed their families,
splitting up families in parking lots.
And all of a sudden, Rogan's like, bro, this is nuts.
But this is the game.
These guys, it's it's such a common thing.
They flirt with reactionary politics when it's abstract.
It's memes, it's free speech and vague slogans about freedom and sovereignty.
But the second the ideas
hit the ground in real life, people start getting hurt. You see the videos of this happening to
people. They claim who knew it could have gone this far, who could have possibly. But it's
partially because of Rogan. Rogan helped normalize this stuff. He platform Trump and Trump's allies.
He echoed their rhetoric.
He said it's the obvious choice.
He endorsed Trump.
He downplayed the authoritarianism fears over and over.
And now he wants to act like he's a bystander.
And he's like, wow, this is really crazy.
I had nothing to do with this thing and had no idea this was going to happen.
Well, Trump told us it was going to happen and you helped promote it, sort of like stomping on the gas pedal. And then all of a sudden you go, this car is in a ditch.
We got to figure out who's responsible because nobody could have predicted this.
Trump hadn't even really and still hasn't really built the new deportation force.
He hasn't yet suspended habeas corpus.
Maybe he will.
He hasn't started his denaturalization task force.
Remember that we're going to look at people who have been granted citizenship like me,
right?
Born in another country.
We're going to see about denaturalizing people that hasn't started yet.
So if this is Rogan's breaking point where he goes, this is fucking nuts,
he is not only too late, but it's also really early because some of the really crazy stuff hasn't yet
happened. So remember when they go, no, nobody could have predicted this would have gone so off
the rails. We predicted it. Trump said he was going to do it. They ignored it. And now they're
all pretending to be surprised because the alternative would be you made
this happen and admitting that is very, very difficult for a lot of people.
So this is going to be, you know, I'm not super in the manosphere.
I sort of follow it to the degree that I need to to have a sense of what's going on so I
can talk about it on the show.
I don't really know right now whether any of the other Manasphere hosts have started
to express concerns recently about Trump.
I know we covered a couple rumbling some months ago.
If they are, let me know, because it would be very interesting if the Manasphere big
picture ended up turning on Trump after being one of the biggest reasons that Trump got elected again in the first place.
Let me know what you think.
We're going to take a break.
We're going to hear some of your feedback and so much more.
I was in Washington, D.C. this week and we did a number of really interesting interviews
with senators and members of the House.
And today we're going to look at my interview with Cory Booker.
I sat down for these interviews alongside progressive host Jesse Dallimore.
So you'll hear both of us talking to Senator Booker.
We talked about a lot of different things.
Let's take a look at that right now.
I think that like really one of the hardest things I was just saying this to my girlfriend
that if you were all were not in our our 20s anymore I should just say.
Speak for yourself.
But I think one of the secrets of life is the ability to go from utter discouragement
to utter discouragement and not lose your energy and enthusiasm.
And when I meet people like John Lewis who in his final months of his life,
I went with him on a road trip from Atlanta to Plains, Georgia
to hear Jimmy Carter teach Sunday School.
And people, it was one of the more,
I had never seen anything like it in my life.
People were waiting out from the night before,
sleeping out like it was some kind of top concert.
And it was ecumenical.
There were Hindus there, Muslims there, Jews there,
Christians there, all coming to hear
Jimmy Carter's Sunday School in the last months
or years of his life.
And on that road trip I asked John Lewis tough questions
like you made all these advancement in voting right,
now you watch the Supreme Court gut the Voting Rights Act.
You made sort of these advancements in ideals of equality
that are now being vilified and attacked by Donald Trump.
And yet he wasn't fazed.
And he just seemed to let me know that this pathway
is not linear towards justice.
And so I had this discouraging moment on the floor
like a week or so ago where one of these Republicans
who I've worked with across the aisle, and I would never characterize him as,
like he and I have vast differences,
but we have found ways to do things together.
And I was teasing him about that.
I was saying, you're being a friend,
if you want me to, if you're gonna run for reelection,
I'll come down and tell people how awful you are,
that might help you.
And then he looked very sad at me and he said,
I'm not running for reelection.
And the bad thing for you is that when I leave,
you're gonna get somebody that is, as you said,
a different type of Republican.
In other words, and he would say not even,
he wouldn't even use that word, probably Republican,
because of what we're seeing, which is not about a party,
it's about a person right now.
And that person right or wrong, you fall in line.
And that's why-
It's wrong.
Yeah.
Well, this is sort of, I mean,
it kind of gets us right into where I think we wanted
to start, which is like, there's sort of two things happening
simultaneously right now.
On the one hand, we have exactly what you're describing,
where these are not disagreements as to like,
should the top tax rate be 37 or 39.6?
These are much bigger sort of disagreements where we've been saying, is there even any,
can you even work with some of these folks?
On the other hand, there are these little cracks that do seem to be forming on Iran,
on he really was the anti-war candidate or he wasn't or it's technically not a war or
whatever. What do you think is more, are these cracks relevant in terms of your ability to get things
done that you want to get done?
Or is this really just a facade of independence that we're seeing from Republicans and at
the end of the day, it's oppose anything Democrats want to do?
So I mean, the best answer to that question is I don't know.
I mean, you just don't know. And you have to keep whacking away
at that implacable wall of resistance no matter what,
even if those cracks are real or not.
You can't stop hitting the wall.
And you know, look, I'm like, my friends tell me,
I'm like, I'm a prisoner of hope always.
I'm so optimistic.
But this is a day that I'm really having a hard time struggling right now and I think it was the end of my
day yesterday where I watched these incredible working Americans for within a union seiu
who are working hard I know what they do for their union I know the money they make but
they're crowding here in the heat of yesterday to stand out and protest this bill
with horribly difficult stories about,
even though they're working full-time jobs,
how barely they're holding it together.
And then this is what I went home
to tell my girlfriend about, and it gets me emotional.
This woman who's out here struggling,
older woman still working a full-time job,
reminding me of a relative of mine, says to me, we're going to keep fighting, we're going
to keep fighting.
And by the way, Cory, I'm a monthly contributor to you.
And that's what hit me that this woman who's struggling has put her faith in me, whatever
it is, a recurring monthly donation of like, what is it, maybe a dollar or $5, because
she wants to do everything she can to fight
for the healthcare of other Americans.
And so I honestly, the suffering in the world right now,
from Ukraine to Gaza,
to nobody's talking about Sudan the greatest,
and I know the Americans that used to be there, trying to provide aid and support
that are no longer in Sudan. I was standing there on the Chad Sudan border, seeing the horrors of
human suffering that have now been pulled away. And so today is a day where I'm just like,
keeping it together, keeping fighting, keeping whacking at the wall, but my heart's broken
keeping it together, keeping fighting, keeping whacking at the wall, but my heart's broken
and my spirit is struggling.
But I will tell you this,
there's too much on the line for us to stop fighting
every day to keep trying to win this battle.
Let me piggyback off of that.
I think it's a great segue
because so many people in the party,
my audience, I'm certain David's audience
are so disappointed right now,
disheartened, you talked about going from disappointment
to disappointment and trying to keep your resolve.
What do you say to my audience that want resistance,
they want a fight and they want people
to be standing up to Donald Trump?
What's the plan going forward to stop leaning
into allowing Donald Trump even an inch
by voting for his legislation and his agenda
and his nominees, when are we gonna actually
be an opposition party and not the minority party?
So I wanna answer that question in two ways.
One, and I'll be as brief as possible.
So as the only Senator that goes home to a community,
black and brown community below the poverty line,
where we don't mistake wealth with worth,
where there are struggles going on
that so many Americans face from all backgrounds,
but we don't talk about enough.
And so in my community, you see the ravages of gun violence.
And by the way, I always tell people this.
When I was mayor, all my shootings, except for one,
were done by people who illegally acquired guns.
And this is a president that is tearing down the ATF
to enforce our gun laws in order to have more money
to abduct people off, more resources to abduct people
off the streets who no threat to us whatsoever.
And I'll never forget my tenant president
when I lived in the high rise projects,
whose son was murdered in the building
in which I would eventually move into,
who just always taught me that what real hope is,
and I face, again, I've been shattered
by the children that I knew,
all the kids that used to hang out in the lobby,
shouldn't say all, a lot of the boys
that used to hang out in the lobby,
Hassan Washington, I can go Shahad, all are dead right now from gun violence.
And yet somehow Miss Jones and others would say that real hope is just not letting despair
have the last word.
So the first thing I just want to tell people is do not let him have the last word.
Do not let him be the main character of this story.
Keep the focus on the fight.
Keep the focus on the people you're fighting for.
Let them be your motivation.
Now, as far as the larger Democratic Party politics,
we as a people, all of us have an obligation
to find more creative ways of fighting this battle
than the typical stuff.
I don't know, you know, as an opposition party, you and I can disagree on tactics, but much of what we're doing here is not breaking through to the larger public.
I'm coming from a hearing much of what I said there, as passionately as I said,
that's not breaking through. We've got to find creative ways of helping the folks that are on the
sidelines right now get into the game.
Because King said this that we have to repent for is not just the vitriolic words, violent
actions of the bad people, but the appalling silence and inaction of the good people.
And so the strategies that I always try to tell my team we've got to do is fight them
in the courts, fight them procedurally in every way we can, but we've got to find a way to be an ignition point and get more people
understanding what's at stake and more of the good people into the game because we outnumber
them. I know we do. And so that's what I'm pushing my colleagues and others. This is
why we did the 25 hours on the floor. This is why we did the sit in on the steps. This
is why we're already plotting what are the next good trouble we're going to do to try to get more people activated
and engaged.
Is there or are there specific either policy or action items that you think would be most
effective at getting people together in the context that for all of our criticisms of
the way that MAGA has run politics, Donald Trump is able to come up with some ideas
that really coalesce people.
They're bad ideas, they're based on,
often, incorrect information,
but whether it's trade or immigration or crime,
they get people united,
putting their smaller differences aside,
and voting together to win elections.
After the election, it's haywire, right?
But for the purposes of winning the elections,
they've come up with these kernels.
What are they for the Democratic Party?
Well, so I hope you guys will let me come sit down with you
before the next election, and a year from this November.
Still a long way away, but I'm gonna just put a bookmark
to tell you that we had better policies as a party.
When you polled them independent of the people,
more people agreed with our policies.
But he was a better salesman.
He was communicating in spaces
that we didn't even communicate in.
They were on Discord and Twitch.
They were doing the kind of communications
that we should have been doing.
So they had a better, they had a great messenger,
whether you like him or not.
They had, they were using the mediums and then the messages and part of that message is,
do you trust me enough to know that even I'll do the things I say I'm going to do?
Right. And I think that both parties have lost the trust game. Why, how do I say, how do I make a statement like that is because
you basically had two people, one got 49.7%, the other one got 49.3%.
Most of America reject, the majority of Americans voted against both candidates.
There wasn't this like wave election where I believe that leader
has captured my moral imagination makes me feel in my heart that their vision of America
includes me and my family.
And so if we're gonna be a democratic party,
it's not just the policies, but yeah,
I wanna be able to say to people,
this is a shitty country to raise a child in.
We don't give maternal care, we don't give paid family leave,
we push women out back into the workplace a week or two
after they've had their kid.
It's more expensive in most states to have child care than it is to go to state tuition college,
that we are the worst on things like giving tax breaks to working class people. We give them all
to the... I don't... The policies, we need to have the messages, but we're losing our faith as a
society in the very idea of the American dream.
And the next leaders need to be able to redeem the dream and restore the trust that we can do something.
Now that's electoral politics. My fear right now is how many thousands of Americans will die before the next election
because they don't have health care. How many thousands of will die because of their emphysema or their asthma
is gonna get so much worse because of the particulate matter
that Donald Trump has allowed polluters to pay?
How many public lands that we, from Idaho to New Jersey,
are they going to give away to oil companies and others
that we can never get back together?
I'm worried that between now and that election,
the harms that they're gonna do
are gonna become irreparable,
they're gonna cost people's lives.
They're going to cost people's livelihoods.
There's already an extinction level event going on for small businesses in this country
because folks don't realize that his tariffs have made the baby carriage in the backseat
hundreds of dollars more expensive and they've hurt those businesses that can't pass along
those charges.
So that's why I'm I get this question
all the time and it pisses me off but I have to answer it to people when I'm sitting with a
reporter usually more mainstream media than folks like you all and they say to me what are you going
to do to save the Democratic Party? It's it pulls lower than colonoscopies and cockroaches
and I say to folks I am not interested in saving the Democratic Party.
Right now I'm interested in serving the American people, not a frickin' party.
And I think actually in that answer is the secret for the Democratic Party.
Because if we're all concerned about Democrats, screw that.
Americans out there, most of us are barely affiliating with either one of the two parties now.
They're just trying to make a way for their family. And we've got to get back to
having leaders that are more concerned with people than parties.
Senator, thank you so much.
I have one more.
Yeah, please.
I love all of that. But when, listen, we exist in a new political order. The old way of my
good friend across the aisle, it doesn't exist anymore.
So when is a bridge too far for elected officials
to stop advancing the agenda of Donald Trump?
So, look.
Because we want a good partner in governance
and you don't have that now.
We're not governing if you're bending the knee to,
not you, specifically.
Right, right.
But I want to address that because it has visited upon me.
So I'm trying to anonymize this,
but there was something really bad happening
to Americans working for government abroad.
And I was able to reach out to somebody to Americans working for government abroad.
And I was able to reach out to somebody in the Trump administration that's name's not
a necessary household name, but I had that relationship.
I can't, I'm not stopping him from doing a lot of this stuff, but the fact that this
person knows me to be an honorable person and somebody I supported, even though I don't support the president,
I was able to get that reversed.
And so I hear people oftentimes saying,
we need moral absolutism.
People want that right now.
And I am willing, I just need to tell folks
that what we need is the best strategies
to deliver results for people.
And we may disagree on tactics, but if we start within our party creating the sense of moral absolutism,
it's going to hurt our coalition.
Because if everybody in your coalition agrees on everything, your coalition is not big enough.
And so I've shown in my career from my early days as a city councilman doing 10-day hunger strikes and
fighting, living in a mobile home, I will go to great extremes in my service.
But I'm not always going to agree on everything.
Right now, I don't want to become Donald Trump just to beat Donald Trump.
I was running for a town hall stage in Iowa back when I ran for president in 2019, 2020.
And I'm about to jump up on the stage, and a big guy,
I'm a former tight end for Stanford,
this guy looked like he was a former linebacker
for Iowa State, and he goes, dude,
I want you to punch Donald Trump in the face.
And I look at him and I go, dude, that's a felony, man.
And so I asked him if I could tease him,
I jump up on the stage and I said this to a huge crowd of people. I said, this guy said to me, I should punt
and everybody roared in applause. And I was like, this is gonna be a short run for president.
But that's not how we win. Now, this is a big fight. People like, oh, when they go low,
you go high, dah, dah, dah. I'm sorry. I have an Oscar-nominated documentary about me called Street Fight, about fighting in urban politics and winning,
but not sacrificing my soul.
And what I know from the people that I most herald
in my life as heroes, from Harvey Milk to Alice Paul,
these are incredible Americans in the suffrage movement
and the LGBTQ movement that found ways to fight
by not sacrificing their truth.
And the best example is we didn't beat
Bull Connor by bringing bigger dogs and bigger fire hoses.
What they were able to do, which is what we need to do in this moral moment,
is they were able to say, as bad as they are, George Wallace, Bull Connor,
we are not going to become them.
The challenge is to ignite the people who are bystanders to history.
And by them standing in
front of them they were able to call to the conscience of this country and thousands of
people joined their fight. The reason why this bill it literally I have to motivate myself in the
morning to come back for another day to fighting because this bill is so close to passing out of
the Senate and the reason why it is is because right now too many people's
voices are not being heard.
You know what Jefferson said.
Jefferson said when people fear their government, there is tyranny.
When the government fears its people, there's liberty.
Well, there are a whole bunch of senators here.
How do I know it?
Cause they whisper it to me in the elevator that are disagree with what Donald Trump is liberty. Well, there are a whole bunch of senators here. How do I know it? Because they whisper it to me in the elevator that are disagree with what Donald Trump is doing.
But you know who they fear? They fear the president and his reprisals more than they
fear the American people. And you know what that means? That the equation to shift this
lies on us, the American people, that telling those folks, if you vote against my health
care, if you vote against my food stamps or my meals on wheels, if you vote against my disabled child, if you vote against the veteran in my state who just got fired by Doge, if you vote against them, I'm coming after your job.
You better fear me more than you fear him because your days are numbered. And until we shift that equation,
these guys are gonna follow that man to their detriment.
Right now we have a Republican party that is laying down
when they know that what Hegseth tweeting out plans
on signal to reporters,
they know that he's unqualified for that position.
I can go through from the beginning of his administration
to now how many things I know that they know is not right,
but they're following it because they're afraid of him
more than they're concerned about the American people.
And so look, I will not agree with everybody on everything,
but the big challenge right now,
the things that make me get up in the morning
or go to bed at night feeling so shattered
is because I am not worried
about the next election.
Days now we are from days of passing a bill out of this Senate that the majority of Republicans,
Democrats and independents thinks is horrible.
And it will have real effects on the kind of people I was with outside last night who
are doing everything they can of standing in the heat for hours,
giving dollars to elected leaders like me
who they believe in, these are the people
we've got to fight for right now.
This is the test of our character.
This is the moral moment.
And in the way they responded in the civil rights movement,
in the suffrage movement, in the environmental movement,
and so many things that have altered our labor movement,
altered our country.
This is another crossroads for our country.
And I'm praying people, your audience,
will think to themselves, what more can I do in this fight
to make those Republicans listen to me?
And if they fail, I'm going to stay involved
and I'll make them answer for it in the next election.
You're good at this.
Thank you.
You should run for office.
I really appreciate it. I appreciate it. Right. Thank you. You should run for office. I
appreciate it right now. I just want to run some days, but we're going to all stay in the fight. Absolutely. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. All right, let's get into Friday.
Feedback your opportunity to send in questions, comments, criticisms and occasionally trolling.
And I will respond to some of it. You can email, you can post on Tick Tock,
you can post to YouTube. We'll sometimes look at Spotify comments. It's all fair game is
the point. All right. On YouTube, Secret Society of Goths said Pacman's letting the beard grow and wearing goth tease.
Shits getting serious.
Well, I don't know that I have any goth tease, to be honest, but there is really no grand
aesthetic plan here.
I know that there is a small sliver of the audience that is very carefully analyzing
everything I do.
Is my hair weirdly pointy on one side or am I sending some kind of message with the shirt
I'm wearing?
It's more like what amount of time does my toddler provide me with to get myself ready?
If I have time to shave, I do it.
And if I don't, the beard grows.
There's no like look that I'm going for here.
It's really not a branding shift of any kind. It's just like what what can I do? But it is funny how people pick up on these visual changes and they're often interpreted as signals. And we're
we're leaving in really leaving behind what I think is the most important thing, which is where am I on authoritarianism?
Where am I on anyway?
And it's all the personal is getting very political and everything has meaning.
But in my case, it really doesn't have meaning.
I'm just trying to, you know, keep keep the hygiene going to the extent that I can.
All right.
Next is from the subreddit.
It's Red Ash who said, is there any chance Elon is faking his divorce with Trump in the
sense that this bickering between them is just a ruse to distract from other failings
of the administration, such as the disastrous bills, the failures in foreign policy and
to hide the crypto scandals. So, you know, I understand why people look for meaning and signal in the noise and the
chaos.
Is this a distraction from that?
Was that coordinated in order to make people not pay attention to this other thing?
I just think it all gives this administration way too much credit.
The idea that they have a long game where they carefully use strategic distractions.
We've seen zero evidence of that whatsoever.
When I see what appears to be dysfunction, I have every reason to believe that it is
dysfunction and not design.
And so the Trump Musk fallout was certainly predictable.
And we'll get to that in a moment.
It's sort of like what happens when egos collide and everybody wants the spotlight.
I believe that that it is genuine.
The administration's failures don't really mean.
Listen, it's all out in plain view.
I don't think slight of hand is responsible for what we see.
And so when we see a fight or a contradiction, I mean, just look at over the weekend, the
Iran stuff is not regime change to course. We would want regime change. Why not? Trump
gets in on it and Caroline Levitt gets in on it. I just think this is this is the policy.
It's total chaos, fights on social media. A. And then the next day, who would ever want a that that doesn't make any sense whatsoever.
So no, I don't attribute malice where stupidity and incompetence are enough.
Now, relatedly, Timu Brin wrote on the subreddit, How did David from the beginning predict that
the Trump Musk romance will fail in the end.
I remember tuning into the show all the way back in the early months of the second term
and could hear David say again and again that this relationship won't last.
And lo and behold, now took him less than a year.
You know, I love the praise, right, because there's so much negativity in the email.
I don't believe that it was a particularly insightful or prescient prediction that the
Trump Musk romance was going to implode.
Trump doesn't want to share power.
Elon Musk doesn't want to take orders.
Elon Musk is used to his money getting him absolutely whatever he wants.
When you look at two egomaniacs come together in that way, it's very obviously an arrangement
with a shelf life and not a particularly long
one because once the photo shot, the photo ops rather are over and Trump starts to get
annoyed with Elon kind of hanging around, Elon starts getting annoyed with the fact
that Trump does whatever the last person who he talks to suggests he should do. It all
boils over. And it was transactional from the beginning, not ideological.
And it stopped.
The transaction stopped working, if that makes sense.
What's wild is how much people projected onto the Trump Musk relationship.
There were people who said, oh, Musk is the libertarian tech savior.
He's going to temper Trump's worst impulses.
And it turns out that if you put two guys who think that they're the smartest in the
room in the same room, it's a matter of time before it implodes.
So I would love to take more credit for it.
But unfortunately, I think that it was a relatively obvious prediction.
All right.
Norrin Rad on Facebook says, I'm all for peaceful protests.
We need to keep the protests peaceful.
But David, how long do the people keep it peaceful?
It seems like the taco regime keeps escalating things.
I've talked about this in a number of different contexts. I think the instinct to stay peaceful is correct
and powerful. And history shows that it works. Civil rights movements, mass labor actions,
even some revolutions have made real change without violence. There's also a pattern that
we sometimes see, which is when governments escalate with repression,
people naturally start to say, can we do this peacefully if they just repress?
Can we really accomplish the change we want peacefully?
And some people are bringing that up right now.
So I'm going to go to history, right?
I'm not going to be here advocating for violence because I don't.
I advocate for peaceful protest.
I also am a student of history.
And what we see is that the longer administrations or regimes ignore legitimate grievances, respond
with crackdowns, et cetera, the more it pushes people to the age to the edge.
So while I am not advocating violence because I never do, I'm against it.
I think it's also necessary to acknowledge that the states have power that when abused
can radicalize the very people they want to silence.
And so without advocating violence, I'm acknowledging that that is something we have seen historically.
And I hope that it doesn't come to that terminal.
Willness on Reddit said David's argument against socialism can someone elaborate on the reason
David doesn't outright endorse socialism?
I've heard him explain his rationale before, but he seemed strangely unwilling to really
go into it.
My take is he opposes socialism because he doesn't want something he believes is coercive
to become prominent.
Is that right?
Can someone flush it out?
Well, I can flush it out since it's my view.
First of all, the reason I don't outright endorse socialism is I am
not a socialism, a socialist. I just why would I endorse something I don't believe in? I
believe in markets for many things because I'm a small L libertarian. I'm not a member
of the libertarian party. What I mean is on a spectrum between authoritarianism or libertarianism from the government.
I default to libertarianism unless there's a good reason to involve the government health
care.
There's a good reason to involve the government education, housing.
These are basic human needs.
If we leave them to market forces, we get suffering, we get inequality, we get people
with a lower standard of living
than anyone needs to have in a rich country.
So that's why I identify as a social Democrat for other things.
You know, basketball sneakers or tablet computers or whatever.
I think markets are fine at allocating resources.
So I don't oppose socialism because I think equality is bad.
If we're talking about equality of opportunity, I oppose socialism because to impose it on
all industries is authoritarian if it's done by the government.
Now, if individual companies say we're going to be a co-op, I love that.
That is the libertarian small L libertarian way.
Let companies that want to be co-ops be co-ops.
So I believe in using democratic means through taxation, the way northern European countries
do to fund universal universal programs and strong public goods, strong public schools,
regulate anywhere that is necessary.
But I don't want to impose that ideology from above.
So that's why I am not a socialist.
OK.
Edward Richardson wrote on YouTube about last week's protests and Trump's military parade.
Twelve million protesters, eighty six hundred at Trump's parade.
You know, sometimes the numbers don't tell you everything you need to know.
These numbers tell you a lot, not just about turnout, but also about momentum.
When millions mobilize and protest while a sitting president struggles to fill a parade
route, that is more than a messaging problem.
That's a legitimacy crisis.
People don't take to the streets in these numbers.
And I wish they were bigger, but people don't take to the streets in these numbers unless
they feel unheard, betrayed, afraid.
Mass protests aren't just about optics.
They really are barometers of public trust.
When trust collapses, it becomes difficult to govern by fear, spectacle or nostalgia.
And so Trump can hold as many of these parades as he wants.
If people don't show up.
And by the way, some of the people showing up were protesting the parade.
It's just a performance.
It's really not leadership.
And that terrifies Trump because to a great degree, above all else, Trump really wants
to be liked.
And a lot of people do not like him.
Dog Boy says, I'm having a good laugh listening to the MAGA faithful trying to put
a positive spin on Trump's military parade debacle. Yeah, it's actually more than just
spin. We saw desperation when an event so clearly flops and the response is pretend
it was a success. Steven Chung, I believe his name is, was talking about how awesome
and successful it was. These are cult dynamics.
The goal becomes protect the image of the dear leader at all costs, even if it's completely
unbelievable.
Even if anybody who wanted could have tuned in and seen a silent parade route with a squeaky
tank rolling by, you've got to say that it was awesome.
And it's important to remember that optics were one part of Trump's military parade,
but also asserting power was part of it.
And when the assertion of power is met with empty bleachers and squeaky tanks, it does
send a message.
This guy may not really have the strength and testicular fortitude that he claims to
have. And testicular fortitude that he claims to have a M.G. with an exhausting message on
YouTube says he's only been in office for one hundred and forty seven days.
Let that sink in.
Yeah.
I mean, we've gone from inauguration to burnout.
It was a lot quicker than one hundred and forty seven days.
But this is about the exhausting nature of the volume of the insane headlines, the content
of the headlines, the scandals, the policy failures, the firings, the authoritarianism.
This is not like a normal political situation.
And people are exhausted, but also the content creators are exhausted. Everybody I talk to comes to me on the verge of tears. And they say, you know, I took an hour to
go play basketball with my friends as we often hear people talk about Trump that way. I took
an hour to play basketball. I came back. We had bombed Iran or whatever. Right.
Insert the appropriate story.
There is a sheer pace of chaos that makes it hard to cover this stuff.
It also makes people numb.
It makes them tune out.
It makes people say, oh, is my resistance futile?
Because what can I really do about all this?
But I think the important thing to remember is when we tune out, then they get to do whatever
they want unopposed.
And that we definitely don't want.
Make sure you're subscribed to the YouTube channel, youtube.com slash the David Pakman
show.
Make sure you're getting my sub stack at David Pakman dot sub stack dot com. We will see you on the bonus show and I will
be back next week of course.