The David Pakman Show - Are you ready for the military on election day?

Episode Date: May 11, 2026

-- On the Show: -- Sarah Isgur, editor of SCOTUSblog, host of the legal podcast Advisory Opinions, and a legal analyst for ABC News, joins us to discuss her new book "Last Branch Standing: A Poten...tially Surprising, Occasionally Witty Journey Inside Today's Supreme Court" -- Donald Trump announces plans for an “Election Integrity Army” in the 2026 midterms while accusing Democrats of interference -- Donald Trump repeatedly declares the Iran conflict over while new strikes, escalation, and military activity continue 11 weeks into the war -- Sebastian Gorka claims the Iran war is lasting longer than just a few weeks because the Trump administration has been “too effective” -- Trump economic adviser Kevin Hassett and Energy Secretary Chris Wright continue blaming Joe Biden for inflation and energy costs -- Donald Trump gives confusing answers about vaccines, Cuba, Fort Knox, football prices, and future military operations -- Donald Trump gives a $6.9 million no-bid contract for the Washington reflecting pool renovation to his own pool contractor -- David gets medical testing, including an ultrasound, after some viewers speculate about his health and appearance online -- On the Bonus Show: Democrats strategize following a court axing Virginia's new congressional map, more than a third of Americans believe the midterms will be stolen, the US will start revoking passports from those who owe child support, and much more... 🥐 Wildgrain: Use code DAVID for $30 off & free croissants FOR LIFE at https://wildgrain.com/david ✉️ StartMail: Get 50% OFF for a year subscription at https://startmail.com/pakman 😺 Smalls cat food: Use code PAKMAN for 60% off & free shipping at https://smalls.com 👂 MDHearing: Use code PAKMAN to get a pair for just $247 at https://shopmdhearing.com/ -- 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 (00:00) Start (01:29) Trump announces an election army (08:01) Trump keeps saying the Iran war is over (13:12) Gorka says Iran continues because Trump's too effective (22:12) Trump officials keep blaming Biden (31:46) Trump hints at war with Cuba (42:53) Sarah Isgur Interview (1:01:35) Trump gives DC reflecting pool contract to his pool guy (1:07:52) David's health results Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Behind every F-35 jet is a Canadian company, horizontal tails built in Winnipeg, engine sensors from Ottawa, and stealth composite panels crafted in Loonenburg to name just a few. Thanks to thousands of skilled Canadian workers, the F-35 aircraft is delivering unmatched capabilities for 20 allied nations around the world
Starting point is 00:00:16 and will generate more than $15.5 billion in industrial value for Canada. This ad is sponsored by the F-35 partner team, Lockheed Martin, BAE Systems, Northrop Grumman and RTX. Learn more at www.f35.com slash Canada. Hey y'all, it's Kelly Clarkson with Wayfair. Ever order furniture online and wonder what if? Like, what if it doesn't hold up? That sofa was four days old.
Starting point is 00:00:37 You should have ordered from Wayfair. With Wayfair, there's no what if. Just style you love and quality you can trust. Visit Wayfair.com. Wayfair, every style, every home. Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive. The Price is Right Fortune Pick. BetMDMDM and Game Sense remind you to play responsibly.
Starting point is 00:00:55 19 plus to wager. Ontario only. Please play responsibly. If you have questions or concerns, about your gambling or someone close to you. Peace contact connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2,600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. That MGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario. Red alert as the Trump administration is openly talking about deploying an election integrity
Starting point is 00:01:20 army in November to polling places. This is about intimidating people. This is about process warfare, as I would call it. We're going to talk about it and this is obviously a very dangerous escalation from people who know they can't win elections by convincing people about their policies. So they're going to try to win by manipulating the systems. We also have now heard seven times that the Iran war is over and yet we are into week 11 of what was going to be a three to four week war.
Starting point is 00:01:55 And the reason that this is happening according to Sebastian Gorka is because we have we have just won so quickly and so powerfully that the war continues. Doesn't really make a lot of sense. Also today, Trump officials continue promising that we're just a couple of weeks, a couple of months from complete and total economic paradise, a panacea, utopia, except it doesn't seem to work out that way. And the $7 million contract to rep- excuse me, to repaint the link. Lincoln Memorial was given with no bidding process to Trump's pool guy. I wish I was kidding. Donald Trump has just admitted that he has a plan to militarize polling places in November.
Starting point is 00:02:50 The point of this is just to intimidate people. It's to scare people, people who show up and they plan to vote. And then all of a sudden, they're going to see this election integrity army, as Donald Trump is calling it. And Trump is hoping that this will, I guess, scare some people so that they won't vote. Let's dig into the details, but the most important takeaway is one that I've been pointing to for a while and we talked about extensively last week, which is that if you believe that your policies are going to convince people to vote for you, you don't need to do any of this stuff.
Starting point is 00:03:20 If you are winning an election by winning the will of the voters because they say, hey, you're doing a good job or I believe that we're going in the right direction. I believe that your ideas are good. Then you wouldn't need to do any of this stuff. They can't. They can't win voters on policies. They can't win on we reduced the price level, inflation, affordability. So they are going to try to win by controlling the election itself and by intimidating people.
Starting point is 00:03:47 And that leads to this completely deranged post just hours ago from Donald Trump on truth social, where he says, quote, Palestinian Chuck Schumer is hiring Eric Holder, famous for handing guns to Mexican cartels under the Barack Hussein Obama administration. as part of a Democrat-led election integrity group that will no doubt try to suppress Republican voters and interfere in our elections. Furthermore, Mark Elias, that's our friend Mark Elias, by the way. Trump calls him a terrible lawyer with a horrible track record is also involved. This is the same disgusting individual who was responsible for his fake, for the fake Russia dossier
Starting point is 00:04:26 from a foreign national to medal in the 2016 election, which I won in historic fashion. the Democrats are totally unhinged and we will not allow them to threaten the integrity of our election. So a lot of Mark Elias hate. And then Trump says, during my historic election in 2024, when I won every single swing state and decisively won both the electoral and popular votes by wide margins, the Republicans had an election integrity army in every single state to preserve the sanctity of each legal vote.
Starting point is 00:04:59 will be doing the same again in 2026, but it will be much bigger and stronger. All Americans should have their voices be heard by casting a vote. Be assured this election will be fair. This goes directly to the point I made last week about the difference between winning by persuasion on the issues and winning through manipulation, intimidation, exhaustion, making people distrust the system. If you have a healthy political system, it revolves around convincing people about your ideas and what you will do. Here's my policy. Here's why it will help you. If you believe me, you vote for me. If you don't believe me, you might vote for my opponent. What it has become for Maga is the election is fake unless we win. We need an army at polling places.
Starting point is 00:05:52 If we lose, there was fraud. And the thing that really should jump out here is that Trump is admitting the Republican strategy is not about persuading people on policy. Trump is casually saying, you know, economy's better than ever. We've ended eight wars. I ended the Iran war seven times. All of this stuff. But they're really talking about using process warfare to try to win. Not we're going to lower your prices or will make your life more affordable.
Starting point is 00:06:24 He promised that stuff before. He failed to do all of it. Instead, it's election integrity army. Republicans must defend fair and free elections and we're going to do it with an army. This is going to get very ugly for them. They know that this is going to get very ugly for them. Gas prices are up because of the Iran situation. Groceries are more expensive rather than less.
Starting point is 00:06:48 is up rather than down the 50% Trump promise. We're still waiting for Trump's 2020 health care proposal. I hope you haven't been holding your breath for that one. And so when they realize we're underwater on every single one of our promises, we've been trying to just convince people about it, but they don't seem to be falling for it. What do we do? Well, instead of talking about how you fix cost of living because you didn't, you talk about you got to be really careful about this election, You've got to be really careful about whether your vote were count. Illegals are voting by the millions for Democrats, stuff that just isn't happening. So then people go, well, if that is happening, we need some kind of system to defend us against it.
Starting point is 00:07:32 What about an election integrity army? And that is exactly what they are trying to do. So none of this are you better off now than you were, what, a year and a half ago? Because most people would say I'm not better off. The polling says that people believe the economy has gone in the wrong direction and they expect it to be in an even worse place a year from now. You can't win on that. You're going to get crushed.
Starting point is 00:07:56 You're going to lose the House. You might lose the Senate. Maybe not. We'll have to see. So you just don't have that conversation. Don't argue with people about that. Instead, say, I'm the only person that can make sure this election can be trusted. And that is a real sign that your movement is in trouble.
Starting point is 00:08:13 Again, it reminds me of lawyers often say, if the facts are on your side, you argue about the facts. If the facts aren't on your side, you argue about process and vice versa. Republicans don't have accomplishments to their name. And they know it because even the magasicophants when they get interviewed, they go, listen, I voted for Trump three times. I bought his hats and I got one right here. Look at this. I bought his hat and I bought all of this different stuff.
Starting point is 00:08:40 And he screwed me. He screwed me. really, really badly. And so I am now recognizing that I have to go in a different direction. They realize as a result, they have to run a different election. And that is exactly what they're doing. They are just going to run on. We're going to intimidate at the polling places. No more talk about improving your lives. More talk about controlling the election. We can't let them get away with it. And Mark Elias, who Trump is attacking, is actually doing everything he can to prevent them from getting away with this.
Starting point is 00:09:16 Did you know that Donald Trump has powerfully ended the Iran war seven times? Would it shock you to be told that we are now in week 11 of what was going to be a three to four week war? It's kind of weird. Week 11 of three. We all knew that this was going to happen. Donald Trump has announced seven times over the last nearly 50 days that the war is over or ending very quickly. Nearly 50 days ago, Donald Trump said, I am pleased to report that the United States of America
Starting point is 00:09:56 and the country of Iran have had very good and productive conversations regarding a complete and total resolution. based on all of this, I've told the Department of War postponed strikes and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. We did it. Isn't that great? Well, that was 50 days ago almost. And then 10 more days went by. And the war was still going on.
Starting point is 00:10:20 So nearly 40 days ago, Donald Trump posted, remember when I gave Iran 10 days to make a deal or open up the Hormuz straight? Time is running out, 48 hours before all hell. will rain down upon them. Glory be to God. So 10 days after Trump said it's going to all be wrapped up within a week. He said, I may actually just destroy the entire country because they're not doing what I said. But then that didn't happen. And another week went by. And about 33 days ago, Donald Trump said, a big day for world peace. Iran wants it to happen. They've had enough. Likewise, so is everyone else. Lots of positive action. Money will be made. Iran can. start reconstruction, we're loading up supplies. I'm feeling confident, said Donald Trump 33 days ago,
Starting point is 00:11:11 but it didn't take. And then just over a month ago, Donald Trump said the United States will work closely with Iran, which we have determined has gone through very productive regime change. There will be no enrichment of uranium. We'll work with Iran. We'll dig up and remove the nuclear dust. It's all happening very quickly. We're making. We're making. We're making. We're making tariff sanction, tariff and sanctions relief. It's all been agreed to. At which point I said, wow, Donald Trump is now struggling to get back into a weaker version of the Obama nuclear deal, which he said was terrible. He must be really desperate. And he was because it still didn't happen. Then we are in mid-April, April 17th. We finally hear more about the Strait of Vermuth.
Starting point is 00:12:01 Iran has agreed to never close the Strait of Hormuz again. It will no longer be used as a weapon against the world. It's finally over, folks, after four, five announcements. But it didn't take because then three weeks ago, after Iran hadn't opened the Strait of Hormuz, Trump again announces. Iran has just announced that the Strait of Iran, which he means, of course, the Strait of Hormuz is fully open and ready for full passage, except that also didn't really happen.
Starting point is 00:12:41 And then most recently on May 5th, just about a week ago, Donald Trump, tacos again, saying based on the request of Pakistan and other countries, the tremendous military success that we have had during the campaign against the country of Iran. And additionally, the fact that great progress has been made towards a complete and final agreement with representatives of Iran, we have mutually agreed that while the blockade will remain in full force and effect, Project Freedom will be paused for a short period of time to see whether or not the agreement can be finalized and signed. The seventh time that Donald Trump announced to us, ladies and gentlemen, we did it.
Starting point is 00:13:26 And it brings me no joy to tell you. that now another six days later, we have not gotten a resolution. And advisors are increasingly worried that Iran was never close to agreeing to Donald Trump's terms. I hope that on the eighth time Donald Trump announces the end to this war, it will really be over. I really do hope that. But call me just a little bit skeptical. Now, you might be looking around and saying to yourself, well, you know, he said it was going to be three to four weeks. We're in week 11. Why might this be going on? Could it be because Donald Trump is incompetent?
Starting point is 00:14:03 Could it be because Donald Trump's advisors are incompetent? Could it be because he was lied to? Could it be because he was simply lying? Could it? What could the reason be? Well, would it shock you for me to tell you that the reason the Iran war is still going on is because we want it so quickly? Hmm.
Starting point is 00:14:22 That is exactly what a Trump advisor is now arguing. And I want to talk about that next. Listen, if we just met on the street and we talked about what's going on in Iran, could I convince you that the reason the war against Iran is entering week 11 when it was supposed to be three to four weeks is that Trump won it too quickly. The military was too good. And we won so fast that it couldn't end. You would probably look at me and say, David, did you just fall on your head? Do you have a brain injury? Are you disoriented and dizzy?
Starting point is 00:14:57 Are you taking some new kind of medication? Are you experiencing confusion? But that is what Trump advisors and sycophants like Sebastian Gorka are now claiming. Check this out. We've been too effective at the war. And so it continues. But we did hear a much shorter timeframe at the beginning of this, right? Was this an optimistic take or how do we?
Starting point is 00:15:25 we reconcile the original timeline with the what we're dealing with now well look there is the ancient aporism every plan lasts until a first contact with the enemy but there is a very simple answer to your question we've just been too effective along with our colleagues in jerusalem that have affected numerous persona strikes we have absolutely destroyed the leadership the traditional leadership Take this one metric, Chris. Where is this vaunted new Ayatollah? Where is Mojtabah? Oh, really, is he in charge?
Starting point is 00:16:01 How come we haven't seen hide no hair of him? Not one still photograph, let alone a video statement. Because they're terrified, Trump will try to kill him. This is a regime in ultimate collapse at the top. As a result, it makes communicating and getting that final deal, that acquiescence, that surrender, a little bit more complicated. Understand what Sebastian Gorka is saying. He's saying that because we were so good at the war, Trump is so good, we were so good
Starting point is 00:16:33 at the war that we destroyed everything and everyone. And there's no people left to end the war from the point of view of Iran. They would be ready to surrender. If only they had anybody that could actually sign the paperwork. It's a paperwork issue is what he wants. to believe. The war is taking longer because we're just winning too hard. Imagine if your contractor doing renovation said the remodel is taking an extra six months because we're doing such an incredible job that there is nothing left to do. What you would say that doesn't make any sense.
Starting point is 00:17:14 A football coach says we're losing by 30 because our strategy is working too well. It doesn't make any sense. And in Trump world, every single outcome, whether it's a positive outcome or a negative outcome, has to be framed as a success. This is a key of authoritarianism. This is a key of cult leaders. Even if it seems as though the leader stumbled, the leader was dancing. It looked like they almost fell on their face, but they, it was a special dance that they did
Starting point is 00:17:46 to communicate with us. If gas prices go up, it's strategic strength. And because we stopped Iran from having nukes, the fact that gas prices are up proves that we're winning in Iran. That's kind of weird. That doesn't really make a lot of sense. If inflation is up, that's because of a transition economically getting rid of the bad fake jobs from Sleepy Joe to undocumented immigrants.
Starting point is 00:18:12 And we need that in order to be positioned for success. If the war drags on longer than you said, we were too effective. We were too good at the war. So what they've done is make reality irrelevant. And I know I've mentioned this before. You know, the right loves to criticize what they claim is the postmodernism of the left. And by postmodernism, what I mean is that any competing theory is equally valid. And that's not even actually what postmodernism said, but there's a degree to it.
Starting point is 00:18:40 It doesn't even matter. They go, Jordan Peterson, these postmodern on the left, they believe everything is the equally valid. And it is the right that goes, no, I mean, listen, we promised gas prices down would be good and they're up, but that's good. And we said that we wouldn't be getting into wars. And we did, but that's actually a good thing because it means this other thing from over there. They have become these sort of postmodern entities that they falsely criticized on the left. And reality doesn't really matter. It's just how governments end up trapped in endless conflicts is playing out again. even though Trump and Tulsi promised us, this is not going to be the war administration.
Starting point is 00:19:23 So we were told three to four weeks, targeted, controlled, really quick. You won't even notice it. It'll be like a little pinch when the dentist just puts in the Novacane before your whole face goes numb, just a little pinch. But we're on week 11 of a three week pinch. And Trump has declared victory seven times as we looked at earlier. And every couple weeks, we have a historic announcement. peace is rising like a phoenix over the horizon and then it keeps going. If the war keeps going after you announce victory, did you really end anything? Trump says he ended eight wars. I mean, he's claimed to have ended the Iran war seven times just on that one.
Starting point is 00:20:02 So I think I don't have to explain to you that this becomes very dangerous very quickly, politically for the Trump administration, because Americans have a historical track record of losing patience very quickly once the war seems open-ended. And Americans get sick of it. And we've seen it with a number of conflicts before. And prices were high at the start of Trump's term and they only went up. Oil markets are really unstable. Voters are anxious about the direction of the country. They expect things to be worse economically in a year. So that's why this answer from Gorka is so fascinating. Because instead of explaining what is the goal now in Iran, what what's the timeline? What does it look like to win?
Starting point is 00:20:46 He goes, we're too awesome at war. That's why it's still going on. That's a sort of sit down and shut up and let Trump do whatever he wants kind of statement. I don't think voters. I think even many Republican voters are not going to vote for that. They may not come out and vote for Democrats in November, but a lot of them are going to stay home because they're just not falling for this crap. If you love having quality fresh breads and pastries at home with no hassle, our sponsor Wild
Starting point is 00:21:17 Grain makes it easy. Wild grain is a bake from frozen subscription box for sourdough breads, artisanal pastries, fresh pastas, everything arrives frozen and bakes in 25 minutes or less. No thawing required. Simple ingredients, slow fermentation process. It really improves the flavor and texture. I always keep wild grain sourdough bread and croissants on it. hand, convenient, tastes like something you'd get from the bakery, straight from freezer to
Starting point is 00:21:45 oven, no planning required. The pasta's great too. I love having wild grain on the busy nights when I need something good, but without spending a bunch of time on it. And wild grain boxes are customizable. You can get the variety box. They've got gluten-free, vegan. They've got a protein box.
Starting point is 00:22:04 Wild grain is offering $30 off your first box plus free croissants for life when you go to wildgrain. dot com slash Pacman or use the promo code Pacman at checkout. The link is in the description. You use your email for everything, banking, work, purchases, medical information. That makes your email provider one of the most important places to think about privacy. Most big tech email services, scan your messages, build profiles about you, use the data to show you ads. Our sponsor start mail takes a different approach. Start mail looks and works just like the big name email services you're used to. But start mail never scans your mail, never tracks anything about you, never sells your data. Start mail also includes powerful privacy features you don't get from big tech email providers.
Starting point is 00:22:56 For instance, you can create unlimited email aliases. So you don't have to give out your real address to anybody, which will reduce spam and fishing risks. You can also send PGP encrypted emails, even if the recipient isn't using encryption. And if you switch to StartMail, it is really easy to migrate your existing emails and contacts in just a few clicks. Go to startmail.com slash Pacman to get 50% off your first year. The link is in the description. The administration is still pathetically suggesting that any problem that you see in today's
Starting point is 00:23:32 economy is Joe Biden's fault. I mean, he was Sleepy Joe after all, right? These are truly pathetic people. We are now well into year two of Donald Trump's second term. And they continue to insist or imply we took over a mess. If you've identified any kind of problem in today's economy, don't look at Donald Trump. Don't look at Republicans who control the House. Don't look at Republicans who control the Senate.
Starting point is 00:24:00 Don't look at the right wing Supreme Court. No. Look at Joe Biden, who was simultaneously so incompetent and addled while he was president that he couldn't do and didn't do anything, but also responsible for everything that's a problem in 2026. Wow. How simultaneously impotent and omnipotent Joe Biden is, huh? We're going to go through a couple clips of this. Here is Maria Bartaromo talking to Trump's economic advisor, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett. And Kevin Hassett is asked again about the price of oil and gas. Now, we're going to build to this. They don't always say Biden's name.
Starting point is 00:24:38 But they like to structure things as it's a process and Trump took over and it takes a while to wait a second. Didn't Trump make specific decisions that blew up the price of oil and gas? Well, yeah. But can't we just blame it on somebody else? So in terms of the price of oil and gas and this spike, this has to mean higher cost for corporate America and for consumers. Well, it does in the short run. And you mentioned Secretary Bessett who follows these.
Starting point is 00:25:08 numbers, you know, he made a lot of money following these numbers of the past and being able to trade. And he says these futures markets are saying that basically once we get the straight open, then there's going to be a gusher of oil release from that. It's going to be a gusher all right. The gulf, and that's going to help put prices down relatively quickly. Now, there's a little bit of a time lag from that. We've got to get the boats to move from the Persian Gulf to, especially Asia, where jet fuel prices are so high and that can take a month or two. But once, you know, basically the gusher opens that we expect that oil prices could drop.
Starting point is 00:25:40 It's going to be a nasty gusher like you've never seen. So the story is boomed, even though all the numbers are worse now than under Biden, we're just around the corner from boom times where everybody will be happy and everything is going to be completely and totally perfect. Energy Secretary Chris Wright was asked yesterday. Have gas prices peaked? And Chris Wright goes, I'm not so sure about that. But the all-time record high in gas prices was five bucks back during the Biden administration in 2022.
Starting point is 00:26:16 It lasted that real spike for about eight weeks time. With this conflict, you had said last month that prices had already peaked. You advise the president. What are you advising him now? Well, the main advice we're giving right now is 47-year-long conflict. The world simply cannot live with a nuclear-armed Iran. Now remember that this is the energy secretary. He is rendering a political opinion about foreign policy and the question was about energy.
Starting point is 00:26:46 Everyone in this government knows it. In fact, everyone in the opposition party in our country knows that as well. That is the overall objective, not just for peace and freedom, but for energy markets. A nuclear armed Iran could threaten a major oil and gas producing region forever. But you're not saying you've got to. come to a nuclear agreement before the Strait of Hormuz is opened. Because that could take a lot of time. As you know, nuclear deals are really complex. Well, if it's a one-pageer like Trump wants. Obama made a complex deal because it didn't end their program. Well, you get to keep the program,
Starting point is 00:27:19 you keep enriching, but do it a little bit slower and we'll send you a bunch of money. That was clearly a failed thing. It was also completely dishonest for Chris Wright to present it that way. They love this. Obama sent Iran money. Obama. released sanctioned Iranian money, which by the way is in Trump's framework for what he wants to do as a deal. If Obama was bad for releasing sanction money, why isn't Trump bad for doing the same thing? Now I want to remind you that this very same guy, Chris Wright, the energy secretary in March was saying that by now, by today, gas prices would be under $3.
Starting point is 00:28:01 So no responsibility taken whatsoever. How's GDP going to do this year? Oh boy. Well, that is a complicated one. Kevin Hassett again says we could have 6% GDP growth this year. I'm not a betting man, but I'm going to tell you in a moment why that is not a bet I would tell. Well, I would bet against that if I were betting.
Starting point is 00:28:21 The election. So what kind of economic growth number would you expect for 26 and beyond then? Let's let's assume that we do get out of this war fairly soon. What kind of GDP growth number would you expect for the U.S. economy? Yeah, and that's the thing that we've been working a lot on lately because of the capital spending boom, remember that in March, capital spending went up by 3.3%, not at an annual rate. So multiply that by 12, and you're looking at historic capital spending numbers because President Trump, with his tax cuts, which are in getting people to expense, but also on-shoring activity,
Starting point is 00:28:54 is giving us the capital spending boom, unlike anything we've ever seen. And if you look at how fast the capital stock is growing, that's sort of like how much stuff that we make stuff with. It's between 5 and 8% right now. If you divide that by three, that's about how much GDP growth you get out of just capital spending. We've got productivity growth at 2.5. I think we really could be looking at numbers north of 4, north of 5, north of even 6.
Starting point is 00:29:18 North of even 6% GDP growth. Can you imagine that? That is delusional. That is delusional. Now, there's two critique. of this. One is they get this wrong all the time. Remember that for 2025, Lutnik and Besson were saying, we could do 6% GDP. We really could see 6% GDP growth. And I explained to, you know, even in good times, that's really difficult when you're as large and mature economically as is the United
Starting point is 00:29:49 States. It's harder to move the needle 6%. And 25 GDP growth ended up being 2.1%, a number that when it under Democrats, Trump said was a pathetically low number. So they've been wrong before. But most importantly, it's not really plausible given how the economy of the United States works. But why bother with facts and reality, right? Except, except Kevin Hassett is prepared. He is preparing you. He is preemptively blaming blue states if the GDP isn't what they are promising for 2026. You know who you can blame New York and California because of their terrible left-wing policies. What is your projection right now for GDP growth for the year? Right. Well, I think we're really safely looking like we should have 4% for the rest of the year.
Starting point is 00:30:46 But I can tell you that, you know, you went on about Mumdami and the Socialists of the Democratic Party. Here's a thing that's a serious drag that has me a little bit concerned. If you look at all the job creation that's happened since President Trump took office, all the positive job creation is in states that voted for President Trump. If you look at states that voted for Kamala Harris, they've had job destruction. And in part is because, you know, people are leaving the states because of the high taxes and so on. And so for sure, in the aggregate, we're looking at 4% economic growth because of all the productivity from AI, all the capital spending, and so on.
Starting point is 00:31:22 But the drag on the economy is that the blue states are actually hemorrhirt. And so if we disappoint at all, it'll be because of like what happens to New York State, what happens to California because of these misguided policies. It'll definitely be the fault of any Democrats we can find. And then dumping the Biden bomb, Hassett says, you know, when Biden was president, all that job creation you thought was happening, it was illegal. Right to work. And we did an analysis when we first got into the White House that showed, you know, that
Starting point is 00:31:56 that almost all of the job creation that happened under President Biden was the employment of illegal aliens. And so by securing the border, by reinforcing immigration law, you know, there were some that said that we'd never, we wouldn't have enough workers to grow the economy. You can remember that. But in fact, what is- Notice how HACET is able to smile while telling disgusting lies. After this great high paying jobs to be going to American citizens, which is really what the intent of President Trump's policy was. Right. All of that, that incredible job creation record of Joe Biden, it was just giving jobs to illegals. Now, there's no evidence of that.
Starting point is 00:32:39 And I'm guessing that most of my audience intuitively would recognize that that doesn't really sound right. But at some point, you're not going to be able to just blame Joe Biden. I don't know when that point is. It should have been over a year ago. But at some point, voters aren't going to fall for it. And I believe they might already not be falling for it. And we'll see how that works out for them in November. Donald Trump stunned an interviewer of a show called Full Measure.
Starting point is 00:33:06 As his brain stopped working, he casually mentioned, I'm going to do another invasion. I'm wondering whether the interviewer thought, do I need to call a doctor right now? Trump talking about babies and vaccines again. This is very dangerous territory for Donald Trump. And he talks about pumping babies with a vat full of stuff. Incredible imagery. Completely fabricated. And I would not suggest taking medical advice from Donald Trump.
Starting point is 00:33:39 A woman named Katie Talento, if I'm saying her name correctly, who recently stated that in 2017, she worked for you. And her job was to keep Bobby Kent. as far from the West Wing as possible after you had agreed to a vaccine safety commission. Did you know about that? She's published on that the last couple of days. She says she's apologizing for that, basically. Did you know that at the time that there was somebody supposedly tasked with keeping Bobby Kennedy away?
Starting point is 00:34:04 No, he's doing a good job. I think Bobby, people love him. I didn't know about that. Do you think there should be a vaccine safety commission? A commission on what? Vaccine safety. He has no clue what's going on. And you'll, that'll become very evident as the interview. continue to examine something like I believe in vaccines but I don't believe that you know you have to
Starting point is 00:34:24 have a mandate for all of them the polio vaccine's amazing it's to you know wiped it out and I believe in vaccines but you know I think we were up to 88 vaccines and I really feel that vaccines if they were given in smaller quantities they want to cut some out and that's good too and I agree with that 82 is so many if you look at Denmark and other countries you have noticed that he went from saying that there are 88 vaccines, he now changed it to 82. But when he used to do this rent, he used to say it was 44 vaccines. It's just made up. 12, 14, I think 17. And we have like 82. But I look at these beautiful little babies and they get a vat. I mean, so like a big glass of stuff pumped into their bodies. And I think it's a very negative thing to do.
Starting point is 00:35:17 And I would like to see it. I'm not doing this in terms of Bobby or not. I hope they agree with that, but that's just my opinion. I would love to see much smaller shots like four visits to the doctor. And I think you would have a much better result with the autism. There you go. Donald Trump has an opinion that vaccines should be given in four visits to the doctors and no vats of stuff. Now, as usual, they just lie. There are not. not 82 or 88 vaccines. One of the things they love to do is to mention every single dose. So like, if you get the MMR, which vaccinates against three things, they call that three vaccines. And then when you need boosters, they're like, it's 88 vaccines. As I've explained to you before,
Starting point is 00:36:06 there doesn't appear to be any benefit to separating out the vaccines. In fact, if you stick kids more times with a needle, the risk is very low. But in theory, the, it's a higher infection risk because every time you stick, you could get an infection. I've never seen it happen in anybody I know, but at least theoretically. But the most interesting thing is I have a lot of pediatrician friends who say, you know, parents sometimes have been coming in lately. And they go, listen, I want to spread out some of these vaccines. And in general, the pediatricians go, fine, spread it out.
Starting point is 00:36:38 Let's do one. Let's do rhodovirus today. And then we'll do the MMR in a week or 10 days. It doesn't really make a difference, but they'll do it. But then they have parents asking for exactly what the Trump administration has been saying. Give me just the measles today. We'll come back for mumps and then we'll come back for Rubella. That's not available in the United States.
Starting point is 00:36:58 There might be other countries where you can get those individually. It's not even a thing. And Trump and others just casually go separate it out. Do measles then mumps then Rubella. Pediatricians don't have access to that. And I have a lot of pediatrician friends who are very frustrated that people are coming in asking for something that simply doesn't exist. Donald Trump, of course, asked how much longer on this Iran war? You've ended the war seven times already, sir. She didn't say that, but I'll say it. How much
Starting point is 00:37:25 longer? I don't think it'll surprise you to hear that Donald Trump expected to take a couple more weeks. So is it accurate to say you think the combat operations are over and done, but there may I didn't say that. I said they are defeated, but that doesn't mean they're done. They've lost, but the war continues. Just accept it. We could go in for two more weeks and do every single target. We have certain targets that we wanted to do. And we've done probably 70% of them, but we have other targets that we could conceivably hit. So if they're completely defeated, how are their targets left? But even if we didn't do that, you? You know, that would just be final touches.
Starting point is 00:38:08 But even if we didn't do that, it would take them many years to rebuild. Can you imagine? It's over, but it'll continue a couple more weeks. And they've been totally defeated, but we still have 30% of the targets left. His brain's not working. It's that it is simply not working. And then when asked about the NFL price gouging, Trump complains about the kickoff rule. His brain doesn't compute.
Starting point is 00:38:35 On some domestic issues, one of them, a lot of people are interested in involving the NFL. Your Justice Department is investigating the NFL for moving a lot of viewers from free broadcast television to more expensive pay programming like Amazon Prime, Netflix, Peacock, and YouTube, where the NFL makes more money. Do you think this is price gouging on America's favorite sport? Should the government do anything about it? It's tough. It's a tough. You've got people that love football. They're great people. They don't make enough money to go and pay this.
Starting point is 00:39:03 It's tough. And they could be killing the golden goose. I mean, they have that stupid kickoff thing that you can't watch. It's unwatchable. I hate the games where they, you know, they have the new phony kickoff. I don't think it's any safer. I hope college football doesn't do that. You know what I'm talking about. I'm not a big football. You are not. No, I'm just reading questions. I don't understand, sir. Someone else wrote this stuff for me. His brain's not working, folks. It's he, it's just random free association. Why do they call? it a football when it's normally thrown, I think it's nasty. It's absolutely nasty. What's the latest with Cuba? You still invading Cuba? The reporter asks and Trump goes, well, I think we're going to take care of it after we take care of this other thing. What's the latest with Cuba and are there talks underway now? Well, it's a failed country. It has been for years and we'll take care of one before we take care of the other. But no, it's a failed country, Cuba. And we'll take care of one before we take care of one before we take care of.
Starting point is 00:40:04 of the other. I guess he is still planning to invade Cuba, the anti-war president. And then finally, Donald Trump tells so many lies he forgets about them. You might remember that Donald Trump proudly said, we will audit Fort Knox with Doge and Elon Musk. Trump forgot about it. So the interviewer makes a huge mistake. She's following up about something Trump promised. You never follow up about something Trump promised because he forgot about it. What happened to the audit of Fort Knox? Which one are you talking about? There was, oh, that's genius. The look on his, this moment right here is when Trump goes, I don't know what the hell she is talking
Starting point is 00:40:48 about. Which audit? The Fort Knox. Which one are you talking about? It was, I think when you first got into office, you and Elon Musk talked about auditing the world to make sure it's there. Well, we wanted to go knock on the door, Fort Knox, very thick door, and to see whether or not we have any gold in there, you know, because we take a look at it's a very interesting
Starting point is 00:41:10 question. Yeah, we played with that. I wonder if they left the gold in Fort Knox because they steal a lot. No need to really do that, though. Well, I don't know. I think it's, I do want to go to Fort Knox sometime. What you're forgetting is we actually just said that. I didn't understand that at the time. I was trying to distract from six other things that were going wrong. And I thought it would make a nice, you know, like when I went to McDonald's, we would just knock on the door at Fort Knox. But I don't know that we really need to do that. He doesn't even remember. And we were supposed to believe Joe Biden couldn't do the job. I don't have a cat myself, but I have spent enough time around friends' cats to know that there are picky cats when it comes to food.
Starting point is 00:41:53 They don't like it. They won't eat it. But one of my friends has had a ton of success switching to Smalls cat food before Smalls. Mealtime was very hit or miss. The cat gets excited now. Our sponsor, Smalls, is fresh, human-grade cat food made with real ingredients, no fillers or artificial stuff, high protein, gently cooked, promotes digestion, delivered right to your door. My friend did a side-by-side with the old food and smalls.
Starting point is 00:42:25 The cat went for Smalls. Your cat deserves more than a bowl of processed shortcuts. Try Smalls if your cat doesn't love Smalls. You get a full refund for a limited time. audience gets 60% off your first order plus free shipping and free treats for life. When you go to smalls.com slash Pacman, the link is in the description. Hearing aids have gotten shockingly expensive, paying thousands of dollars for basic hearing aids does not add up.
Starting point is 00:42:56 That is what our sponsor MD Hearing is here to fix. MD Hearing offers rechargeable digital hearing aids for less than 10% of what you'd pay at a traditional hearing clinic. hearing's new Neo model fits inside the ear. It's nearly invisible. The Neo XS is their smallest hearing aid ever. No bulky hardware. No learning curve. Family friend of mine has used MD hearing for years now. She loves the affordability. She thinks the virtual appointments are so convenient with MD hearings team of audiologists to help with the device from home. MD hearing has sold over two million hearing aids with customers consistently saying they outwe
Starting point is 00:43:37 perform devices that cost up to 10 times more. Every purchase comes with a 60 day trial and a 100% money back guarantee. For a limited time, MD Hearing is giving my audience a pair of hearing aids for just $247. Plus, you'll get a free extra charging case, a $100 value. Go to shopmdhearing.com. Use my promo code, Pacman. The link is in the description. Today I'm going to be speaking with Sarah Isger, the editor of Scotis blog, host of the legal podcast advisory opinions and also a legal analyst for ABC News. She's author of the new book Last Branch Standing, a potentially surprising, occasionally witty journey inside today's Supreme Court.
Starting point is 00:44:26 Sarah, really good to have you on. Thank you for having me. I'm pumped. So the first thing I want to ask you about came up recently. And I want to get your take on it. You know, on the one hand, there are those who claim that saying that the Supreme Court is political is not really accurate in the sense that to some degree the justices are simply applying law precedent and the constitution to the facts of a case.
Starting point is 00:44:53 And it's sort of like a mechanical process in a way, in go the facts, you smother them with the law and then just outcomes a sort of decision. And intuitively, we know that that can't possibly. be the case because decisions do seem to be grouped roughly along what we might call the liberal and conservative justices, although I know you argue that there might be a different way that that we might divide them up, which maybe you'll tell us about. Democratic presidents want to choose certain justice, certain judges to become Supreme Court justices. Republicans, same thing.
Starting point is 00:45:28 So intuitively, it seems as though it is political, explain how we might better understand this. Yeah. So I think both of those miss a lot of nuance, this idea that it's politics and it's the same as Congress and the red team votes this way and the blue team votes this way. Yeah. That is just not borne out by the data, you know, last term, 15% of the cases were 6-3 or 5-4, sort of those closely divided cases with all of the liberal justices and dissent. So that's what we'd expect from a 6-3 court, right? That was only 15% of the cases, though. 15% of the cases, the exact, the exact, same number were decided 6-3 or 5-4 with all of the liberal justices in the majority and only conservative justices in dissent. So I don't think the, you know, the team sports tribalism thing
Starting point is 00:46:19 works at the Supreme Court. At the same time, this idea that there is some sort of mechanistic formula, as you say, right, the facts go in and the law comes out in this, you know, delicious little tasty meal, that's obviously not true either. Of course, the judges come with ideological priors. They overturn precedent of previous courts. We wouldn't see that happen if it were this mechanistic right and wrong process, though it is interesting to note that this court is overturning fewer precedents per term than any of the previous courts in modern history. The Warren court actually takes the cake for that one. I would suggest a little bit of more nuanced things somewhere in the middle of this, right? Number one, the judges obviously have
Starting point is 00:47:08 ideologies. Those don't map on particularly well to our politics. And we know that because the judges are at best a lagging indicator of our politics. You know, Justice Thomas has been on the court for 30 years. He's far more likely to reflect whatever it meant to be nominated by a Republican president in 1992 than by Donald Trump when the Republican Party now stands for totally different stuff than it did 30 years ago. Yeah. But they have ideologies. They are, as you say, conservative or liberal.
Starting point is 00:47:41 And what comes with that is a way to apply the law to facts. You know, are you a judicial minimalist? Are you an originalist? Are you a textualist? Are you a practicalist? Like Justice Breyer. So that's like one important part of this. This ideological thing is true, but it's not partisan.
Starting point is 00:47:58 A second thing that I think would be helpful to bring to bear. is what about those other, you know, 85% of the cases? If only 15% of them were decided along ideological lines like we'd expect, what's going on everywhere else? So 42% were unanimous. And the rest were, you know, cats and dogs all over the place where they're not deciding things based ideologically. And the pushback I get is like, well, what about the big cases? In other words, that the ones that really matter. are not in those 42%. Sarah, you're just picking, you know, the 15% are the important ones, the big ones.
Starting point is 00:48:38 And the other 85% are like, yeah, some contract dispute that nobody, you know, there isn't an ideological prior to brain to it. That's just not true. At the Supreme Court, you can find an ideological way to look at nearly every case, even the sort of weirdest contract cases. It's like, well, what about standing? What about how we read the contract? Is it based on the text?
Starting point is 00:48:59 Who defines these words? All of that can be. conservative or liberal. But I offer this other way to think about the justices for those 85% of cases, which is institutionalism, where you end up with Justice Kavanaugh, for instance, much closer to Justice Kagan, a justice he was more likely to agree with than Justice Gorsuch, who is just as conservative as he is. Justice Kavanaugh was more likely to agree with Justice Kagan and Justice Sotomayor last term than with Justice Gorsuch. Justice Gorsuch, much closer to justice Jackson along this spectrum that isn't ideological. It's about how you view your job as a justice,
Starting point is 00:49:38 how you view previous court's decisions, whether you're one of nine or it's a single group project you're turning in at the end of the day and you just contribute your peace. So, you know, that's a whole lot to throw at you. But the point is I think both teams who try to make this like very easy, simplistic way to think about the Supreme Court, it's all politics. It's not politics at all. Surprise, surprise. Neither of those are right. What about the distinguishing sort of aspect of seeing the Constitution as something to be
Starting point is 00:50:12 interpreted literally, sort of the originalist textualist approach and then no, it's a living document and we have to sort of adjust our interpretation for 2026. Does that map more cleanly in some way? It used to. It used to be the case that conservatives wanted to. adopt this quote unquote original meaning of the Constitution. Yeah. Of course, like footnote here, what does it mean to adopt the original meaning of the
Starting point is 00:50:40 constitution? What would the founders think of geolocation devices in our pockets that we carry around with us and whether the police can access those without a warrant or exactly what kind of warrant they would need? What is the original meaning of the Fourth Amendment in that case? And how do we determine that? That is a tough question that originalists, conservatives on the court, wildly disagree on. So even among conservatives, you're going to have huge, interesting, fun
Starting point is 00:51:08 disagreements about what it means to even look at the, quote, original meaning. And then the living constitution, the idea that we just want these nine people to, you know, apply their best judgment. You're smart people. That's why we put you here. Do your best to think through this problem and what would be best for society, using the constitution as a, I don't know, a guidepost. you're not bound by that. That was considered the more liberal interpretation. Of course, that led to its own problems. As London B. Johnson once said, it takes two-thirds of Congress and three-quarters of the states to amend the Constitution, but Justice Douglas can do it in an afternoon. Of course, people then stopped amending the Constitution, and they started fighting over who these justices would be,
Starting point is 00:51:55 because why go through this really hard process when we can just have knock down, drag out confirmation battles? But there's something else interesting going on here, and we saw it, I'll just pick out the birthright citizenship case. President Trump, of course, on his first day in office, signs this executive order, redefining what birthright citizenship in the United States was going to mean. And all of a sudden, you see the Trump administration adopt this living constitutionalism,
Starting point is 00:52:23 this idea that like, look, I mean, I mean, it doesn't matter that much what people thought the 14th Amendment meant. Let's, you know, be practical about this. We all know we've got a big immigration problem. Let's, you know, apply some wisdom and some common sense to this. And you saw the liberals say, no, no, the 14th Amendment says what it says. And by God, we're going to look at what they thought they were agreeing to when they ratified this. And so I think what you see is that it's not a conservative versus liberal distinction.
Starting point is 00:52:53 It is a in power versus out. of power. If you are out of power, you want the Constitution to be a binding contract. And if you are in power, you want your people to get to redefine what we're doing here today. So the war in court at sort of that, you know, post-FDR, they had nine justices on the Supreme Court. Liberals really wanted a living constitution. Now that it's more conservatives on the court, liberals are the ones who are like, no, no, not living constitution, because I don't want these people deciding what the rules are. And so, that people realize and get back to this idea that, no, no, we want the political process to do this, whether you're in power or out. This is the beauty of our Constitution is that it has a process for
Starting point is 00:53:37 this, and this is how we protect minority rights, free speech, religion, criminal defendants. It's all about having the Supreme Court as a counter-majoritarian institution that says no to our current politics. What do you think happens with the birthright citizenship case? And I think right now, I mean, we don't really have polls for this sort of thing, but like the betting market odds have it at under 10 percent that Trump wins on this. Yeah. And that feels a little high, frankly. I don't think the question is whether Trump wins or loses. I think the interesting question for legal folks who are following this closely is which way does Trump lose? Does he lose on the constitutional
Starting point is 00:54:21 question, which would mean this question is done forever. The only way that you could change birthright citizenship moving forward would be to amend the Constitution, which, as we've said, is a very hard process to do that no one seems to believe we still can do. Yeah. We can and we should. But there's another way he can lose that's a more minimalist way. This gets to my institutionalist point. Some justices want to only decide sort of the narrowest questions before the court, leave everything else for another day. They could simply say, look, I don't know what the Constitution demands here, but I know that only Congress can pass a law about this.
Starting point is 00:54:58 We sure ain't doing it by executive order. So Congress, feel free and we'll review the constitutionality of that when you do. But until then, no, Mr. President, for the same reason that you couldn't do tariffs, for the same reason you couldn't federalize the National Guard, for the same reason Joe Biden couldn't do student loan debt forgiveness or the eviction moratorium, the vaccine mandate, presidents acting alone are not going to have these powers without Congress passing a law.
Starting point is 00:55:24 I want to go back to you were talking sort of if we put all nine justices kind of on a spectrum that you would actually have some conservatives on some issues that are closer to some liberals. You know, I've seen Gorsuch and Kavanaugh will occasionally rule against what Trump wants, for lack of a better term, is the way we might say it. seems especially triggered when it's Amy Coney Barrett. And as an observer from the left, I see that when Trump talks about low IQ, it tends to be a black woman that he applies that to. What do you've made?
Starting point is 00:55:58 And what I'm going to is, is there's something about the female Supreme Court justice he picked ruling against him that you think really bothers him? Or is it about the decisions? I'm so glad that you're making me feel not crazy. So I actually wrote many bios of each justice in. my book and for the bio about Justice Barrett, I write about this thing where when conservatives are mad at her, they talk really differently. And I shouldn't say conservatives when Republicans who support Donald Trump are mad at her. They talk really differently. They are not conservatives
Starting point is 00:56:32 in any way, shape, or form by my definition. And it's very gendered. And it's very different than the way they talk about the chief justice when he rules against them. Or as you point out, Justice Gorsuch in a very famous case in Bostock. He ruled against, you know, what the right wanted. But when it's her, it's, it's not gender undertones. It's gender overtones. So I absolutely think you're on to something. And of course, the great irony is that Justice Barrett is like the epitome of femininity by any definition, right? She's got seven kids. She can play Bach. She makes pasta carbonara. Like, she is the Jane Auster. in apotheosis of a woman. And that's what, of course, this right wing in the Republican Party
Starting point is 00:57:19 says that they're in favor of. But when she doesn't agree with them, they are triggered in a way that is really hard to come up with an explanation otherwise. The one thing I would note, though, is that Donald Trump, there's this narrative out there that Donald Trump keeps winning at the Supreme Court. He is not. Every major policy initiative that the Supreme Court has decided not just like on an interim basis of what's going to be the rule while the case is pending. So alien enemies act, that was immigration. He lost. Federalizing the National Guard, which I mentioned, he lost.
Starting point is 00:57:52 Terrace, he lost. Birthright citizenship, again, I think 10% is too high a chance for him to win at this point. He is almost certainly going to lose on the Federal Reserve and removing the governor from the Federal Reserve. So I think it's really weird that the left wants to make, you know, a fetch happen with Donald Trump keeps winning at this Supreme Court. Donald Trump sure doesn't think he's winning. And really, no matter how you look at it, if anything, he just keeps losing and losing and losing, which I don't think tells you like, oh, these justices are betraying the right. I think it tells you that Donald Trump is not a conservative, but he appointed conservative justices to the Supreme Court. Last thing I want to ask you about, I've had Donald Trump's former deputy press secretary,
Starting point is 00:58:41 Sarah Matthews, on the show a few times and have sort of talked to her about like, are you still a Republican? What sort of candidate would you like to see in 2028 or would you consider voting for a Democrat, this sort of thing? I see you sort of as like a moderate Republican. You can tell me whether you agree with that characterization or not. But what would you like to see in a post-Trump. Republican Party in 2028, for example.
Starting point is 00:59:11 So I think at this point, I've probably voted for more Democratic candidates for president than Republican in my lifetime. I would not say that I'm a moderate Republican. I'd probably reject both of those terms in some ways. Wow. Because I don't think I'm a moderate conservative. I am a conservative. I'm very conservative on some stuff.
Starting point is 00:59:31 But that doesn't map onto either political party right now. Donald Trump defeated the Republican Party before he defeated the Democratic Party in 2016. He's not a conservative. We're not arguing over the size and scope, the proper role of government anymore. We have two big, you know, spending government parties. They're just arguing over what to spend the money on, what to use the power for. So really our elections right now are over power, which isn't working very well, in my opinion. So if you're asking what I'd like to see, I'd like to see two functioning political.
Starting point is 01:00:04 parties. Right now, I think at most we have about a half of functioning political party. And I'd like to see an argument over who's going to make Congress function again, who's going to actually give power back to voters to have their say, you know, in a legislative branch that negotiates and compromises and passes real laws that maybe aren't exactly what anyone wants, but are something that we can have stable agreements on some of these culture war issues on. How about a Congress that says no more partisan gerrymandering. That's allowed, but nobody's even talking about that. Instead, they blame the other side or they blame the Supreme Court. All the Supreme Court said is we need guidance from Congress on how we would litigate partisan gerrymandering. Where is the conversation about Congress
Starting point is 01:00:49 getting back in the game? That's the political party I'm voting for. Is there anybody who you think is aligned with that right now? Like, if you said, oh, well, you know, if Mitt Romney came back and said, like, is there anybody? Sure, yeah. Mitch Daniels, I think, would be my number one pick. I think you'll hear that name from a lot of former, like, conservative Republicans or whatever because he was the governor of Indiana. A lot of us thought he would run for president. He then becomes the head of Purdue University,
Starting point is 01:01:18 where I think he navigates all sorts of things really beautifully at Purdue, that this is a weird thing to say could be mimicked at the federal level. But he has this kind of Calvin Coolidge vibe of like, look, if I come here, I'm just making Congress work again. Like I don't, I'm not doing government by executive order. And that's what we need. And I don't hear a lot of presidential candidates who tend to be narcissistic, you know, sociopath adjacent, at least. They're not all saying like, ooh, ooh, I don't want this power. Let's give it back to Congress. Instead, they're just telling you which executive orders they would sign that either will be unconstitutional that the Supreme Court
Starting point is 01:01:59 will strike down or that the next president will get rid of on day one. So if you care about climate change or immigration or anything else, we ain't going to solve it in executive orders and in four year increments. You have to have Congress in the game. Agree with that. That's for sure. The book is Last Branch Standing, a potentially surprising, occasionally witty journey inside today's Supreme Court.
Starting point is 01:02:19 We've been speaking with Sarah Isger. Really appreciate your time. Thank you. I am so grateful that you had me on. Thank you. The David Pakman Show is an audience-supported program and the best most direct way to support the show is by becoming a member at join packman.com. You'll get the daily bonus show, the daily commercial free show, and plenty of other great membership perks. Get the full experience
Starting point is 01:02:45 by signing up at join packman.com. You should be outraged because Donald Trump was just caught funneling millions of dollars to a friend in a no-bid contract using a fake emergency declaration for the Washington Memorial Reflecting Pool and it is backfiring primarily because it looks like absolute crap. I mean, it just it looks like Drek. This all started with Donald Trump in the middle of a war in the middle of gas prices up 66%. Apropos of nothing saying, you know what, it's urgent that right now we repaint the bottom of the reflecting pool so that it'll look bluer and it'll look better. And in fact, Donald Trump posted a picture to truth social of what it was going to look like, which we have up right now. And it like it sort of looks maybe okay.
Starting point is 01:03:39 I mean, like it's a weird blue. It looks very fake. I don't know. But it at least is sort of like, okay, if that's what it's going to look like at the end of the day, it's not urgent. It's not important. But if it came out like this, you know, it's the blue of like toilet bowl cleaner. But at least it's passable. But it's definitely not an emergency.
Starting point is 01:04:00 And you know what? Trump might have been able to get away with it except then people saw pictures of the progress, which we have up on the screen now. And it looks like trash. It just looks it looks like what happens when I decide to paint the entire living room. And I get half of one coat on one wall and it looks terrible. And I go, this was a bad idea. Let me call somebody.
Starting point is 01:04:24 And people started asking questions. People saw how terrible it looked. And so they said, wait a second. Why are we even doing this right now? Who is being paid to do this? Are they competent? Is this a good use of my tax money? And that's when it was revealed that the $6.9 million contract for this was given to take
Starting point is 01:04:46 a guess. You all know, right? It was given to Trump's own pool guy with no bidding process. Now you might say, aren't you supposed to do a bidding process? He goes, I've got a pool guy who's unbelievable at swimming pools. That's a quote. Trump said that in April to the press. But for $7 million government contract, we're going to bid this out.
Starting point is 01:05:10 Who's going to give us a good price? Who's competent? Who's done similar projects in the past? Submit a proposal. Prove that you can do it. They didn't do that. How did Trump get around the requirement for a bidding process for government contracts? Well, because there's the little rule that says if it's an
Starting point is 01:05:29 urgent project, you can skip the bidding altogether and just get someone working on it right away. The next question, I know you're all critical thinkers, would be how is an urgent project defined? Well, certainly not this. It only applies when you are trying to prevent serious injury, financial, or other to the government, not painting the bottom of the reflecting pool. would not cause serious injury, financial or other to the government. It would just look the way it's looked for a really long time. And so Donald Trump faked urgency to skip the bidding process and hand out a no bid $7 million contract to his pool guy. And if it didn't look like crap, he might have even been able to get away from it.
Starting point is 01:06:25 Now, this this is $7 million. And you might be listening to You might be listening and saying, David, we have $70 million problems. We have $700 million problems. We've got billion dollar problems like the war in Iran. That's right. But the important thing here is the anti-corruption platform. I've been explaining now for a really long time. We have what I believe is the greatest opportunity to win over voters from the middle and
Starting point is 01:06:56 from the right is to say, listen, we can do. disagree on abortion. We can disagree on taxation. We can disagree about AI and vaccines or what we could do all that. Okay. But we need to do that disagreement with people who are not simply in this for corrupt practices to enrich themselves and their family members and their friends. And so I laid out this anti-corruption sort of program, this anti-corruption platform that I have to, believe could be the best and most effective way to bring over disaffected Trump voters who go, you know, I'm nominally right wing or I am actually a conservative and I'm not sure. Whatever, wherever they are in the political spectrum, whether they were political before
Starting point is 01:07:42 Trump or not. They voted for Trump, but they recognize this is not the way government is supposed to operate. I'm getting screwed. Trump asked me for my vote. He asked me for donations. He's collecting my tax money as the president of the United States. I pay my taxes and no bid contracts to his pool guy. That is too much. Let's go back to where we can just disagree about policy rather than this stuff. So I think that there is a real opportunity here by pointing out that this is going on. You might have disagreed with Joe Biden on policy, but Biden wasn't doing stuff like this. And Obama wasn't doing stuff like this. And John McCain, I don't believe had he won in 2008, I don't believe he would have done stuff like this.
Starting point is 01:08:27 We would have disagreed politically for sure, but it wouldn't have been like this. So we need to use that anti-corruption platform to try to unite. We're not going to get everybody. There's tens of millions of people who voted for Donald Trump three times. They're in the cult. We're not going to get him out with this. But some we can get out. And seven million, my pool guys, the best that painting the by, wow, that looks like shit.
Starting point is 01:08:50 I think that it is a reminder that your tax money is being squandered on. the Iran war that he said he wouldn't get into, the reflecting pool that his buddy is now cleaning up $7 million from, we have to put a stop to it. Let's end the corruption. I think it's a powerful message. Hey, so I, this is, I'm going to tell you about some medical tests I just had done. And it was because of messages I got from viewers. And this is, this is a wacky, wacky story. I've had situations before where people write in and they have some medical concerns. And it's very obviously not a real concern and I just ignore it. But a little while ago, someone, I'm going to tell you about two medical concerns actually
Starting point is 01:09:35 that came up from viewers on the show. And I went and got tested. Okay. Someone wrote in and said, hey, you know, David, you seem to have a swollen thyroid or goiter. And you got to get that thing checked out because it's happened before that. Someone notices it on TV. There's this guy, Tarrick El Moussa from like a real estate show. He had thyroid cancer and it was diagnosed because someone saw it on TV. You got to go and get this thing checked out. And I wrote to my doctor. I was I was looking at the videos and you know what? I do see this
Starting point is 01:10:17 thing here. As I talk, this thing is moving up and down. But I said, I think that's my Adam's apple. I think that's my cartilage. But I wrote to my doctor and I said, doctor, listen, someone wrote to me. They're talking about thyroid cancer. They're talking about goiter. Can you look at some of my videos? Because I went back and I looked, what did my neck look like five years ago? What did my neck look like 10 years ago?
Starting point is 01:10:43 And I thought it looked the same, but I've been in different studios. The lighting changes, I don't know. And my doctor looked at it and he goes, David, I think that that's what's called the cricoid cartilage, it's the cartilage right below the atoms apple. I think it's just moving up and down, you know, in thin people. Sometimes it's very noticeable. I don't really think it's anything, but you want to do a thyroid ultrasound. I mean, it's no radiation. Now, at the time, this is, it's so wild. I was in D.C. running around, interviewing senators and doing all the stuff. And on the phone of my doctor, do you want to get an ultrasound? And I was like, nah, it doesn't sound like I need to
Starting point is 01:11:20 do it. I mean, it's it if you're not worried. And then that. That's, that's, That little thing in the back of my head started up and I said, imagine if I'm turning down a test that could reveal something. And if it's thyroid cancer, you want to get it early, you just, you treat it. And I guess I should just go and get this ultrasound. Now, I book it. I don't think much about it. And then the day before, I'm going, oh, my God, what is, what is this thing in my neck?
Starting point is 01:11:49 And the whole thing was working. So I go in there. And it's, this is like a moment out of breaking bad. I'll explain in a moment. They sit me, lay me down on this table. I guess to get the thyroid angle right, the ultrasound technician put like a pillow under my back so that my neck would be back and my thyroid. And at a certain point during the test, I just kind of glance, it was taking what I thought
Starting point is 01:12:14 was too long. And I know people, the tech is not reading the ultrasound. I understand a radiologist will do it. But in my head, I'm like, these texts do this all the time. They probably realize if there's something weird. At some point, as this thing is going on, I just look over to the right and I see her drawing a circle on the screen around some pulsating red thing that appears to be on my neck. And at this point, I go, oh, my God, what is that?
Starting point is 01:12:46 What that does not look normal. And it reminded me of this moment in Breaking Bad where Walter. White is having his lung cancer scan and he just looks over and there's this huge white thing on the scan, which he believes is lung cancer. And then later he is told by his doctor, oh, that's like from coughing, it's like inflammation or who knows what it is. Who knows if that's even a real depiction of medicine? But it reminded me of that moment.
Starting point is 01:13:13 I'm looking at this red thing going this is completely effed up. I leave. And I think 40 minutes later, the results come in. And it's like completely normal, symmetrical, beautiful thyroid. Trump's doctors would have they've, Trump's doctors have never seen a score this high on a thyroid ultrasound. And I was able to get it out of the way. But I quite literally went and got tested because I there's another story.
Starting point is 01:13:40 I think it's from hockey where a nurse had seen a player who had something on his neck and like held up a sign and the guy had thyroid cancer. So I went and I got tested. Is that crazy? Now, let me tell you the next one for which I didn't get tested, but I did write to my doctor. A couple of months before that, someone wrote to me and said, David, I think you've been having mini strokes while you've been doing the show. And this was like not an A list celebrity, but a relatively well-known person that watches the show.
Starting point is 01:14:17 And they said, and there's a couple things going on. You seem to be saying things that make no sense and not realizing it. And when you speak, your mouth is asymmetrical. Like you've had some kind of paralysis to the face. Now again, I asked them, what do you mean? I'm making no sense when I speak. Tell me what you mean by that. But I went back and looked.
Starting point is 01:14:41 And it is true that sometimes when I'm gesticulating wildly, my lip opens, my mouth opens in a not totally symmetrical way, but I went back and looked in 10 years of. ago, it was the same thing. So I go, what do you, what do you mean? I'm making no sense. And they said, you know, you were just talking and you said, God bless the United States. And you didn't even seem to notice that you were doing that. And at this point, I just start laughing. And I explained, no, no, I'm, I know I'm doing that. I'm mimicking when Donald Trump had some kind of dental malfunction. And he said, God bless the Palestinians. And God bless the United States. And And at this point, we had a laugh.
Starting point is 01:15:23 But I still asked my doctor at my physical. Hey, have you noticed that when I talk, my mouth moves sort of asymmetrically? And he goes, you're fine. You don't, you don't need to worry about that. So multiple. And you know what? After 20 years of doing this, maybe two medical explorations based on viewer mail is not really that much.
Starting point is 01:15:45 On average, that's like one every 10 years, even if they have both been. in the last few months. But I got my results. The internet tried to diagnose me. So I got tested. And I was fine. Thankfully, we've got a great bonus show for you today. The chaos around the redistricting simply won't stop. We will talk about voters who believe the election will be stolen, but by whom is the question. And we are seeing threats that there will be passports revoke. If you owe child support, is that even legal? All of that and more on today's bonus show. Sign up at join packman.com.
Starting point is 01:16:31 Make sure you're getting my daily newsletter. It's free. And I'll keep you up to date on everything that's going on. Go to Davidpackman.com slash substack to get that newsletter for free.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.