The Dispatch Podcast - Investigating Jerome Powell
Episode Date: January 13, 2026Steve Hayes invites Michael Warren, John McCormack, and James Sutton on the podcast to discuss the Department of Justice's investigation of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, how President Trump's t...ariffs are affecting interest rates, and the deadly protests in Iran. The Agenda:—Jerome Powell investigation—The fallout of Trump's economic policies—Trump’s approval numbers fall over immigration—GOP messaging and midterm possibilities—Iran’s deadly protests: Is this different?—NWYT: predicting the National Champion—Introducing Dispatch Culture Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Dispatch podcast is presented by Pacific Legal Foundation, suing the government since 1973.
Welcome to the dispatch podcast. I'm Steve Hayes. On today's roundtable, we'll discuss the newly announced investigation into Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
We'll also look back at the Minnesota shooting, discuss the Iran protests, and, not worth your time.
Spend a moment on the National Championship for college football. Stick around for my decision.
discussion with Valerie Pavlonez or ideas editor about the launch of Dispatch Culture
newsletter. Joining me today for the roundtable are James Sutton, John McCormick, and Michael
Warren, all dispatch colleagues. Welcome, everyone. I want to start today by taking, if I can,
a big picture look at the kinds of things that have been happening in the country and in the
world over the past couple of weeks. And I'm going to
borrow for the domestic part of this from our old friend Irwin Stelzer, who writes a terrific
newsletter. And he starts his newsletter this way. It's been a busy week for the president as he
overcame his reluctance to interfere in capitalism's market system. He decided that $50 per barrel
is the right price for crude oil, and we use control of Venezuela's oil industry to drive prices
down. He decided that 10% is the most Americans should be forced to pay on
their credit card. He decided that private company should not be allowed to buy homes for rentals.
He decided that banks are charging too much for mortgage loans and ordered Fannie and Freddie
to buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds. And on and on it goes. That's what the president has done
on the domestic side of things. Overseas, we have conducted strikes in Nigeria and Syria.
We have removed the leader of Venezuela. The president has threatened kinetic action
in Iran, Mexico, Colombia.
I'm undoubtedly forgetting some other hotspots.
He has repeated his threats to take over Greenland,
refusing, again, to rule out military force and doing so
and sort of shrugged his shoulders at the possibility that NATO might react negatively
or even go away.
And then in news that broke late Sunday, we're recording this about 1030.
Monday, January 12th, we learned that the Department of Justice is investigating Fed Chairman Jerome Powell
related to renovations, theoretically related to renovations at the Federal Reserve and alleged
cost discrepancies and discrepancies in testimony that Powell has given. But I thought it was
worth laying out in that kind of a way the number of massive stories that we have been dealing
with here in these first couple weeks of 26. So I'm very glad to have James, Mike, and John
help us try to make sense of this. And look, as I've said, as I say to you and to everybody else
on staff, we'll make sense of what we can. And when we can't make sense of the events, we'll just tell
people. We can't make sense of this. More reporting to come. Gentlemen, welcome, glad to have you this morning.
Hey, Steve. Hey, Steve. Okay, Mike, we're going to start with you. Can you walk us through this news about the
investigation into Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve and the subpoenas from Friday? What happened?
Well, the subpoenas came on Friday, but we didn't learn about this until Sunday, the we being the public,
when Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve Chair, made a remarkable statement.
It's a printed statement.
It's also a video statement that was released online, on social media, from Powell,
in which he revealed that the Federal Reserve had been served,
these grand jury subpoenas, informing the Federal Reserve that, or I should say the chair,
is under threat of criminal indictment.
There's a lot to unpack about sort of the text or,
the pretext of what this indictment is likely to look like and sort of the real story behind it.
But the pretext is essentially, and this is what Powell said in his statement, it's related
to testimony that he gave last summer, summer of 2025 in front of the Senate Banking Committee,
about these renovations being done to Federal Reserve Office buildings.
And the issue seems to be a discrepancy in what Powell testified about.
regarding the cost of those renovations and arguments that that was from,
from administration officials and allies, that there was a different number or that maybe
he was even misleading or lying to Congress about that number.
And it's sort of a bizarre thing because Jerome Powell is an economist and he is the Federal
Reserve Chair.
and this is a very important sort of independent institution setting short-term interest rates.
The idea that he's about to be undone, indicted, possibly convicted on lying to Congress about
renovations sort of boggles the mind.
Like, what are we really talking about here?
So I think taking another step back and realizing that this is something that Powell is
alleging in this really remarkable statement is really about.
Donald Trump's frustration with Powell and with the Federal Reserve for not lowering interest rates
enough.
And this is not some big secret.
Powell is not revealing something that has been said behind closed doors or has been sort of
veiled threats against him that he's now revealing to us.
We've been hearing about this for the better part of a year that Donald Trump has been
actually saying out loud he wishes that Powell would lower interest rates more, that the Fed
would lower interest rates more, and that it's hurting him that Powell isn't doing
that open and direct calls for lowering of interest rates repeatedly anytime president trump talks about
the federal reserve at all and i would also say open and direct threats to powell to remove powell
there's been sort of an open public discussion about who will replace powell trump has made no
secret of the fact that he doesn't like powell doesn't agree with powell and thinks paul is ruining his
presidency so we have that context and then we have this grand jury subpoena the
potential indictment coming down from Donald Trump's Justice Department.
It all smells a little fishy, and it smells fishy enough that you even have a member of the
Senate baking committee, a Republican member of the Senate baking committee, Tom Tillis,
essentially saying, this stinks, I don't like it.
And in fact, I'm going to be, you know, placing a hold on any nominations to the Federal
Reserve until we get some answers on this.
I think this, there's a lot we have to learn.
We have to learn exactly what the investigation looks like.
We have to learn if there's actually going to be an indictment, although the grand jury subpoena really suggests it's coming down the pike.
But the fact that you're seeing a Republican member, yes, a retiring member, one who has been more willing than others in his conference to criticize Trump in recent months.
Nevertheless, this is not simply a, you know, misspeaking or lying before Congress issue that.
Trump has made it clear that he doesn't like Powell and he would like to see him go and the context of everything we else we've seen from the Justice Department in terms of the issues of retribution going after Donald Trump's political enemies.
We should be watching this story very closely.
To Mike's point, you know, we need to wait and find out exactly what is in this subpoena.
But we do know from last summer, Anna Palina Luna, a Republican mega congresswoman referred Powell to the DOJ for, you know, potential indictment of prosecution.
and these are the two statements she highlighted from his testimony.
Quote from Powell in June 2025,
there's no VIP dining room, there's no new barbell.
There are no special elevators, just old elevators that have been there.
There are no new water features, no, there's no beehives,
and there's no roof terrace gardens.
Paulina Luna states, this statement is false.
According to the Federal Reserve's final submission to the National Capital Planning
Commission, nearly all those assertions,
excluding the beehives, are contradicted by the actual project plans.
I mean, come on, like whatever the, whatever the discrepancy
is there. Maybe there's more to it. Like, that is the definition of pretext. The idea that you're going to
take out the Federal Reserve Chairman over a misstatement over water features and marble. And just to
put this in context, it's worth noting that the White House itself put out a revisionist history
of January 6th last week, which contained multiple claims that are far more egregious and misleading
provably false than anything that you just read from Jerome Powell in his testimony.
James, we should note that President Trump was asked about this on Air Force One last night, said that he didn't know anything about this.
Apparently, the investigation was approved by Janine Piro, who is a former Fox News warrior on behalf of Donald Trump, who spent most of her time, and I can testify to some of this personally, making sure that people on Fox's air and beyond Fox's Air were loyal to.
President Trump. And she apparently approved this investigation. And Jerome Powell now is going to have
to answer for this. What do you make first of the news over the weekend? And then also, Mike mentioned
Tom Tillis. Senator from North Carolina has been occasionally critical of the president in the past.
He is now retiring. How much should we pay attention to his words? And do you expect that anybody will follow him?
Okay, so a couple things. First off, I don't like, like you've all said, I don't think this is, this should be surprising at all given the track record of the Trump DOJ. I mean, not only Trump's statements on the interest rates and Jerome Powell, he's expressed his personal dislike of Powell many times. I believe last year when he was did that very strange tour of the renovation site, he was asked by reporters if there was anything that Powell could do to kind of get a better relationship with the president. And he said, well, maybe lower interest rates.
So even if he doesn't know anything about it now, he knew something about it then.
Hey, James, let me pause you there because I want to play that audio for our listeners.
So the 2.7 is now 3.1.
I'm not aware of that.
Yeah, it just came out.
Yeah, I haven't heard that from anybody.
It's a bed.
It just came out.
Are there things the chairman can save you today that would make you back off some of the earlier criticism?
Well, I'd love him to lower interest, race.
Other than that, well, other than that,
What can I tell you?
And it should be noted, TMD, of which I'm a representative, is a big fan of Jerome Powell,
not because we have strong opinions about monetary policy, but because they're always on schedule
and on time, which really helps our workflow process.
Anyways, so I think, you know, I watched Jerome Powell's statement, which he released publicly
saying essentially that he wasn't going to back down, that it is the job of the Federal Reserve
to set monetary policy according to their best data and analysis without political pressure.
And I saw Tom Tillis's statement, too, saying essentially the same thing.
he would block any nominees until the matter is resolved.
I think I'm quoting there.
Well, I think the first thing for Tillis is to say, give him time, right?
Like, you know, we've seen this before with Bill Cassidy, with other Republicans.
We've seen this before Tom Tillis on Pete Heggseth, that they make a very strong statement,
and then they decide to go along with the president.
But assuming that this is more genuine from Tillis, and it's definitely genuine from Powell,
I think the main takeaway is that the only people we can see who consistently
are willing to defy the president's wishes and public life
are people who aren't accountable to Republican voters, right?
Because Tillis is retiring and Jerome Powell is, you know,
is an appointee with a protected term.
And I sort of think that's basically the best way
to understand how any Senate figure,
congressional figure acts in this administration so far.
Let me read the statement from Tom Tillis issued late Sunday.
If there were any remaining doubt
whether advisors within the Trump administration are actively pushing to end the independence
of the Federal Reserve, there should now be none. It is the independence and credibility of the
Department of Justice that are in question. I will oppose the confirmation of any nominee
for the Fed, including the upcoming Fed chair vacancy, until this legal matter is fully resolved,
end quote. Tillis obviously believes that Powell is being targeted because of
his willingness to defy. There was a New York Times article over the weekend suggesting that
congressional Republicans are sort of finding their spine and might be signaling a new willingness
to challenge the president, whether it's on Obamacare subsidies, whether it's on war powers
where five Republican senators defied the president in a sort of a first pass vote. We've been talking
about this for as long as Donald Trump has been president? As long as Donald Trump has been on the
scene, really, is this the moment that Republicans stand up and say in public the things that
they say in private? I will just announce to you that I'm skeptical that this is that moment.
What say you? I share you. Your skepticism, James's skepticism. I think James's framing of it was
a pithy one, which is if any of these senators feel any sort of fealty or pressure from
Republican voters, they're not going to do it. Now, on some specific areas, you have seen some of
that kind of pushback. And I think it is targeted. And I think if you talk to some of these Republicans,
either their staff or the members of Congress say themselves, a lot of what they say behind the
scenes, they are trying to influence the president from behind the scenes, from the inside and
try to push him in the right direction.
That was sort of the argument that was made in the first term.
I think the big difference, and really this ties into sort of your big statement at the
beginning, Steve, about the kind of go, go, go.
There's things happening all the time with this administration is that Trump and his
administration, I should say, are much more active this time around.
And they are much more willing to just go and do.
and I think the ability for people to, in his own party, to sort of influence behind the scenes
is severely curved.
Not to jump ahead here, but I think it would be interesting to get John's take on some of this
when it comes to tariffs.
And again, I don't mean to jump ahead of you, Steve, on this.
Sure you do, Mike.
Yeah, no, I want to.
I'm hijacking.
Mike is warming up for his hosting of the dispatch podcast on Thursday, just jumping right in.
We'll just give you the host the host title and the reduction in pay that comes with it.
Well, Mike, I'm not going to get to that question until I get a chance to weigh in on Tom Tillis.
Okay, all right.
Well, I'll say, I'll throw this out there and then you could jump in, John, and talk about whatever you want.
But I do think on an issue like tariffs, which you wrote about last week and the sort of pressure that might or might not be felt by Republicans, I mean, there are the voters and they like Trump, the Republican voters like Trump.
but these economic issues, the feeling that things still cost a lot of money, inflation
or tariff-driven cost increases, that is not nothing.
That is something that they also are responsive to.
Maybe you have something to say on the fact that that kind of pressure could make Republicans
sort of stand up and say, wait a second, this is too far, even if they're not doing so yet.
Yeah.
Well, one, one on Tillis, I would say it's a big deal because Tillis is.
is essential accounting to four. I mean, you actually need these Senate-confirmed positions,
and you've always had people like Murkowski, Collins, and McConnell in the Senate,
senators from Kentucky, Alaska, and Maine. But Tillis has been wobbly. Even after he announced
his impending retirement, he voted to confirm a Trump Judicial nominee, who was totally unqualified,
who was alleged to have engaged in a corrupt quid pro quo in dropping corruption charges
against Mayor Eric Adams, the judicial nominee, now appeals court judge, Emil Bovet. The fact that
Tillis was willing to go along with that, show me that he was still just in the Republican full. The fact that he is preemptively breaking and saying, I will not confirm anyone, I mean, that's a big deal. I think that you're definitely going to get McConnell fall behind him. There's going to be a lot of pressure. I would assume that people like Collins and Murkowski. So, you know, there are 53 Republican senators. You subtract four. Nothing can get through. So that's a big deal. That's a real consequence, a real policy consequence thing where on a lot of these other issues, you know, even if you have a majority on war powers, well, Trump's still going to do what he's going to do as long as he's not, you know, there's not a super majority to override him.
On the broader question here, what's going on?
I mean, this just goes to show you that Trump will, by any means necessary, you know, in his own Trumpian way, authoritarian way, try to address the affordability issue, whether it's Venezuelan oil or pressuring the Fed chair through lawfare to lower interest rates, he'll do anything you can.
The one thing they won't do is fix their biggest self-inflicted wound, which is tariffs.
Scott Lincolome has written, you know, our monthly, the monthly tariff revenue right now has jumped about, you know, 24 billion a month that would translate something like, you know, $290 billion over a year. We usually talk about these things in 10-year increments. So a $3 trillion dollar tariff effectively, this would stay in effect for 10 years, $3, trillion tax like paid by Americans, businesses and consumers. And so I went around the Capitol before and after Christmas break, just asking Republicans, what exactly explains why, you know, your approvals?
rule rigs aren't so great, you know, that Trump's stuck in the low 40s. You're on track to lose the House. And, you know, there's just a thing where Republicans can't exactly say anything that Trump has done is wrong. Trump can only be failed by other people. And so the two main arguments I heard one from Ted Cruz was that, well, just a messaging problem. You know, we just had the greatest success in 12 months, so much more successful than the past. You know, the one big, beautiful bill. And Josh Hawley gave the substance argument, which is that Congress has failed Trump because it hasn't been populist enough, that we haven't raised them in a wage at $15 an hour.
that we haven't passed legislation capping credit card interest rates, that we haven't set caps on the price of pharmaceutical drugs.
So I think this is just goes to the street that Republicans just whistling past the graveyard on their biggest vulnerability, which is tariffs.
It's $3 trillion dollar tax, like something that everybody feels.
You look at the polling, you know, something like 73 percent of Americans say they believe prices have gone up because of Trump's tariffs.
The reason interest rates are where they are is because Powell is trying to keep inflation in check.
Inflation was the number one reason why Trump is president now, why the Democrats lost in 2020.
So the idea that you're going to put this political pressure on a Fed share in a way that could
increase inflation is just its political malpractices and saying it's a whole bunch of things.
That's authoritarian.
It's sluggish.
But it also is counterproductive in terms of actually, you know, obviously interest rates, yeah,
they are hurting people who are anyone considering buying a house in the next five years
is looking at those and thinking this is greatly affected my cost of living and my future plans.
You know, goes against to what happened in the 80s where with Reagan, you know, interest rates were,
you know, sky high to tame inflation.
and there was a huge backlash against that,
but it was all taken care of by 84.
And it was mourning in America then,
and he won in the landslide.
And Trump is not allowing that process to play out.
So let me agree with you that this is authoritarian and thuggish,
and I think we've done a pretty good job of addressing these announced investigations
sort of on their merits.
Carves on the table, I think this is absurd.
I think this is just one in a number of.
things the president has done where he's just going after his political enemies. He's clearly trying
to punish Jerome Powell. This is the kind of thing that Republicans should be outraged about.
I think when we uncover what the real lack of substance to the charges, this is the kind of thing
that would be one in a long list I could put together of potentially something that would be
impeachable for President Trump. Having said that, John, back to you, I'm not sure it's that stupid.
isn't one of Trump's bits of true genius that he is able to redirect anger and frustration with, I would say, not just his policies, but reality by creating villains.
And what he's doing here, rather than address the underlying economic problems, as you suggest, although I think he probably would say, what do you mean I am underlying?
This is what we're doing.
We're generating this revenue.
I'm going to give $2,000, $2,000
dollar tariff rebate checks to people.
You know, morning in America again, we're rich.
We're going to pay down the debt, he said last week.
He might actually believe that what he's doing is good for the economy.
But I think what he's really trying to do is create additional enemies.
And when we sort of break this down and look at the substance and pay careful attention to the charges and the counter charges,
what people, including many Trump voters who don't pay as careful attention to the day-to-day twists and turn of these news stories, what they hear is Trump's taking this oil so that we can have cheaper gas. And then they look up and they say, man, I'm only paying 247 for gas. This must be working. Trump's going after Jerome Powell, this fancy-pants banker economist in Washington, who's created inflation along with
Biden and the deep state. And thank goodness he's finally going after somebody in Washington
who's made things worse. I'm glad Trump is going. Is it that's what we're watching here,
rather than any sort of detailed economic policy moves, we're just watching Trump create
villains that he can then turn to blame for the economic challenges facing the country.
Sure. I think that's totally right. He's made a whole lot of villains over last year. He's created a whole lot
civilians and his approval rating is in the low 40s. So if he's playing to rile up that base of support
at 40, 42 percent, sure, he can maintain that support. He can rile them up. He can get them angry.
But that's not playing for 50 percent. And the fact is 100 percent of Americans feel inflation.
So the idea that you're going to attack the Fed share in a way that could raise inflation that
will just take away confidence in the market set, this is going to get, we're going to have an
independent Fed that's going to use interest rates and make judgments based on facts.
and reality. Yeah, it's ultimately counterproductive. I think that, yes, that that is,
there is to Trump, there is a method to the egomania, eumeniacal madness. It's not a 50% plus
coalition. It is a, that is inherently appeals to a minority of people. And the majority of Americans,
they actually want things to get better. And the truth is that the policies that Trump and the Republicans
and Congress have enacted have not done a lot to make things better for the average person. I mean,
the one big beautiful bill, it wasn't that big, really. It was it, it was, we talk about it being
this Frankenbill and this hodgepodge of different.
different things. It basically kept this taxes as a status quo. You know, keeping taxes as
status quo doesn't change a lot of things for Americans. And then on health care, you know,
they're talking about maintaining the status quo implemented by Democrats in 2021, 2021, 2022. To what
extent are they going to give that away? They're not actually talking about dramatically
improving things for people. And so I think that if you want to look at how people are going
to vote in two year or any year and then three years down the road, it's going to be how they feel,
they personally feel about their economic situation. I think you can only spin things so much.
You can only create so many villains that we, people in politics and media think that words can shape reality.
And that only applies at the margins.
That people actually, I actually think people are a little smarter.
They can kind of, I mean, maybe they, maybe they're drawing a wrong causality of, you know, the economy who's in power.
The economy is bad.
I'm going to vote against them.
Obviously, there's a lot of factors that go into economic conditions.
But I think people on economic to vote how they are actually feeling.
Yeah, the voters were talking about that powered Trump to victory in 2020.
And Republicans more broadly, actually, not just Trump, are not these kind of people who are watching Fox News, who are watching, reading various forms of online, conservative media, are more likely to buy into a narrative that Powell is keeping inflation up.
It's these, as we've, as it has been discussed ad nauseum, not very high information, not very clued in voters.
They have better things to do.
They don't care about politics, but they notice that grocery prices are higher.
So this is the case where, to John's point, you can say what you want, but at the end of the day, if you're not actually,
dealing with inflation, it's really hard to convince that sort of lower, less engaged middle
of Americans that we fight over every four years, that inflation is actually better.
You know, I'm not a very experienced reporter, but I remember literally a year ago when the Biden
administration was saying almost the exact same things, that the messaging isn't right.
We haven't communicated to Americans how inflation is actually bad, but not as bad as they
think it is. We need to do full Bidenism has never been tried. I mean, it's total deja
you're just replacing the red team with the blue.
Man, you're awfully cynical for a young buck reporter, James.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
If I can tell you the number of times you will hear over the course of what is sure to be a long and illustrious career in journalism, we've got the right policies.
It's just the messaging.
You will hear that again and again and again.
You're astute for picking up on it.
All right, we're going to take a quick break, but we'll be back soon with more from the dispatch podcast.
Welcome back. Let's return to our discussion. James, going back to John's reporting on the Hill and these questions of affordability, I was struck in the interviews that John did. He mentioned Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley. He also talked to his very mega house member, Eli Crane and some others. It's been the case for, I would say, most of the Trump era, if we date it back to the Jews.
June 2015 dissent on the golden elevator that, and we've talked about this sort of incessantly
here at the dispatch that you have members of Congress who are sort of true hardcore MAGA
Trump supporters.
They were, I think, few in number at the beginning of the Trump era and have grown significantly.
It is still the case in my conversations with Republicans on Capitol Hill that you have Republicans,
many of them who will say one thing privately, say another thing publicly, roll their eyes at the president in private, go and praise him before the microphones.
But fewer and fewer of those.
And I wonder, as you read John's piece and looked at the polling, are we getting to the point now where this, you know, once divided and somewhat complicated Congress is really just much more a MAGA Republican conference?
Yes, I think definitely. And I think I don't speak with nowhere near as many Republicans as you and certainly without the same level of candor. I do speak to a lot of people in D.C. who are kind of young right of center staffers and think tankers and activist. And even though these are not necessarily people who you would call fully bought in MAGA, they don't love Trump necessarily. They're all kind of on board with this is the agenda. And I think it's kind of hard to articulate why.
Exactly they are. I think it's a combination of the voters have been convinced of this over almost, you know, 10 years of the Trump quote unquote the Trump era. And then I think also like a political party, a political machine like Democrats or Republicans in Washington is a massive boat to mix metaphors horribly. But is a massive boat. And once you kind of turn that boat in one direction, it kind of assumes its own momentum. And so I think there's been an almost subconscious decision that listen, tariffs, these sort of aggressive, you know, hard power.
interventions abroad and blaming DC elites for everything. This is what we're doing. This is what we think
the voters want. When in doubt, blame voters always, I think, for reasons politicians do something.
And that's kind of just the overwhelming momentum. So, Mike, I want to use this discussion of voters and
polling in the politics of this to spend a moment on the shooting in Minnesota. We spoke about it on the
dispatch podcast last week when news was still relatively fresh, we had had the opportunity,
I think, to look at some of the videos that had come out and assess the various claims
and counter claims. Over the weekend, we had much more discussion about this. You had much more
analysis of the videos. You had members of the administration out on the Sunday shows,
sort of advancing the argument that senior administration officials had made, including President
Trump, Vice President J.D. Vance, Department of Homeland Security Secretary, Christy Noem,
the spokespeople at the various agencies, that the woman who was killed, Renee Good, was,
effectively a domestic terrorist, an agitator, and the unstated part of their argument,
although sometimes it was stated was that she got what she was asking for. You had certainly
folks on the other side who were making the counterargument that this was sort of an unprovoked
killing of an innocent protester who was raising issues of ice overreach and by just looking at what happened,
proved the point.
The president's numbers, if you look carefully at his numbers on immigration over the past
couple of months, have slipped pretty considerably and slipped, especially among Republicans.
Immigration had been his strongest issue.
it remains one of his strongest issues.
But if you look at the AP poll from mid-December, for instance,
his support among Republicans for his immigration policies slipped from 88% to 80%.
Now, 80% is pretty strong, but that's not an insignificant slide.
And if you look at his slippage among independence, he slipped even more.
I think you can trace the deterioration of the president's approach.
on immigration issues with a shift. A shift in news coverage, but also just the sheer number of
these videos that we're seeing. Many of them real and verified. Some of them not. That show ice
in cities around the country using extraordinarily aggressive tactics with people that they
suspect are illegal immigrants or illegal immigrant criminals. And in some cases, with everyday,
average American citizens who are filming them. I wonder if you see it the same way. Is there a cause
effect to the slippage in those immigration numbers? If so, does that imperil the president's
support further if what James is saying is, you know, ultimately this is about the voters.
If Republican voters become more and more uneasy about the way that ICE is doing its job, does this create greater risks for the president heading into 2026?
So one thing I've learned in 15 years or so of reporting on American politics is that voters in mass and in individual situations can hold what those of us who cover politics or are in politics would think of as contradictory ideas.
opinions. They can hold them and it doesn't mean they're dumb. It doesn't mean they're uninformed.
It just means they're complicated and complex and not everybody fits into, you know, easily described
and proscribed boxes of what a voter should think about a certain thing. I think there is
strong evidence that the majority of voters and certainly the vast majority of Republican voters want
strong immigration enforcement, something along those lines. They want enforcement. They want
enforcement of immigration laws.
They would like for illegal immigrants to be deported.
And that's what they voted for in 2024.
And at the same time, I think what you were seeing is the reality of what immigration
enforcement looks like, or I should say the reality of what immigration enforcement
looks like under Donald Trump and Stephen Miller and Christy Noem.
When confronted with the reality of that is distasteful, certainly to a lot of
Americans, and I think even to some and not just some, a significant number of Republican voters.
And I think that contradiction is, you know, explains also why immigration is such a thorny issue
for both parties, why everybody seems to be sort of puzzled and vexed by it.
Nobody can agree on a solution and even the solutions that people want.
They don't actually like it when it comes into practice, whether it's this actual,
sort of the physical enforcement mechanisms are icky when we're confronted with it on video.
I think that's that yes, to answer your question, that is absolutely what is happening.
It's interesting because I like probably everybody on this podcast and maybe some of you
listening watched the video, then the next video, then all the videos last week of Renee Good,
of the shooting of Renee Good, of the different angles, how am I supposed to interpret it?
I was struck, of course, by how partisans on both sides saw exactly what they wanted to see.
Opponents of Donald Trump saw an execution and supporters of Donald Trump saw someone who was not complying with legal orders from a law enforcement officer.
And I think those who pay close attention to this stuff are watching that sort of Zepruder film like to try to figure out whether or not she had turned the steering wheel or whether or not he was supposed to or not supposed to be in front of the car.
I think what you're seeing that video in the totality of all of the videos that are coming out,
the result of which is it looks ugly.
It sort of makes Americans in general, that sort of natural way that Americans kind of bristle at authority,
which I think is just inherently an American viewpoint.
Doesn't matter your background.
It doesn't matter if you're a heritage American.
You don't like authority.
I think it rubs us the wrong way, even if it doesn't change how people,
people feel about immigration enforcement in the general. I think in the specific, it's having a
negative effect. And that's hurting Donald Trump. It is not helping to see, I'm sorry to say,
to see, like, white Americans being sort of treated this way. I think a lot of other Republican
voters view that and think, is this really what we wanted? I don't think so. I do think it's
I think you're broadly right, Mike. I think there's something worth saying, though, in that,
you know, the first major police shooting incident that I remember in my lifetime was Ferguson and people
debating over it. And the exact same thing happens every time. People go over the film. They start
talking about legal concepts that they're not competent to address. But always, and usually from the
conservative side of I've noticed, there's a pretty strong segment of Americans who say something to the
extent of, listen, it's terrible, this happened. She should, she or he or whomever,
shouldn't have died. But if you put yourself in this sort of situation with law enforcement,
you know, that you take, you're taking your own life in your hands. I have also seen that
bleed into statements like the one Wesley Hunt made over the weekend, which was essentially,
you comply with, I'm not quoting exactly, but he said, you comply with federal law enforcement,
you get to keep your life. And that's a deal. And so I think there is,
this is a Republican representative. Yes, a Republican representative. I think there
is a segment of Americans who actually does like seeing the use of authority like that.
I think it's, and I don't think that's actually a new thing.
America's a big country, and there's a lot of people who have both beliefs.
And I certainly think there's a lot of Americans who are either are very supportive of law
enforcement and feel polar, feel kind of isolated by recent protests against police over the past
decade and people in law enforcement themselves, including ICE, who do feel like their authority's
not being respected and that sort of needs to be reestablished.
Yeah, well, look, I would say on that front, you're correct, just as I think you'd be correct if you were to say that, you know, there is a sizable portion of Americans, you know, who have an anarchic streak and want to, want to burn down federal buildings.
Totally, totally.
During the George Floyd protests, what matters in politics, of course, though, is the margin.
And I think that is what, that is where, I mean, this is to Steve's point about 88% to 80% of Republicans that shift.
it's that margin that matters.
And I think speaking marginally,
like we're still a fairly libertarian,
small L libertarian country.
I think the effect of all of these videos
is to give a general sense that this is a,
it's a little foreign.
It's a little alien to see this kind of sort of
massive force of law enforcement
that's like kind of militarized,
like marching through American cities
that look familiar, that look like places
that we might live or where our kids or our parents might live.
That, I think, is the difference.
It's on the margin.
Well, you had just in the last several hours, the head of the Democratic National Committee,
Ken Martin, make this an explicit comparison, suggesting that Donald Trump's America is
beginning to resemble Iran under the clerics, as worried as I am about the direction and
that Donald Trump has taken the country in the...
tactics of ice that we are seeing. Again, some of these verified, some of the videos,
it's hard to know what's true and what's not. Some of them have been verified and some of the
stories that have been told are, I think, truly chilling. We're not yet where the Islamic
regime is in Iran, who have over the past two weeks killed, depending on the estimates,
a minimum of 200 upwards of several thousand, depending on, again, your, your, you're
sources to put down the protests that we've seen expand and grow in Iran. And James, you wrote a
terrific item for the morning dispatch late last week looking at the protests in Iran. I want to start
our conversation on Iran by asking you to put this in historical context. We have seen
moments like this before. I have covered moments like this before. And I think
think for those of us who have been frustrated by the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Mullahs,
you know, certainly their use of proxies to attack U.S. and allied interests, their pursuit of a nuclear
weapon, but also and maybe even in particular their repression of the Iranian people. We have
seen that in the extreme. And every time we've seen these kinds of protests, there's
a sense of excitement, that this might finally be the moment.
You know, in each of these moments, 2009, 2019, 2012, that hasn't come to pass.
This feels like it could be different.
And if you talk to people, as I know you did, for this item, people who follow us very closely
believe that this might be different.
Why do people think this might be different?
And what did you learn in reporting that item?
Yes.
And I've been talking to people since the item, too, actually trying to kind of keep a handle on this as it develops as much as it can.
I think, first off, revolutions often actually take quite a bit of time.
You know, I don't know if you've been watching Ken Burns' American Revolution, but the story of like the American issues with Britain really begin in like 1757.
We don't have a revolution until 20 years later.
French Revolution, there were bread riots and disturbances for over a decade before that took off,
not to get into history teacher mode as a former teacher.
But all that being said, the window we should be looking at is starting in 2009 and kind of
increasing in tempo and intensity, these popular protests in Iran until now.
But what makes these protests different?
Because certainly there have been big protests before.
There have been bloody protests before.
There's two main factors that people who are observing.
and talking with people inside Iran tell me, the first of all is that this is a couple months
after Iran was humiliated, or more than a couple months, but within a year of Iran being humiliated
by the Israeli and American militaries.
Basically, one of the whole claims of the Iranian regime to legitimacy is that we oppose
American imperialism, we oppose Israeli imperialism.
That has been very potent to a lot of Iranians who are not committed Islamists for a long time.
That has been completely wiped away.
And it also just has made the security forces seem that much less scary, a lot more feeble than people thought they were.
And then so there's also President Trump's threats that, hey, America's prepared to back you up.
That has some sort of effect, too, though it's hard to say exactly what.
The other big factor, and this is a generational issue in Iran that people tell me is really important.
Kind of my generation, the Gen Zers, the, well, I guess I'm an elder Gen Z.
I'm a very young millennial.
But anyways, that generation is totally done with sort of reformist politics or at least a large chunk of the generation.
So in Iran, during a lot of these protests, like 2009, where it was example in protests in favor, known as the Green Revolution, protest in favor of kind of the reformist factions in Iranian politics.
And in Iranian politics, Iran has politics.
It's not a dictatorship in the way that we often assume it is.
There's been a push and pull between reformists.
You want more opening of diplomatic relations with other countries, open to.
the economy, kind of hard miners who are committed revolutionaries want to, you know, go to war with Israel,
that sort of thing. A lot of the younger generation, people tell me, has assumed that that is basically
a shell game, that essentially, no matter if we elect reformist or not, the kind of Ayatollah, the
theocracy remains in power, Iran remains committed to this enormously destructive foreign policy.
So we need to get rid of the regime totally. That's kind of the big difference. There's a
And there's been an increasing radicalization of protest movement's aims for 15 years.
That's basically as radical as it's going to get now.
And that gets into the kind of third big difference, which you hear a lot of them chanting in Farsi, a lot of the protesters chanting, long live the Shah.
Like, it is not in favor of a current Iranian political figure.
It is not in favor of specific policy.
It is we want the Shah back.
Now, as people told me, that doesn't mean that there's a whole lot of committed monarchist in Iran.
because the Shah has his own kind of checkered history,
it does mean that people want to very clearly signal,
we're done with the current regime.
We want to transition past it.
And they've responded by calls by the current,
well, claimed Crown Prince of Iran,
Reza Pallavi, who lives in the D.C. area,
who issued a call on Friday night for people to protest
and to chant specific slogans, including down with the regime.
And then people who are connected to his,
organization told me that they were blown away by the amount of Iranians that they could tell
went out into the streets and chanted those specific things. And it showed that the Shah, who is,
you know, not a political mover and shaker with in Iran, but is, or the crown prince, but at the very
least is one person with a kind of voice on a platform that people are responding to it. So that's
what's different. So the reasons for pessimism, again, if you look at historical revolution,
and authoritarian regimes, I really recommend following on Twitter the work of Julian Waller,
who's a political scientist who covers a lot of this and it's kind of a prominent Twitter figure,
is that you need to see elites kind of switching sides. You need to see, you know, back in the
American Revolution, you need to see the colonial legislature switching side. You need to see
the French Revolution figures taking the Tennis Court oath and saying that they were going to
install a constitutional monarchy. We have yet to see anyone from the Iranian security services,
from even the kind of elected officials
from the IRGC,
the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps,
to switch sides.
And that's really key.
You need to, as people kept telling me,
you need to have somebody willing to say,
I'm not willing to slaughter my own people
in mass numbers.
And there's reason to think,
I mean, Iranians have a sense of national identity
that's not just Islamic theocracy.
Like I said, it's not a pure dictatorship.
It is a real nation.
There's reason to think that there's people
who don't want to do that,
but they have not come out yet.
I mean, I'm reminded of,
I did a story earlier last year in Georgia with their mass protest movement when they had
10% of the people, estimated 10% of the country out on the street in the capital protesting.
And if nobody from the regime ends up switching sides and there's not that cascade effect,
then you've got a lot of people on the street and that's kind of it.
Yeah.
I mean, I would say there are reports of varying degree of credibility, perhaps, that those kinds of changes are taking place at the lower levels that you have IRGC for.
folks who are stepping away, who are refusing to fulfill their responsibilities, not discharging
duties as they've been assigned. But certainly we haven't seen anything or heard anything about
senior level people doing this. Part of that also could be explained by the fact that it's
very difficult to get information out of Iran at the time. You have people who are able to communicate
via Starlink, but the regime has been effective in throttling that, I would say.
We're going house to house, the new reporter merch today, trying to see Starlink from people's houses.
So it is the case that the news that's coming out of Iran is spotty.
We're going to take a break, but we'll be back shortly.
We're back.
You're listening to the dispatch podcast.
Let's jump in.
John, as you look at what you're hearing from politicians here in the United States,
United States. I will say I'm a little surprised, given the magnitude of the protests.
All of James, I think, very important cautionary notes, notwithstanding, I do think this feels
different. It does feel certainly more widespread, all 31 provinces. You have people taking
risks that you wouldn't have seen or that we haven't seen in these previous protests.
I guess I'm a little struck that we haven't seen and heard more from American elected officials here.
First of all, do you agree with that?
And two, is that because of just this flood of news that we've seen on all of these other issues?
You have a sort of a national conversation that's been dominated by the Minnesota shooting appropriately and that people are still talking about Venezuela.
and people are talking now about the Federal Reserve.
And, you know, the reason that we were originally going to talk about the Iran protest as our first topic.
And we moved things around because we thought we should talk about the Federal Reserve story.
Is it just that that has sort of a muted response from the United States?
Or am I just wrong?
Am I just not appreciating the response correctly?
I think you're right that the flood of news explains a lot.
And I would actually say the biggest surprise about.
statements from American politicians is just how what Trump said at the beginning of the year,
which was, I'm going to read the quote, this is garb a little bit from True Social.
If Iran shots, shoots and violently kills peaceful protesters, which is their custom, the United States
America will come to their rescue.
We are locked and loaded and ready to go.
Thank you for attention this matter, President Donald J. Trump.
That's shocking to me.
I mean, this comes in the context of him basically throwing the pro-democracy elements of Venezuela
under the bus.
after we, you know, just took out their dictator.
So I don't know what explains that.
And Trump, you know, I mean, he's been Jacksonian in his foreign policy with relation to Iran.
I mean, he took out Soleimani in his first term.
He, you know, after Israel had basically taken away Iran's air defenses, he, you know, did
Operation Midnight Hammer and struck the Iranian nuclear program.
But to say, I'm a human, this is purely humanitarian.
I mean, I was just, that's maybe the most shocking statement to
come from Trump on foreign policy I've seen in the past decade, the fact that simply killing protesters,
this is the guy who sort of praised when he was before running for office. He basically praised
Tiananmen Square, at least admired the strength, which, you know, the Tiananmen Square protestor,
and so I don't know what explains this other than that Trump is this has a sort of, you know,
his world view is sort of locked in the 1970s and the idea of these Iranians or these evil people
who, you know, kidnapped the Americans and the hostages, and I guess he's called it a red line.
And so will Trump actually do something?
I mean, he's acted a lot in ways that other people haven't.
So for all of the negatives that we've discussed, I'll be shocked to see what happens.
I think Secretary of State Rubio put out a statement saying the U.S. stands with the people
of Iran over the weekend.
I think you're right that in Congress it hasn't been, there's not this wall-to-wall, this is the moment.
I think because of what James had all these previous moments, right?
you know, why are we, we're not going to get ourselves worked up. And there's probably also some view that, you know, not, it's not necessarily helpful to have, you know, Americans being, you know, the Iranians want to say this is a Israeli, the great Satan and a little Satan back protest movement. So I don't know exactly what explains. But I would, I'd be curious what your take is on Trump saying, you know, we're going to come to the rescue of Iranians if they kill the innocent protesters. What explains that?
Yeah, I mean, it's, I think you're right to point out the contrast. I mean, this is not a president who spends a lot of time. I mean, I mean,
We had a discussion on this podcast before the new year about essentially the Trump taking morality out of the United States foreign policy.
It just hasn't really been a concern.
Even in the conversations or Trump's public statements about Russia, Ukraine, I can't imagine making any comments or any observations about any observations about what's happened in Ukraine without, you know, making moral observations about what's happened there.
The Russians invaded.
They're an aggression, aggression power, and they're slaughtering Ukrainian civilians by the tens of thousands.
How do you talk about that without making a moral argument?
And President Trump has managed to do so by and large.
So in all of these conflicts that he's seen, that he's observed, that, you know, he's threatened U.S. intervention.
And he has not made those arguments, including and especially,
And his comments from Mar-a-Lago, the day of the raid in Venezuela in which U.S. forces captured Nicholas Maduro, you know, sort of shrugged off any question of the will of voters or the repression of the Venezuelan people.
Cast aside Maria Karina Majado as the leader of the Venezuelan opposition was seems unpersuaded, unmoved at all by claims, those claims to power.
It is a striking contrast here.
Mike, I want to end by asking you about what John said about the president's threat to the Iranian regime to intervene militarily should they kill protesters.
That came at the very beginning of the year.
Unquestionably, the Iranian regime has been involved in killing protesters to this point.
Reports over the weekend suggest that Donald Trump was presented options, military options, to interview.
he has not done so yet. At a certain point, does the president have to do something because he said he
would do something? It's a good question. Look, I think when it comes to Donald Trump in credibility,
none of the normal rules apply. You know, I mean, we talked a lot. I remember talking about it at the time.
the red line in Syria that Barack Obama set for the Assad regime.
And it really hurt American credibility when Assad crossed that red line and we did nothing.
I think Trump is different.
And that's in some ways you can't sort of analyze it in the normal ways because part of
his, I don't know if you even want to call it a strategy, but his sort of MO,
is to throw people off and leave foreign actors guessing about what he could do.
I do think it was ill-advised for him to say that because of this point that it was going to happen.
If there were going to be these protests that kept going, that of course the Iranian regime was going to kill protesters.
I mean, this is like not a surprise.
It's like the sun coming up every day.
Of course they were going to do this.
and I do think for you know, take the Donald Trump out of it,
it does hurt to not take some action here,
even if it's simply to do some kind of diplomatic support.
I don't know.
I think it's,
I think he's gotten himself into a mess.
I think he did this because at the time,
it looked like the protesters,
things were going to maybe keep going well for them.
And I think the backlash to the protest,
which have gotten, I mean, it's gotten bloodier over the last couple of days.
Donald Trump likes to put his finger up into the air and see where the wind is blowing.
And some shocker, I know, says things without thinking through the long-term consequences of it.
This is the peril of having a president who sort of shoots off with his mouth before we know all the facts.
Yes, indeed. Indeed, it is.
Well, thank you all for helping us sort through all of these.
pretty significant issues that are part of the national conversation right now.
I want to talk in our final segment, not worth your time, about some issues that I think a lot of people in the rest of the country are talking about, maybe not getting the attention in Washington that it otherwise would.
And that is college football.
So we finally have, we've got to the point as we near the end of the college football playoff where we have a national championship game.
Miami University, who seemed to have snuck into the college football playoff,
jumping ahead of my Notre Dame Fighting Irish at the very last minute.
In what was then, I think, remains a controversial.
Steve, Steve, I have to stop you there.
We're talking about the University of Miami, not Miami University.
It's an important distinction.
Oh, you're right.
University of Miami Hurricanes, correct.
Correct.
It's not Miami University of Ohio, which is in Oxford, Ohio.
Very famous alumni, including Paul Ryan and Dan Hayes.
Yes, University of Miami and Indiana University, not University of Indiana.
We have a national championship game.
Indiana University has, I think, surprised everyone in the college football playoffs
with the dominance of their play.
They were a very good team.
They were a good team last year,
made the college football playoff,
were dispatched by Notre Dame,
and has just been unbelievably dominant
over the first couple rounds,
its first couple games.
And Miami, which, as I say,
snuck into the college football playoffs,
has also acquitted itself very well,
beating higher-ranked teams.
We have the game coming up.
I have two questions for you.
Do you have a pick for the national championship,
Indiana versus Miami,
and given Indiana's dominance,
given the fact that they beat another Big Ten team in Oregon
to make the national championship game,
given the fact that Ohio State was,
for most of the year,
the number one-ranked team in the country,
and also made the college football playoff before losing.
Is the Big Ten now, once again, the dominant college football conference in America, James?
I go to you first.
Okay, I guess first of all, my boring pick is Indiana because they've been so dominant all season,
and, you know, Miami hasn't been.
I would say TMD's job is to be right down the middle on reporting.
We don't do opinion, but the dispatch is a conservative.
publication. I am nowhere more conservative than I am in college football. So I kind of refused to
discuss the conference that killed the PAC 10. I refuse to discuss this thing that we call the
playoff. For me, it has the same legitimacy as the Iranian regime. I just want the road,
I want the winner of the conference that killed the PAC 10, playing the PAC 10 in the Rose Bowl,
and that is all I care about. So just denying reality is what you're doing. Oh, completely. Completely.
But that's the point of college football, right?
It allows us to at least escape reality from time to time.
Mike, your Vanderbilt, what are they, the Commodores?
The Commodores, of course.
Your Vanderbilt team, which hasn't been good for decades,
really had an impressive run.
Pretty good last year, too.
Everything was going swimmingly.
They did not make the college football playoffs.
had a Heisman contender who, let's just say,
didn't necessarily represent the university very well
after he was not awarded the Heisman.
Is there a question coming here, Steve?
No, I just wanted to take some shots of the Infield, actually.
You can talk about any of that.
Feel free to correct me on it.
Defend that horrible behavior by Vanderbilt's quarterback
after the Heisman ceremony,
but also give us your pick
and tell us why the Big Ten is the best conference
in the land.
Nice try.
Indiana is my pick to win the national championship.
They're dominant.
Kurt Signetti is, he has taken a team, which I don't mean to denigrate this Hoosiers football team
by saying they are a very good team.
They are not a team of elite players.
This is a team that has gone as far as they have because of their coach and superior
your coaching. And I do think that's important in this really topsy-turvy college football
world that that all everything has, you know, the last several years have wrought, you know,
with the NIL and the transfer portal, all of these sort of abominations to college football.
At the end of the day, like a scrappy team with a great coach can still go to the national
championship and I think will win the national championship, then there is hope, uh, even, even in
these dark and dismal times. Look, the, the problem is the conferences don't, don't mean
anything anymore. I'm with James on this, which is, look, the pack 10 is, the pack 10 is was a cute
conference, you know, playing their, their, they're, they're sort of, uh, crazy, uh, you know,
offense that, that, that was nice out there on the West Coast, but they were, won the directors cup for
25 years in a row, I believe, which is for the best sports programs in all of Vision
1.
Okay.
You just have to watch a lot of swimming.
Sure.
Okay.
But it was a part of the fabric of college football.
So the sort of eviseration of the PAC 10 is, or the PAC 12, as it was called, is a tragedy.
But look, the Big 10, the SEC, the ACC, these conferences are nothing like what they were.
We used to add these teams in ways that made geographic and sort of, and the geographic is sort of collection of them is important because same sort of recruitment was going on.
You know, a lot of these players were being recruited by the same SEC or Big Ten teams.
Look at the ACC.
There are members of the ACC, which stands for Atlantic Coast Conference that are located in California.
Look, I'm not, I'm not a genius.
But my sense is that California is not located near the Atlantic Coast.
So what are we doing here?
I think we need a back-to-basics in college football.
We'll never get there.
We need to get rid of either NIL, which we won't, or the transfer portal.
You're actually seeing colleges in places like Texas advertising, just advertising, throwing it out there on social media, that they don't have an income tax in their state.
It's all corrupt.
It's all driven by money.
it's gross.
What's the matter with reminding people
that they don't have income taxes?
I don't know.
It's taking advantage of market conditions.
Look, I don't blame those schools for doing that,
but it suggests a sickness in college football,
which is, you know, I'm all for paying players,
but this is getting a little out of hand.
The SEC just beats up on each other.
That's why the SEC has not, did not proceed in these playoffs.
It's why Vanderbilt did not get in.
There's just too many good SEC teams.
That would be a more convincing, a more convincing argument if the SEC had beaten the big 10.
John, don't pay attention to the results.
John, I just want to point out that Mike did not address the issues I raised about Vanderbilt's quarterback.
That's fine. We don't need to hear from him on that.
Can I say real quick?
Wait, wait, wait, let me say real quick.
All these other schools get their jackass quarterbacks.
They get to go around and buy fancy cars and do all these.
this crazy stuff. Vanderbilt gets one shot at doing this. We're going to leave Jay
Kotler aside. It gets one shot at doing this and everybody piles on him for being
competitive because he wanted to win the Heisman trophy and he was competitive. He's a little angry.
Is that what you're just being competitive? Leave Diego Pavia alone.
Please people, I encourage you not to read into Mike's general judgment and reporting abilities
based on his description. There, John, question. Do you?
you, who's your pick for national champion? And is the Big Ten the greatest football conference ever?
The Big Ten is the conference you should always root for, or at least I do, because I believe in Pan-Midwestern
pride. I only have this. This approach only applies to college football, I thought to clear,
not the National Football League. But yeah, as a kid, you know, Wisconsin number one, Notre Dame
number two, the night I'd always root for like, you know, Michigan or Ohio State. And I guess now
Indiana. My brother had a shirt, you know, Indiana shirt back in the way. It's like, there's an
Arabic phrase. I think it's a Bedwin phrase. Like, me against my brother, my brother and I against
my cousin. My brother and I and my cousin against the world. And like, that is definitely the way that I think
you should approach college football. So I'm rooting for Indiana. I predict they win. I would say that,
you know, a group of hardscrabble Midwesterners hasn't been underestimated this badly since General Sherman
marched to the sea. So, and I think that the, the, not only is the return of the Big Ten, a big story,
but the downfall of the SEC.
I mean, it has been three years
since you've even had a team competing
in the championship game.
What happened?
I want to know that story.
Pretty brutal.
I think the one good part about realignment
for me has been watching Texas
become a 500 team.
Pretty fun.
Also watching Mike Google feverishly
trying desperately to come up
with some response to any of that.
But unfortunately, we're out of time.
So we're going to have to move on,
close this chapter of
the Dispatch podcast.
Thanks for joining us.
And stick around for a discussion that I had
with Valerie Pavlones about dispatch
culture. Very exciting
new addition to the dispatch family.
And before we leave you today,
I want to spend a few minutes with Valerie
Pavlonis, who is the ideas editor
here at the dispatch
to tell us about the birth
of dispatch culture,
a newsletter that we sent for the first time
this weekend featuring Kevin Williamson
on Hunter S. Thompson. And if that's not
off to get people excited. I don't know what is. Valerie, welcome to the dispatch podcast. Good to have you.
Thanks, Steve. So give it to us. What is dispatch culture and why are we, as people can hear in my voice,
why are we so excited about dispatch culture and the launch this weekend? Well, I will say that Kevin's
maiden piece for dispatch culture was indeed very exciting. I love anything, everything, Hunter S. Thompson.
and that got some really good responses.
And that piece was part of the section in the newsletter called American Artifacts.
And so that will form like the new kind of bulk of the newsletter.
And each week we'll pick some sort of piece of Americana, American paraphernalia,
some unit of American culture from the past and then just have someone discuss that.
The other sections have to do with just our other kind of cultural coverage.
So this past weekend we had something on the.
man who shot Liberty Valence, and I think that that really, really tends to get the dispatch members
going, because I know that it gets the internal dispatchers going, too. Then we also had something
on why literacy matters beyond just, you know, playing, being able to read road signs, and
another essay from one of our contributing writers, Luella Domico, on women and aging. And then beyond
those things, we'll also have a couple of sections where dispatch staffers will share
recommendations. So this past weekend, we had our TMD editor, Ross Anderson, recommend a whole
suite of fun apps for your phone. Ross is a tech card. Indeed. I don't actually know if I will
use these apps. But I also got a couple of emails saying, please don't make this, you know,
apps every weekend because we all have enough apps. And I don't worry about that. We will not do
that every single weekend. How does dispatch culture newsletter that we're sending differ from the
culture stuff that we're doing on the website or does it? Are we overlapping? Should people expect
new fresh material for it? Is it a combination? How should people think of this? So there definitely is
a bit of an overlap. I think that, you know, we're using the newsletter to kind of marry what we
already have on the website and just kind of present it in a more cohesive form. So typically
culture content is most, it goes up early in the morning on Saturdays and you can just kind of
find it on the website, but it's not sent out to anyone in a cohesive form.
Sometimes it's sent out in our morning TMD, but besides that, you don't really get these pieces in your newsletter or in your email.
You know, the culture newsletter right now, it begins with a roundup of our Saturday pieces.
And then also includes that new content that I talked about, so American artifacts, that sort of thing.
Yeah.
And so for people who are dispatch members, they get all of this the way that they would get anything else and they can sign up for this as one of the choices in their membership drop.
down. Yes, exactly. And we also have a fun members-only feature in the culture newsletter called
Work of the Week. And so in Work of the Week, you can submit a piece of art that you like
and then for a chance to be featured at the bottom of the newsletter. And you'll have to answer
questions like, why am I a dispatch member? And also, why did you choose this work? And we've already
gotten some pretty exciting responses. And this includes things from, say, the Prado in Madrid,
as well as my daughter's third grade drawing of a horse or a unicorn.
Yes, I would honestly love to see your daughter's drawing of a horse.
Good. It's pretty good, I'm not going to lie.
And finally, as someone who skipped the Golden Globes last night, as I think I have, for every one of my 55 years on this earth, I'm not sure the golden globes have been around that long.
But that's kind of the point.
If you're not into, I'm not a pop culture guy, I'm occasionally taking a movie, but I care about all sorts of other kinds of art.
Will there be things in dispatch culture for me?
I mean, it will include presumably pop culture, but go beyond pop culture?
Yes.
So we try not to focus too much on pop culture, honestly, because those things come and go very quickly.
And I try to make sure that all of our cultural coverage does have some staying power.
And so we might do, say, a one-off review of a movie.
We had one of our internal people review, Marty Supreme, for example, the new Timothy Shalime movie.
but most of the time our pop culture coverage is going to be limited to like the really big stuff.
So, for example, back when Barbie and Oppenheimer came out at the same time, you know, that was something that that's something that we might review.
But, you know, but for example, the piece that I mentioned from earlier this weekend about the man who shot Liberty Balance, that might be more up your cultural alley.
We also.
Written by Timothy Sandifer, who is a vice president for legal at the Goldwater in.
Institute. This is sort of something he wanted to do on the side. Terrific writer. Yeah,
really, really smart guy. Yeah, it seems great. And I think that one of the things that I
love about working on the culture section is that I can actually work with the vast majority
of our political writers and they usually have something to say about the culture. I think that
if you're a good writer, you're pretty much a good writer about anything. Yeah, but I think in general,
you know, we have people writing about podcasts, but we also have people writing about poetry.
One of the, one writer who's contributed to the culture section before is AM Juster.
He used to be the poetry editor at Plow magazine.
And, you know, he's very into like formal concepts, you know, kind of more traditional stuff,
whereas, you know, I myself might write a review of an art exhibition.
So that's, I think, marrying the old and new is something that I think that we can do really well.
Excellent.
Well, thanks for coming on and talking to us about it a little bit.
I'm eager to read next Saturday's edition.
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We read everything, even the ones attempting to defend the SEC. That's going to do it for today's
show. Thanks so much for tuning in. And a big thank you to the folks behind the scenes who made this
episode possible, Victoria Holmes and Noah Hickey. We couldn't do it without you. Thanks again for
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You know,
