The Majority Report with Sam Seder - 3570 - Nationalize the Defense Industry; GOP's War on Voting Rights w/ Julia Gledhill & Ari Berman
Episode Date: August 28, 2025It's an Emmajority Thursday on the Majority Report. On today's Show: After another school shooting the right-wing media plays defense for the gun lobby. Kristi Noem wants us to know that the shooter w...as a transgender woma Co-Host of the Un-Diplomatic Podcast, Julia Gledhill joins us to make the case for nationalizing the defense industry. Voting rights correspondent for Mother Jones, Ari Berman joins Sam in a pre-taped interview to discuss the GOP's war on voting rights. In the Fun Half: We are joined by Brandon Sutton and Matt Binder. Adam Friedland interviews AIPAC robot Ritchie Torres. Senator from Susan Collins can't be out in public without getting heckled. All that and more. The Congress switchboard number is (202) 224-3121. You can use this number to connect with either the U.S. Senate or the House of Representatives. Follow us on TikTok here: https://www.tiktok.com/@majorityreportfm Check us out on Twitch here: https://www.twitch.tv/themajorityreport Find our Rumble stream here: https://rumble.com/user/majorityreport Check out our alt YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/majorityreportlive Gift a Majority Report subscription here: https://fans.fm/majority/gift Subscribe to the ESVN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/esvnshow Subscribe to the AMQuickie newsletter here: https://am-quickie.ghost.io/ Join the Majority Report Discord! https://majoritydiscord.com/ Get all your MR merch at our store: https://shop.majorityreportradio.com/ Get the free Majority Report App!: https://majority.fm/app Go to https://JustCoffee.coop and use coupon code majority to get 10% off your purchase Check out today's sponsors: EXPRESS VPN: Get up to 4 extra months free. Expressvpn.com/Majority GIVE WELL: For trusted, evidence-backed insights into this evolving situation — and information about how you can help — follow along at givewell.org/USAID SUNSET LAKE: Head to SunsetLakeCBD.com and buy any three 4-packs, and you’ll get a fourth one for free. Just add four 4-packs to your cart and use the code LABORDAY25 at checkout Follow the Majority Report crew on Twitter: @SamSeder @EmmaVigeland @MattLech Check out Matt’s show, Left Reckoning, on YouTube, and subscribe on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/leftreckoning Check out Matt Binder’s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/mattbinder Subscribe to Brandon’s show The Discourse on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/ExpandTheDiscourse Check out Ava Raiza’s music here! https://avaraiza.bandcamp.com/ The Majority Report with Sam Seder – https://majorityreportradio.com
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The Majority Report with Sam Cedar.
It is Thursday.
August 28th, 2025.
My name is Emma Vigeland in for Sam Cedar, and this is the five-time award-winning majority report.
We are broadcasting live steps from the industrially ravaged Gowanus Canal in the heartland of America, downtown Brooklyn, USA.
On the program today, Julia Gledhill will be with us to talk about her piece, arguing for nationalizing the defense industry.
And later in the show, Ari Berman joined Sam for an interview that is recorded in the past, but, uh,
You'll get to hear it through the magic of time travel.
And it's also about an article from the future.
Yes.
Wow.
My head is spinning.
That will be after my interview with Julia.
Great conversation.
Also on the program in Minneapolis, a shooting at a Catholic school leaves at least two children dead and 17 injured.
As Republicans scramble to find a way to blame anything but,
guns. R.F.K. Jr. severely limits who is eligible for the COVID vaccine, narrowing it to
people older than 65 or with proof of an underlying condition. And not so coincidentally
yesterday, the CDC director was fired less than a month after being sworn in.
In Chicago, Pritzker and Johnson's offices are closely coordinating to shield the
city from Trump's deployment of the National Guard.
Israel has a problem.
Many IDF reservists are not showing up for duty, complicating Netanyahu's plan to call up
60,000 to invade Gaza City in the north.
Tony Blair is taking meetings with Trump to help craft post-war plans for Gaza, you know,
to democratically, without.
the input of Palestinians.
A new Kwynopiac poll
finds that half of all voters in the U.S.
think Israel is committing genocide,
including 77% of Democrats
and 51% of independence.
And that same poll finds that 56%
of registered voters disapprove of Trump
deploying the National Guard to D.C.,
including an overwhelming majority of independence.
Maybe taking this on is good politics instead of hiding from it.
I don't know.
What, something like 14 Democrats and one Republican call it a genocide?
The administration is testing a pilot program in six states,
hiring private AI companies to screen Medicare patients to determine coverage for certain care like spinal surgeries.
Alligator, Alcatrazia.
will be vacated even as they appeal the court order demanding they shut it down.
That's some good news.
Trump gives an army contract to build a concentration camp in Texas to a shady LLC with no
experience running a correctional facility or a functioning website.
It could be worth up to $1.2 billion.
And lastly, over 600 workers of the United Auto Workers Union at GE's Airbus.
Aerospace Facility in, I did not write this down correctly.
We'll look it up in just a second, but they're going on strike.
All this and more on today's Majority Report.
Welcome to the show, everybody.
It is an Majority Report Thursday.
I just want to make sure I have the correct location of that GE Aerospace Facility.
in the Evendale, Ohio plant and the Erlinger, Kentucky distribution facility.
So 600 workers at those two facilities.
They didn't reach a contract agreement.
So all solidarity to the GE workers in Kentucky and Ohio.
And hello to Matt.
Hello to Brian.
We have a great show for you today.
We'll start off with, you know, the biggest story, really, in the country yesterday was this horrific shooting yesterday morning at Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
It happened as the students were attending mass in the morning.
The shooter reportedly shot through the stained glass and killed an 8-year-old and a 10-year-old in the pews and injured at least 17.
other people. Here is a young boy who survived this horrific traumatizing ordeal recounting the
events. My friend got hit in the back. Did he go to the hospital? Yeah, he went to the
hospital. What went through your mind when you saw that? I was super scared for him,
but I think now he's okay. I was scared that I wasn't going to see her because I didn't know what was
happening really I was just in shock it was like right beside me I was like two seats away from
the stained glass windows they were like the shots were like right next to me the first one I was like
what is that I thought it was just something then I heard it again I just ran under the pew
and then I covered my head my friend Victor like saved me though because he laid on top of me
but he got hit your friend laid on top of you yeah and he got hit is this something that
you've practiced before?
Yeah, we practice it like every month, or I don't know.
But, yeah, we've never practiced it in the church, though, only in school.
So it was way different.
What do you want to say to your friend who helped protect you?
He's really brave, and I hope he's good in the hospital.
And what do you want to say to everyone that had to go to the hospital?
I hope you're okay
And I'm praying for you
Oh
Owee
That's just
It's really
The innocence of it
The fact that any student
In this country has to go through that kind of thing
It is a choice
It's a policy choice
There's been analyses done
And this is not news to anyone in this audience
But just for posterity's state
We'll get to the demographic piece in the second because we know how the Republicans are running with this.
But there was an analysis done by the Violence Project, which is really the most frequently cited database academically for these mass shootings.
their qualifications for a mass shooting
mean four or more killed excluding the shooter
so this wouldn't even qualify
but this data is I think from
1966 to 2016 I believe
it was over a 50 year period
but they analyzed that
over the past 50 years
20% of the 167 mass shootings in that period
occurred in the last five years of the study period
more than half occurred after 2000
33% occurred after 2010
so just think about that
33% occurred
in a fraction of that 50 year period
the study
yeah oh actually it was from
1966 to 2019
but that's still
just 10 years where 33% of those shootings occur and in 19 or in 2004 Congress let the
federal assault weapons ban expire it was enacted in 1994 and expired in 2004 under the
Bush administration Republicans let that happen and you see how the death toll has risen
since that period from 2010 to 2019 the end of the study period
the average was 51 deaths per year with these mass shooting events versus eight lives in the 1970s.
And that's a result of magazine capacity, assault weapons, these weapons of war being on our streets.
The shooter was clearly deeply disturbed, as you would have to be, to commit this kind of horrific act.
the shooter had anti-Jewish, anti-Latino, anti-black slurs written on the magazine and weapons that the shooter used.
The shooter had a rifle, a shotgun, and a pistol, and died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on the scene.
This study also shows that suicidal ideation is one of the best predictors of this kind of act.
and this shooter
appeared to
meet that criteria as well
what it seems
what seems to be the case
is that the shooter may have been trans
we don't know this for sure
but the
and the data is still coming out
but that has not stopped
Republicans from of course
running with this in a
defensive manner as you were saying
before the show Matt
they need to run cover
for their amosexual
cohort of support
I mean you have to scapegoat someone
I mean the problem with the defensiveness is like
I feel like it's almost
running with this trans thing
like other countries have trans people
they don't have kids being slaughtered in schools
it's because we allow people to buy
this person had an AR-15
yeah it shouldn't be allowed
I don't care about permits
fuck you
Christy Gnome
confirms on Twitter
she says that
the shooter, the 23-year-old
man, of course,
misgendering. I don't know
what that serves.
I mean, you're already being explicitly transphobic
with this rush
to blaming someone's
gender identity for this, but
called the shooter a monster,
of course, and kill Donald
Trump was on one of the rifle
magazines, but obviously
Nome leaves out the anti-Semitic,
anti-black, anti-Latino slurs that were written on there.
Yeah, like Reddit racism type stuff.
I mean, this shooter was extremely online, disturbed,
and had many, many contradictory viewpoints.
But the grossest reaction
might be Jesse Waters
in his monologue last night.
Tucker Carlson is
embarrassing, I would say,
Jesse Waters, who took over for him.
him and Waters' overgrown fratboy thing isn't breaking through while Tucker is like a dog
with a bone a bit with some of this Israel stuff and exploiting that within the base right now
to make a new name for himself outside of Fox News.
I guess this is how Jesse Waters is going to do it.
The title transgender who hates Trump's Christians and Jews shoots up kids at a Catholic school,
and the media wants to take away your handgun.
so how are we supposed to protect ourselves from trans shooters the media is bad at pattern recognition we aren't just two years ago another trans 20 something walked into a christian school in nashville with a rifle and shot three kids and three adults they buried the manifesto and locked down the case we've seen trans shootings in colorado and in maryland they even shot up an ice facility in texas and it seems like half of antifahs
trans. A couple of them's just got popped for firebombing Tesla. The mayor of Minneapolis
says, you can't say that. Anybody who is using this as an, using this as an opportunity to
villainize our trans community or any other community out there has lost their sense of common
humanity. We should not be operating out of a place of hate for anyone. We should be operating. We should
be operating from a place of love for our kids.
I don't hate anyone who thinks they're trans. I feel sorry for them.
But statistically, the trans population has been prone to violence.
That's not villainizing. That's reality. And if you can't recognize reality, you're in danger.
We love the American people, especially American children.
I'm just trying to make sure that we have the fact straight here. He was referring to the
Club Q Colorado Springs
shooting. I
believe that that shooter identified
as non-binary.
The
Trump assassination attempt
was quickly blamed on a
trans person, which was not the case.
What was the other
Uvaldi? But we know that the shooter was a
cis male. And in fact, there have been
some lawsuits against prominent right-wing
media personalities for misidentifying
somebody in that particular.
particular shooting.
There's a, you mentioned
Nashville as well.
I'm not sure about the details of those because, I mean, I
remember one, I don't know if it was a Nashville one or a
different one, where it was very clearly
ironic that the person was
opposing as trans online.
Exactly.
They're, these
neo-Nazi, you know,
were extremely
online
black-pilled, I don't know if that's an outdated
term school shooters.
they will say things like that because they know that right wing media will run with it
it's a way it's it's a way to to demonize trans people on their way out or it's a bit it's a joke
in their community but to zoom out it goes this is what the right wing does and any sort of
tragedy that involves way too much access to guns um look what happened in minnesota the lawmakers
get shot and they're blaming tim walls it's what can how can we peg this on our political enemies it's
just a fascist playbook.
How many schools,
how many shootings do we have in this country?
Yep.
Like,
I mean,
we have the numbers on this.
We,
I mean,
we have an insane amount of data,
frankly,
a huge sample size.
It's,
it's unequivocal.
And the polling is,
is there on this issue.
It's just that there is not the political will to change it.
Because even if people in a vacuum,
say we support gun control measures,
they're not in mass driving to the,
polls based on this particular issue. It's why
orienting your
political strategy around polling
is so silly because say like
polling on economic numbers are
way more likely to drive someone to the polls
versus say polling on like trans
kids in sports or even an issue like
this where there's broad consensus
but there is a
both like political corruption
angle to it although the NRA has been
defanged to a degree
but now there's this constituency
on the right that loves their guns and they
call the shots as a very vocal and loud minority.
We have the numbers on mass shooting demographics.
Of the 172 individuals who engaged in public mass shootings covered in the database,
97.7% were male.
Ages range from 11 to 70, with a mean age of 34.1.
The shootings were 52.3% white, 20.9% black, 8.1% Latino, 6.4% Asian.
4.2% Middle Eastern and 1.8% Native American, which is fairly close, I think, to
to demographic numbers, although not not exactly, except the mailness part.
So if we're looking at what is an overwhelming variable of someone's identity that would cause
them to be a mass shooter, over 97% of these mass shooters are male. Now you don't hear them
make that case because it's time to demonize trans people. And we know that trans individuals
are not overrepresented in mass shootings as perpetrators at all. Trans people are way more likely
to be victims of violence. But just this written in the Reuters article at the end of last
year, transgender individuals represent less than 1% of perpetrators in all mass shootings over the
past decade, and about 2% involved in school shooting specifically, according to the gun
violence archive. Which given to the degree to which they're bullied, um, yeah,
surprise. Trans people are four times more likely than cis people to experience violence,
including rape, sexual assault, or, or just simple assault. The UCLA Williams Institute
did that analysis a few years back. Trans-American's behind
bars are 12 times more likely to experience sexual violence.
And in May, the Trump administration basically stopped requiring that people's gender identity
would be counted in reports about sexual violence or violence of any kind because they want
to cover up the fact that trans people are more likely to be victims of this kind of violence
and this kind of crime than perpetrators.
but this is what's being said
on our biggest cable news show in prime time
so
that's that
what else is there to say
yeah
I mean they have to fill the air with something
because people are really upset about this stuff
but the policy is not going to change
if they have anything to do about it
so you have to fill the air with something
but I mean Jesse Waters says padded recognition
that we rush to oh this is some conspiracy about Tim Walls
like the earlier Minnesota shooting
or this is something about trans people
we can recognize a pattern here
these are professional scapegoat hunters
pointing at scapegoats at every single turn
and you know we got to be too stupid
we got to stop being stupid enough to fall for it
in a moment we'll be talking to Julia Gledhill
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Okay.
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Okay.
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We are back, and I'm so happy to be joined by Julia Gled Hill Research Analyst for the National Security Reform Program at the Stimson Center and co-hosts of the undiplomatic podcast with our friend Matt Duss, her latest piece in the Quincy Institute for Respondy Institute for Response.
Statecraft is entitled is nationalizing the defense industry such a bad idea. Julia,
thanks so much for coming on the show today. Thanks for having me on. I am such a fan, so it's such a
pleasure to be here. Oh my gosh. Well, that's great to hear. I'm so happy to have you on because I loved
your piece. I loved that you're kind of taking this idea from the administration and running
with it in a way that I'm not sure is their intention. But let's play this clip of Howard
Lutnik that got this conversation kind of kicked off, right? So we have the Trump administration
converted some chips grants that we're going to go to Intel into basically an equity purchase
to uplift their stock because they've been lagging behind technologically in certain areas. And,
you know, there are some
centrist Democrats calling that socialism
but there's no ownership
involved here. This is just
instead of grants for research and
manufacturing, this is a grant
for a free giveaway for
the stock to go up.
So I just want to be clear about the crony
capitalism vision here.
And Lutnik then
on CNBC
said, hey, maybe we'll try this
with the defense industry. Here were his
remarks.
Why don't you think it's fair for America?
Secretary?
Why shouldn't the U.S. government say, you know what, we use Palantir services?
We would like a piece of Palantir.
We use Boeing services.
We would like a piece of Boeing.
There are a lot of businesses that do business with the U.S. government that benefit by doing
business with the U.S. government.
I guess the question is, where's the line?
Oh, there's a monstrous discussion about defense.
I mean, Lockheed Martin makes 90s.
7% of their revenue from the U.S. government.
They are basically an arm of the U.S. government.
They make exquisite munitions.
I mean, amazing things that can knock a missile out of the air when it's coming towards you.
But what's the economics of that?
I'm going to leave that to my Secretary of Defense and the Deputy Secretary of Defense.
These guys are on it and they're thinking about it.
But I tell you what, there's a lot of talking that needs to be had about how
do we finance our munitions, acquisitions? I think a lot of that is talking. And now you have the right
people in the jobs and Donald Trump at the head thinking about what is the right way to do it.
I tell you the way it has been done has been a giveaway. I mean, he's correct that it's been a
giveaway, but he's just suggesting a different kind of giveaway, at least in my estimation. However,
it does present an opening here where, hey, if we're going to subsidize some of these industries,
maybe it might make sense for that to come back to the American public in some way.
Julia, take it from there, your reaction to Lutnik?
Sure. I was very surprised by this news by Lutnik.
I think that many of us were.
And in fact, I had just finished a paper coming out in September, making the case for nationalization.
and he beat me to it.
But I don't think that we should shy away from big ideas
just because the conversation around them
starts from a rather unexpected place.
It is undeniable that the arms industry
is so deeply ingrained in our government
and corrupts our decision-making process
around national security policy.
And frankly, I think that we need fundamental institutional reform
to throw a wrench in the war machine.
And the fundamental institutional reform, what would that look like in your estimation?
Because, like, you know, right now we talk about Pentagon waste and how they keep getting audited over and over again, and they keep failing because there's all this money that is unaccounted for.
You then also have, as you write in your piece, the arms industry just spending hand over fist on lobbying.
and in order to basically buy the politicians on high committees to to favor them,
there's just so much sloshing around and so much waste to borrow like the administration's language on this
that, I mean, it would be a drastic reorientation of how we conduct our foreign policy.
You know, in theory, yes, but I think that transition might be,
a little less dramatic in practice than it is in theory, just because our primes, these five huge
military contractors that take home most of our annual defense budget every single year,
they've been rocking with the government in this way for a very long time. And they,
like I say in my piece, have government completely wrapped around their finger. And so
nationalization presents a whole host of its own risks, institutionalized corruption,
crudy capitalism to your point. But I think that, you know, we've already,
seen kleptocrats use public office for private gain. And so I think that we can mitigate a lot
of the risks of partial or full nationalization by, you know, filling board seats and
establishing transparent dividend policies. I mean, we have a few reference points for this.
There are European countries like France that have, you know, partially nationalized their defense
industries, in exerting more overt or transparent government control over companies, you know,
we would at least have policymakers who are more accountable to the American people than the
faceless executives who are pocketing taxpayer dollars.
Well, it's almost like, I mean, it may not be France, but there are other European governments
that will have like a worker representative on the board.
This would be like say,
hey, we're giving you billions and billions of dollars in contracts.
We need to have a representative for the interests of the American public
in your decision making process because maybe if you don't mind giving people a sense
of how much is being paid to shareholders right now,
which like of these companies that is,
money that's just being wasted
where
there could be more oversight
if there was somebody who was a government
representative sitting in on that?
100%.
I mean, government officials are humans, equally
susceptible to corruption and
the pursuit of, you know,
financial gain.
However, these
industry executives' only job
is to deliver shareholder value,
regardless of what they say about
protecting the American people or protecting national security. Ultimately, they are private
companies with private interests. And if they can't exist without the government, then I think that
this deserves serious conversation about how we reorient that relationship. More than that, though,
you know, there is this issue of Pentagon waste. But to my point about, you know, the arms industry
corrupting our decision-making process, our national security budget is well over a trillion
dollars. It is completely unmoored from any cohesive or realistic strategy to guide our foreign
policy. And I think that nationalization is worthy of serious consideration because it could
help lawmakers actually justify their spending decisions with strategic considerations and
public interest in paying the least amount possible on the military so that we can invest
in other areas of our economy and our society.
it the these like
monopolistic
um
basically
uh defense uh industry uh
companies
they can
they've found a way to almost like
price gouge the government
um that there are only a handful of these
companies that have the capacity to deliver on like the
weapon system that the Pentagon is interested in and now there's this massive
influx in cash from the supposed
anti-war President Donald
Trump who wants to change the Department of Defense
to the Department of War now and also
increase our military budget
by and did
by a crazy percentage
prior to
other ones. It feels
to me though like the way
that this is, they're approaching
this from the Trump administration's
perspective is similar
to Intel where we are
worried
that our economic policies are going to have a deleterious effect on the stock market and the
economy. So how do we protect ourselves against that? Basically give free money to these corporations
that are such a pillar of our economy. Absolutely. I mean, the concerns that you lay out are
extremely serious. And I, you know, can't say that I can co-sign the Trump administration's
particular approach to nationalizing defense contractors. But I don't.
think that we should throw away the bathwater with the baby here because Howard Lutnik
is going to bring this up. Let's talk about it and think about how we can actually mitigate
those challenges to nationalization. Obviously, we already have examples from this administration
of folks taking advantage of their government service for crony capitalist purposes,
but I don't, I am very averse to having a reactive response to this kind of news where absolutely,
you know, you can certainly take an equity stake in a company and leverage that for private
profit and for shareholders. But, you know, there's another path as well, and we should consider
that, especially when we're on this, you know, unsustainable path of national security standards.
I mean, we are spending $2 trillion-ish dollars on modernizing our nuclear arsenal the next 30 years and, you know, people can't buy groceries.
So I think that we need drastic, drastic change in the very near future in this country.
One thing you wrote about that I wasn't really aware of are the intellectual property rights that these military contractors have and that they also have like a monopoly over the maintenance of a like a weapon system.
during the duration of their, basically the cycle of that, that machinery.
How is that used by these defense contractors to kind of continuously gouge?
Because they, they're the only ones that can make this kind of weaponry.
They're also apparently the only ones that can maintain and, you know,
work on this kind of weaponry.
And so that means even fatter contracts, I'd imagine.
Absolutely. You know, so contractors price gouge the government in a number of ways. They have really successfully lobbied Congress to essentially gut contracting law and regulation so that they can sort of make up prices on military contracts. And by that, I mean they're not required to give the government what's called certified cost and pricing data to substantiate prices on contracts that, you know, potentially no other company can fulfill for the government. So it's sort of a separate issue. There's
price gouging issue wherein contractors have bent lawmakers to their will to, you know,
better bilk the government, essentially. And then there's the issue of intellectual property of
right to repair, right? And so the problem with that is that take, for example, the F-35, the most
expensive weapon program in the United States history, part of the reason that program is so expensive
and so fraught with complications is not only because the design is overly complex,
but also because it requires this software program called the Joint Simulation Environment to test it.
And basically the software for that program is never going to be complete seemingly.
And so, you know, you have a contractor that is sort of kicking the can down the road with programs like this one.
and really, really kicking up prices on the F-35.
And, you know, the DOD finds itself in a place where it sort of gets waste deep in the mud
and, you know, falls into this cost fallacy.
And so there are a number of ways that military contractors are able to maximize not just
profits, but other financial returns as well.
The defense industry far outperforms other commercial industries in terms of, you know,
return to their shareholders, for example, but also in, you know, return on equity on capital
investment and things like that because they are subsidized in the government. And yet they're
able to privatize the rewards of public investment and maintain IP to repair military equipment
or to develop the technologies needed to maintain a program or run a program. This was
this is literally what I think Apple was facing legal trouble over its right to repair.
not and that they lost in in court on that, I believe.
Monopolizing not just like the product, but the ability to repair that product if it's broken.
And this is just happening to the tune of billions of dollars on the defense in the defense industry.
Right. I think that this is also an issue in farming.
You know, I think that in the agricultural sector, this gets really tricky.
I've heard conversation about right to repair with John Deere.
But, you know, the top line here being that these are core government functions.
The military national defense is a core government function.
And it is insane that private contractors are able to reap the financial rewards of, you know,
research and development that's funded by the government.
Lastly, your piece, you know, you talk a little bit about both partial national,
and full nationalization, what would both of those visions look like if we were to, you know,
take that into the future? You mentioned the model in Europe, but that looks more like a partial
nationalization, right? What are, what's the contours of this vision? Yeah, I mean, look,
the idea of full nationalization might not have a lot of legs in the United States, but the
reason I put that in the piece is because I do think it's incredibly pernicious that private profit
motive impacts the way that we budget for national security and the weapons that we buy.
The benefit is to sever that relationship. Now, the actual details of how you go about nationalizing
an industry, I mean, you have to make shareholders whole. There are plenty of Americans who might
be unknowingly invested in defense companies as part of their retirement plans. And that is something
that the United States government would have to address in order to take full control of a military
contractor. I don't mean to say that this would be uncompensated nationalization, because that would
impact a lot, a lot of Americans. But I do think that in thinking about full nationalization,
you know, we really have to consider what it would look like to do this, even temporarily.
There's historical precedent for this. And the reality is that in a moment of crisis,
for example, World War II, you will always need government intervention to meet munitions capacity
and production needs. And so, you know, it isn't unprecedented within the United States.
Obviously, we've bailed out the banks. We've done all these things on temporary basis.
And whether nationalization would be a permanent or a temporary fix, I leave open to discussion,
but there is precedent for the United States to take control of industries, you know,
partially and potentially even fully.
And truly, lastly, here, your contention, which we kind of talked around it, but is also that this would incentivize less brutality, less offensive action, less recklessness, and, you know, I mean, in many ways, the genocide in Gaza has been ongoing and people have been getting really, really, really rich off of it.
And that's never central in the discussion.
if the government is the stabilizer here, even in a partial nationalization situation,
then you have undercut the profit motive to a large degree, is your contention?
Yes, absolutely.
I don't think that you can completely eradicate bureaucratic interests that might drive, you know,
in arms production.
For example, you have military services that are still going to compete for the bigger budgets.
That's kind of the origin story of our nuclear triad. It's not a strategic analysis. It is the fact that, you know, the military services wanted to take home that that slices the nuclear pie. But yeah, absolutely. I mean, imagine what the discourse around national security would look like if the arms contractors were not lobbying Congress to the extent that they are. If they weren't giving tens of millions of dollars in political contributions every election year. And if they weren't funding private research in civil society, I think that it
it totally changed the way that we talk about national security, particularly in Washington, D.C.
Julia, really appreciate your time today.
Julia Gladhill Research Analyst for the National Security Reform Program at the Stimson Center.
And check out the undiplomatic podcast, if you've done already, Matt Duss, friend of the show.
And you guys fighting the good fight over there.
Julia, thanks so much for your time.
Really appreciate it.
Thanks for having me on.
Of course.
Folks, with that, we will now play.
Sam's interview with Ari Berman about the Republican War on voting rights, which is unceasing, but hitting a bit of a fever pitch at this current moment.
Ari has a piece coming out soon.
Let me just see if I have the details on that.
We're not sure.
It's coming out at the beginning of September, Brian.
Is that correct?
That's what Sam told me.
Okay.
But we can't be sure.
Just look out for it and enjoy the discussion.
You should give Ari a follow.
Exactly.
You can tell his work at Mother Jones.
Yep.
Ari Berman, voting rights correspondent for Mother Jones, author of Minority Rule the Right Wing Attack on the Will of the People and the Fight to resist it.
Here is that interview.
We're back. Sam Cedar. Majority Report, pleasure to welcome back to the program.
All right, Berman, writer from Mother Jones. Do you have any other title there, official title?
National Voting Correspondent. I got the longest possible title.
National Voting Correspondent, author.
National Voting Rights Correspondent.
National Voting Rights Correspondent.
Good thing there's no national voting rights news.
And in due, I mean, and honestly, I don't know if anybody's written as much about the Voting Rights Act over the past 10 years as you have.
And voting rights in general.
And we got a couple of things to talk about.
We're pre-tapping this.
and things are moving pretty fast, at least on the gerrymandering perspective.
And we will get to gerrymandering.
But there's a lot to talk about in the interim.
It's also possible, I guess, as we talk about the Voting Rights Act, and that's where I want to start, that over the course of the next couple of weeks, I wouldn't put it past them.
I don't know if the Supreme Court is in session.
However, we have a question of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, and specifically whether private individuals can bring suit or private entities can bring suit on behalf of people whose rights have been dispossessed under the Voting Rights Act Section 2, whether you can have private action under these things.
and there's a lot of reason to believe that the Supreme Court will roll that back.
But, Ari, will you explain to people all of what I've just said, particularly let's start with,
let's go back a little bit.
2013 is the beginning of what very well may be essentially the end of the Voting Rights Act.
We have a Supreme Court at that time.
It was 5'4.
The Chief Justice, John Roberts, cut his teeth in Ronald
Reagan's GOJ with basically coming up with ideas how to get rid of the Voting Rights Act.
And 20, 30 years later, he is in a position to do so.
Just walk us through the history of the past 10, 11 years on the Voting Rights Act.
That's right.
I mean, there's been this longstanding movement to try to kill the Voting Rights Act.
And it's really taken shape and had success once there was this.
conservative majority on the Supreme Court, led by John Roberts. So the first major blow against
the Voting Rights Act came in 2013 in the Shelby County v. Holder decision when Roberts wrote
the majority opinion saying that states with long history of discrimination no longer needed
to approve their voting changes with the federal government. That was really the most important
part of the Voting Rights Act because it stopped abuses before they even occurred in states with long
history of discrimination. So if Texas, for example, wanted to pass a new redistricting map or a new
restriction on voting that was racially discriminatory, they had to get that approved from either
the Department of Justice or a federal court. And so it was extremely effective. That part of it was
basically gutted. Then the other part of the voting rights out. Let me just say one thing about that
is that you had a lot of the conservative justices, I think all of them, say one version or another,
of this is a special benefit.
We're giving to minorities.
Or you can't hold these people responsible.
There's not telling that they're actually going to be discriminatory.
Even though, like, moments after Shelby County is resolved,
you see all of these states go and actually break the Voting Rights Act that was determined
in subsequent cases when we had a motivated DOJ to go after them.
they went ahead and did it.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, Roberts's whole argument was basically, he said, you know, things have changed in the
South, that the South was dramatically different.
The country had changed a lot since 1965, but the voting rights act kept treating the country
like it was still in 1965, which I think both missed the fact that, A, a lot of the
progress made since 1965 was because of the Voting Rights Act, because states tried to
discriminate, and the voting rights act blocked him from doing so, but also that the Voting
Rights Act had been reauthorized.
four times by Congress, in 1975, in 1982, in 1970, and in 2006.
So the Congress looked four different times and decided, we should reauthorize this.
It's still necessary, including in 2006 when the vote was 390 to 33 in the House and 98 to
zero in the Senate, you know, things that you don't even see ever these days.
Now, you can't even name a post office with that kind of vote now.
So, I mean, there was such an overwhelming bipartisan support for this among the public and in terms of the Congress.
And the Supreme Court just pushed all of that to side because they had this vision of the country that they wanted to free these states from federal oversight.
And then, of course, what happened is you had things like the Texas voter ID law where you could vote with a gun permit but not a student ID immediately go into effect.
and states like Texas and Alabama, Mississippi, and North Carolina, all revered to doing
the kinds of discriminatory things they had previously blocked from doing.
So that then, so basically they take one part of the Voting Rights Act, the preclearance part
out.
There's another part of the Voting Rights Act, Section 2, it takes effect after, meaning
that instead of blocking discrimination before it occurs, you can only challenge things after
the fact.
But Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, a preclearance part, only applies to part of the country.
Section 2 is nationwide.
So that's the really important part of it.
And you can still use Section 2 to challenge discriminatory voting laws,
to challenge discriminatory election maps,
redistricting laws, that kind of thing.
Then they start going after Section 2.
They weaken it in 2021.
They make it easier to be able to pass discriminatory voting laws.
Now they're talking about going after it in a few really important ways.
One way is what you talked about,
not allowing private plaintiffs to file losses under Section 2.
That would basically destroy Section 2 because pretty much every voting rights lawsuit is filed by private groups.
People like the ACLU or the NWACP.
If they if you said-
My understanding is that over the past 40 years,
there have been 182 successful lawsuits.
These are successful ones that may have been some that failed.
Now, in the Voting Rights Act,
in only 15 of those suits were brought exclusively by the DOJ.
Because it's a question of, A, do we have a,
presidency that is interested in allowing everybody to vote. And B, do they have the resources
available to pursue this case? So, I mean, that is, I don't know, less than 10 percent of the
successful voting rights cases under Section 2 over the course of the past 40 years have been
exclusively the DOJ. Exactly. So what happens is that basically the federal government doesn't
file a lot of voting lawsuits, either because in the case of someone like Trump, they don't
want to, or they just are cautious even under someone like Biden. They're just cautious about
doing this. And private groups are generally more aggressive in filing these lawsuits. So basically,
some Republicans and conservatives realize this is the most effective way to kill the Voting Rights Act
is just to say that private groups can't file these lawsuits. This originated before the
Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers seven states in the Midwest and the Great Plains. There
was redistricting map in Arkansas, there was a redistricting map in North Dakota, and a bunch of
conservative judges, some of whom were appointed by Trump, said private groups can't file these
lawsuits. So that basically made the Voting Rights Act a dead letter in those seven states.
Now, the Supreme Court has temporarily blocked this. Three justices essentially said they would
allow this in-circuit decision to move forward. Six said not so fast, but they're going to hear
this case. So that's one major way that Section 2 is being challenged.
The other major way, which I know you want to talk about, is this whole question of racial gerrymandering, right?
Well, I want to start. Let's start, though, with this private action, because you have 182 cases in 40 years that are brought by private actors, or I should say minus 15.
So, you know, whatever, 160 some odd cases brought by private actors that win. Never mind.
didn't. How do you then 40 years later say that this right does not exist?
Well, it's the most like wooden sense of textualism where you say it doesn't explicitly say in the
Voting Rights Act that private groups can file these lawsuits. Therefore, we find that it's not
inherent in the authority of the voting rights act, which is insane because from the very minute the
Voting Rights Act was passed, private groups were filing these lawsuits. Yeah, the federal
government was also filing a lot of lawsuits because they were interested at that point in time
in enforcing the Voting Rights Act. But from the very beginning, you had groups like the ACLU and
the NWACP Legal Defense Fund and the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights. I mean, I know a lot of the
lawyers back then who were, they worked hand in hand with the Justice Department to file these
lawsuits. And then the years later, when the Justice Department moved on to other things,
it was these private groups that filed the bulk of the lawsuits.
What happened was you would have places, you would have people in places that were being
discriminated against.
So let's say they want to destroy the only black city council district in a town in Alabama.
Those kind of things happened all the time.
Those people would approach the ACLU or the NWACP or the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights
and those groups would bring lawsuits.
And that's how it works.
So no one even considered the idea that.
private groups couldn't do this. I mean, it's just one of those things that came totally
out of left field, or in this case, right field. And basically, they found some judges to put it
into law. And I mean, that's what's happening all over the place with so many different things
where these crazy decisions happen. And these judges who would have otherwise never been on
the bench, right, who are even more extreme than the likes of John Roberts or Brett Kavanaugh or
Amy Coney Barrett. They're sort of auditioning for the next Trump Supreme Court appointment,
and they have these wild decisions, and that's how they get recognized. And so then what happens
is even if the Supreme Court decides not to do this, then you say, oh, they finally did the
reasonable thing. But all that does is restore a status quo that no one ever thought about
challenging before, you know, Trump came on the scene in the first place. Right. Four of those judges
appointed by on the active judges on that bench four appointed by Trump if I'm not mistaken
and I think four appointed by George Herbert Walker Bush and then the first one excuse me
George W. Bush and then one or I said five by George W. Bush and then one by George Herbert
Walker Bush and one by actually two by George Herbert Walker Bush and then one by actually two by George Herbert
Walker Bush, and then one during the Obama administration. So, I mean, this is a very Republican
court and tipped over by the Trump people and also by Gorsick, I think, sort of floating out
there, this idea that there is a limited action that private people can take to enforce the
laws of their own government, which is absurd. Yeah, I mean, and we're saying that in general.
we're seeing that in a lot of cases that even when the conservatives lose, which doesn't usually
happen, there's always, generally speaking, a dissent. And then that dissent becomes the basis for a more
extreme federal lower court decision, which then gets bounced back to the Supreme Court. And that's what's
often happened in these voting cases is then more extreme things are before the court. Like,
this gets to the point that I wanted to make about the other attack on Section 2, which is,
is the idea that Section 2 shouldn't be used to strike down racial gerrymandering.
That is also an insane, totally a historical idea.
Clarence Thomas has basically been arguing this for 30 years.
And now it seems like there's a majority on the court for this idea, because they were
going to decide, this is the other major attack on Section 2, they were going to decide
this Louisiana redistricting case, which seemed pretty straightforward, the idea that Louisiana,
which is a third black, should have a second majority black congressional district.
The Supreme Court essentially created this situation in another case from Alabama, which said that you should have another second majority black congressional districts.
Louisiana was just following what Alabama did.
Then instead of deciding this case after oral arguments this year, they punched it.
And they basically said they're going to rehear the case in the fall and they're going to look at whether this idea of drawing this majority minority districts violates the Constitution.
Another thing that nobody ever contemplated but now seems to have close or a majority.
support. So that would basically kill the Voting Rights Act because essentially there
would be, even if private groups could file suits, there's no way you're actually going to win any
of them. I mean, just what is the theory behind out of the emanating out of the Voting Rights Act
of majority minority districts? Well, it's essentially the idea. It's basically turning the 14th and
15th Amendment on its head. It's basically saying that laws that were meant to give rights
to formerly enslaved people and ultimately to bring a whole huge segment of formerly marginalized and
disenfranchised people into the political process, that those laws prohibit the consideration of race.
Now, what those laws were meant to do was prohibit racism, not the consideration of race,
but they've been turned on its head, and this has been jurisprudence in a lot of other cases,
but it's the interpretation that the 14th and 50th Amendment prohibit any consideration of race
so that creating these majority minority districts, therefore were to violate the quote-unquote
colorblind constitution that was established under the 14th and 50th Amendment, when in fact,
the 14th and 50th Amendment were all about giving rights that were previously denied to previously
enslaved people. One way you do that is to create these kind of districts that would allow people
that were formerly enslaved and marginalized to elect their candidates of choice, which otherwise
would be impossible in some cases without the protections of the Voting Rights Act.
Okay. So there's two things here. On the, on the section two, I guess, rationale is that you could have 40% just off the top of my head, 40% black population in a given state. And they were gerrymandering these districts in such a way that you would get no black representation.
in Congress, which you have to literally like take one, you know, if there's 10 districts,
we're going to take one 10th and put it in one district.
We're going to take one 10th to put in another district and just create these weird, weird lines
that are clearly to disenfranchise black people.
So they came up with a formula essentially, right, some type of like algorithm that says,
like, if there's this amount of percentage of black people, Latino people, whatever,
it is in a state, presumably they should have at least roughly some commensurate political
representation. Yeah, and it wasn't even that. I mean, it wasn't even anything close to
proportionality, but the idea was it wasn't necessarily that there was zero, but in places like
Alabama, in places like Louisiana, what was happening is there was six or seven congressional
districts and African Americans were 30 percent or more of the population, but they were only getting
one of the districts. And essentially, where you were packing all of the black voters into one
district so that you could dilute their influence in the rest of the state, meaning that the vast
majority of districts would not just only be controlled by white people, but white Republicans
that were hostile to the views of most black voters in those states. And so what civil rights
groups and others showed was that you could create these cohesive districts where blacks were a
majority of the population, and they were concentrated in such a way that they were.
could have another district. And this started in Alabama. I mean, there's a long history of
the court ruling this. But the thing that was surprising was in 2022, the Supreme Court said
that Alabama should create a second majority black district, which was surprising because
the Supreme Court has been so hostile to voting rights. And it was authored by John Roberts,
who has been very hostile to voting rights. And it was joined by Brett Kavanaugh, who's also
been very hostile to voting rights. Cavana, though, in that opinion,
in Alabama said maybe there should be a limit on how long you can create these kind of districts,
which again was kind of shocking because nowhere in the Voting Rights Act does it say there should
be a limit.
Like the other part of the Voting Rights Act that we talked about earlier, the preclearance part,
that did have to be reauthorized by Congress.
So you could theoretically argue there should be a limit on that at some point in time.
But this other part, Section 2 was meant to be permanent.
So this idea that there was a limit on it, that was really something only Clarence Thomas
had argued. And then suddenly, Kavanaugh floats this idea in the Alabama case. It seems like
Louisiana is very similar to Alabama, has a cohesive population, has a majority of black
population, should draw majority black congressional district. As fact, Louisiana, a legislature,
which is Republican, already did that. So it seems like this is pretty much settled. And then the
court, instead of deciding this case, says, no, we want to look at it again. And we don't just want to
look at this instance. We want to look if these districts are protected in the first place. And
And if they were to do this, it would basically not just kill what was left to the Voting Rights Act,
it would basically kill the protections that remain against gerrymandering.
Because remember, the Supreme Court has already said, you can't challenge partisan gerrymandering in federal courts.
That if a place like Texas says, yeah, we're rigging the maps, but we're rigging them because Trump wanted us to do it,
and by the way, there's nothing illegal about that.
If they can show that they didn't actually discriminate while doing it, which, by the way, it's going to be hard.
But if they can show that, the Supreme Court says, okay, we're.
okay with that. But you could still bring claims under the Voting Rights Act. But if they were to do
this, if they were to basically say, you can't challenge partisan gerrymandering and you also,
you can't challenge racial gerrymandering. Well, then you basically can't challenge gerrymandering at all.
Right. And we should say getting back to the sort of negative argument against the section two,
it's that like we're supposed to be race blind because of the 13, 14th, 15th amendment.
And for us to believe that those amendments were race blind in the way that some of these conservatives would argue, it's just a coincidence that it happened in the wake of freeing slaves, right?
I mean, it's just like a total coincidence that that's what it happened.
Well, you could, the only way you can read them is race blind is because textually they wanted African Americans to have.
the same rights as whites, right? So it was arguing for a colorblind society, but in the context
of giving black people the same rights as white people. But it was the most race conscious part
of the Constitution, and that that's what it was specifically meant to do. So there's no way that
you can read the 14th and 50th Amendment in a colorblind way to say that it discriminates against
whites and advantages blacks, which is basically what people are arguing in the Louisiana case.
This whole district, this whole second majority black district is being argued by a group of
quote unquote non-African American plaintiffs who are basically saying the Voting Rights Act
discriminates against white people, which I think sort of misreads the whole purpose of why
there's a Voting Rights Act in the first place.
Okay.
So we don't really have a sense of what the timing of this is, right?
Well, they're going to re-argue it next term, and they're going to go.
going to decide it sometime, I would imagine, in the summer, so months before the midterm
elections. And I think it's quite likely that Supreme Court rejects the private plaintiff
argument. We were arguing earlier. But I think they're basically going to say, yeah, you can file
suits, but it's going to kill the Voting Rights Act to such an extent. That doesn't matter
if you can bring suits because there'll be no claims that you can functionally win under the Voting
Rights Act. They won't, they'll still be a lot.
that says the Voting Rights Act of 1965, but it'll be so toothless as to basically be practically
useless. And I think that's, I mean, that's just a very hard future to think about what is America
without the Voting Rights Act, because the Voting Rights Act was a law that basically made America
a multiracial democracy. And without it, I think that democracy would suffer in a lot of different
ways. And some of the things that we thought we would never see again, those kind of things
will start coming back. And we should just say, just for the sake of clarity, it's not just
southern states. There are multiple counties in New York State that are subject to, well, that
were subject to the preclearance that were, I guess, was reversed. And so we should just be clear
on that when we had talked about the preclearance earlier. Yeah, not only that, not only that,
But, I mean, yeah, it covered northern places.
It covered western places.
It covered southern places.
But not only that.
I mean, the other part of the Voting Rights Act applies nationwide, right?
So, I mean, you could challenge discriminatory voting laws.
You could challenge discriminatory election maps anywhere.
I mean, it could be Arkansas, could be North Dakota.
It could be New York.
It could be Texas.
I mean, these laws are filed all around the country.
So it really is a nationwide problem.
We tend to think of it as one of those things that just applies to the South and just applies
to black people, but it's much bigger than that.
All right. I want to pivot. You got a piece coming out in the beginning of September in Mother Jones. And it is entitled Project 2026, Trump's plan to hijack the next election. And we're seeing it, right? Like, I mean, we're, you know, the ink was probably not dry. And you already had to probably go back in. I would imagine you're going to have to do.
that at one point it's in the magazine so it's it's locked in but they are moving so quickly
this texas situation and we should say you know we're uh we're doing this uh interview in the
second week of august by the time the third week of august or the fourth week of august comes
when we play this somewhere around there the the texas situation could be changed and this is a prime
example of what you were talking about earlier we have uh texas wants to go to special
session, they want to essentially do gerrymandering. So they pick up five seats. It will
shrink the margin in which a lot of these Republican districts have a majority of Republicans
in a wave that could expose them to some electoral danger, but probably not. It'd have to be a
pretty big wave. But it will also dispossess a significant portion of the last of
Latino voters in some way, walk us through this, but walk us through it with an eye to your
larger piece, which is basically that Trump has a quiver full of arrows to help sort of rig the
election. It's very important for them to retain the house. And he's just now starting to
like, bing, bing, bing, shooting all of them at the same time. Yeah. I mean, I like I think that
was a little bit ahead of the curve with this whole Trump rigging the election idea, because
as I was writing it, things that really started blowing up on that front, and there's going to have
to be a lot of updates when it finally goes online. But I think the mid-decade gerrymandering we're
seeing, it's just the most concrete way, but not the only way Trump is trying to rig the midterms.
And we should say, Sam, that mid-decade redistricting in and of itself is extremely unusual.
Generally speaking, redistricting happens at the beginning of the decade.
after the census. And that's it. And yes, gerrymandering happens, but it still usually happens at the
beginning of the decade. The idea that a state would just redraw its districts mid-decade. And then
the fact that it would come from the White House, that is totally unprecedented. A president
telling a state, you need to redistrict, you need to gerrymander mid-decade to give me more seats.
And it's not just happening in one place because, yeah, Texas did this before under Tom DeLay in 2003.
remember this, right? That was a mid-decade redistricting that came from Washington. But this is coming
from the president, and it's coming not just in Texas, but now they're saying they want a dozen
seats because Trump doesn't want to have to deal with a Democratic Congress, especially a
Democratic House, meaning that they're not just pushing Texas, but they're pushing Florida and
Indiana and Missouri. I mean, this is absolutely insane to see it's basically the quasi-legal version
of stop the steal. But instead of trying to overturn the election after the fact, they're just
trying to rig the election ahead of the time. So that Democrats just don't have enough places
that they can pick up seats to flip the house. Now, Democrats are going to respond and we'll see what
happens. But I basically think if there's a gerrymandering arms race, Republicans are going to win
because they control more states. They're just more Ruth as in general, but they control more
states, even if every state was as Ruth as is California. And they said, well, if Texas is going to
pick up five seats, we're going to fight back with five seats. That can only happen in so many
Democratic states because Democrats both have moved to ban gerrymandering in ways that Republicans
haven't, but also there's fewer states under Democratic control than there are states under
Republican control. So Republicans are going to win this fight. And then, of course,
there's all sorts of other things the president is doing. From passing a national voter
suppression bill, they're trying to still get through the courts in other states,
to killing protections against election security,
to going after their political opponents,
to taking over the courts and not just as the U.S. Supreme Court, but lower courts.
I mean, there's so many different parts of this strategy
that gerrymandering is just the most concrete way it's playing out right now.
Do you have a sense of why the Department of Justice
is requesting voter rolls from a lot of blue states,
like Massachusetts and others?
I mean, what is your take on what they're doing there?
Well, I think it's pretty similar to what they tried to do when Trump had his first.
If you remember, quote, unquote, election integrity commission after the 2016 election,
when he claimed three million people voted illegally in California and cost him the popular vote,
it was headed by Mike Pence, but the functional head of it was the vice chair, Chris Kobach,
who was secretary of state of Kansas, someone who I wrote a lot about.
And they requested voter data on all 50 states.
They got very negative responses from the states.
The Secretary of State of Mississippi most famously told him to jump in the Gulf of Mexico
when it was still called the Gulf of Mexico.
And that's when you still had some elements of the Republican Party willing to stand up to the Trump
administration.
But I think the end goal there was to try to get this massive database to try to prove that
there was some kind of fraud on a massive scale.
And then to file lawsuits.
that would both try to remove people from the roles, but also to further this narrative of fraud.
And I think that's what the Justice Department is trying to do.
They're trying to get this data so they can run it through all this federal databases to say,
hey, see, we finally have the evidence that non-citizens are voting, that this isn't a hoax that's real.
Even though everyone knows it's an incredibly small, if not minuscule problem,
that it makes no rational sense why someone who is here illegally would want to vote and risk deportation and worse just to cast a ballot.
But nonetheless, I think they're trying to do this.
And I also think they're going to try to file these lawsuits and say, states need to more aggressively purge their voter rolls.
And so that will lead to people being removed from the rolls.
But I think ultimately, it's going to be more of a PR tactic.
So Trump can further do things to not just restrict voting, but also boost his immigration crackdown as well.
I was going to say, we saw them purge voter rolls with names of convicted felons.
And if, you know, Eliezer Rodriguez went to prison, they would say, well, Edward Rodriguez,
we're going to challenge your right to vote. If, you know, Ben Smith,
went to prison and they see that like, oh, you know, Brian Smith, well, it's B, B, different address,
but we're going to challenge your right to vote. I mean, that's what they would go ahead and do.
Exactly. I mean, people get removed from the voting rolls all the time. If they've died, if they've moved,
if there's good solid data on it. The problem with the kind of voter perjures that the Trump
administration wants to do is they want to do it based on.
bad data.
Right, as sloppy as they can.
Sloply as they can.
And they're running it through databases that are not designed for this purpose.
So they're taking Homeland Security databases that are not meant to be used for voting purposes.
They're taking these databases.
They're running people through it.
And the problem of these databases is they're not accurate.
They don't often say whether someone has naturalized.
So this happened in Texas, for example.
Texas claimed all these people a few years back were illegally on the voting rolls that needed to be
purge. And then when people took a closer look at it, it turned out it was full of naturalized
citizens who at one point in time had told the state they were non-citizens. They were,
most of them were legal non-citizens, but they had then become in the process they'd become
naturalized citizens. But the Texas data didn't have that. So being able to say, being able
to go on Fox News, being able to go on X, being able to push this lie that non-citizens are
voting has a lot of benefits for the Trump administration. It allows them to push for states
to remove people from the voter rolls. And it also allows them to further this crackdown on
immigration. And they clearly want to make this a central issue in the midterms. This idea that
Democrats are defending people who are here illegally in all sorts of different ways. And
Republicans are trying to remove them. Now, I think Trump's general handling of immigration has become a
more popular than it was the beginning of his presidency. But I still think they feel like they want to
make this. Remember, in 2018, there was the caravan of people that were coming. They want to do this.
And they want to do this on as many fronts as they can. And this is part of the larger strategy here,
the larger nativist strategy they have. And so that's one of the things that Justice Department is
doing. And I think that what we're going to see as the midterms get closer is that the Justice
Department is basically going to be the weaponization arm of the Trump administration. It already has been
become that, but I think it's going to be that with regards to elections, that so many of the things
they want to do vis-a-vis elections to interfere in the midterms they're going to do through
the Justice Department. Even the gerrymandering in Texas was kicked off by a Justice Department
letter, which is sort of gone under the radar a little bit, but Texas Republicans weren't
going to call this special session. And I think Trump convinced them to do so. But they needed some
sort of pretext to do it. And the pretext that they came up with was the Justice Department
and sent this letter saying that four districts that were all represented by black or Hispanic
Democrats violated the Voting Rights Act, making the kind of argument against the voting rights
act that we were talking about earlier. Now, it was a laughable letter, but then it was cited
as by the governor of Texas as the reason to call this special session. Now, of course, lots of
Republicans have come out and said, subsequently, we're doing this to help Trump. Trump himself said
we're entitled to five seats. So that letter has been totally discredited, but that
is nonetheless the legal pretext they use to kick this whole gerrymandering spree off.
And so I would imagine you're going to see that kind of election interference on steroids
by the Justice Department as we get closer to the midterms.
Let's just, you know, as we wrap this up, I'm curious as to your take, because I don't
know that we've talked, certainly not in a couple of months.
and Trump number two is much more in my perspective, like, well, certainly far more planned out.
I mean, you allude to it in your piece of Mother Jones.
I mean, the Project 2026, Project 2025 was multiple years in the making by people who, despite their disdain for government, had at least some, and it's still not.
a great grasp on how
sort of the bureaucracy works, but
enough that
when you're going in just with a wrecking ball,
you don't need to
have the
specific knowledge you might if you were
trying to build something.
But I'm curious
as to your take on how
it's going for them, because
I have to say, the
pace of authoritarianism,
and it does
feel like Trump is very
very desperate to be able to have more than just the two years they have accomplished in my estimation
a lot in just eight months i mean very bad things and again it's been destructive and that's a lot
easier to do but they have started to figure out how to work around the courts it feels like
the supreme court is now sort of like gaining the confidence to be able to sort of like unleash this
and there's an awareness, we have a special opportunity right now to really, in our perspective,
probably derail the country.
But this is sort of like, you know, the great deconstruction in many respects.
And what's your, what are your thoughts more broadly speaking on this?
Well, I think that two things can be true, which is whatever Trump wanted to do,
is falling apart at I think the pace that we thought it would, meaning he is becoming more
personally unpopular. His policies are unpopular. His handling of every major issue is underwater.
That is not that surprising. But on the flip side, his push for authoritarianism is gaining speed
every single day and has been remarkably effective and has been quicker and more aggressive
and more successful than I think even many of his critics, including myself, maybe expected that.
We went into thinking, oh, man, like, Trump, too, is going to be bad.
And, like, it's even worse than I think a lot of us thought it would be.
And I think because it's been such a flood-the-zone strategy that even if the Supreme Court,
let's say they, I still think they agree, let's say they agree with nine of the ten things
or eight of the ten things that Trump does, which I think is probably about the ratio if you looked at
it. They, even if they lose on two or three things, they're winning on so many things that it's
hard to keep track of. And I think that's kind of like where we're out with elections right now,
is that like, yeah, they might lose in court here. They might feel to do this. But they're,
they're succeeding on so many fronts. And, you know, they're opening. Like, so, like, I started this
article, right? And I started in the summer. And I look, there's a section on gerrymandering. And,
like I said, it's an update online in the magazine, a section on gerrymandering. And we said,
Ohio's going to redistrict and the White House is putting pressure on Texas, right? That's where
things were at in June of 26. Well, now it's August. And about half a dozen Republican-controlled
states are being told explicitly by the White House. You need to redistrict. So, like, in the span of
two months, we went to like one or two states that were considering this to more than half a dozen. And
that's just how it is for everything, it seems. And it's just, it's really difficult to try to
figure out how to counteract things when you feel like you've won one battle and then a million
other fronts emerge. And that's, that's my worry here is that everyone says, oh, wait until the
elections, right? Wait until November. And it's like, well, what if. Well, wait for a year from
November. I mean, it was this November. And it's like, okay, well, what if, what if, because of all
things that happen, there is no accountability in November. And they say, wait until 2028. Well, then
what happens in 2028? I mean, like, I do think that it's basically impossible for Trump to
remain in office absent changing the Constitution. But then you start to see how all these things
are normalized. And it's like, will he leave? What will they do? All this kind of stuff.
And even, like, let's say he does leave and let's say there is a Democrat who takes over.
Like, what will America look like at that point?
Like for a Democrat to be able to get in and do anything about it.
And so, yeah, I mean, it's very chilling to where we're at.
The only thing that gives me a little bit of hope is that it seems like so obvious what he's doing and it also seems unpopular what he's doing.
So maybe there's some kind of resistance to it.
But I feel like the whole project that they have is how do we insulate ourselves,
whatever kind of political backlash we might face it may be a personal a predisposition of mind but when
the law firms caved and we've seen a lot of universities cave um and businesses cave to trump i
mean that there was no that a lot of that was pretty frictionless uh relatively speaking and um
and also indicative of like sort of the party discipline uh within the high
House. I mean, to me, that is the most important thing about 2026. I don't know if Democrats are going to be able to
actually do anything, but the indication that they can lose, I think is very important by following
Trump is an important sort of lesson for a lot of these people to learn, at least in terms of
slowing the role. But what happens if Democrats get into power in 2028 is a completely different
ballgame and what is going to be necessary for them to do?
to, I think it's going to have to be a fairly radical change.
There is no going back to what the status quo was.
I think, you know, eight months out, it already looks like a distant blip on the horizon.
One can only imagine where we're going to be in twice the amount of time that's already passed.
So we'll see.
But this is a great piece.
I encourage everybody to read it.
It's going to come out in a probably.
a week or two from when we're talking now, but keep your eyes open and that Mother Jones
for Ari Berman's piece entitled Project 2026, Trump's plan to half the next election or hijack
the next election. And of course, we'll find out more about their assault on the Voting Rights
Act. Ari Berman, always a pleasure. Thanks, man. I appreciate the conversation.
We are back, and we are back, and we are back.
And we have Brandon Sutton.
about to head into the fun half. Hello, Brandon. How are you? I'm doing well, Emma. How are you doing?
I am doing well. What's happening over on the discourse? Well, this week, we started a new segment on the
discourse that I've been calling DUI hard, where we watched the body cam footage of cops being
arrested by other cops for drunk driving. Oh, that's great. And if you haven't watched these videos,
I would highly recommend watching them
either through my stream
as your vehicle or on your own
because there are tons of them
and they all hit.
They all hit pretty hard.
Did you say DUI hard?
Yeah, DUI hard.
Because is it mainly for like cops with DUIs?
No, it's cops arresting other cops
one body can like live.
Exclusively.
Right.
Yeah, and let me tell you,
they can get pretty drunk
and get behind the wheel.
A cop?
No.
Yeah.
And wait.
Yeah, no. How much, how many different clips can you find of this kind of thing? Like, I guess there would, it's pretty voluminous, but. I had to stop. I had to stop because we had like just multiple streams full of clips. The part where they're forced to do like the, the part where they're forced to do like the sobriety test where they walk like a line, those are extra special. I enjoy those. So yeah, definitely check those out on your own if you're having a hard day. If you're feeling like, you know, if you're feeling a little stressed about the times we live in, I would definitely recommend checking.
out the discourse with Brandon Sutton on YouTube or on Twitch, or, you know, just like
Googling DUI cop arrest on body cam and like, you know, getting yourself a glass of wine
and having a good evening. That sounds like the perfect evening. Just don't drive after because
you're not a police office. Yeah. So you don't know how to do it safely, allegedly.
Good point. I don't watch when you're driving either. Exactly.
A lot of good points. We have Matt Binder. Hello, Map Binder.
Uh, muted.
Hey, how are you?
There we go.
There we go.
How are you?
What's happening in your neck of the woods?
Sure.
So tonight, leftist mafia 8.30 p.m. Eastern Time at YouTube.com slash Matt Binder.
Also, if you haven't already, don't forget to subscribe to the newsletter at
Disruptionist.com.
All right.
Matt, what's happening on Left Reckoning?
Uh, yeah, left reckoning.
talk on Nordic socialism
and they talk on
different types of poisonings
you can get
if you sign up
to be a member of
America's enlisted service
check that out
and we'll have a Sunday show
maybe talking about
some of this dark money
floating around
the dem partisan
independent
media space
David Packman
Patreon.com
just left reckoning
to get that on
for our Sunday show.
All right,
we will head
to the fun half in just a second. Leftist rage, though, says DUI Heart has been an absolute joy
to my life. Brandon, so you're bringing joy to people. How does that feel? I mean, look, I don't
think I'm bringing joy to people. I think this is sort of like a bizarreo situation where police
officers are, you know, hurting themselves to bring joy to the American people, which, you know,
I like to think, like, and this might sound like anti-revolutionary, but if I were allowed, like,
to have my cop beat only arresting and administering sobriety test to other drunk driving
cops, I think I would also be seduced into the badge. So, I mean, I guess it's really,
it's helping us develop empathy for police officers. Maybe I can't, I'll figure it out.
Yeah. So is there a reason they're never arrested other cops for like domestic violence?
Is that just like allowed? Well, so I think what happens a lot with the DUIs is that they get calls
from other people about a car acting erratically.
And the way that body cameras and dash cams work now on police vehicles,
because they oftentimes get up to a lot of like untoward things when they're not being
recorded is that like when the car siren goes on, the dash cam comes on.
And it's also able to record like prior, in some cases prior to even being turned on by
nature of how it works and also keeps recording after it's turned off.
And so a lot of times they start chasing the cop that's driving erratically,
without realizing they're a cop.
And then they confront them with the body cam on before they realize their police officer.
And then, you know, then it's you versus me.
And the police officers are not going to, like, put themselves out for another police officer in that case.
Because, you know, it's not like shooting a black person.
That's pretty amazing.
Yeah, right. Yeah. Who cares then?
All right.
Well, check it out.
Check out the discourse and all the good stuff here.
We will head into the fun half.
Don't think we'll take calls today because I got to jump a little bit early for an appointment, but don't worry, barely early.
We'll read your IMs, and we will have some fun with clips.
I mean, everyone's begging us to get into the Friedland thing.
Maybe we'll just kick off the fun half with that.
See you on the other side.
Okay, Emma, please.
Well, I just, I feel that my voice is sorely lacking in the majority report.
Wait, look, Sam was unpopular.
I do deserve a vacation at Disney World.
So, ladies and gentlemen, it is my pleasure to welcome Emma to the show.
It is Thursday.
Well, I think you need to take over for Sam, but that's cool.
Sir, I'm gonna, I'm gonna pause you right there.
Wait, what?
You can't encourage Emma to live like this.
And I'll tell you why.
So it's offered a twerk, sushi, and poker with the boys.
Twerk, sushi and poker with the boys.
Who's offered a twerk?
Yeah.
Sushi and poker with the boys.
What?
Twirl.
Sushi and poker
Tim's upset
Twerp
Sushi and poker with the boys
It was offered a twirn, sushi and
That's what we call
Bids
Twerp
Sushi and poker with the boys
Right
Twerp
We're gonna get demonetized
I just think that what you did to Tim Poole
Was mean
Free speech
That's not what we're about here
Look at how sad he's become now
You shouldn't even talk about it
I think you're responsible
I probably am in a certain way
but let's get to the meltdown here.
So I'm not trying to be a dick right now, but, like, I absolutely think the U.S. should be providing me with a wife and kids.
That's not what we're talking about here.
It's not a fun job.
That's a real thing.
That's a real thing.
Willie Walker.
That's a real thing.
That's a real thing.
That's a real thing.
That's a real thing.
That's a real thing.
A real thing.
That's a real thing.
Ladies and gentlemen, Joe Rogan has done it again.
Sam, that's a real fit.
That's that poker with the boy.
I think he might be blowing it out proportion.
Real fit.
That's got poker with the boys.
Offered a twerk.
That's a real thing.
That's a poker.
Let's go, Joe.
Dwerp.
Sushi and poker with the boy.
Take it easy.
Dwork.
Sushi and poker.
Things have really gotten out of hands.
Sushi and poker with the boys.
It's elusible.
You don't have a clue as to what's going on.
Live YouTube.
Sam has like the way of the world on the shoulders.
Hogger!
Sam doesn't want to do this show.
show anymore. It was
so much easier. One of the
majority report was just you.
You were happy. Let's change the subject.
Rangers and Nick's doing great.
Now, shut it up. Don't want people saying reckless
things on your program. That's one of the
most difficult parts of this show.
This is a pro-killing podcast.
I'm thinking maybe it's kind of we bury the hatchet.
Left is best.
Trump. Violet twerk.
Don't be foolish. And don't fucking
clean at me and don't get changed.
The way Emma has cucked all these people
love it. That's where my heart is.
So I wrote my honor's thesis about it.
Oh, she wrote an honest thesis.
I guess I should hand the main mic to you now.
You are to the right on the unslow policy.
We already fund Israel, dude.
Are you against us?
That's a tougher question.
I haven't answered.
Incredible theme song.
I'm bumblers.
Emma Viglin, absolutely one of my favorite people.
Actually, not just in the game, like, period.
Thank you.