The Megyn Kelly Show - Absurd New Resistance Efforts for Trump Address, and Dems Vote Against Protecting Women's Sports, with the Fifth Column | Ep. 1018
Episode Date: March 4, 2025Megyn Kelly is joined by Kmele Foster, Michael Moynihan, and Matt Welch, co-hosts of The Fifth Column podcast, to discuss how the Democrats' resistance for Trump’ upcoming address to Congress includ...es empty egg crates, noise makers, and “p” hats, the absurdity of the response to Trump so far, whether Democrats will even show up for the speech, the Trump tariffs hitting Canada and Mexico now, what the effect will be on Americans, every Senate Democrat voting against protecting women's sports from men, real stories of girls getting hurt by biological men, how the issue is no longer political and supported by 80% of Americans, the bizarre “Resistance choir” singing about DOGE, how a TikToker turned herself into Zelensky with make-up, what happens next between Trump and Zelensky after the Oval Office blow-up, what went wrong and the criticisms of both of leaders, Chuck Todd trashing Biden on a podcast, the corporate media finally telling the truth about Biden's cognitive fitness and decline, and more.More from The Fifth Column: https://www.wethefifth.com/Ancient Nutrition: Enjoy 25% off your first order at https://AncientNutrition.com/MEGYNFYSI: https://FYSI.com/Megyn or call 800-877-4000Just Thrive: Visit https://justthrivehealth.com/discount/Megyn and use code MEGYN to save 20% sitewideXX-XY Athletics: Go to https://TheTruthFits.com and use code MK20 for 20% off!Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Transcript
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at noon east.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show. It is the first big
President Trump address tonight since taking office. Not that he hasn't been making news
on a daily basis since his inauguration 43 days ago.
Overnight, he paused all military aid going to Ukraine, for now at least. And those tariffs on
Canada and Mexico officially took effect, plus he hiked the ones on China by another 10%.
Those stories both could evolve throughout the day today, and there might be announcements
coming tonight during the speech.
There's probably going to be something up his sleeve, something big to announce.
We'll find out.
The theme of the president's speech tonight, the renewal of the American dream.
Democrats were told in closed-door meetings Monday night to avoid using props to disrupt Mr. Trump's speech.
What did they have in mind? But an Axios report details the wide array of disruptions Democrats may deploy, including hand clappers.
Oh my God. Please let that happen. Doge signs and empty egg cartons. Joining me now today
for the full show are friends from
the Fifth Column Podcast, Camille Foster of Freethink, Michael Moynihan, whose two-way show,
The Moynihan Report, launches later this month, and Matt Welsh of Reason Magazine. You can find
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Welcome back, guys. So like the hand clappers that you have like on New Year's, like the little the little plastic things you get.
What is a hand?
What is a hand clapper?
I just aren't your hands for clapping.
I mean, we've gone from you lie to President Obama to people bringing in air horns like they're at a goddamn FIFA game.
Like what is happening here?
This is ridiculous.
That was the you lie thing was the most controversial
thing of like a month.
We were in a more innocent country back
then. More innocent country. It's all
like professional wrestling all the way down
from now on. Empty
egg cartons? Like, literally
they were in charge of everything
up until, what,
six weeks ago. Who is
that going to persuade?
See, I think what they have to do
is bring the chicken coop cage
after the comments yesterday
from the Trump administration.
Like, just get your own chickens in the backyard.
That's not going to be a problem.
Or maybe a sugar maple tap
so that we can all have maple syrup now.
I mean, I like, this can't be, this cannot
be the plan. I realize they don't have Nancy Pelosi position behind president Trump anymore
because she's not speaker of the house. It'll be Republican Mike Johnson and JD Vance, but like,
there's going to have to be something better. I mean, what we're hearing is
some are going to know show. And then they said to the ones, I guess the leadership was saying,
no, you should show up, but you should bring somebody should bring somebody who will make
a point. Well, by the way, like, is that a thing? I don't remember like the Congress members ever
bringing a guest. Isn't it just the president who brings a guest and puts them up in the first
lady's box? Or is it a thing for all the congressmen to do it? The Congress people have
been bringing, they usually have a one spot
and they will do theatrical things.
Thomas Massey brought someone last year, I forget who,
but it was kind of on some point.
I think the problem is that Democrats are just not as good
at like troll culture as Republicans.
And I don't say that necessarily
as a compliment to Republicans.
I kind of wish that we would go to a different place in our governing universe than trolling all the time. But Democrats,
what did they do? They all wore white a couple of years ago or several times in the past. I
wouldn't be surprised to see some kind of handmaid's tale thing. There was talk of like,
oh, they're going to bring a fired government, a federal employee to sit next to them. And
I might, you know, if I knew more
federal employees, I might know someone that would be personally sad about. But like, this is just
not going to resonate with anyone really like, oh, my God, they fired a fired federal employee.
That's not really going to get the job done. Oh, and by the way, there's talk about some of this
literally was in one of the reports today, about wearing the pink pea hats.
Some are going to wear the pink pea hats. I mean, yes, that's in one of the reports today.
I don't know what anybody will be dumb enough to do it.
What does the pea stand for? I don't remember.
That's the one word I don't say. I say them all, almost all.
Oh, really?
It's a short list of ones I won't say.
Oh, wow. Okay. I'll be sure not to say it.
I don't know, it's just so like aggressive and they use a lovely lady part and they turn it
into something like aggressively vulgar. And I just, I declined to participate.
Well, I want to agree with you on one thing. It is a lovely lady part, but I want to continue and
say that, um, that the most amazing thing to me is we have these conversations and you see them with,
you know, bozos like Steve Schmidt and Chuck Todd about, you know, the president's age and
should Jake Tapper write this book and Biden, blah, blah, blah. We shouldn't have done this.
We shouldn't have done that. Donald Trump is giving Democrats a lot of openings. It doesn't
matter if you agree with them or not. There's just a lot of openings because there's a lot happening.
What are they doing in response? I mean, where is the political strategy here? We're going to have
like noisemakers and we're going to throw egg crates. And like, what are you talking about?
Seriously, you've had the time now to assimilate this defeat from November. Notice, by the way,
that Donald Trump is actually keeping his promises in an aggressive way, some of which I agree with
and some of which I agree with and some of which
I don't. But, you know, the way in which he's handling it, you know, Elon Musk, all this stuff,
there's so many openings. I see people burning Tesla chargers in towns that are, you know,
one away from where I grew up. But I don't see I don't see a lot of strategy when it comes to
policy and when when it comes time to fighting back. I mean, you notice MSNBC, they're like, all right, we're going to get rid of Joy Reid. And then we're going to replace her
with another Joy Reid. Right. And this is like all these people. It's like the exact same strategy
you guys had for the previous Trump administration and the previous four years of Joe Biden in which
you fought the future Trump administration. I mean, I don't I don't see any strategy here
from Democrats whatsoever. They don't have one.
The most they've come up with is organizing like move on to send some nasty protesters
to some of these Republican town halls to make it seem like Republicans and are very
mad at Republicans.
And maybe there are some Republicans.
But for the most part, these are Democrat operatives showing up at Republican town halls
to yell at them.
Yes.
OK, hold on.
This is Politico.
Let me see. Where is it? Politico. Large scale disruption is still unlikely tonight.
Some lawmakers have privately discussed walking out as an entire caucus during the speech or wearing pink hats in protest, but there's less enthusiasm for such demonstrations
than in the past years.
Camille, they just can't get excited
about wearing all white or wearing the pink pea hats tonight.
Maybe there will be a couple of brave souls who will do it.
We'll have to tune in to find out.
Do you think that's really going to move the electorate
in favor of their party?
I think bringing back the pink hats
is about the only chance that they have tonight.
And they just should find the strength within themselves to get those things someplace. I'm
sure that the Trump administration would be trembling with fear if he had to stare into
the gallery and saw nothing but a sea of pink hats again. I mean, they are flailing. They are
flailing at a time when they really ought to be getting their stuff together. they're not airing conspiracy
theories about the worst possible imaginable thing that Elon Musk is imagined to be doing with Doge.
They're just utterly quiet. It's just very, very strange. There are a plethora of things that they
could be talking about and that they could be agitating about. I think the president has had
any number of important victories, but he's also done lots of things that they could actually be out in the field criticizing.
And they're just not doing a great job in opposition.
No, they're not.
And so here I knew you were coming.
So we checked out The View today.
And here was their recommendation for how their team should handle tonight's address.
I think they should walk out en masse.
Naked or clothed?
Naked or clothed.
I mean, they should walk out, you know.
Boys, they're going to be a laugh track, by the way.
I think they should walk out.
I think that a picture is worth a thousand words.
It would be joy to a certain extent.
I actually don't think that they should show up at all.
Okay, I'll go with that too.
I think that when history resurfaces the photos of this first speech in this abnormal
presidency, he said he was gonna be a dictator from day one.
And we warned about the
demise of our democracy and the rise of fascism. And I think we've seen it in the first days of
his presidency. I think the record will show that the room was half empty.
Wow. Okay. There's a proposal.
I mean, that is with the absolute worst advice.
Like fascism is on the rise.
It's on the march and we didn't show up.
That is the advice.
So we ran.
Incredible.
But also for the idea that maybe Chuck Schumer will be naked.
So just like have that in your brain.
Is that reaping the whirlwind he talked about?
Because that really would make me behave differently.
You mentioned Jasmine Crockett.
Can I just give you a word on her?
There were all sorts of reactions to the Zelensky-Trump Oval Office meeting.
Hers began as follows.
In short, bullies ain't shit.
Bullies ain't shit.
Wow. Bullies ain't shit. Bullies ain't shit.
That qualifies as her, I guess, sophisticated political analysis from an elected elected representatives.
Bullies ain't shit.
Oh, OK.
Thank you.
Congresswoman Cardi B.
Yeah, that's great.
Cardi B would be a little bit more eloquent.
But she might make it rhyme.
I don't know.
But yeah, that's the level of political discourse.
I mean, I do think Trump, he's got an opportunity tonight because usually at this point, the reason they don't call it a state of the union address is because when it's your first year in office,
you've only been there for a few weeks and you usually haven't gotten anything done.
And my God, not the case at all. I mean, just the Lake and Riley act would be reason enough to hold this address and get into the specifics of what's happened at the border.
You know, the reports are and Trump has been saying that the numbers are down more than 100 percent at the border.
The latest is that we're down 94 percent of crossings at the border.
I mean, it was like almost 200,000 a month this time last year, and it's down to 8,000 a month this year. I mean, it's incredible what he's, he has sealed up the border almost as much
as is humanly possible, but there's so much beyond the executive order. This is just an extraordinary
presidency so far in terms of volume and the number of things that, you know, some might have
predicted this older, perhaps tired second
go at it president could possibly get done.
He's governing like his life depends on it with the number of things going on.
So I think it's actually going to feel and sound very much like a victory speech.
Like here are all the things we've already delivered on for you and it will be a substantial
list.
So what do you guys think?
I mean, always remember when you're talking about city, the union addresses that, um, 90% of it
will be forgotten within a week. And, uh, including many of the, uh, promises that are made about
what's going to happen in the future. If you look back at 2017, Trump's first one, uh, he, uh, had
nice words to say about Justin Trudeau. He says, you know, we support NATO strongly.
And he bragged a lot about how the stock market had done since his election. So I don't think
we're going to see either of those or any of those discussed in great detail. And they spend most of
the time talking about how they're going to repeal Obamacare and replace it with something,
which didn't happen. Not all at his hands. But it's so we're going to hear things like that
that don't really matter that much. And we're doing it on a day where we started a trade war.
This is a much more consequential single-day policy than almost anything he did last time around.
And I'm sure if Michael Moynihan is glancing down furiously at his desk, he's watching his stock portfolio continue to be massacred.
Today is not the day for that.
Today's super not the day. Yesterday wasn't either.
Trump thought that that was going to be something to tout, right? I mean, he made the deadline
for them to do. It wasn't really clear exactly what he wanted them to do in Canada and Mexico
in order not to be subjected to these tariffs right before this address. So clearly Trump
wanted to use that in his speech tonight.
And he said, well, they haven't accomplished enough. But again, it was kind of unclear what
exactly are they supposed to do? We realized that, you know, the border's not secure because
of Mexico. And he's still complaining about the amount of fentanyl that's coming across it. Yes,
I think everybody agrees. There were some stats around that where that were very bad in terms of
bus we just made. And it's coming across the Canadian border. And that's the reason.
Some of it is coming across the Canadian border.
But I think he's more upset about the trade deficit with Canada,
and that's why he's punishing them.
It remains unclear.
Trump hasn't said specifically, here are your sins,
at least not as much with respect to Canada.
He keeps pointing to, yes, fentanyl, but also trade deficit.
So now they're each facing 25% tariffs.
He's come up with six different rationales for Canada. Well, anyway, so let's talk about it, because he's very happy about it, and he
clearly thinks he's going to, A, get money for the United States from doing this. He points out that,
like, Canada's got all these banks in the United States, but not a single American bank is allowed
in Canada. How's that fair, right? Like, just these basic things that, frankly frankly people can understand. They're like, you're right. There is a bank from Canada down
the road. Why can't we have this sort of basic fairness is what Trump's going for.
You guys as libertarians are not big fans of tariffs. We had a conversation when Trump first
announced that he might slap 10% tariffs across the board months and months and months ago.
And now he's done it. It's not
10% across the board, but these are big old tariffs on two of our so-called friends. So
what do you make of them? I mean, they're huge tariffs. This is the time for him to tout them
today. He should do it today because the tail of this is not going to look good for him.
And we already see this echoing out into, you know,
certain input costs. I mean, we've seen a lot of numbers in this. The Wall Street Journal has been
covering this pretty, pretty closely, is that in anticipation of these tariffs, the input costs
for a lot of things, a lot of American manufacturing have gone through the roof.
You have also seen a lot of Republican congressmen, Republican senators talking both
off the record and on the record that they're really fearful of what this is going to do,
particularly in agriculture, because we always think about this as an export thing only. I mean,
import thing only. We want to put barriers up because someone's being unfair to us and we will
reap the benefits. Remember, Donald Trump says that the tariffs are going to pay for
themselves on their own. The most lovely word in the English language, according to Donald Trump,
is tariff. So why would you ever take them down? Why would you ever use them as leverage? Why not
just keep them in forever if they're so consequential to the American economy and in a
positive way? I mean, there's literally no economists that you can find that believe that trade is a net negative. They think it's a net positive that has some sort of factors that
aren't great that you have to account for, you know, the hollowing out of certain American
industries that was kind of inevitable in any case. But there was some consequences of free
trade. But on net, it is a very, very positive thing for the American consumer. And when you see people like American farmers, they export so much stuff in this is going to
really hit their bottom line and they're worried about it. And a lot of Trump has suggested it
might. Yeah. And Ron Johnson was talking about it in and these are much more consequential tariffs
than the first time around. So I think that, you know, the Wall Street Journal had an editorial the other day that
said it was, you know, we're again back to the dumbest tariffs of all time.
We'll see.
They do not look good for the American consumer.
And we are going to take a hit.
It's just going to happen.
It's just a matter of how much can, you know, the American voter and consumer take of this
and how much will they blame Donald Trump in the
law room? Just FYI, this is what the White House put out on a fact sheet on its tariffs to justify
the tariffs in part. I'm bringing this part up because it mentions more about Canada.
A recent study recognized Canada's heightened domestic production of fentanyl and its growing
footprint within international narcotics distribution. Canada-based
drug trafficking organizations maintain robust super labs, mostly in rural and dense areas in
Western Canada, some of which can produce 44 to 66 pounds of fentanyl weekly. Last year's northern
border fentanyl seizures, though smaller than Mexico's, could kill 9.5 million Americans due
to the drug's potency. Proof of Canada's growing role in this crisis, fentanyl seizures at the
northern border in the first four months of the fiscal year are quickly closing in
on what was seized the entirety of fiscal year 2022. Both nations' failure to arrest traffickers,
seize drugs, or coordinate with U.S. law enforcement constitutes an unusual and
extraordinary threat to America's security. Do you think President Trump wants them to step up crackdown on fentanyl and greater
crackdowns on the border?
Or do you think President Trump wants to extract the 25 percent penalty?
Like, which one is the better result in his mind?
I think the answer is yes.
And I would also point out that that White House press release, if you look at a map of where those border seizures happened, some of our states that border Canada have a lot of territory south of that border.
And that's where some of those seizures took place.
It wasn't necessarily like border introductions.
The reason that you mentioned fentanyl is that that gives you the national security excuse.
That's why it's not it's not, you know, you this is an emergency declaration. You need some reason for the
emergency. So the emergency with Canada is fentanyl. The emergency in the southern border
is for the cartels. I think it is appropriate to take it as BS, that it's just a fig leaf to
do a thing that Trump wants to do. And that's also illustrated by the fact that it's one of a half a dozen.
You mentioned banks, and there are U.S. banks that operate in Canada, including retail,
but not in every single sector.
And there is protectionism associated with that.
But Trump has also mentioned the amount that Canada puts into NATO.
There have been a whole number of different rationales for this.
I think the best way to understand what Trump wants to do with tariffs is that Trump wants
to do tariffs. He modeled himself after William McKinley. He likes to call himself tariff man,
all of these things. He truly believes that we can swap the federal income tax with the tariff
system, as was indeed the case in America between 1870 and 1913. So let's do that all over again.
It can't happen because the president can do the
tariffs, but cannot necessarily do the tax reform exactly the way that he wants to do it. That has
to go through Congress. But he really, truly believes this. And so he's going to, because
precisely his second administration is a lot more lubricated. It's just going. It is getting things
done in a way that the first administration is on. You'll see the rhetoric associated with his first State of the Union, much different than his first, as you rightly pointed out, Megan. But one of the things that he has wanted to do for a really long time is tariffs. And so that's why they are done. I don't think, the economic argument is a lot harder. So if you're making the argument that it's about fentanyl, like, look, no one in their
right mind is going to say, great, we want more fentanyl coming. I mean, we I think we could all
agree that, you know, Canada, Mexico, a more aggressive stance towards, you know, drugs that
are killing a huge number of people coming across the border is a good thing. Can you negotiate that
in a way that doesn't punish, you know, American consumers? I mean, we saw today right before we started this,
that Ontario slapped on a 25 percent tariff on electricity that they delivered to almost
two million households in Michigan. They promised that they would and now they've done it.
And now they've done it. And, you know, that's an immediate thing that people feel in their pocketbook. Is that a long term good? I mean, what is the negotiation here? I mean, is it is this for American manufacturing? I just can't even I mean, is it for fentanyl? It seems like a very, very, you know, slapdash willy nilly policy. But I think people are going to feel really quickly. So that's why I said, you know, mentioning it tonight. Well, have you looked, I confess I haven't looked at how bad the trade deficit is between the United
States and Canada or the United States and Mexico. I know it was very bad between the United States
and China, which is why they got, in addition to the Trump put on tariffs in his first term,
which the Democrats ripped, but then Joe Biden kept in place and most economists actually wound
up defending them. And then he came back into office and slapped another 10 percent on China.
And now just last night slapped another 10 percent on China.
But there's no question that there's a massive trade deficit between China and us.
I don't know what it is between us and Canada and us in Mexico, but I'm sure there's a basic fairness argument to be made.
You can also talk to most economists who don't believe trade deficits are even a thing
that matters.
I mean, that ultimately it is a benefit to American consumers either way.
I mean, that if there's some equalization is, and again, this is, you know, something
that I believe myself, but I am not an economist and should probably talk to an economist about
this, but that is a widely held view that trade deficits are not something that is like an actual deficit, which is another thing that we have to pay attention to at the moment.
Well, I mean, I guess we should know the answers to these.
And maybe President Trump will fill in some of these blanks at a speech tonight and defend why he thinks these are necessary.
But I, for one, am willing to see how it goes. I think if the economy really starts tanking and large swaths of the American economic machine start hurting, Trump
will do something. I mean, that is really what he prides himself on more than anything, is his
being a businessman, his cutting deals. And Trump in particular is not going to look at a suffering
stock market for very long and say, I won't do anything. He'll do, he will do something. He's just, that's the thing about
Trump is he's active. You know, he doesn't just sit back and then go quiet and we see him half
dead on a Rehoboth beach weeks later being wheeled out by his wife. That's, Trump is active. So I
feel like let's give him a shot. He clearly believes in this. Let's see how it goes.
If it turns disastrous, I think he'll, he'll do what's necessary to undo it or make up the losses somehow. Um, I'm willing to hear him out tonight.
Okay. So let's talk about what, like the look of it, as I point out, we're not going to have Nancy
Pelosi behind him. It's going to be Mike Johnson and JD Vance, which will be, I think a pleasure
for most of us. Um, and then you've got the, the guests who are going to be invited to sit in the first lady's, you know, sort of skybox there.
And he is bringing, among other people, Peyton McNabb, the now 19-year-old girl from North Carolina who was slammed so hard in the face by a volleyball by a male pretending to be a female player that she suffered permanent nerve damage and a traumatic
brain injury. I think she's a perfect guest to accompany the president and to be there so he can
make reference to her. Here's the video here. That's Peyton on the right. Sorry, sorry. That's,
that's the male player on the right. And then Peyton is going to get it. Watch. And so the spikes of male players are,
they've been documented like to be far more powerful and with higher velocity than what
any woman can do. And so this girl is a great walking. But since Peyton got injured, there
have been so many young girls who have been injured, who have had trophies stolen from them. And guys, this comes on the heels of yesterday.
Every Democrat in the Senate and both of the so-called independents,
who are also secret Democrats, voting against the Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act.
Every single one, even though this issue has 80% support by the American public to not let boys into
girls sports. It's insane. That alone is a huge winner and winning moment for Trump tonight.
Thoughts? It's clearly a very popular policy nationally. This is perhaps one of the issues
where Donald Trump, especially with respect
to by comparison to Democrats, has just been able to kind of lap his opposition. There are, I think,
plenty of people like weirdo libertarians who have this concern about whether or not the federal
government ought to be getting involved. And it is rather ironic and surprising to hear Democratic
senators making arguments that we have made for years and
years and years on a range of issues that the states and the local government ought to be making
these fundamental decisions about what's happening with specific kind of narrow issues. And this,
in many respects, is a kind of specific and narrow issues. There are particular cases that have risen
to national attention, as you just pointed out. But for the most part, I don't know that most people experience a lot of this stuff in their everyday lives.
And the question that I've asked since Donald Trump's inauguration and the executive order
pertaining to this is whether or not the objective ought to be to try and pass executive orders,
or even to pass a new federal statute that is going to outlaw certain things, as opposed to trying to make certain that there is a kind of neutrality, that universities and
the NCAA aren't trying to push particular values on parents and families and communities and even
players and incentivize things in the way that Joe Biden had before. And now Donald Trump is
essentially trying to reverse that. The reason why you need some sort of federal legislation if you're a conservative
is concerned about these issues is because you know that just doing this with respect to executive
orders, it's going to be tit for tat. As soon as Donald Trump is out of office, someone else is
going to do this. So the question becomes perhaps going for pluralism, perhaps trying to make some
of these things less ideological is a better path forward on a range of issues.
Even a lot of the diversity.
It's very hard because we're trying to take your point state by state experiment and all
that.
But I actually do think it's a civil rights issues issue for girls and for women.
And they they they're already entitled to this protection under the existing law.
It just must be enforced.
But secondly, we've, of course, been through four years of Joe Biden, where he implemented these
so-called reforms into Title IX and policy and his dear friend pressure on universities.
And so Trump has to try to undo it on a national level, both through executive order and Title IX
new guidance, and ideally through a statute
which would stop this pendulum from swinging back and forth and back and forth, and we
could have predictability.
Here is who we need to keep our eyes on, okay?
Because the senators who are from blue states like New York and California are not going
to be punished for their absurd vote.
And keep in mind, they didn't even have the balls to allow a vote. That's what they were
being asked on. Will you vote for cloture, which is where you need 60 votes in the Senate to say
yes. That's it. They just needed to allow this to proceed to the Senate floor for a real vote
and then let majority rule as it always should. They wouldn't. So they affirmatively stopped it because they knew that the Republicans did have
the 53 votes. All 53 Republicans were ready to vote yes on this. And they couldn't get the chance
to because they needed seven Dems to cross over. So here are the true villains, the ones who are
in swing states who must be targeted. I'm begging Elon to use some of his
money and he's 100% with me on this issue. 100% with me. I beg you to use some of your money
to help defeat the following people. Arizona, both of them have to go. Ruben Gallego,
it should have been Carrie Lake anyway. Well, she would have voted the right way.
Mark Kelly, who I liked and who I still have a personal affinity for. I'm sorry, you need to go. If I could wave my
magic wand, you're fired, sir, because you voted the wrong way. Georgia, John Ossoff, who's got a
daughter but doesn't seem to give two shits about what happens to her on the sports field. And
Raphael Warnock, who I think is going soon anyway. Michigan, Gary Peters, Alyssa Slotkin, you have to go too. You didn't show up. You didn't think
it was important enough, even though you're one of the women in the Senate, to show up and support
young girls trying to work their way up the power chain behind you. Nevada, Catherine Cortez Masto,
you too. Jackie Rosen, gone, if I have anything to say about it. Pennsylvania,
fuck you, John Fetterman. You act like you're a man of the people. You're going to look out for the weak. You get it. You don't get shit. You really don't. That part of your brain still
appears to be injured because you're going to let all these little girls go out there
and get a traumatic brain injury. you, of all people who understand
what a brain injury can do, screw you and your working class appeal. You don't get it at all.
And then there's Wisconsin's Tammy Baldwin, who exposed herself as a complete idiot in those
confirmation hearings that I went down to. She was one of the dopiest people we saw up there.
I'm not surprised she landed in the wrong place. But those are swing state Democratic senators who ruined the protection of girls
and women thanks to their votes on this issue. They ought to be targeted and they ought to be
made to pay at the ballot box the next chance we get. I think you need to show more emotion on this. Megan, your pulse is lacking. I think
you're going to go. Definitely. Show me a 16 year old girl with a traumatic brain injury
and permanent paralysis because she's trying to play her high school game. I am. I am angry.
I sure I'm furious with them. I went today and looked for the arguments of the people who voted no um because uh i you know i have a
built-in skepticism of uh legislation in general and then also stuff that appears to be sort of
chasing headlines um first the text of the bill is pretty innocuous it's just like hey look um
people who are born girls should play girls sports uh people who are born boys should play
boys sports and if you receive title nine if you receive federal funding, you won't get it anymore if you don't follow those rules. Pretty simple. I mean,
Trump's executive order was followed and adopted by the NCAA in basically a heartbeat. So it's
already the rule of the land. And I don't see a whole lot of upset associated with that.
So I went and looked at the- There's an asterisk on that, but keep going.
The arguments for it, and there really weren't that many, there wasn't actually the like principled libertarian
arguments against it. It was mostly like, oh, this is just a culture war issue. I think John
Hickenlooper was saying that, uh, it, it affects almost nobody. Um, uh, Fetterman said that, uh,
it's important to show that you're an ally to trans people. Um, and, um, I actually agree that
it's important to show that you're an ally to your, to all I actually agree that it's important to show that you're
an ally to your to all constituents. But I don't know what what a vote on this has anything to do
with that. Honestly, it's like, do you have the legal rights to participate in society? That's
kind of where that goes as far as I'm concerned. And then I think it was Cortez Masto said
something along the lines of if this passes, then, um, all, all girls are going to have
their genitals inspected. Um, and I just don't think that that's really what's going to happen.
Um, I don't think that's what's happening right now in the NCAA.
Can I tell you something, Matt? Let me tell you something in response to that. It's exactly the
opposite because here's what's happening now. I know this because I am the mother of this age
child. You know, I have a 15 and a 13
and 11 year old, and this is where this kind of thing becomes a problem when they're little,
you know, when it's not an issue pre-puberty when they're seven and eight and playing against each
other, there's not a difference so much, a little difference there is, but like, it's not a dangerous
difference between boys and girls at that, at that this is where my kids are, where it does
become an issue. And what's happening now is if you have a gender non-conforming girl who's out
there, let's say on the field hockey field, parents are starting to worry that it's a boy.
Is that a boy? Because there are a lot of moms now who are like, my child
is not playing against a biological boy. It isn't safe. And I object to it. And so now questions get
asked about, is that a girl or is that a boy? Inspect genitals. That's of course hysterical
talk from the left, but they, there are like questions. Is that a boy or is it a girl? And
you're entitled to know as a parent who has a child out there because look at Peyton McNabb. Nobody wants their child to have that
happen to them. Or the girl in Massachusetts who had all of her teeth knocked out on the field,
hockey field by a boy pretending to be a girl, the other team and the trauma to the rest of her
teammates and watching her mouth fall out of her skull, which is what happened with blood everywhere. Fuck you,
John Fetterman and your empathy for the trans people. Where's your empathy for that girl
who has no more teeth in Massachusetts anyway? So if, if we know that boys are not allowed to play
in girls' athletics, of course we will do what we have always done, which is just say
that's a more masculine looking girl. That's maybe it's a lesbian. Maybe it's like a butch lesbian. Fine.
Most women have zero problem with that. We love all women. We love the lesbians. We love the
lipstick kind. We love the butch kind. We don't care. Welcome to the sports. Lead. Be great.
Awesome. But if you have to wonder whether it's secretly a boy, it raises safety and other
concerns that do make you get more not inspecting on the child, but worried and inquisitional and
can lead to awkward, uncomfortable moments for everyone. No, Megan, I think you're making a
really good case. And I will say that, admittedly, I don't follow this issue nearly as closely. My
kids are pretty young. My daughter just turned seven. My son turned three today. And Leah is outclassing most boys her age in every athletic engage. that even the Biden administration had more than entertained the possibility of actually implementing some kind of restrictions on the policies that they were putting forward
in this area because they had the same kinds of concerns that there would be situations
where you'd had a boy who'd gone through puberty who then decided to do some sort of transition
and as a result would have a particularly unfair advantage in certain sports and could
endanger some of their fellow athletes. as a result, would have a particularly unfair advantage in certain sports and could endanger
some of their fellow athletes. So the fact that they're even willing to entertain that sort of
thing does give, I think, some credence to the arguments that are being leveled from the right
right now. And it also suggests that there was probably, and I would imagine continues to be,
a real opportunity to actually get some Democratic support for a piece of legislation that makes
sense to them. As Matt said, the one that does exist seems fairly innocuous, but perhaps there's
a way to actually barter to get something done here, which I think, you know, ultimately getting
the win is far more important, I think, than just having the battle and, you know, losing a close
vote. So maybe they do come back and actually get this done by looking to whatever model intentionally to be as non-controversial as possible, you know,
so that they didn't put all these weird things in there that would allow the Democrats to wiggle
out of it. It's, it's very simple. It's, it's the thing that 80% of the populace supports and
these Dems all voted. No, not one showed. On this subject, before we move on from it,
just this week, this is via The Lion. It's a new media outlet that publishes articles
on news and culture. They reported that in biological male, finished first in the high jump,
the long jump, and the triple jump. The triple jump performance, which I'm about to show to you,
was eight feet further than the runner-up. Eight feet he jumped further than the girl. Watch it.
Wow. And you hear somebody say that's just wrong because they know no girl's going to be able to compete against that.
Here is A.B. Hernandez after the meet.
How are you using all that momentum and just all that energy
to try to put into a great year this year?
I just keep telling myself you are number one and it's yours to lose.
Just the 40-foot, jumping that in the triple,
keeping that consistency with that,
hitting that 40 foot mark.
What's just your expectations for the rest of the year?
Expectations just to keep my phases longer,
push more, work out more, get further,
hopefully hit a 41 this year if it's possible,
preferably at state so that I can possibly win.
Okay, and then I'm just gonna make two other points quickly. That that's why this AB Hernandez
is being allowed to play. Yes. Woke ideology and all that, but also these ridiculous schools who
want, who want wins. There is a school in Westchester. It's a private school and they
fired their athletic director because he was against letting boys onto the girls' teams for
safety and fairness issues. And they wanted boys on the girls' teams because they want to win
the rugby championship or the ice hockey championship. I can't remember which one it was.
Must be ice hockey because rugby's not big here. They want to win the ice hockey championship,
the girls' team. And the more boys
they can put on the team, the better. And here's the second thing. Staying in California,
there's the San Francisco Waldorf girls basketball team. We have covered this team in the past.
They've been dominating thanks to a boy named Harry, who is on the team, who typically averages 20 points a game,
20 points a game. But he was out in the last week of February. And by the way, in January,
he scored 29 points. That was his average. But he did not play in the recent playoff game. And guess what? His team lost by 26 points. They really missed
their biological boy on the team. So this is what girls are up against. You run into these
athletic directors who want the W or the school principal who wants the W at all costs and,
or, you know, extremely woke Californians who are like boys boys or girls, or CBS News, who in reporting on what
happened last night, says as follows. Senate Dems on Monday blocked a measure that sought to ban
transgender girls and women from competing on school sports teams that match their gender
identity. Talk about not phrasing the problem correctly, right? This is what we're up against.
So it's a no. It must be a federal statute. It cannot be a state by state experiment.
We need national legislation. And we while we don't need this on girls teams,
we do need in Congress more people with balls.
Well, some of them don't have balls. Thank you, Camille.
Because they're women. And I believe in those are very rare. And even though you're in
a blue state, this is a pretty clear issue for people when they have girls. I mean, I have
a girl who is just turned 14 years old, is shockingly, when you look at me, an exceptional
athlete and a very competitive athlete. I was just in Florida for a gymnastics meet. I'm all
over the country for them. And,
you know, it was funny when we were in Florida, we went to the meet and it was the only meet we'd
ever been to where there were men doing male gymnastics, which is a different thing, by the
way. They do rings and they do pommel horse. The girls don't do that because there's a strength
issue, right? Those are very strength oriented things. And that's the basic thing that do,
are we even having that argument still that
men and women are fundamentally different? That was by the way, an argument we had, you know,
four or five years ago that I just had my head in my hands and I couldn't believe that this was
actually an argument that was being proffered by the people on the other side of this issue.
But there are two things, as you point out, is one of them is a fairness issue. And one of them
is a safety issue because there are different sports. You point out hockey is one of them is a fairness issue, and one of them is a safety issue,
because there are different sports. You point out hockey. No one ever talks about that.
Leah Thomas is going to beat you in the pool because of obvious biological differences.
On the hockey rink, my daughter and I are both obsessive hockey fans. We go to NHL games all
the time, and I would love for her to play hockey when she gets into high school. But that's a
different story, because people are hitting each other all the time that is the point of hockey
like losing a race i mean i mean you saw the four nations game against the the canadians in the u.s
they fought there were three fights for the first nine seconds of the game and this is what the game
is it's a physical game and then all of a sudden you're like, wait a second, this is why you saw that with the boxing and the Moroccan boxer. Yeah, yeah. That like that stuff
is terrifying. I mean, to watch that. And if you have a girl that's out there who's 15, 16 years
old, that doesn't matter if you're in a blue state or a red state, that's an issue that Donald Trump
is obviously right to bring up tonight because it's a winning issue. And immigration is obviously a winning issue, too, that he has the public on his side in
those things.
And it's amazing to me the Democrats just are caught in the same ideology of culture
war, because like you mentioned, Title IX, that Title IX is where people have been fighting
culture war stuff for the past decade.
And it's time that it stops.
It's kind of insane because most of the American people
are on the side of sanity on this issue.
It's not-
By the way, since you're just among friends here,
you can tell us the truth.
At those gymnastics tournaments,
you're really just looking for Olivia Dunn, are you not?
It's a-
I literally have no idea who that is, Megan.
And I-
What do you mean?
She's like this incredibly talented, very beautiful- I know exactly who she is. I'm lying to you.
I have a tattoo of her in my shoulder blade. I know my daughter and she listens to the show
sometimes. I don't want her to know that. I'm there only in a sort of academic way. That's it. Took me a minute. Okay.
One other,
I want to talk about some of these guests,
but there's also on the,
well, we're on the gender front,
January Littlejohn.
And she had her daughter
socially transitioned
by her school
without her permission
and somehow managed
to save her daughter,
who's now in high school.
This is when she was
in middle school, and get her back on the path. Kids who express gender confusion, if you just leave
them alone and you don't start socially transitioning them or changing names, 90% of them
plus will revert to their biological sex and forget the gender nonsense. But what happens
is these schools, without telling the parents,
start transitioning them. And then they don't tell the parents anything. The parents have no idea that when they go to school, they assume an entirely different identity, name, put on
different clothing. Everybody there experiences them as somebody of the opposite sex. It's very
dark. Trump said this was happening. We just did a story on this. He said it repeatedly,
but over the campaign trail, he said it. And they tried to fact check him. Axios tried to
fact check him saying that's not happening. It's happening all over the way. It's happening all
over New York City, public and private. I can attest to that personally. I've looked at the
policy in both and known people that it's happening to. And this is out in California.
And so tonight, to his credit, Trump brings the mother of a girl to whom it happened. Socially transitioning these children
is a huge step. And it's one that's very hard to undo very because the kids got emotional
currency in it. You know, it's like you make this big leap and everybody's like, yeah, snaps, snaps. You know, now she's a boy. And then the kid's got to be like, no, didn't work out. No one's
given any thought to that. That should be a decision that is made with parents. But these
schools are doing it without. So I credit Trump a lot for choosing these people, putting them in
the first lady's seating area. And so, you know, we'll see
the whole point of doing that guys is try to force the media to talk about it. But will they?
I think that one final point on this for me is that it's not really an ideological issue.
The reason it became an issue nominally of the right was because people on the right were
fighting these kind of woke wars and
they stopped caring. The number of people you talk to that are not on the right that live in New York
City who will quietly tell you that they agree with this stuff but are afraid of voicing it
publicly is enormous. I mean, you know, we saw today Martina Navratilova, the famous tennis player who's gay and a very left wing woman, if you
follow her on Twitter, was excoriating Democrats for voting against this.
J.K.
Rowling is a left winger.
People might think differently because they think this issue.
She's a liberal person.
There's a lot of liberals on the side.
That's why it's an 80-20 issue.
And one of the gaslighting things
is to make people think that this is a right-wing issue. It might be handled differently by people
on the right, but it is an 80-20 issue because it does go beyond kind of ideological boundaries.
And I think people are kind of becoming a little more comfortable talking about it
because maybe the administration made it that way. Maybe the culture made it that way.
But Elon Musk's ex helped more than anything else. Hmm. I just want to say that my 16 year old,
who I think is brain damaged without getting hit by a volleyball. Um, but her first day of
her first day of middle school here in Brooklyn and public middle school, first day of math class.
They were encouraged.
They were told by their teacher this week is national coming out week.
So you should feel comfortable, everyone in this room, to come out at age 11 here in math class in middle school.
This is not an isolated type of incident.
It happens in a lot of spaces.
And I think people are right to go,
this is what we should do with 11-year-olds.
And that also speaks to the limitations.
Can you imagine if somebody stood up and said,
invitation accepted,
I am a conservative who voted for Trump
or who supported.
Can you imagine what those teachers would do?
Thrown out of the school altogether. I think Matt's daughter would definitely do that.
They actually will punish you for that. Stand by. We're going to take a quick break.
Moynihan is going to go back to his Olivia Dunn file on his phone, and we will resume right after
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call 800-877-4000. Success starts with FYSI. Just to round it out, a couple of other guests we know he's going to be having,
the Comperatore family, the family of the man who was killed at the Trump-Butler rally.
Stephanie Diller, this is a very smart one from Long Island. She's the widow of Jonathan Diller,
that NYPD officer who was murdered at a traffic stop in Queens in March of 2024. You remember Trump flew
in from Florida and he attended the wake when Biden opted to go to the fundraiser and sit
for the, I think it was the smart list podcast that day was so ridiculous. Um, and then, yeah.
And then he went to that fundraiser at radio sitting music hall with Bill Clinton. So dumb
anyway. Uh, so the widow of Jonathan Diller will be there. Mark Fogle, the school teacher, Trump got back from Russia along with his 95 year old mother
who asked Trump to get him back for her. They're going to be there. Smart. Um, the mother and
sister of Lake and Riley, Alison and Lauren Phillips. That'll be a very powerful moment.
Uh, Alexis Nungari, all this poor mom, the mother of Jocelyn, 12-year-old girl
who was murdered by two illegals. And Biden's administration had apprehended and released them
just before they murdered Jocelyn. A steel worker who has been helping out, including at Hurricane
Helene in the aftermath. And Roberto Ortiz from Texas, who was with the U.S. Border
Patrol for a decade, he has been shot at repeatedly by cartel members. So we'll see all these folks
mentioned by the president tonight. Should be compelling. The speeches generally are boring,
except for those personal moments. Trump is rarely boring, but he's still a president. He's still got
a long speech to read through. And so these addresses tend to be long and monotonous and predictable. And the Republicans
in the audience will be totally obsequious and, you know, be on their feet every other,
and you'll be like, shut up. It's too much applause. And the Democrats will be sitting
there cross-armed no matter what great thing he's done. You know, I give you AOC back in the Trump years when he celebrated the bipartisan passage of
the anti-sex trafficking act. And she was like, those are sex workers. We're not clapping for
their, whatever, I don't know what's in her head. But that's some of what's going to happen tonight.
For sure, he's going to mention Doge, which has been very demonized and really is absolutely loathed by the left. And I do mean loathed, but they're getting clever on how they
express their outrage. They have formed the Rapid Response Team, Super PAC, protest group,
George Soros-funded inorganic riot organization. No choir, my friends choir.
And yes, then the choir is now a rapid response choir. Yes. Literally not making it up where
people are getting laid off. Like they went to Noah on Monday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
where hundreds of workers had been laid off last week. They wore pink vests and they
sang, my friends, here is a soundbite. Yes, I did that for you.
Do you have joy? People out there are going to try to tear you down,
but the world outside can't take us down.
And that's what this song is about.
This joy that I have, the world didn't give it to me.
The world didn't give it, the world can't take it away.
Strike.
No.
This strength that I have
now
the world can't hold it to me
cut the mic, Phil
hands off our Noah
sign reads
can I try to take their joy away right now?
I love that this guy's like
you all just got fired do you
have joy no i just get fucking fired what are you talking about i'm gonna sing your job back it's
like no please lord democrats are always trying to tell us that we have joy remember the democratic
convention like wow to be all the joy in this room um and they're always sending theater
kids to fix the problem i just don't understand either one of those things yes we need more
theater kids this is you're right it's like their instinct is to go to the theater kid thing
and that will bring me to my my next person i wanted to introduce you to uh who is a TikToker. She goes by the name of Antoinette Selly, C-E-L-Y.
And she's got 16,000 followers
and yet somehow we found her.
And she was very upset
about what happened in the Oval last Friday with Zelensky.
And I mean really upset.
You think you're upset?
You should see what Antoinette did.
I'll show you.
Oy, what a day it's been. And I am so exhausted. If you notice, my hair is gone
and I had to cut my nails because today I did an updated transformation into
President Zelensky.
I stayed in the makeup for hours and I watched the
Oscars and had dinner
in the makeup.
Oh, Antoinette.
No, I'm not going to leave it there. Of course, I'm going
to show you what happened. It's the music.
The music in the background. Fantastic. The little piano thing.
Almost as good as the rapid
response choir.
Blah, blah, blah. What is Zelensky? Little piano thing? Here, almost as good as the rap in response choir music.
What is Zelensky making?
Here is the first part of her transformation into Volodymyr Zelensky.
Don't do it.
Oh.
No.
No.
For the listening audience, it's really happening.
I mean, Annette's doing a good job.
She's putting black eyeliner inside her nostrils now
to make her nostrils bigger.
She already looks like a man.
Dark eyebrows.
It's like a man hair.
Zelensky hair.
Oh, no.
She put on a beard and mustache. Oh, God. She put on a beard and mustache.
Oh, God.
She's like Stalin.
Don't unbutton anything.
I've heard that to let you feel.
She took off her little shirt.
She's winking at us.
My God.
She dressed up as Joseph Stalin.
Megan, you either need to pay your producers like five times,
does hazard pay, or fire them all.
I'm not sure which.
Or fire yourself.
I guarantee you if you showed that to Zelensky,
you'd be like, you know what, we'll give it to Russia.
I don't want to be associated with these people.
It's fine.
Holy cow.
It's going to drive Trump's approval numbers right up there.
I was upset by it too um but i never for one second thought about trying to make myself look like zelensky and then film it for 16 000 poor
unfortunate people that is really to a soundtrack to a soundtrack i gotta say though uh she she
she kind of looks like zelensky until she takes it there
she looks like Zelensky and then she takes it too far
and looks like the guy
who changes my brake fluid
she looks like
an Albanian gangster at the end of that
it's so amazing
why are they doing this
the rapid response choir
founded February 2025
they have songs like the Little Light of Mine.
Okay, we know that one.
All You Fascists Bound to Lose and Doge is to Blame.
Well, OPM says you can sign up and pledge to retire and just walk away from job security into uncertainty with no guarantee. That's what Elon
calls efficiency. Doge, Doge is to blame for this mess that they cannot contain. Under cover of
night, they've tried to take all our rights, but we won't back down, not without a fight.
And then there's joy in resistance. Of course, continuing the theme. So, I mean, back to where we started.
We've got possibly some pink pea hats tonight.
Maybe some wearing of the white.
An occasional guest who was a fired federal worker.
The resistance choir.
I mean, who they should bring in is Lech Walesa.
They should bring in Lech Walesa, who sent, you know, the solidarity anti-communist hero who, with a bunch of other dissidents from Poland, sent a really sharply worded letter to Donald Trump the other day, making the impassioned case that you shouldn't abandon someone who's been invaded by Russia.
That's a serious response. Darkening your nostrils is not a serious response.
I mean, she ended up looking like Black Valais, to be honest.
That's true.
Like modern Black Valais. I have to say, like, you put that black stuff on your nostrils.
Man, oh, man.
Like, that was truly transformational.
I mean, good tip, Anjanette.
I mean, you learn things from TikTok, Megan.
I mean, that's what it's for.
Makeup tutorials.
You learn quite a bit.
You also learn a lot if you watch MSNBC.
I don't know if you're aware, but their reaction, you're going to you're not going to be able to believe this to the Friday Oval Office situation was to claim that Trump is weirdly and problematically tied to Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia. I'll give you just a little taste of Rachel Maddow's monologue on it last night.
Imagine if a foreign adversary, imagine if the Putin government somehow could just do a thought
experiment. Imagine they could somehow exert control or influence over the government of
the United States.
What do you think the Putin government would have the U.S. government do if he could control it?
What kind of headlines would you expect to see about the operations of our government under that kind of a scenario?
And what would you expect the news out of the Oval Office and the White House
to look like on a day like today.
Ugh, her fake drama.
Serious tone. Very serious tone. I want to say that it's an amazing thing because
I am weirdly probably on Rachel Maddow's side on this one when it comes to I didn't like how
it was handled. We talked about
it in our podcast. I think Zelensky probably shouldn't have been baited in that way and
actually said he expressed regret today because of the situation that that resulted in. But I
absolutely would never say, and you didn't hear us say in the two hour podcast that we did about this at any point
that this was a result of some conspiratorial Donald Trump is under the control of the FSB.
This stuff has been debunked time and again. And this is the reason that despite the fact
they're in opposition, and as Megan, you know this very well, is that when you're in opposition
network and opposition magazine, newspaper, whatever, you tend to have circulation and viewership numbers that go through the roof
when you're in opposition. Theirs have cratered. And the reason is, is that people might not like
this. You know, people might not support the way Donald Trump handled this and J.D. Vance handled
this. But I don't think that the the instinct is to say they are under the control of the Kremlin.
I don't.
That's not why.
And it's actually a pretty embarrassing and juvenile way of thinking of it at this point
after it's been thoroughly researched and debunked.
But there are other reasons that people can make, in my opinion, a desperately wrong call
vis-a-vis Ukraine.
And I don't think the only explanation for that is the man must be either a fascist or a Russian stooge.
That is clearly our answer.
You can't let it go.
It's like when you delude yourself with a conspiracy theory, like most conspiracy theorists, you cannot let it go.
Even when it's been totally disproven, you just still hold on.
You're like, but I know better than all these other people. And so with every new news story,
she's looking for proof of the lies that she told us for four years. Um, uh, I, I will say this.
We talked about it yesterday. Mark Halperin conducted a poll with an independent pollster
named wick. And,. And they showed that the
reaction to that exchange was overwhelmingly in Trump's favor among American voters. So they
actually thought Trump handled himself very well. And some 62 percent said they found Zelensky's
behavior offensive. And then there's this on Trump's overall policy with Ukraine, where
it's going to be painful.
It's not going to be settled on terms anybody who feels bad for Ukraine is going to like, but it is going to stop the killing, at least for now.
Here's Harry Enten over on CNN talking about how Trump's doing with the populace on this. It's not for.
So I think the easiest way we can kind of just ask this is, do Americans like the way that Trump's handling his job and compared to how they felt about Joe Biden?
So this is the net approval rating. You look at Joe Biden back in twenty twenty four.
He was twenty two points underwater. Holy cow. You look at it.
It's just a different planet entirely. I mean, the gulf between these two is wider than the Gulf of America or Mexico, depending on which side of the aisle you stand on.
He's at plus two. And so on this simple question, I think Americans are saying, OK, Donald Trump's doing all right on this.
You know, I just I'll just give you one more where he's talking about what Americans want
now versus what they wanted in twenty two. So five. Because that one, a quick end of the war.
Look at this. You go back to August of twenty twenty two. It was at thirty one percent. Now
we're at fifty percent. I mean, that is a rocket ship upwards in
terms of the Americans who want a quick end to the war, even if it means Russia keeps the captured
Ukraine land. One of the reasons why we're seeing this as Americans who say Russia is an enemy,
you go back to 2023, it was 64%. And that CBS News YouGov poll, it was down to 34%. Now,
there is a chunk that believes that Russia is an unfriendly nation, but the percentage who believe that they're either an ally or friendly, that's up to 34 percent as well.
Basically equal to the percentage who say that they're an enemy.
Wow. Go ahead, Matt.
I just want to say that our friend Harry Enten, he's really undergone a change since the election.
His New York accent is a lot more pronounced now.
I love it.
Suddenly, just out of bruising like crazy.
This opinion change has been going for a while.
Americans had an instinctive and I think correct, at least that I share with desire to support Ukraine in the wake of them getting invaded, unprovoked by Russia, which was Vladimir Putin's fault and not, as Donald Trump has suggested on various times, Zelensky's fault. And other people have suggested that too. Elon
Musk and other people have blamed Zelensky for this, which I think is shameful. And it becomes
a conspiracy theory of its own on the right that we're seeing playing out here and there.
But so what happens if the US, United States public, preferably through their congressional
representatives, decide that it's time to stop supporting Ukraine, or at least just say, uh, the U S United States public, preferably through their congressional representatives
decide that it's time to stop supporting Ukraine, or at least just say, Hey, look,
we gave you a lot of money for a lot of time, but now we don't see a path to victory. We feel like
we were throwing a lot of money. And also, um, this should be a European led initiative to begin
with, which is something that I agree with that latter bit for sure. Uh, should have been that
three years ago should have been that 30 years ago. Okay. So what does, what should an administration do
with that set of information? I think there's an honorable way to go to them and say, Hey,
look, this is going to wind down. If you want someone else to be your chief sponsor,
go with God. But we, we don't see a path to victory. We're not going to give you that money,
but that's not what the Trump administration has done. And it remains to be seen. Sure, if there's going to be a conflict
with a foreign leader and getting all talky and barky in the White House, Americans are going to
support the president and the president is, you know, lighting something on fire, being completely
bizarre. We are patriotic people and we rally behind our own. But what should the honorable
thing to do? It should be sort of like, we are stepping
back now from this role. We don't want to, uh, say who's going to, you know, we're not going to
dictate terms to people, but Trump is not satisfied with that. He wants to end the war and he wants to
be seen as the one who ended the war. And so now we're going from basically, uh, leaning very hard
on the Ukraine side to starting to lean a little bit on the Russia side. And that is a less honorable path. And I don't know if Americans who are tired and growing increasingly
weary of this war are going to like that particular part of the side switching. We want to be seen as
Americans generally want to be seen as having a moral stance in the world, being on Russia's side,
even if it's a realistic response,
which is how J.D. Vance and Donald Trump
position this, like, hey, look,
we're the only ones who are acknowledging
the reality that Ukraine can't win,
so now what?
And I get that.
That's an argument.
What's not an argument
is to single out Zelensky as the dictator
in the exchange between these two countries.
So we'll see how popular that is among Americans.
I think it's an open question. That was a tweet or a true social post,
but he didn't say that to his face. And I will, I encourage you and you are busy guys who have a
lot going on, but you should go back and take a look at the video we did yesterday. It's on our
YouTube feed right now, where we went through every one of the moments leading up to the big
moment where things really melted down between them. And we showed how Zelensky was antagonizing Trump with the eye
rolls and the size and interrupting him and correcting him over and over and over. And Trump
took it. He took it. He took it. He took it. He was he was was taking the high road guys, but Trump is Trump and the American people
elected him knowing who he is. And this is not a way to get on his good side. He should have been
flattered. He definitely shouldn't have not have been antagonized. And where did Trump not forget
JD? Where did Trump lose it? Trump lost it. When Zelensky said the danger may be coming to you.
And that's when he came in and was like, you're not going to talk that way in the Oval Office to the American people.
Now I'm done. Now it's over. I don't blame Trump at all for his behavior in the Oval.
And J.D., he didn't get mad or really interjected at all until he'd seen all that behavior by
Zelensky, the stuff I'm talking about. Go back and look at the video. And then he was called by
his first name in what was obviously a disrespectful moment.
That's, I said this yesterday.
It's one thing, world leaders don't usually call each other by their first names, but
they'll occasionally do it in a moment of levity or warmth.
You know, we're like, whatever Trump might say, like BB and I go, go way back.
Or we had a moment back when we were having lunch, you know, but where it's tense and
you're
in the middle of this escalating thing where the guy's eye rolling at you. And by the way,
he has said very, very critical things about JD prior to this day and vice versa.
So they don't like each other. And then you lean over and in front of the press, you're like,
you refer to him as JD. What are you talking about? JD explain yourself.
And so JD gave him shot back. It wasn't a nasty answer,
but there was a tone to it that showed things were starting to go down.
And then the rest is history. But anyway, my point is simply, I really don't think Trump
behaved badly in that. I think he was antagonized over and over and over. And to the extent that
Donald Trump's capable of taking that kind of needling on the world stage in front of the
American public, he did it.
And then finally, they pushed him too far when they started to threaten the safety of Americans.
And to me, it was totally understandable. I think on that point, there's a language issue
and a big language issue. I mean, Zelensky is not a great English speaker. And what he was trying
to convey in that moment where Donald Trump lost it with him is that Trump had previously said, you know, I watched all 45 minutes of it,
had said the ocean between us, and that had come up two more times. And Zelensky brings it up
that last time that kind of sets Trump off. And, you know, what I took him to be saying,
and this is a kind of a boring thing that people have
said for years, is he's trying to express that, you know, if we allow the Russians to
do this, though, they'll be emboldened and that will come to other countries, including
America.
The ocean won't protect you.
And I just I think that that was a more benign thing than maybe Trump read it.
And I've rewatched it a bunch of times.
And every time I rewatch it, I realize the clumsiness.
I mean, you notice right afterwards, he goes on Brett Baier's show.
In about three or four pretty basic words, he has to consult with the translator off
set who yells what the words are.
And he said, OK, OK.
And he continues his answer.
And it's just like, it's the reckless thing, which I said previously on our podcast is that, um,
doing that in that situation in such a kind of hinge moment, uh, when your language skills are questionable, um, and not a hundred percent. I mean, anyone who speaks a foreign language
understands that when you, when you're not like a fluent speaker, you're going to miss a lot of tone and intonation. And I think that that was a
huge problem. I mean, I think if Zelensky grew up in Queens, but happened to be the leader of
Ukraine, much like the leader of Estonia grew up in New Jersey in the past, that it would have been
a completely different exchange. I mean, judging those tones and everything,
it became quite difficult.
I think quickly that...
You should not have done it.
I think quickly that Zelensky screwed up for his people.
He's eaten his words.
And I wouldn't be surprised if Donald Trump announces
a signing of a minerals deal
at the State of the Union address tonight.
Zelensky screwed up,
but I don't think Trump took the high road
in the run-up to the meeting.
There's a lot of diplomatic activity in the week 10 days fair beforehand and uh and i don't think
zelensky was treated particularly nicely uh in that process he wasn't but it's it's you know
it's the problem that zelensky faced in the lead up in the in the meeting still is there's i mean
a total and utter power imbalance and it's like it, it's, it's very annoying. But one of the things he challenged Trump on was Trump keeps saying that we've spent
$350 billion on Ukraine. I don't know where Trump's getting that number from. I've tried to
replicate that. I cannot find what's in 350 billion or how he's getting there.
We got to 250 billion. I could find that. And then there's one source that says, well,
you've just limited to this particular kind of aid,
it's more like 115 billion, which would put the Europeans at 136 billion above us.
But you'd have to limit our aid down to one particular thing, and our aid has been vast,
and we've been doing military training, and we've been sending munitions and so on. So
I think that if you look at our Pentagon, there's no question we've spent more than
the Europeans. And Zelensky was trying to say that
we haven't. And Trump handled it. He handled it. He was like, no, not really. And Zelensky goes,
yes. They kind of agreed to disagree. But like, it is true that we have done the lion's share.
The United States has done the lion's share in funding this war on behalf of Ukraine.
And where have we gotten? To a stalemate, to a place like, I don't understand. Like,
I look at it from the Rachel Maddow point of view,
and I, or yours, Moynihan,
since you say it's similar on this issue substantively.
What is it that Trump should be insisting on that he's not?
He, I think, accurately perceives the American people
do not have the appetite for American boots on the ground
to maintain security in Ukraine. So he thinks the Europeans should do it, which makes a lot
of sense because it is their backyard and Ukraine is part of Europe. That makes perfect sense to me,
but he didn't. Well, today he pulled all eight because he's mad now. And of course it's working.
Zelensky is already coming back and you're probably right. He'll sign that minerals deal. And Trump will likely announce
it tonight because Trump decided to play hardball. But he said to Zelensky, here's what I will do.
I'll invest billions, hundreds of billions of dollars in your country. Now I want something
for it. I would like some of these rare earth materials that we really need because Russia
and Ukraine are rich with them and the United States is not.
And China's rich with them and we are not. So that could help me and my people. And it wouldn't be too terrible for you either because we'll give you all this money in exchange for it. And we'll
have this ongoing economic presence there and actual physical presence as we work with you to
try to extract this stuff that will be a deterrent in other ways to Putin. That's what Trump has
proposed.
How is that so offensive? Well, I don't think it's offensive. I think that what Zelensky is,
and again, I think that probably Rachel Maddow and I have pretty substantive differences on this.
No, I know. I'm on the Ukrainian side on this. And I think that Putin and the gang in the Kremlin
are horrible, monstrous dictatorship and is what it is.
They are actually a dictatorship.
But I will say this, that when it comes to what Zelensky was asking for, and he kept on interceding and saying this, and it's a frustrating thing for Ukrainians, is not getting a security guarantee because they've had security guarantees in the past. I mean, they made a security guarantee by giving up their nuclear weapons after the Cold War that we give you,
we give up our weapons and we have the protection that we need. And none of that
has come and come to come to bear. I mean, you see that even he mentioned.
But let me ask, OK, but let's let's have a back and forth on this. So how does that look
if Trump gave him that? And there was a moment in which Trump suggested he might be open minded to it yesterday. But Zelensky didn't take the W.
It just kept stepping over Trump. But I don't in general, I don't think Trump wants to give that.
But nor did Biden nor Obama. It's not. Nobody does. No, nobody does. No. OK, so let's say we
gave that. No, it's not. And it shouldn't be. I'm not sending my sons over there to go fight for
Ukrainians if Vladimir Putin crosses that line. Hell no. Or daughter. And so that's what I'm
talking about. So if we sent troops over there to be the enforcers of this deal as the security for
Ukraine, you know, security guarantees, then we're involved. Then if Putin crosses the line again,
it's a war between Russia and the United States. Hell no. We don't want that. The country doesn't want
that. No, I don't. I don't want American soldiers over there either. I don't think that's the only
way of doing it. I mean, Donald Trump, of course, is saying that there is a way of doing that,
that it would deter people. It would deter people in the Kremlin if we had Americans working on the
ground there, which I just don't believe because we had Americans working in Kiev when it was trying, they were trying to surround it in 2022. What is it he should be offering that
will calm the other side down? What do they want from Trump that he's not giving? Well, there's no
conversation about a number of things. There's no conversation about the status of various Ukrainian
cities that are under Russian occupation. There's no conversation about the
tens of thousands of children that have been stolen from Ukrainians. I mean, this is not
a controversial thing. People understand that this happened. I mean, that those are two huge
things. I mean, if if the argument is you give us minerals and then what what do we get for it?
There is no negotiation there. It doesn't appear that there's much negotiation.
You give us minerals and we give you hundreds of billions in aid. I mean, it's not we're not
getting it for they're not giving it up for free. Well, we don't know if that's I mean, there's the
contours of that deal are unclear to anybody, both people involved and people like myself.
That's reportedly what they're negotiating, that we will continue our ongoing economic
investment in Ukraine in exchange for the minerals we want.
And by the way, all the monies that we've given so far, virtually every dollar is unsecured.
And Trump keeps saying with the Europeans, it was secured.
They got loans and we and we gave gifts.
And Zelensky denied that.
It is true.
That's another thing Trump's saying.
That is true.
The Europeans got guarantees and we didn't.
So what Russians going to get to keep? think Trump's saying that is true. The Europeans got guarantees and we didn't. So, and of course,
they're going to negotiate what Russians are going to get to keep. And Trump seems to be
telegraphing, look, they're probably going to keep what they've gotten, like, and no more.
You know, you kept them out of Kiev and that was great. And there's not going to be further
incursions. But Trump, I mean, it seems to be, look, let's just leave it where it is.
It's gotten bad enough already. Let's stop the bleeding. Honestly, I think what Ukraine wants is to be part of the negotiations in Saudi Arabia or
anywhere else. They don't want to be where the Czechs were in the Munich agreement and where
all of Eastern Europe was in 19... It's shuttle diplomacy. It's Trump with the one side and then
he goes to the other side. It's not time for that yet. You ask what they want. I think that's what
they're seeking. And they want a security security guarantee there's this sort of kabuki theater that goes like this uh emmanuel macron
in france wants to be wants to lead a european only uh like a semi-nato they want to sort of
detach this has been french goals and foreign policy since forever cool right i like it you
like yeah everyone likes it and then look at the fine print of what he says when he's out and saying, my dear Donald at the White House last week saying, we just want we want to do that. want a u.s backstop this is a french way of
saying we want the u.s to be the one doing the guarantees europeans germany too germany's the
worst frederick mers i mean he's also talking about one of some of the strongest game right
now we need to declare independence for the united states we need to create our own european
security we need to spend five percent of% of GDP or whatever the number is.
This is an acceleration towards- Then he never does it.
Well, it might change. The Germans have not done it. Of course not. No, no, you've never gotten rich betting on Europeans.
And then somebody was asking, well, what specifically in terms of military will
you give to Ukraine? And he was like, oh, well, we'll see.
That's the problem. 80% or so of all of NATO actual warfighting capability is American. The munitions, certainly the leadership. And this is a really important part. Like NATO has been able, the Western European countries have been able to underfund NATO and benefit from their security without the burden of responsibility for NATO's decisions forever. And so what Ukraine needs in order to survive, to make a ceasefire something different than just like a five years to wait before Russia pulverizes you again, is for someone to secure their their future.
That someone should be Western Europe. Western Europe says they want that to happen, but they actually so far lack the balls to actually do that.
So everyone's dancing around each other in these negotiations trying to get over that fact.
I think Donald Trump and I disagree with how he's done it and sort of the approach.
I think he's accelerated towards that future, a future that needs to happen, which is that Western Europe has to put on its big boy pants.
So let me just say this. So in the wake of that Friday Oval meeting, all the European leaders are talking tough.
You know, like, oh, we got your back. Ukraine, we got your back. We got your back.
Like, we'll do this. They're like, oh, we got your back. Ukraine, we got your back. We got your back. We'll do this. They're all frauds. They can't do it without us. That's the reality,
unless they dramatically change their spending habits and live up to military commitments
they've made previously that they've been flouting for years. So technically, I guess they can,
but nobody believes they actually will. That's the problem. So that now they want to rub Trump's
face and, oh, he's terrible. He didn't stand by his ally. Meanwhile, even the New York Times, their podcast yesterday was admitting
they can't do it. They need the United States so they can try to walk all over Donald Trump.
Like, oh, what a cad he is. He's terrible. We'll just do it. We'll do it without him.
But listen to the New York Times, the daily having this discussion. It's Michael Barbaro,
the host with Peter Baker, the White
House correspondent for The New York Times. Time and time again, Europeans have said,
yeah, we're going to step up and take more of the burden from the United States
without actually following through. And they have risen to the occasion with Ukraine over
these last three years. They've actually donated more money for Ukraine's defense than the United
States has. You may have heard Trump say the opposite. He's wrong about that. But it's still a question whether they can do everything
that Ukraine would need and would lose without American support. And for Europe, it really is
a moment of truth. Right. And it seems worth noting that UK's prime minister, even as he
announced more money for Ukraine, said, we've got to be honest,
we still need a backstop from the U.S. There's nothing approaching a true guarantee of Ukraine
safety unless the U.S. is involved. That's right. I mean, you know, they don't expect
U.S. to put troops on the ground where they would like would be air support or logistical support
or intel support and mainly just political
and geopolitical support. The idea that the United States is behind them on this and that Russia
ought not to try anything because it would not just be aggravating Europe, but aggravating the
United States and taking a real chance there. And it's not clear that Trump wants to do that.
So they can't do it without us. They need to not keep aggravating President Trump. President Trump, I think, probably would get around to, you know, intel support if that's where we are. That's a much different commitment than we're going to send American military to Ukraine and be the first defense against Vladimir Putin, which puts us in a war if Putin gets hungry again. He knows he can't do
that. I just think Trump is threading a very difficult to thread needle here and he needs
people's support. He's trying to bring an end to this impossible near intractable conflict.
He needs Zelensky to not be a prick. And I don't care if he doesn't like the way Trump's talking in the Oval.
He has no bargaining power, none, zero. He is in a supplicant position. And he needs to know that when he's over here dealing with our commander in chief, to whom he owes and needs everything,
from whom he needs everything. And the Europeans, the same. So you can act all high and mighty with a bunch
of swagger, but there's only one real player here and it's us. And that's why we are speaking to
Putin. And Trump is trying to speak nicely to Putin and not say the terrible things about Putin.
He understands all the things that you said, Matt. He's trying to negotiate in the way that he knows
how. It works for him if you compliment him, if you flatter him. He's trying to negotiate in the way that he knows how. It works for him if you compliment him, if you flatter him.
He's trying to do exactly that with Putin because that in Trump's head is the price of getting a deal done.
It's air fucking relevant to the rest of us.
We should not be getting upset or drawing conclusions from any of that language.
We should be looking at what Trump accomplishes.
But when dealing with Trump,
you should know how to play him.
And that there's no excuse for Zelensky
to have gone in there
and to have been openly antagonistic,
given the power imbalance
and given what we know about Trump.
That's my own take on it.
I'll give you guys the last word.
I would just say briefly
that I think there was obviously a miscalculation.
I would agree with that
with respect to Zelensky's approach.
But another miscalculation might be that if this is diplomacy, if it is uniquely
sensitive, even if Donald Trump wants to use the particular tactics he's most comfortable with,
that he should be having most of these conversations in private, that he should be
having his envoys conduct most of these conversations in person. And that the fundamental
issue with this
meeting on Friday is that it was a room full of people with cameras. Yes. Like that should not
have happened, even if they thought they were going to sign this deal. And had they been able
to do that, given the administration's stated objective of achieving a peace as quickly as
possible, we would be far closer to that if this blow up had happened behind closed doors.
And the opportunity that I think J.D. Vance missed first and that Donald Trump eventually missed as well was to say, you know what? Things are getting a little intense. I understand why
emotions are running high here. I don't like some of the things that have been said, but we've got
all afternoon to continue to talk about this. We are going to get to the bottom of it. That's what
we do here. Fix hard problems. Meeting over. Thanks, everybody,
for coming. We've got hard work to do. That's what should have happened. And that's the opportunity
that I think J.D. and Donald miss. Can we credit Zelensky with the first error of the day? Yes,
fine. But in general, this should be happening behind closed doors, which has been happening
subsequent to that Friday meeting. but it was an unnecessary failure.
Like, why didn't they have the deal signed? And why, like, I don't know why JD and these
others were even in the room. It should have been Zelensky shows up, they sign the deal,
they have lunch, then they go out with a signed deal, just the two of them. Now,
I don't know why the vice president was there. He normally wouldn't be there. Just the two of them go out and talk to the press. And Zelensky never should have
negotiated pieces of part two that day. It should have been purely celebratory. That should have
been very clear between both leaders. We've signed this historic deal. Yay. The United States is
doing super lots of stuff in Ukraine. Hello, Vladimir Putin. We're really good friends
and we're going to prom together. Like that's that day. Everything else gets tabled. And then
you have your arguments about security guarantees and how many times Putin has violated them behind
closed doors leading up to phase two when you're trying to convince America to do more and be the
backstop to the Europeans that everybody knows the Europeans need.
Zelensky blew it. And he tried to antagonize Trump over security guarantees, which is part two during the part one. There were too many players in the room. They hadn't signed the deal yet.
And he had been amped up by Democrats like Chris Murphy and Mark Kelly before he even got there,
who I believe pushed that guy into the wrong headspace when he
went into what was one of the most important meetings of his life. OK, quick break back with
the guys. Wait, you want something else quickly before we go? No, I was going to say just
I was going to say, you know, it plays into the conspiracy theory when you said it's very
abnormal for J.D. Vance to be there. And they didn't sign that beforehand when Zelensky said, quite frankly, that he was willing to sign it.
So I do understand those conspiracy theories that he was baited into it in some way because it's just the chronology of it is kind of strange.
But that's all I want to say.
I just don't believe it because I believe much more that Trump like the conspiracy theory is that the deal was like falling apart and it wasn't favorable to Trump and Trump couldn't get Putin to agree to it.
Like I.E. having European security forces patrol Ukraine.
And so that Trump did something to tank the deal in that Oval Office meeting so that it didn't look like his dealmaking skills were bad.
It made it look like, oh, Zelensky's a hothead.
You know, it fell apart.
That doesn't sound right to me because Trump is not shy about owning up to any reality,
good or bad. He like he'll spin it. He'll spin all of it, of course. But when have you ever
seen him so scared about a nasty political reality that he does something like that?
That's not that's conspiracy theory talk. This president conspiracy theory is much more advanced himself, who's who's always had a very, very negative idea of Zelensky and the war in Ukraine, where Trump has been a little more kind of, you know, not on one side or another, more willing to kind of negotiate a deal. until you say we can promise peace, until you want to work towards peace,
I cannot give you the weapons of war.
I mean, that is, and as you pointed out, Megan,
I mean, that is part of that deal,
is that we will give you the weapons of war
if you promise peace.
I don't think that that's something
that J.D. Vance has ever wanted at all.
So, I mean, that strikes me as more plausible,
less plausible that it was Trump, you know,
in some kind of 90s.
I hear you, and there's no question J.D.
is not a Zelensky fan or a fan of this, you know, of Ukraine. But I also just think it's much more
consistent with Trump to have wanted the win and to have wanted to run around being like,
I got the minerals deal. And that loser who was there before me got nothing. He got us further
and further entrenched in this thing. And I got the minerals deal which you know trump is all about that like we're about to annex greenland because he wants minerals
he wants like this is important to trump so i isn't the mineral isn't it a better thing if
he announces it tonight and says not only did i get the deal but i played hardball you saw it on
television that's how i negotiate yeah yeah he wouldn't have done that whole that i just don't
think that he would have blown it up or trump would have done anything it to today. That's how I'd negotiate. Yeah. He wouldn't have done that whole, I just don't think that he would have blown it up
or Trump would have done anything like,
you're saying J.D. Vance intentionally blew it up
so that Trump could then spend the weekend renegotiating it
and announce it tonight?
That doesn't make sense.
I don't think there's a chain of events there.
I just think that right now,
Donald Trump is probably, you know,
likely to say, yeah, I'll sign that deal.
Because not only is it the deal
that they had worked at before and that he wanted and Zelensky agreed to,
but if you get it now...
Zelensky came back begging.
He came back begging. He's been begging for three days.
That's what's going to make the deal go forward.
Now, you come back and say, look at the negotiation.
I played such hardball with them that they came groveling back.
That's no better than I got it signed on Friday with no problem.
Look at me. It was easy
for me. I think it's a little better. I got to go. I mean, I'm not going, going, but I have to
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So bit by bit, some distance out from the November election and the debacle of the
June debate with Biden and Trump, truth bombs are starting to emerge here, there and everywhere.
And you mentioned one earlier in the show. Chuck Todd sat down with Steve Schmidt of the Lincoln
Project and listened to this. You know, Joe Biden never should have been there in the first place.
Right. Number one, he shouldn't have run for president. I completely got so angry at Joe Biden, the man,
when I read the transcript of the Hunter Biden trial. And when I realized that not one,
not two, but three Biden children were all dealing with drug problems in 2018.
And Joe Biden said, now's a perfect time to run for president
because who cares about our family?
I have to tell you something about Joe Biden.
There's this mythology about Joe Biden
that the man cared so much.
It's all bullshit.
This man supposedly cared so much about his family.
It created a myth and he did it for 40 years.
God bless him that he was this incredible family man what
he really was was a craven political animal oh yeah that never it was desperate that man
considered or ran for president every four years he was eligible you know
unbelievable pretty interesting right guys didn't all four of us talk about this exact thing in similar, maybe not quite as harsh as Chuck Todd's words on this for several years?
Like your family's falling apart and you're running his family, man.
What the hell are you doing?
It's crazy to see this. mentioned how it was in March or April of 20 of last year when there was the fundraiser that Joe
Biden went to Radio City Music Hall instead of the funeral of the cop. We were on your show that
morning and we talked about that. I remember that. That happened in March or April of last year.
And when did George Clooney come out and say, wow, Biden's Biden's memory sure was going. Yeah.
Four months later, July. Four months later.
So Chuck Todd, dude, welcome to the whatever this is.
But like that stuff about Joe Biden being a family man guy for 50 years and it being
a bunch of horse pucky and people knowing that it's horse pucky and that his family
is an absolute catastrophe.
What part of that is new?
I just don't know.
No, no.
Well, what part of that is new is that him talking about it, if you want an example, like, by the way, nobody looks at this
stuff as like, oh, he knew, but this is bravery. It undermines people's confidence in the mainstream
media that doesn't need any more undermining. I mean, the opinion polls are like 18% below
Congress that people believe the mainstream media. And this is somebody saying,
I knew this for a long time. I thought this for a long time. And I decided to not make it public.
I decided not to talk about it. Why not? Because you were a straight newsman? No, you were talking
about other things. I guarantee you, if you go and look at what Chuck Todd said for the past
eight years, you're definitely going to find some things that are sharp elbowed and that have
opinions. But that opinion was left out. What do you think people when they see that they're like, yeah,
there is a kind of conspiracy in the media of silence because they don't like Donald Trump.
They don't want him to win. So therefore, let's thumb the scales for this guy. It's kind of gross.
Here's just a little bit more. Steve Schmidt weighing in on whether he'd trust Hunter Biden or the Trump children more to babysit his own children.
I don't leave the kids with someone.
And my choices are Hunter Biden.
Or Ashley Biden.
Or Don Jr.
And Eric and Laura Trump.
Like, I'm dropping the kids off at Don and Eric and Laura's house.
How about that?
The Lincoln Project, guys.
Honestly, like, is anybody sincere about anything?
Yeah.
I mean, this is a guy that literally said that he saw the Lincoln Park project as generational wealth. What is it required to have generational wealth is to,
you know, be fighting Donald Trump all the time. Did he get fired? Because now he's calling it a
grift. Did he get fired? Well, it was a grift when he was there. And I think that he left
under under a cloud. But, you know, it's amazing that this is the same person that
that was talking
about how he's going to get wealthy from being being the anti-Trump man. You can't trust anybody,
anybody other than Mark Zuckerberg, that is, who decided to put it all out there,
guys. And the minute we have left, here he is at his wife's 40th birthday party. Watch.
Imitating Benson Boone wearing a jumpsuit.
I mean, he brought it, guys.
Admire or judge?
I love it.
I love it.
I love him living his best life. I don love the shoes that is that is the principal objection the shoes and the pants could have been a bit a bit better fitted little
shoe short well the pants were fitted just right because then you realize that he doesn't bring it
um oh maybe maybe put it on full screen i know that That's fine. We're okay. A lot of money.
One problem he can't solve.
All he's saying is stick a sock in it.
Stick a sock in it.
Maybe.
You get a lot of cash.
Maybe buy a very fancy sock and put it in there.
He's unashamed.
Size large.
Leave him alone.
Got it.
It's always a pleasure, guys.
We had to end it on an R-rated note, naturally.
That's our thing.
Of course.
Thank you for being here.
That's right.
All right.
We are back tomorrow with Rich Lowry and Mark Halford.
Don't miss that.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show.
No BS, no agenda, and no fear.