The Megyn Kelly Show - Best of the Week: Trump Puts Homan at Border and Gaetz to DOJ, Bill Ackman on Elon, Vivek and DOGE
Episode Date: November 17, 2024Megyn Kelly looks back at some of the top stories from the past week, including billionaire entrepreneur Bill Ackman talking about Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy running DOGE, The EJs on Tom Homan as b...order czar, Ruthless on Matt Gaetz as Attorney General nominee, and Megyn's deep dive on exactly why Kamala lost.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
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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 and welcome to today's weekend best of special.
Oh, we had a busy week this week. Not quite as busy as the week before, but a busy one.
Including my first ever interview with billionaire entrepreneur Bill Ackman,
who has had quite a political evolution over the course of 2024, culminating with his endorsement
of Donald Trump. See what he said about this next administration that Elon Musk got so happy about,
he was retweeting it. We also spoke with the EJs about Trump's new badass border czar, Tom Homan.
What a man. And the fellas from Ruthless swung by to discuss Trump's picks of Matt Gaetz as
attorney general and Tulsi Gabbard as director of national intelligence. Then on Friday,
I gave you my diagnosis of why Kamala Harris lost and what a terrible candidate she actually was. So much more news
ahead. Enjoy, and we will see you on Monday. I think it's just so innovative to go completely
Trumpian. Just keep people on their heels. Do not go with establishment types like he tried to do
the first time. And I see absolutely nothing wrong with him going with Trump loyalists, but that term keeps getting bandied about as though it's a bad thing.
Actually, I think it's, I call it the dream team. I'm really super impressed. We have Elon Musk.
We have a good friend of mine, Vivek Ramaswamy, who's incredibly talented. I love all these.
I've actually been super impressed with all the picks so far.
The New York Times, the daily podcast today and the New York Times itself is really wrestling with Elon's elevation to the right hand man of the sitting president elect.
They don't seem happy. I feel like you should look at somebody like Elon who's willing to serve in any capacity for our government and just say thank you. But they are concerned. He's got 100 different lawsuits
against him. How is he going to deal with those conflicts of interest? He's got all sorts of
regulatory constrictions on him that are important to our safety. You know, why can't how can he
possibly be in this important role? What do you make of
Elon being willing to serve as he is? I think he's a great American. I think he's a great
global citizen. You know, if you have to think of a guy who's made more consequential impact on
society, on everything from the electric car to space to now Neuralink, AI. He's, I would say, the most important figure
of our time in the non-political sphere. And now we have the benefit of all of his talents
working alongside the president. I mean, it's an incredible home run. I have not been this excited
to be an American, if you will, in a very long time.
And so it's amazing.
Yeah, I feel the same.
And so what they announced last night was that Elon and Vivek are going to work together on Doge, the Department of Government Efficiency, and start trying to find efficiencies in the biggest business of them all, the United States government, and figure out where we can tighten our belt and save some money. And yet, you know, sort of the
established Washington, D.C. class is very upset about this because it means jobs of federal
bureaucrats. And that's what runs D.C. So what do you make of this idea of Doge? Trump says in
the announcement it's going to be completely outside government. These two will not be government employees. Yeah, I think it's a
home run. You know, I've always thought of the United States as one of the greatest. My day job
is to find these really great companies that have lost their way. And then what we try to do is
bring in great new management and have them fix the business. And that's basically what's
happening here. And they're not going to have to look far. And everyone knows the government is the most ineffective bureaucracy in the world.
Governments generally, ours has not particularly impressed us as citizens. And now we have an
opportunity not just to find cost savings, but actually to operate more effectively.
The analogy that Musk makes is he says, you know, think of
the government, you know, as just a, you know, when you go get your license, you know, updated,
think about how inefficient that process is. Well, imagine the entire country being run that way.
And I think that's the opportunity and having sort of outsiders do this. You know, Elon certainly has
the playbook. You know, X was a quasi-governmental agency in the way it operated in San Francisco.
And he stepped in, he took out 80, 90% of the employees, and it's become a much more effective platform.
Software development, the various features, functionality, you know, have been able to happen much more quickly under new leadership.
And I think that's what we have here. Um, and so I think it's going to be a huge boon for, uh, you know, the economy for business
generally. Uh, so, and that will help everyone. When we saw, uh, Javier Millet run for, and then
ascend to power in Argentina, a lot of us were shocked by how he spoke and the things he did
with the chainsaw that he was going to take
to government and highly entertaining. Here he is with his chainsaw. And look at this guy.
I love him. So I have friends who are from Argentina and they're absolutely thrilled
with what he's doing. And he told everybody there we're in for some short-term pain
as we try to get our enormous inflation down.
But these are the things we have to do. Here he is. This is video for the listening audience of him
pulling these names off a board, the ministry of this, the ministry of that, and throwing them
behind him. We don't need it. It's down. It's out. And that's how I see Elon and Vivek,
you know, who are supposed to go in there and Javier, Javier Mille, our government, I had the advantage of being next to Elon in September when he spoke on the all in podcast,
um, at their summit. And I too was there and spoke on the same thing. And he was describing
what it was he would like to do if this whole thing worked out, if Trump were elected and if he could form this Doge thing.
Take a listen here to Sat 10. If you could just pair two, three, four, five percent of those
organizations, what kind of impact would that have? Yeah, I mean, I think we'd need to do more
than that, I think. Ideally, if you could shrink the side they got size of the government with Trump
What would be a good target just in terms of like ballpark?
I mean, are you trying to get me assassinated before this even happened?
Pick a low number
Old phrase go postal. I mean, it's like their minds just think that that people, you know
Had like immediately turped, you know tossed out with with no severance and and blue, you know
Can't could not can't pay their mortgage,
then you see some reasonable off-ramp where...
Yeah.
So a reasonable off-ramp where they're still receiving money
but have, I don't know, a year or two
to find jobs in the private sector,
which they will find,
and then they will be in a different operating system.
So you heard him, Bill, say in response to Jason, who said two, three, four percent.
And Elon said, oh, it's going to be more than that. So how high do you think we could go on
shaving the bureaucracy? I think there's a massive amount of waste.
And I think you're going to see fairly dramatic change. I think it'd be incredibly uplifting
for the people who stay. And I think it'll be uplifting for the people who have the opportunity
to do something new. As he said, I think they're going to be quite generous with severance,
making sure that people can transition to the private sector. So I think it's going to be good
for everyone. Yeah. What do you make of that? Because the last thing Trump wants 100 days into his administration is massive layoffs that
run up the unemployment rate and make him look bad. So he's not going to want that narrative
in the press, even though he will want these efficiencies. So how would you recommend they
handle the offloading of these federal employees? Sure. So what's interesting is you don't want to
give people a disincentive to find
a job, right? If you just hand everyone two years severance, some people may say, okay, I'll take
the next, you know, 20 months to just have fun. I'll go look for a job. And then it becomes hard
to get a job at the end of that. So I think the right approach is to give enough severance. So
people are absolutely covered between this job and the next one, and then basically pay it to
them over time. But when they find a job,
pay them the balance of the severance. Let's say they give it a year of severance. Someone finds a
job a month after leaving government. Well, then they get 11 months of salary as a bonus. People
are incentivized to find their next job. And I think you have job training. And then, of course,
there are a lot of people in government where you could probably, you know, just instead of severance, you allow them to begin the retirement process early.
And government employees are very well taken care of in terms of pension.
I like that.
That makes sense and is less scary for those worried that it might be their next on the chopping block.
But we all know there are too many employees, that we have 20 people to do the job
of one, and they're counting on no one paying attention to how inefficient the government is.
It's baked into the system that no one's going to be looking at just how much red tape there is and
how many people we have enforcing it and how useless it is, and worse than useless, it's
pernicious. It stops development. It stops business.
One more Elon clip, and then I want to talk about a post you made on X today. He explained with SpaceX how impossible the regulatory system makes it and really kind of said,
at this rate, we're never going to colonize Mars, which is one of his life goals. We're
never going to get there because when it comes to building rockets and so on, it's just absolutely prohibitive
what they make innovators go through. Here was his example. It's not 27.
The next flight of Starship is ready to fly. We are waiting for regulatory approval.
You know, it really should not be possible to build a giant rocket faster than the paper can
move from one desk to another. I mean, it's perfectly well said. And he talked just about
other problems he had, like one of the rockets dumped water. I
think it was potable water. It was drinkable water on the desert as a release valve. And he got fined
like $35,000 for that. And went to them and said, what are you doing? I'm trying to innovate. I'm
working with the government. I've been used by NASA to resupply the space station.
Get off of my back.
And they won't.
It's just those are all great examples of, A, why we need reform, and, B, what drove him here.
So what do you make of it?
Look, I think actually just getting back to what you talked about before, the context for the efficiency creation and government is one
in which I think there's going to be a huge boon in the economy. I think what's interesting is I'm
hearing from friends who control a lot of assets, invest in lots of operating companies, that the
management teams of their businesses are extremely optimistic. Even those that have voted against
Trump are excited about what's going to happen with the economy. So I think we're going to have
a big economic boom and actually freeing up a meaningful number of government employees
to make them available to the private sector will actually help manage the potential for inflation.
So the cost cutting is one thing, but making the government more efficient on regulatory approvals,
you think about how difficult it is in America to build a bridge, a highway, a house. And, you know, the faster you
can accelerate construction, obviously, that has a huge impact on infrastructure, the fluidity of
the economy, driving demand, and actually, I think, freeing up government workers to step
into some of these roles that will be created will actually help the economy manage through this
period. It could really change their lives, too, for the better. It would be so exciting to work for one
of these innovative companies, hiring new blood. These people have been stuck in these concrete
jungles in the circles of D.C. And maybe it's a new leaf for them, too. You wrote in that
ex-post to which I referred and you mentioned, that merger and acquisition activity is about to explode.
Do you think so? Yes. So the Biden administration has been, and Lena Kahn, who's led the FTC,
very anti-merger. And the result of that is many of the startups in our country don't get to a
scale where they can go public. They have to be basically sold. And if you don't allow the
Facebooks and the Googles and the other companies to make acquisitions, these businesses eventually
either run out of capital or run out of opportunity. And there are a lot of big companies
where meaningful synergies can be created when one business buys another. But if you can't do a deal,
you have to sort of put it on hold. And sort of the antitrust environment in the last four years
was one in which you wouldn't even try to do a transaction. I think that's going
to change. And so there's sort of a long list of transactions that are waiting to happen in the
event there's a change in administration. And now that post-November 5th, you'll see
very aggressive announcements. And the benefit of a merger beyond just the synergies is that
often it's an opportunity for the people who invested in the first company, the company being acquired,
to take their capital and redeploy it in something else. It's going to free a lot of capital in the
economy that's going to put money into the system that's going to fuel growth. So it's going to be
a pretty exciting time for the country, for sure. What are you hearing about non-U.S. companies looking at
America right now? I think they're frightened, I guess I would say. They're frightened to the
extent they don't have a presence in the United States. I mean, the U.S. is going to be the best
economy. We really are one of the best economies in the world right now, certainly the best large
economy in the world. You know, China is in a lot of trouble. This whole European continent is really, you know, kind of struggling.
So we're kind of the best, you know, economy and that's going to change in an even more positive
way. And Trump, as we know, is very America first. And if you don't have a presence here,
you're at risk of tariffs being put on your goods. So we're hearing foreign companies that don't have
a presence here looking for an ability to immediately have a presence so that they're not locked out of the U.S. economy.
And that, of course, is also going to bring jobs here and drive growth.
We saw an announcement right after Trump won that certain companies, Steve Madden was one, but he wasn't the only one, had already decided that they would not build a plant in China as they'd been considering doing.
Now, that particular company didn't say, I'll build it in the United States. He went to another
country, but it wasn't one of our enemies. It wasn't somebody who's actively working against
us like the Chinese are. So that was a bit of good news, too. I wonder how many more
U.S. companies like that or even foreign companies like that will maybe they won't move to the to the states to build their companies, but they'll avoid enriching one of our enemies.
And that, too, is a is a plus for us.
Yeah, look, I'm very, very bullish on the Trump administration, as I think is the entire business community.
And business is sort of a confidence game.
When people lose confidence, they don't hire people.
They don't make investments.
They decide not to build the next factory, build the next building.
All of that is the opposite is happening.
People are actually hiring people in anticipation of growth.
They're increasing their estimates of what the revenues will be in the next 12 months.
And that has a very powerful self-fulfilling effect.
So you're seeing interesting things, obviously, on the economy. You're also seeing our enemies,
you know, Iran, I just read this morning, is tabled their response to Israel and is talking
about, you know, a negotiation with the U.S. I mean, it just shows the importance of having
strength in the White House. What do you make of, have you given any thought to Trump's tariff proposals?
Because those have been controversial with some in the business community, and some people
got burned by, I mean, I remember some agriculture workers saying that the tariffs he had in
place first time around really hurt them, some farmers.
So, but, you know, this is crux, a critical piece of his plan. So what do you make of his proposed tariffs?
Sure. I think Trump used tariffs. I think you have to think about the context, right? The context
was World War II, the rest of the world was decimated and Marshall Plan, we helped rebuild
Europe. You know, Japan had to recover from, you know, the destruction of the war. And all of these governments put in place tariffs to kind of protect their home
markets. And that allowed, you know, their economies to recover, that allowed Japan to
develop an auto industry. And now what's interesting is those tariffs stayed in place,
even when Japan became, you know, one of the most successful, built one of the most successful auto
industries in the world and Europe, you know, if you think about BMW, Mercedes, and all the various very successful auto companies in
Europe, they've had the benefit of tariffs versus the US. And that goes for everything from
food and wine and so on and so forth. And I think the United States has been a very open market to
the rest of the world. And I think Trump's view is, look, if they're going to use tariffs, we
should too. And let's use tariffs as a way to make the world get rid of tariffs that
are out there. So I think it's a very important negotiating tool. And I think it'll be very
effective in using it. Now, there's risk associated with tariffs, right? If the response to more
tariffs from the US is that the, you know, the foreign governments
decide to put even more tariffs on their own home markets, you can get into sort of a downward
spiral, which is very negative for the economy. But I think he's pretty smart and sophisticated.
I think he'll have a very capable team working with him. So I'm going to give him the benefit
of the doubt. And, you know, his goal, of course, look, I think President Trump's goal fundamentally
is to be one of the great, to be the greatest president of all time.
Right. That has to be his ambition. And, you know, obviously, the economy is, you know, if not the most important, certainly one or two.
And I would say it's probably the most important issue. And it's something he knows a lot about.
And he's going to build a very capable team. And I'm just confident it's going to execute well. Well, I know you have been a registered
Democrat for most, if not all of your adult life. And when you said, but I'm voting for Donald Trump
this time, one of the things you pointed out was if you wanted to destroy this country, one of the
things you would do is open the borders. You would just let this influx of migrants come into the
country, come into the cities.
And while we talk a lot about illegal immigration on this show and elsewhere, it's different when you actually go, you zoom into a community.
Springfield, Ohio was one during this election cycle, but there are many others.
And see how that influx is actually changing the way people live without their consent or approval.
Yeah, I think it's a problem. We have a very small version of that in New York City where I live,
but it's 200,000 people in a city of 11 million. Springfield, I think, was 20,000 people in a city of 40,000. So obviously, but even in New York, it's had a very significant impact.
Did you see what Mayor Adams said today or yesterday?
I think it was where he said he's not ruling out working with the Trump administration
to try to deal with this problem.
New York is overwhelmed.
There are way too many illegal immigrants.
We already have our problems.
It's not like New York was running super efficiently prior to all these buses and flights
bringing all these illegal
aliens up here. The interesting thing is that this is, you know, arguably, I certainly believe
it to be the best place, best country in the world. And, you know, you see how many millions
of people want to come here. And when you have the opportunity of millions of people coming to
your country and you actually immigration is important for growth, for, you know, bringing
in talent and so on and so forth, you want to have policies that let in the people you want to let in uh and in fact
the way our policies work today uh my wife runs a really interesting company and she has a very
talented collection of you know mit phds uh that she used to uh you know teach when she was a
professor now she's hired many of them but many of them are from germany other places around the world, and just the challenges in trying to get these incredibly
well-educated, educated in America, brilliant minds. Obviously no criminal records, they're
going to help advance our society. It's hard to, it can take a year or two, if not more,
to bring them into the country if you can do so. Meanwhile, we've allowed sort of unvetted people
walk across the border, and then we provide subsidies when they get here. So it's the
reverse of a sensible immigration policy. We should take advantage of the fact that this is
an incredibly desirable country, and we should pick and choose the right people, and we should
vet them carefully. And we need to, I mean, one of the things I'm hoping from Doge, if you will,
if you went to MIT, you don't have a criminal record, and you've got a job at an interesting company in the United States, or you want to build a business here, it should be a 30-day process to vet you.
It shouldn't be a year or two years.
We should make it really, really easy for the best and brightest to come to America.
And we should make it difficult for criminals to cross the border.
If not, we would make it impossible.
Gates for the, for the listening audience is, is controversial for a number of reasons.
He is definitely a professional shit stirrer. He is fiercely loyal to Donald Trump. He actually is a very effective cross-examiner. And that I now I
am realizing comes from his, his time as a lawyer, but he's very good when he's,
when he's going after somebody on Capitol Hill at these hearings. But he is also
immersed in controversy. Some salacious allegations have been made against him by the DOJ, which then decided not to pursue charges.
Gates has denied these charges. We can talk about them.
But still under investigation by the House Ethics Committee or Oversight Committee.
Now that's done because he resigned yesterday when this news came out.
But it's going to come up if he goes through a confirmation hearing.
And then also something probably closer
to your hearts, you guys, he took down Kevin McCarthy as House Speaker over on the Republican
side and then kind of didn't really have a solution ready to go once Kevin McCarthy fell.
But this is one of the reasons why a lot of the so-called establishment Republicans hate him. And therefore it is, let's say, far from a guarantee that he will be confirmed
because we already have Murkowski and Collins on the record seeming to say it's a no. They can't
afford to lose too many others. And, you know, you've got some squishes over there when it comes
to these kinds of people. So I don't know. Andy
McCarthy says, why are we even engaging in this debate? He's never going to be confirmed. So this
is all pointless. So who wants to take it? Any of those? Well, look, all of that is true. Everything
you said is true. And look, he's dedicated his entirety of his congressional career to creating
enemies, mostly from within, like mostly within his own party, kind of go way beyond the
establishment of your own party. He's just not played by anybody's rules, which I imagine
probably makes him pretty popular amongst the American people, certainly outside the beltway.
The problem is, as you suggested, at some point you have to figure out how to get 51 votes to
get confirmed as attorney general. I think we may have talked about this months and months and
months ago, Megan, is that Donald Trump's nominee to be attorney general was always going to be the most
controversial of them all. It was going to be the most difficult because of this hardened Democratic
opposition to it. Some concerns lingering on the Republican side about what he would do with the
Department of Justice. And so he just went full Leroy Jenkins on it and was like,
if you're going to be controversial, well, then let's make it the most controversial.
And that's where we're at. I do think the only thing that I'm concerned about from a Trump
standpoint is how much political capital do you use on this stuff? He's got four years.
And you got to figure out how to get a whole bunch of things done
in the first six, eight months. And political capital is at its highest when you win an
election, certainly in the fashion that he did. And you begin to drain political capital out of
it with each thing that you do that becomes controversial, that you have to actually use
the power of the presidency to try to get through. Using too much on this in what may very well be
something that just can't be done concerns me a little bit because there's a whole bunch of
things about that Trump agenda. The American people really, really want him to spend all of
his political capital getting. Yeah. But, you know, he has earned the right to pick who he
wants. He had a huge win last Tuesday and he has a mandate to pick whoever he wants. And the Senate is going to consider
them and we'll see what happens. But I mean, if you look at Gates, like you said, he can cross
examine. The guy is not without talent. And if you look at the beginning of his career,
he is a guy who supported Jeb Bush in 2016, which I think is why comfortably smug likes him so much. Smug really liked Jeb. So I look at the same data that Ashbrook and Holmes are presenting, and I think it's accurate.
But my conclusion is completely different. President Trump did come away with an absolute
mandate, which is why I think every one of these senators should be on board with it. And like
Holmes said, there's a small window where Trump can act, and it's even shorter than four years.
It's even shorter than two years.
It's probably the first hundred days where you can really move the ball before you start getting all the opposing forces organized and trying to stop Trump's agenda, which is why I think Matt Gaetz would be the perfect person you want in place in those first hundred days.
I think what most of these people are afraid of is, oh, God, we have the Department of Justice and we used it to go after conservatives.
We used it to go after Trump.
You know, you had Merrick Garland calling parents who would show up to school board meetings domestic terrorists.
So we don't need to send, you know, the same old, same old.
We need to send the message that, hey, that time is up.
There's a new sheriff in town.
I can't believe I'm going to say this, but I agree with you. I was never really a Matt Gates
fan. I was never really a huge Matt Gates person at all. I haven't really spent any time thinking
about him other than with that whole Kevin McCarthy, uh, defenestration thing. But I know
that there are allegations against him. There, there are no charges. So that's that. I mean,
they weren't able to make any charges and it involved his alleged relationship with a 17-year-old
girl, which he's denied. And then they were accusing him of sex trafficking. He went on,
he denied this. This is the thing he went on Tucker about a long time ago. He answered the
charges, he says bullshit and didn't go anywhere. So, I mean, that's that. We'll see what the house
says if there's something more, but if there was something seriously more, we would have seen a charge.
But what I look at is two things.
Number one, and I tweeted this out yesterday, if you are Donald Trump and your chosen attorney general has turned you over to Robert Mueller,
who then ruined your first term as president with a bunch of bullshit, then you leave office and the next guy's attorney general is behind not one but two criminal prosecutions of you and his DOJ is cooperating with not one
but two state prosecutions of you in a bridge that's never been crossed in our 250 year history as a nation, then I too might prize loyalty to me above all
other qualities and go with a guy like Matt Gaetz. Who can blame Trump for trying to pick the most
loyal soldier he can find for this position? And then point two is what you just said, Smug. Eric Holder was a partisan hack loser.
And so is Merrick Garland, partisan hack loser. So what do I don't care? Like at this point,
I'm like, you know what? F you people get the fighter in there. The gloves are off.
You took them off. Now Trump's brought in his own guy with the brass knuckles. It's on.
Yeah, that's the greatest fear of Democrats is that other people will do to them what they've been doing to the American people.
And Trump picking people who are loyal to him is exactly what the American people want.
That's why he has the popular vote on top of the Electoral College in his victory.
He needs to send people who execute his vision 100 percent.
And if he sees Matt Gaetz as a loyalist who's willing to accomplish that,
I'm 100% on board.
I don't blame him, Duncan,
for being a little squeamish about,
you know, some rando establishment attorney general.
Sorry, Ashbrook, I interrupt you.
You go.
Go, go.
I mean, what I like I was saying,
it's going to take a very, very strong person
to fix these gigantic problems at DOJ and Gates will take a meat axe to it.
You can you can bet on that. And if he doesn't get there, Trump will find somebody else who will do the exact same thing to because these problems have to be addressed.
That's why he was elected. Go ahead. Oh, OK.
So you're looking at me, Michael. I heard you there, Megan. Am I squeamish about it?
No, I just to reinforce Holmes's take on this.
It's like you don't want to waste political capital on things that aren't going to happen.
I agree with everything that Smug said.
In fact, I think it goes deeper than that.
You go back and look at what James Comey did at the beginning of Trump's first administration,
where he basically went to Trump Tower to President-elect Donald Trump and tried to entrap him and gave him oppo research
generated by the Hillary Clinton campaign and said, hey, did you pee on Russian prostitutes?
And then he scurried back down to his car and typed out a bunch of notes and tried to leak it
to the media to get a special counsel appointed. So I'm all for that and
rooting out all of the deep state bureaucracy at DOJ and the FBI and all of those sort of things.
I just don't want to waste any time. The thing that makes me squeamish
is trying to get a Gates through. And we waste a lot of time solving these problems
because like you said, Susan Collins, Murkowski, like that's just political reality. There are people who are going to not support him.
And I saw Dick Durbin this morning,
you know, telling the House Ethics Committee
that he'd love to see that report
for the hearings against Matt Gaetz.
And I mean, it'll just, it's going to be a circus.
That's all I'm saying, a circus.
So just to be clear, Susan Collins,
the reports are that she will oppose.
Murkowski said, quote, we need to have a serious attorney general. And I'm looking forward to the opportunity to consider somebody that is serious. This one, this one was not on my bingo card. So she hasn't said no, but he said the following. I have very few skills. Vote counting is one. And I think he's got a lot of work to do to get to 50. So it's really about the Republicans.
There's this. This is on the record from Republican Senator Bill Cassidy, who dodged
Politico's question on Gates, saying, I'm trying to go fix a toilet between getting back for a vote. Life's a little hectic right now.
I don't know whether that's a signal or what that is.
Megan, that's what you're seeing. I think, look, there's an issue at the beginning of every administration in that what you would like to do is take your political capital, take the mandate that the American people gave you and put your hardened opposition in a very difficult place. And I think Donald Trump has got the opportunity to literally
break the Democratic Party. I mean, you look at all of the recriminations, it's Joe Biden's fault,
it's Barack Obama's fault, it's George Clooney's fault, it's Hollywood's fault, it's Oprah's fault.
Like they're all blaming everybody. They don't know. You hear people saying like,
oh, we've got to moderate on social issues or we've got to be more clear populist opposition to big business.
They don't know what the hell to do.
They don't have an identity at all.
But the conversation that we're having right now is a conversation about Donald Trump versus
Republicans.
And I think if you're doing that for a prolonged period of time at the beginning of an
administration, you're sort of missing the opportunity to sort of forever
change not only the policy that comes after, but but the political dynamic in which Democrats live
in, which they are very, very uncomfortable with, provided you have a United Republican Party that
is absolutely beating the drum on them. And it just makes it makes Dick Durbin's job easier.
It makes Chuck Schumer's job easier when we're arguing amongst ourselves. And I understand what you're saying, Holmes, is he can go provocative, but he can't go full on nuclear. is that each one of these United States senators wake up every morning and see a president of the United States in their own mirrors, right?
All of them are elected statewide.
Many of them were elected.
Everyone that we just mentioned on this program
were elected before Donald Trump ever came around, right?
So like you have to try to figure out
what is the best use of your political capital.
And if it's Matt Gaetz, if they decide it's Matt
Gaetz, well, then it is Matt Gaetz. And then we'll see how that whole thing plays out.
But I just worry about sort of the underpinning of that.
But, you know, you mentioned, I think it was you, Duncan, or Ashbrook, you mentioned the
FBI. And that's another thing. I mean, the FBI is within the DOJ. And that's the organization
that raided Mar-a-Lago and tried to humiliate him.
That's the organization that spied on churchgoers under Joe Biden to see if we were wearing our
masks. That is the organization that Biden pulled in to discuss whether parents objecting to the
masks and the mandates and the school lockdowns were domestic terrorists. And that is the organization that
most Republicans believe needs to be shredded down to the studs and rebuilt fresh from scratch
to focus on only one thing, which is law enforcement and not these investigations and so on.
That is probably part of this too. You know, there was a report, I think it was Politico today,
I think, where, did you see the guy who runs Polymarket? The FBI raided his house this morning at 6 a.m. and took his phone and other things. And apparently one source close to Trump world
in an interview to, I'll figure out what's political or Axios,
I get them confused, said he picked, it was Axios, he picked Matt Gaetz to stop shit like that.
Like just to, or look at what happened to James O'Keefe, right? Like they're trying to
harass him. The FBI showed up and raided his house, too, after he was reporting on the Ashley Biden diary.
I mean, we really had some rogue FBI behavior here.
And I can see why they think you don't want a perfectly polite, you know, Queens English pinky out tea sipping lawyer to run herd over these guys. And that's the thing is, it's frustrating that
you have Republicans in the Senate who always wonder, oh, wouldn't this cause some problems?
And the Democrats never thought, well, this caused some problems when they sent Merrick Garland,
who wasn't fit for the Supreme Court, so he's not there. When they sent Eric Holder, who
since running the Department of Justice has gone on to essentially start a dark money group that gerrymanders districts across America.
So conservatives can't have their voice heard.
So we need to stop thinking about, oh, would this cause some problems?
Am I going to have a tough press conference and think about what could we gain from having Matt Gaetz there?
If he shows up day one at the FBI and says, anyone who has a problem with me, get up and leave.
And you see half the people in that building leave. That's a huge win. That's a solution.
Yeah. I guess at the end of the day, what I would prefer is that like the opposition,
to use an analogy from golf, you're playing a heads up match against somebody. They take out
the driver and they hit it into the water and they're out of bounds. Pull the five iron and
hit it down the middle of the fairway and go and use your political capital on, I don't know, deportations,
a 70-30 issue in this country, fixing the economy, ending the wars. Those things are worth using your
political capital. He doesn't need to. What do you mean? He already has the public support on
those issues. So he doesn't have
to burn political capital to do those things. Well, what I'm saying is the Democrats on the
deportation issue will make it a circus. They're going to make it a circus on the Mac.
Yes. But when when what's his name? Homan is not his nominee. Yeah. Like, oh, man,
when all this when all that stuff starts to be implemented and put in motion, there's just an effect in Washington, I think, three months into a new administration, six months where the cement starts to harden and it gets harder to do things legislatively.
Right. And so if you get all of these things in process and in motion in the first hundred days, you're going to reap the political benefits into the future. I mean, I think the biggest
question. How much? I mean, let me ask this quickly. How much can they slow down? How much
can the Democrats slow down this confirmation hearings? Like how long will this drama be going
be with us? Well, it's it's not really up to the Democrats to to provide the pace. I mean,
it'll be Chairman Grassley, the Judiciary Committee chair, will set a timeline. They'll
obviously have to go through, you know, your background checks and your financial disclosures and all of that.
Once they're satisfied with the information, then he sets a hearing date.
You've got hearings and ultimately report on a committee, and they'll set a date for a confirmation.
So Democrats can't do a whole bunch about that.
But what they can do is turn the Judiciary Committee into a big top circus, as we saw like during Kavanaugh, for example. I need a help. Yeah. And the question is,
look, everything that you guys have talked about in terms of the problems with the Justice
Department, the problems with Merrick Garland, you know, Eric Holder, insane, the FBI, everything
they're doing. Nobody disagrees on that. I don't think there's any republican that disagrees with
the notion that we have to do something about that i guess the question is whether or not you
sent rupaul in to do it right i mean there's different ways there's different ways out of
gates fan i think we've determined holmes is not behind the pick i don't and i don't it's like i
mean to be honest with you megan my problem has never been with Matt Gates. In fact, he's kind of said some nice things about the Ruthless Variety Program.
So I have no problem with this guy.
I have a problem with us just sort of pretending gravity doesn't exist.
And what I really wish-
We're going to find out whether it does.
Yeah, I wish we would take the opportunity to sort of like study and understand how the
most effective implementations
of policy have happened because we don't have a very long sound like Trump.
No, it doesn't. But it doesn't. He ran a campaign that did, though, you know, I mean,
he ran a campaign that was technically. But this is his most sensitive area. This is like the crowd size piece of policy for him. Like trigger, you know, like DOJ FBI.
Imagine. I mean, I understand it for the reasons I just stated. Who has harassed Trump more than
this string of DOJs? It's his own to begin with. Jeff Sessions recused, handed thing over to Bob
Mueller. Bob Mueller took over, made his life a living hell. And, you know, then he had attorney general after attorney general who he couldn't
stand, who he didn't feel was loyal to him. And even the New York Times is reporting about this
this morning, like, well, they were grownups who were loyal to trying to keep him in check.
Well, he doesn't want that. The American public may say we like it. They may not. But Trump,
he's not required to like it. This time around, he got smart for what he wants. And he's like,
I'm getting a loyalist.
You've got got to hear what he did on immigration. This is so good. It's so good. If you voted for
Trump, you're getting dividends already.
He's announced that he's going to appoint this man named Tom Homan as his border czar. That's not a
position that must be confirmed. So that's good because this guy can do what he wants.
Hey, if Kamala Harris can be the border czar, so can Tom Homan. He served in the first Trump administration. He was acting director then of ICE, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. And in his announcement, Trump said that Homan, quote, will be in charge of all deportation of illegal aliens back to their country of origin. Homan reacted to the news this morning on Fox. Watch. And look, I've seen I've seen some of these Democratic governors say they're going to stand in the way.
They're going they're going to make a hard force. Well, I know a suggestion.
If you're not going to help us get the hell out of the way.
Tom, you know, the last person who was Borders are she didn't want to be called Borders are you're proud of it.
You know, I don't want to look like a genius because when you follow failure, you can't help but succeed, right?
He began his career in immigration enforcement back in 1994 as a Border Patrol agent.
And while his career background is important, the way he fires back at these bully Democrats on this issue and at the media is a thing of beauty.
It's truly beautiful.
Last month, he was interviewed by 60 Minutes. Watch.
We have seen one estimate that says it would cost $88 billion to deport a million people a year.
I don't know if that's accurate or not.
Is that what American taxpayers should expect?
What price do you put on national security?
Is that worth it?
Is there a way to carry out mass deportation
without separating families?
Of course there is.
Families can be deported together.
Amazing.
In 2019, Homan took part in a hearing on Capitol Hill.
It's so good.
About the Trump administration's border policies.
He was accused by a Democratic progressive congressman of not caring about migrant children because of the color of their skin.
Do you understand that the consequences of separation of many children will be lifelong trauma and carried across generations? Have we not learned from the internment of Japanese Americans? Mr. Holman, I'm a father. Do you have children?
How can you possibly allow this to happen under your watch? Do you not care? Is it because these
children don't look like children that are around you? I don't get it. Have you ever held a deceased child in your arms?
First of all, your comments are disgusting.
I've served my country for 34 years.
I find your comments disgusting as well.
I've served my country for 34 years.
And yes, I held a five-year-old boy in my arms
in back of that tractor trailer.
I knelt down beside him and said a prayer for him because I knew what his last 30 minutes of his life were like.
And I had a five-year-old son at the time.
What I've been trying to do my 34 years serving my nation is to save lives.
So for you to sit there and insult my integrity and my love for my country and for children, that's why this whole thing needs to be fixed.
And you're the member of Congress.
We agree on that.
Fix it.
If you want to legalize illegal immigration, good luck with that
because it's going to get a hell of a lot worse on that border.
If you say, okay, from now on, there will be no consequences, no deterrence.
It's not illegal to come to this country illegally.
More families will come.
31% women will be raped.
More children will die.
We're a nation of laws.
If you don't like it, sir, change it. You're the
legislator. I'm the executive branch. And I've served my country honorably for 34 years. And I
will not sit here and have anybody say that I don't care about children because you're not the
same color as my children. He is amazing. This guy's incredible. We looked into that story he
referenced of the five-year-old boy that he was talking
about that he did hold in his arms. It happened back in 2003. The boy died along with 19 others
after being crammed into a tractor trailer with nearly 70 other migrants in total. They were being
smuggled into the United States. This is how they do it, and they suffocated to death.
Some tried to claw two holes through the truck's foam insulation just to try to get a breath of
fresh air. Per a report by the Daily Signal, at the crime scene that day, Tom Holman was there.
Holman said he directed the men taking the bodies away to save the child until last,
to not remove his remains until last, because he said, quote, I couldn't deal with it because I
just kept seeing my son there. And he held that little boy. And then that idiotic representative walked right into that.
Have you ever held a dead child?
Yes, I have.
I've seen the consequences.
That's what Homan was saying of your disastrous policies.
I'm the one who's got to clean up the bodies.
There are reports at the time about that disastrous truck stop and the deaths.
There were at least 62 people packed into this trailer.
They were in a nearly airless heat-baked container, despite the effort to get two
holes in there so they could breathe. Most of the human cargo was male. That five-year-old
boy was the youngest, but there was a girl who was 15 that day and she actually lived. Sheriff's deputies
there brought her cake and cookies. So much for the evil border patrol guys who are there not
caring about the brown people like that representative is suggested. An emergency
dispatcher received a 911 call from a man speaking Spanish. This is how they found out
there was an emergency there and broken English at 1142 PM. The man was saying,
we're asphyxiating. Help me, help me. We're asphyxiating. In Spanish, he said,
we're in a trailer. We're illegals. This is the cost of that open border that people now like Harris and Biden have allowed for years.
And by the way, the reports now are that we can expect the immigration problem to spike over the next couple of months until Trump gets there.
That the illegals see, this is per the Daily Wire this morning quoting from NBC, that they're anticipating January 20th as their deadline to get into this country.
So what's Joe Biden going to do about it? Because you're going to get more deaths and more rapes
of young girls and more families who ultimately get separated because these drug mules,
these bad actors use the children since we're against family separation to get across the
border. And the children are exploited time and time again.
Tom Holman's been on the side of the angels on this. And he's being placed back in charge and
we should all celebrate his return. In that same hearing we just showed you, he also fired back at
AOC, who as always thought that she knew better when she questioned him about the administration's
zero tolerance policy.
Mr. Holman, your name is on this. Is this correct?
Yes, I signed that memo.
So you are the author of the family separation policy?
I am not the author of this memo.
You're not the author, but you signed the memo.
Yes, a zero tolerance memo.
And so the recommendation of the many that you recommended, you recommended family
separation. I recommended zero tolerance. Which includes family separation. The same as is
whenever you're a citizen parent gets arrested when they're with a child.
Zero tolerance was interpreted as the policy that separated children from their parents. If I get
arrested for DUI and I have a young child in a car,
I'm going to be separated.
When I was a police officer in New York
and I arrested a father for domestic violence,
I separated that father from his family.
Mr. Holman, with all due respect,
legal asylees are not charged with any crime.
When you're in the country illegally,
it's violation 8 United States Code 1325.
Seeking asylum is legal.
If you want to seek asylum and go through the port of entry, do it the legal way.
He's incredible, isn't he? My God. The EJs are back with me now, Emily and Eliana. I don't,
I don't know what more, just as I was thinking, I don't know what more we could ask for. We get
the announcement that Trump is putting Stephen Miller also on the immigration case. He's deputy assistant. What is he, Steve?
Glossing over his official title. Deputy chief of staff for policy on the immigration front.
And he's the guy who came up with a lot of those policies that work so well under Trump, like
remain in Mexico and some of the executive orders that Trump signed requiring us to crack down on
these BS asylum claims. That's a dream team, Emily. Tom Homan is so interesting because one
of the ways he first started, I think, really getting in media is that he worked for the Obama
administration. He's been given like an award by Barack Obama. And I think that's what gives him the confidence to go and talk to AOC like that, because he
saw this flawed process from the inside.
He saw it on the ground and he's able to then sort of flip the script and say, this is zero
tolerance.
And you saw her kind of pause there.
It was really interesting when he said it was a zero tolerance memo.
She didn't totally know what to do with that because it's the script being flipped on her. And he's a great example of somebody who's able to do that with confidence and boldness because he sort of has worked for the other side. He's talked to the other side. He's been friendly with the other side. And so he's able to just say, listen, I don't give a damn. Like, I've seen this. I know exactly what I'm talking about. And so he's a huge asset for Trump. Stephen Miller, somebody who is totally vilified in the
press. And Trump isn't afraid to appoint him to a deputy chief of staff position. So you're
definitely seeing fearlessness. There's no hesitation from Donald Trump at all about
bringing some of these people, no matter how vilified they are in the press. Stephen Miller is a genius. He is a genius,
and he knows immigration better than almost anyone. And I'm thrilled that he's willing to
take the risk with his family, his wife, and called a white supremacist over and over.
He was a newlywed. They were calling him terrible names. That's what's going to happen if you try
to clean up the border. We've seen it time and time. So it does require nerves of steel to say yes to this. Homan looks like he's got him. We
know Stephen Miller's got him. I'm overjoyed to see this, Eliana. And in the news today, too,
Tom Homan making clear that President Trump's deportation priorities are not about people who
are here unlawfully, who are abiding by the law. Now I realize it's a crime to
sneak into the country illegally across the border, but that that's not the priority.
The priority is the criminals who are here and causing havoc in the States. And in response to
that, you already get like the Massachusetts governor coming out and saying, we will not cooperate.
We will not. What happens is this person, Massachusetts is seeing a rash of rapes
by these illegals in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. And what happens when an
illegal rapes somebody is they go to jail if they get arrested. And then you might find out that
there's a detainer on them from ICE. They're in the system as like, hey, we're looking for this
illegal. If you happen to catch this person committing a crime, please call us. And what
happens in sanctuary cities or states like Massachusetts is the cops see that and they say,
we don't give a shit. We don't care. We won't be calling ICE. We're going to release this guy
back out into the general public like he's just like a shoplifter. And we are not going to be involving immigration
authorities. And now the Massachusetts governor has gone on the record saying we will not be
cooperating. We will maintain our status as a sanctuary state. And that's going to be the
next battle as Trump tries to get the worst of the worst out of the country, Eliana, and the media will be on the wrong side.
I think there are a couple interesting things happening here with personnel.
The first is the order with which these picks are being made. You know, first you had Susie Wiles being named chief
of staff, and she's a really interesting pick who couldn't be more different, I don't think,
from Reince Priebus, who was Trump's first chief of staff last time around, who was somebody he
didn't really know. I mean, Reince was running the RNC. Trump and the RNC weren't that close when he ran.
Susie has been running his operation since 2021 and somebody who has really gained his trust and demonstrated an ability to manage both Trump and his operation. The second is that the first appointments we're seeing coming from Trump are on immigration, which I think sends a signal to folks that he's going
to take the issue seriously. You know, the first, the first appointment coming out wasn't the
secretary of state or the secretary of defense, but it was the immigration czar. And I do think
that's intentional and sends a signal. And also to see, we haven't talked about Elise Stefanik
going to the United Nations. She's someone who is, you talked about strong women. She's, I think, likely to be in the mold of Nikki Haley, who was there before, who will be an advocate for America and Israel on the world stage. And so thus far, you know, we're seeing interesting appointments that I
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Kamala lost because of Kamala. That is the subject of today's show. You know, I really thought that someone on the left would write this.
I've been saying this.
The true story of how Kamala Harris lost the presidential race.
I thought that they would be so angry with her for losing to Trump
that they would be clamoring to write the in-depth piece on how she blew it.
You know, like journalists.
Silly me. I thought we'd get to read
all the juicy details about how this well-known bully who lost 92% of her staff as vice president
because no one could stand working for her was impossible to manage, wouldn't take advice,
couldn't execute prepared strategies, was too paralyzed with fear to make decisions, except for the big
one that she did make, which was to pick Tim Walz as her running mate, which turned out to be an
absolute disaster. But so far, nothing. It's really been only a couple of lame pieces and
none have really gone in depth behind the scenes. Maybe it'll still happen. But truly what's happened so far is it's been mostly
she lost because of racism and sexism and maybe because of Joe Biden.
We are being spoon fed a bunch of nonsense. Oh, what a change about how Kamala Harris hit
all of her marks. I mean, you can't be mad at her. She hit all of her marks. These are lies.
Maybe it's just easier for them to blame Joe Biden. He's the white guy who stayed too long
and was far too infirm. I guess he's not going on Mount Rushmore anymore. Remember Nancy Pelosi?
So it's a no. Or maybe it is because this is the Democrat Party and you don't blame problems on
black women, period.
It doesn't matter how terribly they have behaved. I give you Donna Brazile, who cheated on a presidential debate and now has had not one, but two contractor or contributor deals with
network news, Fox and now ABC. It's unbelievable. Sure, some white man would have the same deal, right? The way Joy Reid
has survived, despite the anti-gay slurs all over her blog, her lies about how she'd been
hacked and the FBI was investigating. So weird how that never went anywhere. And now years of open,
abject hatred of whites. They're fine with that. I don't know exactly the reasons why they're not doing it
or whether they will do it. I'm still an optimist at heart, I guess.
But look, before we close this chapter in presidential history and say sayonara, Kamala,
I decided we need to take an honest look back. So here goes. From the start, it was very important that we get her
name right. Inclusion is understandable. Disrespect is not. What are you here to do?
To teach you how to say your auntie's name. Okay. So how do you pronounce it? First you say comma like a common sentence.
Then you say la like la la la la la. Put it together and it's one, two, three. Kamala. Oh my God, is inflation lower yet?
These devoted portions of the Democratic National Convention to this.
And then if you did not get her name right after you'd received the lesson, you were racist.
Just ask Nancy Mace.
When you disrespect Kamala Harris by saying you will call her whatever you want,
I know you don't intend it to be that way.
That's the history and legacy of white disregard for the humanity of black people.
So now you're calling me racist.
I just said you weren't racist.
That is complete BS.
You don't have to intend racism to accomplish your name right.
And Kamala Harris, if I want to call you Nancy Mace. It's Kamala. You're doing this on purpose,
Congresswoman. That's disrespectful. Just a second.
Okay. Helpful articles were written explaining that mispronouncing someone's name is a micro
aggression, an effort to disparage them, a disrespect rooted in the racist tradition of
othering black people in subtle but meaningful ways.
Even though it's routinely done to white people as well, like Matt Gaetz and Demi Moore, Ralph Fiennes, Steve Buscemi.
Here's MSNBC's Nicole Wallace this week, pretending while on air not to know how to pronounce or even spell that pesky
Pete Hegseth's name. Or the Fox weekend guy whose name someone, what is his name?
Tom Heg, what? Pete Hegseth. Heg, can I get a spelling? H-E-G-S-E-T-H? She's such a faker. She's such a faker. God, she's inauthentic. But yeah, look,
here's the kicker. Even well-known Democrats pronounced Kamala Harris's name wrong.
Kamala Harris spoke to me that day. Our leader, Kamala, asked them, how can I help you? We need Kamala Harris,
the president of joy, to lead us. Kamala said, we're all closely monitoring the storm.
Kamala, Kamala, Al Sharpton, Bill Clinton, Joe Biden. I guess they didn't get the memo because they
weren't there when the little girls talked about their auntie. They're racist too,
or is it just Nancy Mace because she's a Republican? So in any event, that's how
things kicked off. Everyone is racist, racist for mispronouncing her name, except for all the
Democrats who can't pronounce her name either. But you're not supposed to notice that. Knowing that she has an unattractive personality, Kamala Harris's team tried hard to rebrand her
when she first launched as not painful, but as brat, the meaning of which nobody knows.
Charlie XCX, who I do know, quote, Brett, you're just that girl who is a little messy and likes to party and maybe says some dumb things sometimes.
Very cool. I'm sure that messenger really communicated to the young folks when she told them she is brat. So the message for voters
is she's not awkward. She's not off-putting. She might be dumb, but she's actually the cool
wine aunt you'll love to hang with at Thanksgiving. Absolutely perfect for the presidency.
Everything about her had to be made over, you see, because the public spent four years watching her
and had come to deeply dislike this woman. In June 2024, this past June, a majority of Americans had
an unfavorable view of her. For over 40%, it was very unfavorable. The most important rebrand
to start with her makeover? The cackle.
High five.
Wow.
That's a lot.
That's a lot.
It's not a cackle, they told us.
It's joy.
This joy, this campaign of infectious and dynamic joy.
These two very positive, joyful, energetic people embrace the joy, which you see them doing.
There's a lot of joy, a lot of optimism out of the box.
The vice president has spoken to this eloquently with great joy, great enthusiasm. And joy,
I think, is a great word because you can see this in Tim Walton.
This week, four Democrats has been, not to overuse this word, such a joyful one.
And just in case you weren't convinced and you actually think she does cackle,
her cackle's amazing. It's amazing and it's just being weaponized against her. Your opponent and Republicans have at times weaponized you laughing.
What do you make of Republicans using that as a way to suggest that you're not a serious candidate?
There are some times when your adversaries will try and turn your strength into a weakness.
Don't you lock them.
Get off Kamala Harris's dick about her laugh. And number two, get rigorously honest with yourself and go get some therapy and talk about how clearly you have such a hard time wrapping your head around the idea of a smart, successful, self-made, confident woman who is able to easily and frequently find and express joy.
Tale of two tickets. One radiates joy. The other is dour and frankly, frightening.
And this is how you know the Republicans are freaking out about it.
Vice President Kamala Harris is criticized for her race, gender and parental status, but also
for laughing. As if an infectious, energizing belly laugh, the literal display of joy
is a bad thing. Infectious and energizing. Whole think pieces were written, like this one from
The Atlantic entitled Kamala Harris and the Threat of a Woman's La laugh, which told readers, Trump doesn't really laugh. He smirks. He bears
his teeth silently. Bears his teeth, I say. He's a rabid dog, you see. Kamala, according to The
Atlantic, well, her laugh is wholesome. It's honest. It's human. In fact, they write, quote,
criticism of emotional expression has long been a weapon of
choice for those wanting to cut down women in political power. Criticism of her laugh is
weaponization, they say. Trump, you see, is rabid with bare teeth. Kamala is wholesome.
And disagreement means you're just threatened by an honest woman. In sum, she does not cackle. She is joyful and
also wholesome and honest and human and you're sexist. We're off to a banger start. At first,
she was tightly controlled. Obviously, there would be no interviews, but some big decisions
were required before the Democratic National Convention,
like deciding who would step into her shoes if she were incapacitated as president.
She later explained on that one, she went on instinct.
What's the last time you would make a gut decision? This here is very prescribed,
very controlled. Yeah, probably the biggest gut decision I've made most recently is to choose my running mate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So what did her gut get us?
You are the dancing queen
Young and sweet
Only 17
Dancing queen Oh, God.
Nicely done, Debbie Murphyphy let's be honest he looked a little familiar come on down yeah The listening audience knows, but that was clips from The Price is Right.
Or maybe it wasn't The Price is Right. Maybe it was this.
Chris Farley. right. Or maybe it wasn't the price is right. Maybe it was this. It was a little bit awkward, but maybe it was just his physicality, you know, like the jerky,
herky motions, but maybe, maybe, maybe the guy was a really effective orator.
Look, I will be the first to tell you, I have poured my heart into my community.
I've tried to do the best I can, but I've not been perfect. And I'm a knucklehead at times,
but it's always been about that. Oh, well, not the best message for your VP choice, but OK.
It promptly came out that Tim Walz was a radical leftist.
The man who was supposed to win over Midwestern working class men for Kamala had mandated tampons in the boys bathrooms and made his state a sanctuary for underage kids claiming to be another gender who wanted to castrate and sterilize themselves.
A story so extreme that many did not believe it, but it was true.
Turns out the insult, walls hurled at Republicans that caught Kamala Harris's attention in the first place and led to her making him her VP running mate was no more than a mere projection.
These are weird people on the other side.
They want to take books away.
They want to be in your exam room.
That's that's what it comes down to.
And don't get sugarcoating this.
These are weird ideas.
Listen to them speak.
Let's know they talk about things.
Listen to how your previous guests were right.
Like you said, they've told them that they shouldn't talk about race.
They can't help it.
It is built into their DNA because there is no plan.
Tim Walz also lied a lot, a couple dozen times at least, about his inflated military rank.
He was not a retired command sergeant major.
Where he served in combat, he did not serve in Iraq or Afghanistan, as he led people to believe.
Lied about in what context he served.
It was not in combat, as he later claimed, and about many, many other things.
We hosted some of the National Guard members who served with Tim Walz.
And I just called him a deserter also because he left his post, he left his duty station,
and he walked off into the sunset.
I say slithered a lot of times, that he slithered out of the armory.
But he walked into the sunset, never turned around, never had any intention of ever coming back to the military.
He was gone. And because I've got better things to do.
I mean, what would you like to see him do? Apologize. Apologize.
Didn't happen. He lied about being a head coach, which he wasn't using IVF,, which he didn't, receiving a commendation from the Chamber of Commerce, which he didn't, being in China when the Tiananmen Square massacre took place, which he wasn't, his son was witnessing a mass shooting, which he didn't, and much, much more.
It was clearly a problem. And pretty soon, we stopped seeing much of Tim Walz on the campaign trail, whose daughter, by the way, has thoughts on the election.
I've like officially reached a point of anger and I'm not an angry person, so I'm just trying to channel it.
The first one being this country does not deserve Kamala Harris.
That's that woman should go live her best life wherever she wants, doing whatever she wants, because we don't deserve her at this point. The only people that delivered this election were black women and we failed them.
And it's just heartbreaking. And we've got to do whatever we can to support them and support our
people through these next four years. These people have to live in their own skin, as in J.D. Vance and Donald Trump have to be J.D. Vance and Donald Trump. And that is not a punishment I would wish upon
anybody except those two individuals. Yeah, so I'm just really grateful that I am who I am and
that I'm on the side of love and hope and joy and progress. Oh, nice. I mean, I think it's fair to say the joy is gone. It's gone.
We've kind of changed our messaging, but you know what? Good luck to you in your future endeavors.
So the Kamala campaign at this point in our story had tried brat and joy and kept her mostly under
wraps, putting her out only in highly controlled scripted settings like the Democratic National
Convention or at rallies
with the teleprompter. But there was still the matter of her radical policy statements from 2019
when she first ran for president. She wanted to ban fracking, to eliminate private health insurance,
to ban meat, to ban gas cars, to ban and confiscate guns. She wanted to mandate taxpayer-funded sex
change procedures for prisoners and illegals. She thought the wall was a stupidate guns. She wanted to mandate taxpayer-funded sex change procedures for
prisoners and illegals. She thought the wall was a stupid vanity project. She was open to
reparations. My God, where to begin with the cleanup? Fracking, that's as good a place as any.
Pennsylvania is a must-win state, and they love fracking. So reversing that position is a no-brainer. Soon, we received unsigned paper statements from rando
campaign spokespeople saying Kamala disavowed her position on fracking. Oh, and also on banning
private health insurance. Fracking ban? Who ever heard of a fracking ban? There's no question I'm
in favor of banning fracking. What? Do not believe your lying ears. Unnamed spokesperson claimed it's not so.
Getting rid of private health insurance? What kind of a nutcase would ever propose that?
To reiterate, you support the Medicare for all bill. I think initially co-sponsored by Senator Bernie Sanders.
You're also a co-sponsor. I believe it will totally eliminate private insurance. So for people out there who like their insurance, they don't get
to keep it? Well, listen, the idea is that everyone gets access to medical care and you don't have to
go through the process of going through an insurance company, having them give you approval,
going through the paperwork, all of the delay that may require. Who of us has not had that situation where you got to wait for approval and the doctor says, well,
I don't know if your insurance company is going to cover this. Let's eliminate all of that. Let's
move on. Yeah, that's worked out beautifully for our friends up north in the evil top hat Canada.
She's over it. Trust me, said rando spokesperson via paper statement. Other positions were not
expressly reversed, but her language around them became very, very different. Gun bans
and mandatory gun buyback programs? Oh, hell no. Reinvented Kamala is a 2A, NRA,
gun-toting kind of gal. She's the Dana Lash of Canada. She's Serpico.
You want to play, guys? Okay. I'll play with you. Come on.
Okay. You want to play with us? Okay. Say hello to my little friend.
You want to play with us? Okay. Okay. That wasn't Al Pacino. That was the reinvented Kamala Harris.
On cops and immigration, she also sounded very, very different from 2019 Kamala.
Kamala didn't really bail rioters out of Minnesota prisons. Yeah, she did. And she wasn't really soft on the border or on ICE. Yeah, she was. In fact, she was the only candidate in this race that has prosecuted
transnational gangs and criminals in a border state. In other words, ain't gonna be no border
trouble in this here town, little missy. Sheriffel harris had arrived well here's my word get the hell off my spread
now get down off them horses i don't favor looking up to the likes of you if you say three mister
you'll never hear the man count ten every time you turn around expect to see me there's one time
you'll turn around and i'll be there. Anything goes wrong, anything at
all. Your fault, my fault, nobody's fault. It don't matter. I'm going to blow your head off.
It's like looking in the mirror for Kamala. So some radical positions either reversed on paper
by the rando nameless, or seemingly disavowed by
new messaging, and boom, we're off to the races. Done. Now it was time for an interview. Took about
a month for her to finally do it, and the lucky recipient, CNN's Dana Bash. By the way, that's
another person whose name gets mispronounced, and it's not racist. Big opportunity, big, lots to discuss. CNN's ratings
are in the toilet. So this is a chance to show everyone you're not actually in the tank for Team
Blue. Do your thing. You're a serious journalist who will hit Kamala Harris just as hard as you
did J.D. Vance, who you've had on your show many times and you continuously, routinely go round and round with him, you're
tough. Let's go, Dana. So she gets Kamala Harris there next to her emotional support governor,
Tim Walz. And Dana Bash does the thing. She asks about the all important fracking reversal. This
is going to be the first time we're going to hear her explain it on camera and directly as opposed through the rando.
This is exciting. When you were in Congress, you supported the Green New Deal. And in 2019, you said, quote, there is no question I'm in favor of banning fracking. Fracking, as you know,
is a pretty big issue, particularly in your must win state of Pennsylvania.
Do you still want to ban fracking? No. and I made that clear on the debate stage in 2020
that I would not ban fracking.
As vice president, I did not ban fracking.
As president, I will not ban fracking.
Wait, what?
No.
In 2020, she participated in a vice presidential debate
against Mike Pence and said Joe Biden, who was at the top of her ticket, would not ban fracking.
Surely you know that, Dana Bash. Surely you've done your homework since this is a very big interview, her first as the nominee, and you studied her earlier statements on fracking, a subject you have chosen to raise.
And you know that other paper statement through the rando spokesperson is all we've gotten,
that she's never disavowed anything directly. And this is our chance to find out all about it.
Let's check in and see whether she was cross-examined, held to account, and how things actually went between them from there. Say we belong to. Yeah.
Yes, that's exactly how it looked.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show.
No BS, no agenda, and no fear.