The Megyn Kelly Show - Fiery and Fun GOP Debate, and Vivek vs. Haley, with Josh Holmes, Glenn Greenwald, Rich Lowry, and Jim Geraghty | Ep. 681
Episode Date: December 7, 2023Megyn Kelly begins the show by talking about her thoughts after co-moderating the fourth and final GOP debate of 2023, and shares behind-the-scenes details about the process. Then she's joined by Ruth...less' Josh Holmes, Glenn Greenwald, host of Rumble's System Update, and National Review's Rich Lowry and Jim Geraghty to talk about talk about Vivek Ramaswamy's fiery exchanges with Nikki Haley, Haley's decision not to respond, the breaking news that CNN is slated to host the next two GOP debates next year, Chris Christie's "white knight" moment in defending Nikki Haley, whether it was good for Haley to have Christie jump in on her behalf, what really happened when Chris Christie walked over to Megyn Kelly during a GOP debate commercial break that went viral on X, Ron DeSantis' best moment during the GOP debate, the outraged reaction from CNN to comments from Vivek Ramaswamy, his legitimate arguments about immigration and other issues, what really happened with the Rumble feed, and more. Plus, Megyn announces Tucker Carlson is coming on the show next week with a big announcement.Holmes: https://ruthlesspodcast.com/Geraghty: https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/jim-geraghty/Lowry: https://www.nationalreview.com/author/rich-lowry/Greenwald: https://rumble.com/c/GGreenwald 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, just back home after a week
in Alabama. Hope you had a chance to watch last night's debate. I would love to hear your thoughts.
Email me at megyn, M-E-G-Y-N, at megankelly.com. And
there we will be posting some exclusive content from the debate. So go to megankelly.com, sign up.
I don't, we don't sell your emails or bombard you. We send you one a week on Fridays, just with news
updates. That's it. So it doesn't cost you anything. And it's a good way to stay abreast of
headlines and some behind the scenes things here at the show. And we will have plenty of them for you this week.
I had so much fun. I was so happy that I got to bring my family. Doug came with the kids yesterday
and that was super fun. They had a lot of thoughts about the debate themselves. And I was actually
really impressed with how thoughtful they were on it. And, you know, I, I would rather listen to my
little 10 year old Thatcher than Politico. I'm telling you, his analysis was spot on. Um, look, I thought it
was a success last night because we got to have a real actual debate. It's the first time, right?
It's like the first debate was a little too big that Fox news had. The second debate was just a
hot mess from beginning to end. The third debate was Kristen and Lester doing an interview, really interested in their own
thoughts on what matters, not at all on what the candidates had to say or getting them to
argue with each other. And I thought this was the first debate where they really got to go at it.
We tried to shrink ourselves and you got to see the candidates be the stars, which I loved,
focused on real issues. And by the way, the two other things I thought
made it different were we asked questions that Republicans want answers to. Some issues that
came up that were not raised at any other debate that are important to Republican voters. So I
thought that was good. And I thought the questions were all very, very charged in a good way,
in a challenging way. You know, you can ask very charged questions like that. I think if the audience knows you don't hate these people, you know what I mean? Like when I'm up
there, those four standing in front of me, they knew I, I don't hate them. I'm skeptical of
politicians in general, as you know, but I've said before, look, I'm going to vote for one of
these guys or Trump. If they get the nomination, I cannot vote for a man who wants children to have their body parts cut off when they're 10. So in any event,
it doesn't have to be a softball just because you're kind of on their side and you can get
away with very charged questions and pointed questions really no matter what, but especially
if they know you don't hate them. It's not coming
from a very, very negative place. All right, we're going to get reactions from all sides.
I'm more interested in what my guests have to say and what you have to say. Glenn Greenwald
will be here just a bit later. Rich Lowry, Jim Garrity, too, of National Review. But joining
us first is Josh Holmes. You know him as the co-host of the Ruthless program. It's a hit
podcast. We love it. And he's the founding partner and president of Cavalry.
He does politics for a living.
Josh, great to have you.
What'd you think?
Megan, first off, congratulations.
I mean, that was so well done.
I expected it.
I've watched your style.
I know how you interact
and I know how you give nobody any sort of free quarter. So I expected you to have a good debate, but you really,
I mean, this was exceptional, really, really well done. You know, I thought both Elizabeth
and Eliana did it well. People got to see what they needed to see. And hats off to you for that.
Thank you. I enjoyed just letting them go. That was my favorite part. Just let them go. Let it
rip.
You know, like for once they got to pile on each other and some defended each other. And you kind of really took in the dynamic, I thought, in a new way. You hadn't seen all four going at it and
like the old Republican Party, the new Republican Party. He's defending her. He's on this guy's side
like, oh, wow, a new dynamic emerged right in front of our eyes yeah they get to actually talk
about stuff and challenge each other you know i mean look off the top clearly where nikki haley
is in the polls was sort of validated by the fact that everybody was piling on i mean clearly
desantis saw her as target a1a not surprised surprisingly ramaswamy continued to put her in the middle of it.
And that was interesting.
I mean, you can tell a lot about where the candidates see the race based upon their strategy in a debate like this, where they have the opportunity to to press their case.
I also thought Ron DeSantis did a very, very nice job for the following reasons. You were highlighting a whole bunch of things and tapping into the anxieties that conservative voters have across this country and a range of
different issues. And each and every time he was able to not only identify with that, but then
show you the solution that he got done in Florida. He's done a little bit of this in every single one
of these debates. But what I found sort of separating here was people were challenging their their opponents credentials in all these areas, including his.
And each and every time he could lay out what he actually did.
And I think that resonates. Right. I mean, I think that's a it's a separating factor.
It's not enough to just sort of talk about how you feel about something when a candidate does something, boy, that's hard to ignore. So I thought he did.
I'll just add to that. I'll just add to that on DeSantis because, you know, we, as you know,
on this show, we've hit them all. They've all taken bumps and bruises from us, but we've praised
them too. You and I were on the air together the day after DeSantis' disastrous launch.
Yes. We're unsparing, But he's done many good things,
for which we praised him. And last night, I thought it was very interesting because I
asked that question about vaccine injuries. And we'll get to, there's some controversy about
the feed going down on Rumble when I asked that, and we'll play you the question and let you guys
hear it. But I asked that question. And when I wrote that question, I thought it was a very
important issue to raise because nobody else, that will never be raised by the mainstream ever at a GOP debate. Right.
I intentionally did not put it to Ron DeSantis because it's a softball to him. Right. It's like
it's a softball because that question landed with was a warp speed, a good thing. So I gave it to
Vivek, who's been very defensive of Trump. And it becomes more a little bit more interesting now.
Is he going to because, you know, he knows the Republican Party has some questions about these vaccines, but he doesn't want to split from Trump.
So now things get a little sexier.
You know, it's like, oh, wait, what's he going to do?
What's going to happen?
What is interesting?
And DeSantis did jump in, which is fine.
We let him weigh in.
But you know what he didn't do, Josh?
He did not raise the fact that he has created a
whole program to help the vaccine injured. And I thought because he had other things he wanted to
say, but I really thought that was almost to his credit because that's the thing about Ron DeSantis.
He has done something about every single issue bothering Republican voters in Florida. He's
actually done something, including this whole thing.
But it wasn't unique or special to him.
You know, it wasn't like, oh, wait, I've got something I can say about myself.
No, he had other many other things he wanted to get to.
We could have gone on probably for an hour with him on that one thing.
But I thought that is to his credit.
Yeah, listen, I totally agree with you.
I mean, it is issue after issue.
And again, everyone else is trying to parse around if they're saying what they actually believe or whether they're just trying to reflect back what they imagine a voter would want to hear.
And he just has to he sets that aside.
He just doesn't have to deal with that question at all because he's got the record on it. And I just thought he did a nicer job last night of laying all that out. And I thought the way you directed those questions, Megan, you're absolutely right. That is a much more interesting question for Vivek than it is for Ron DeSantis. And it allowed other people to weigh in. The other thing that I thought was interesting is Chris Christie, for the first time,
I think in all of the debates, did what he does best. Now, you can make a strong argument
that Republican primary voters don't want to hear that. And I think that's borne out in the numbers
and the poll numbers and how people feel about Chris Christie. But he also is on that stage for
one reason and one reason alone is because he's willing to draw contrast with Donald Trump regularly and challenge everybody else on the stage to do the same thing. He got that last night. He was very strong last night on all of those things. Again, I don't know how that ultimately resonates with conservative voters. Numbers kind of say that it doesn't. But that's why he's on that stage. And you've heard a lot of people talk about Chris Christie,
like, why is he here? That's why.
And I thought he did everything he wanted to do and more
in that debate, in that context.
Nikki had to play a lot of defense last night.
And, you know, the one thing that I think to her great credit
is that she never lost composure.
And in fact, at the end,
sort of stopped responding to Vivek altogether when he's holding up signs and all kinds of
things. I mean, that takes a fair amount of restraint, the kind of restraint that I think
a lot of voters would like to see in a president of the United States when they're dealing with
complicated issues overseas or what have you. But she also didn't get to play the same kind
of offense that she has in the previous debates.
She wasn't, you know,
carte blanche to just go anywhere she wanted.
She was pinned down an awful lot.
She handled the panel well,
but it's, you know,
your scoring ceiling comes down a little bit
when you have to play an awful lot of defense.
Let's show that moment
that you just referenced in SOT 23.
Nikki Haley's campaign launch video sounded like a woke Dylan Mulvaney Bud Light ad talking about how she would kick in heels at the first debate.
She said that only a woman can get this job done.
That's what she said.
After the third debate, when I criticized Ronna McDaniel after five failed years of leadership of this party and criticized Nikki for her corrupt foreign dealings as a military contractor,
she said that I have a woman problem.
Nikki, I don't have a woman problem.
You have a corruption problem.
And I think that that's what people need to know.
Nikki is corrupt.
This is a woman who will send your kids to die so she can buy a bigger house.
This is the problem.
Using identity politics more effectively than Kamala Harris
is a form of intellectual fraud.
And it actually needs to end.
There's our donor puppet masters
wielding their puppet right up here tonight.
This is how this game is played.
The puppet masters put up their puppet,
and I reject the use of identity politics in this party.
It has been a cancer coming from the left,
and I'm sick and tired of the double standards
the people of this country are too.
Having two X chromosomes does not immunize you
from criticism.
Thank you, sir.
Thank you.
Governor Haley, would you like to respond?
No.
It's not worth my time to respond to him.
By the way, there was a reference in there
to the Ruthless Gang.
Yeah.
It was your podcast on which she said, I think he's got a girl problem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now, listen, that has been the marquee attraction in all of these debates is what Ramaswamy
is trying to do with Nick.
Nicky laid him out in the first couple of debates.
Obviously, Vivek wanted to turn the tide on that.
And he was very aggressive.
You know, there's just an element of a P.T. Barnum routine with him where I think it was summarized in one of his last answers when he starts talking about 9-11 and he's talking about, you know, all kinds of sort of conspiracy theories.
We'll play that in one sec.
And all of that.
And it's very hard.
He makes some points there that are very worth listening to if you're a conservative voter. But it's always overshadowed by this P.T. Barnum routine that
verges on complete insanity. And he takes away his authentic pitch. I don't know what the
demographic is that's looking for like J6 is an inside job and 9-11 was a conspiracy and all of these things. Niche, fair to say niche.
Very niche, very.
Certainly does not reflect the primary electorate writ large and definitely not in Iowa.
So I don't know really what he was grasping for there.
So here, I mean, that line about
she will send your kids to die
so she can have a bigger house.
I mean, that, wow, that is below the belt.
I mean, that is like, look, we raised the issue
and it's fair to ask about, as I did at the top,
whether she's too beholden to the banks
and the billionaires
and is gonna push an agenda to please them.
But what he said there is absolutely impugning
her moral character, her integrity.
You know, her life as a a Christian. No, no Christian,
no good person, no like would ever do such a thing. That's really like it's taking it,
ratcheting it up to the nth degree. Although I do think on the other thing, he had a fair
point about the Republican Party is not about identity politics. Yeah, that's I agree. I agree.
When she said on your, when she said on
the program, Josh, I think he's got a girl problem. She said it because he attacked Ronna McDaniels.
He attacked Kristen Welker and he attacked, um, her Nikki Haley at the beginning of the last
debate. And she said, I think he's got a girl problem. She said it kind of with a fun vibe,
you know, you could make the argument. She was being playful, but, you know, I'll be the first to say we are not immune from criticism just because we do have
the double X chromosome. The lady parts do not get you some sort of immunity from attacks in a
presidential race. So I agreed with his point there. But then, of course, it just goes too far.
That doesn't mean she's going to kill children so she can have a bigger house. You're entirely right in a very good point,
one worth examining and getting response to, again, totally overshadowed by complete insanity.
I mean, this was Donald Trump's U.N. representative. I mean, that's a hell of a
thing to, by extension, accuse the Trump administration of, which is essentially what it was that he was doing there. You can disagree with Nikki Haley's foreign policy all you want, but it happens to be pretty well-reasoned based on somebody who spent an awful lot of time thinking about these sort of things. To reduce that to killing your't show up on a stage in Iowa, New Hampshire for the next two debates.
If that means that Vivek's not there, so be it.
But that's not serious discussion at all.
You know, part of what Vivek was doing reminded me a little of Trump.
I mean, I've said he's kind of like a Trump wannabe, but there's only one Trump.
There can only be one Trump.
You're exactly right. There is only one Trump. And you know what Trump is? He's funny. He's funny.
He's funny, Josh.
He raises this sort of thing and it's outrageous. It's ridiculous, but he kind of does it with a wink.
It doesn't feel as mean.
Right. Right. It's like he's part of the crowd making commentary on everything else. He breaks that fourth wall when he does it with Vivek.
It's it's like he's just shot out of a cannon.
And it's the kind of guy that, you know, if you're cornered at a party with, you're just
kind of trying to slink away as fast as you possibly can.
You know, that's the irony of that.
But that's the true irony of Vivek is that I've known him for a long time.
He's totally charming.
One on one. You'd love to have drinks with him at a cocktail party. And I the Vivek I know doesn't say these things.
I think this is an appeal to a sliver of the Republican base with whom he's getting more and
more popular. And he's kind of leaning into it. You know, he's I it's like, you know, you see the positive clicks or
the positive likes on your tweet and then you get kind of radicalized toward whatever it is
they're liking. It seems like that's what's happening. It's a it's a reflection back of
the way to online. Right. You're entirely right. The subsect of the population that believes the
things that he's talking about is so small.
It's very intense and it's very loud if you spend all of your day on X. And I understand if you
spend all your day on X, you probably get the impression that there's a much bigger constituency
to talk about these kinds of things than ultimately exists. But at some point, you'd think
you would get, if he's actually trying to play to win this thing, he would take a broader view and be like, well, you know, I peaked somewhere in August
at double digits. I'm now at like four or 5% real danger of not making a debate stage from here.
I mean, that could have been his last performance right there. I would think you'd want to broaden
this out and showcase some of the things that you just talked about. I've known Vivek too.
This is a charming guy. He's a very smart guy. He's a thoughtful guy. And I think what we've been critical on, on the Ruthless Variety Program
is that that guy hasn't shown up yet at all. It's really, it's-
There've been hints of it. Even at the beginning of last night's debate, I was like,
oh, you know, cause my question to him on electability was all about how he's like, I,
I joked like the Sybil of debate candidates. Like, I don't know what I'm getting. Who is it?
It's the calm, nice one, or it's the really mean, personal, insulting one.
And last night he kind of started off kind of nice.
I was like, oh, we've got second debate, Vivek.
I don't believe in personal insults
and these people are good people.
And then it was like,
psycho killer, you're fat, Chris Christie,
which is by the way,
what he was kind of saying in stop 14.
Take a listen.
I think we just learned something from Chris Christie. We is, by the way, what he was kind of saying in stop 14. Take a listen.
I think we just learned something from Chris Christie. We learned three things.
We learned three things right there. First of all, Chris Christie also doesn't know what provinces in eastern Ukraine he actually wants to fight for. Chris, your version of foreign
policy experience was closing a bridge from New Jersey to New York. So do everybody a favor.
Just walk yourself off that stage.
Enjoy a nice meal and get the hell out of this race.
Whoopsie.
I mean, to your point, like, listen, I know this isn't nice.
I'm not trying to argue this was nice by Trump.
But Trump gets up there.
He's got a whole bid he does on Chris Christie's weight.
And as I said in
that debate last night, Chris Christie has given as good as he's gotten from Donald Trump. You
heard the list of I could have kept that list going for, you know, three more minutes. Yeah.
So Donald Trump doesn't like him. Christie doesn't like Trump either. Donald does this thing on the
campaign trail where he's like, it's not nice to call him fat. That's not nice, sir. See,
I didn't say it. I didn't say he said it. Stop. Don't call him a fat pig. That's not nice to call him fat. That's not nice, sir. See, I didn't say it. I didn't say he said
it. Stop. Don't call him a fat pig. That's not nice. We're not. Okay. I am not advocating this
language in any way, shape or form, but he tries to do it with some humor. It does land differently
than if you do it with and get the hell off this stage. You know, it just feels a little meaner
and a little bit more alienating for the audience. Yeah. Also just totally stage. You know, it just feels a little meaner and a little bit more alienating
for the audience. Yeah. Also just totally disconnected. I mean, whatever you think of
Chris Christie, he has a resume to be on that stage. The only person who doesn't is Ramaswamy,
to be honest with you. And he's making an argument that nobody else is making. Ramaswamy really
isn't. I mean, the only arguments that he's making that nobody else is is like real conspiracy niche stuff. And so he obviously should be on that stage. But I think throughout all of this, you begin to separate the wheat from the chaff and you start to see that if anyone is going to have the capability of challenging Donald Trump seriously, and it might be after South Carolina in the context of like a Super Tuesday at the beginning of March, it's going to require consolidation down to one person.
And it's quite obviously going to be Ron DeSantis or Nikki Haley.
The results in Iowa are going to have a huge impact on that.
New Hampshire, clearly.
And then Nikki Haley will have her Alamo in South Carolina, unless she really underperforms
in the first two states.
At that point, if they're
going to make this a race, it's going to have to be a mano a mano deal. And we still didn't see,
although you gave them every opportunity last night, still didn't see anybody naturally rise
out of that crowd to a point where you're like, well, that's the one. That's the one.
And that's a tough deal when a guy's got a 30 point
headstart on you. Yeah. It needed to be not just like, oh, it was a good debate. You know,
like you look at Ron DeSantis, I think by far it was his best debate so far. Although I think the
debates are done. I'm going to go on the record right now and say there will be no more debates.
I really do. I don't think the RNC is going to do it. I don't have any inside knowledge on this. I just think it's too close to Iowa. They cost a lot of money. It's the
undercard debate. You know, Trump's not participating and they're not going to do it.
You mark my words. Last night was the last debate and it might be the last debate of the entire
cycle. Well, they're going to try to schedule it, Megan. And I think they've talked to CNN about it. There was some news about this today. But look, for all intents and purposes, I think you're probably right in that this was the last best chance. Now, they may have one right before Iowa. They may have one right before.
That was the original plan. hope to execute that. But what you saw last night was hard to improve upon in terms of giving voters
a good look at what it is that they're voting on or who. So, you know, we'll see up to this point,
as long as Donald Trump is not showing up, it's that elephant in the room that you can talk and
you can debate and you can defend yourself adequately and you can score points, but you're
not closing a 30 point gap by getting into a discussion with Vivek Ramaswamy about anything.
So did Ron DeSantis do enough to at least retain or regain, depending on the poll you're
looking at, his front runner status?
Because, you know, last night you have to figure out
who the frontrunner is because you're arranging the podiums.
Now, thankfully we had four,
but we didn't know we had Christy until, you know,
the day or two before.
So when we thought we might have three,
we had to figure out, is Haley the frontrunner?
Does she get to go in the middle or is it Ron?
And it is still Ron DeSantis,
if you look at all the polls and the averages and so on.
But as I said, she's leading
him in South Carolina. She's leading him in New Hampshire. And she's now within three points of
him in Iowa. Now, if you expand it, he's still leading. But my point is, he's got to do something.
He does have to, like, give her the boot in the forehead to get her back down because he needs to
be number one in the undercard. If Trump implodes, he needs to be number one in the undercard.
If Trump implodes, he wants to be number one. There's no number two, right? At that. Right.
So did he do enough? I know I agree with you. Not enough to overcome number one,
the true number one Trump, but enough to overcome her and and give her the boot.
Yeah, well, look, I think he stopped the bleeding a long time ago. I think he's had a pretty good
four or five weeks here.
Now, that's all the staff nonsense that I don't think voters actually pay attention to.
But it becomes captured in the pundit world, whereas Super PAC has got problems and people are resigning and this, that and the other.
But outside of that, in terms of candidate performance, DeSantis has stopped the bleeding a long time ago.
He's basically stuck at his number, maybe a little bit of an improvement. And last night, I think he did himself a lot of favors. The reason that
that race has changed a little bit is not so much about Ron DeSantis over the last month,
as it is about Nikki Haley and actually solidifying herself as not only a serious
presidential candidate, but somebody who can garner support, raise a lot of money and become central to this debate in and of itself. And she's
gone from, you know, six, 7% now up to 17 and many polls. Ultimately, Megan, there's no debate
that can litigate this. What's going to litigate it is the performance in the Iowa caucus. It just
is what it is. It's a separation event that if you're looking for a winner, it quite obviously
looks like it's going to be Donald Trump. But one of these two candidates, either DeSantis or Haley,
needs to be up in those 20%, high 20%, and they need a margin between them and the third place
finisher. If they're both in the high teens, for example, this thing's cooked. This thing's, I don't understand how you could
possibly rearrange the math when you've given both an incentive to keep going and yet there's
no separation at all. So I think it was a huge, huge deal, maybe much larger than it has been
in several open primary Republican years. So no sooner do I utter them than I eat my words, because apparently CNN has
just announced that it's getting not just one, but two, two more Republican debates, one before Iowa
and one before New Hampshire, before the voting starts. Can I just say this?
I think that's bullshit. I don't think they should reward CNN. I don't. What has CNN done
for the Republican Party? Honestly, it's a joke. Who are they going to have moderate it?
I just like I don't know why the RNC keeps doing this. They they I realize not every debate can go
to Fox, nor should it. But what does CNN look? What has it done for the Republican Party over the last six years,
other than lie incessantly about it, Josh? Well, and in and of itself, I think I tend to agree
with you, except for this. I think the RNC has done a really good job in an impossible situation
of trying to pair up partnerships here, where you're not getting the same kind of thing
that we saw in 2016,
where you have agenda,
many agenda-driven moderators
that are not asking questions at all.
I mean, Hugh Hewitt, for example, in that NBC debate.
I mean, if there's anybody that you could say
is worse than CNN, it's NBC,
except for the fact that they bring Hugh in
to ask very serious policy-oriented
questions. It'll be interesting- Well, MSNBC is worse than CNN.
I mean, yeah, I kind of looped the whole- You could go worse.
I kind of looped the whole mess in. But I guess what I'm saying is I want to see who else they
bring in on that. I find it very hard to believe that it's just going to be a CNN anchor directly
to camera, as we've seen in previous- No, let's hope it's not going to be a CNN anchor directly to camera as we've seen.
No, let's hope it's not. I mean, I'm sure, you know, CNN is going to want to front its talent
and then they'll, they'll bring somebody else in as sort of the third party. But look, I've done
this a lot. That's not going to change the tenor of the debate. That's just not going to, you know,
it's probably not like the one weird thing down at, you know, table left saying weird things that the other two are like, what?
It's like I realize that Rana and the others are in a difficult spot because the mainstream media is run by all leftists.
I mean, the liberals run CNN, they run NBC, they run CBS, they run ABC, never mind MSNBC.
And so if you want coverage, if you want the debate blasted everywhere, which is their goal,
there's only so many partners you can work with. So I get it. Putting putting the conservative on the panel is like their next best option. But I think it's so irritating that they get rewarded
after all the shit they pull and all the all the nonsense they've dumped on Republicans and Trump
for the past six years since they went hard partisan.
I just felt like it's outrageous to me. Whatever. OK, I've had my say.
I think there's an awful lot of primary voters that agree with you on all of that, Megan.
But they are in a tough spot and you do need a broadcast partner at some level.
Because remember, it's not just about your Republican primary voter. It is chiefly about that. But in order to win a presidential election, you're going to have to
reach voters beyond a Fox News. I mean, look, you guys did a nice job on News Nation. I've never
watched News Nation before. No, I know. Right. And I had to, you know, I have not. It's like
it's just started. Yeah. I mean, I had to scramble to try to figure out what channel was on. I found
it. Thank goodness. But they did a nice job.ramble to try to figure out what channel it was on. I found it. Thank goodness.
But they did a nice job.
They did a nice job.
The production quality was great.
I mean, you guys obviously are pretty hard to screw up because you're pros and you do
it as well as anybody in the business if you're sitting in front of a camcorder.
But it wasn't that.
It was a nice production.
It was good to do.
I'd like to see some more of that.
Yeah, me too.
I'll say this, just on first glance
at the requirements for the next debate, they're saying the candidates will have to have at least
10% in three separate national and or Iowa polls in advance of Iowa. And I assume it's the same
for New Hampshire. That's a lot. And that will eliminate everyone, everyone but DeSantis and Haley and maybe maybe both of them.
Yeah, well, maybe.
If it's down to a point where we're eighty five five.
OK, you know, it's a wrap.
Guess it's off. We tried.
It's unintentionally that may be the most hilarious part about this.
But look, if they're going to do another one, it's got to be a one-on-one.
We all know who the two candidates are here.
I mean, Christie barely made the dance at 6%.
And Vivek is barely making the dance at these numbers.
There's zero chance of them making 10.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
No, I mean, that's right. And what we saw during the course of last night's debate is you
have two people who are taking this extremely seriously by their tone, by the way they conduct
themselves. I think Chris Christie is too, but I think reality is that there is no real path to
the nomination here for Chris. And I like Chris, but I think that's true. So we're really dealing with these two candidates.
We might as well showcase that.
I'm guessing that's why it's at 10%.
Yeah, the same.
Okay, Josh Holmes, a pleasure as always.
My friends, say hello to the gang for me.
Looking forward to the next time.
Check out the Ruthless program, everybody.
Up next, Rich Lowry and Jim Garrity.
We'll get their thoughts on what changed,
if anything. They do puberty blockers. These are irreversible. That is what Nikki Haley opposed.
She said the law shouldn't get involved in that. If you're somebody that's going to be the
president of the United States and you can't stand up against child abuse. Nikki, you were
bankrupt when you left the U.N. After you left the U.N., you became a military contractor.
You actually started joining service on the board of Boeing, whose back you scratched for a very long time.
That math does not add up. It adds up to the fact that you are corrupt.
Because when she was governor of South Carolina, she was the number one ranked governor of bringing the CCP into her state.
She wrote a love letter to the Chinese ambassador
saying how great a friend China is. The only person more fascist than the Biden regime now
is Nikki Haley, who thinks the government should identify every one of those individuals with an
ID. That is not freedom. That is fascism. It's one thing that Joe Biden and Nikki Haley have in
common is that neither of them could even state for you three provinces
in eastern Ukraine that they want to send our troops to actually fight for. Look at that.
This is what I want people to understand. These people have I mean, she has no idea.
You saw the pile on Nikki Haley last night. It is a sign she's in the lead or about to be,
but it was probably also unpleasant for her. She did not seem to be enjoying it.
Joining us now, Rich Lowry, editor-in-chief of National Review, and Jim Garrity, senior political
correspondent of National Review and contributing columnist for The Washington Post. Guys, welcome
back to the show. So that was sort of the lead story of the evening, the pile on Nikki, Rich.
I guess we shouldn't have been surprised. How do you think she did? Well, first of all, you did a
great job. I thought you guys did a great job.
Most enjoyable debate as far as I'm concerned.
And it helped us to have four candidates up there.
Could have had, you know, stood to have one or two less, actually.
But this was predictable.
I'm not sure, like the Boeing stuff and you're going to cave the lobbyists.
I'm not sure how telling that was. I thought the site you just played,
it was the first one, which came about halfway through, where DeSantis really hit her on the
trans stuff, queued up by your question in exchange with Chris Christie on this. And that's where I
was like, you know what? DeSantis is having a better debate. That one really landed. And I
think it goes to the point, DeSantis is better positioned for debate. That one really landed. And I think goes to the point,
DeSantis is better positioned for whatever it's worth. And it might be worth nothing,
given what the dynamics you and Josh are talking about, is better positioned in Iowa. He just has
a more social conservative record, is more current with where Republican voters are.
But I thought he's had fine debates all along and obviously hasn't moved anything, whereas Haley has had quite good debates and she's moved, you know, within limits, within this distant second place context.
But I don't think she made quite as much of an impression last night.
She's clearly just done with the vague, didn't answer, let kind of Christie take it on and disappeared for a long part in the middle.
So I don't think she hurt herself. I don't think her momentum is going to be blunted, but I don't think she helped
herself as much as in the first three debates last night. You know, she wasn't really doing
battle in the way we had seen Jim. She was, she was kind of shrinking to me. She was, she was like
almost physically shrinking back. And then Christie stepped in again. I said this on the
post-show show last night with
Stierwald. He had predicted it. Stierwald had said, I predict Chris Christie steps in to be
the white knight for Nikki Haley. And man, he called it exactly. Here's the moment in SOT2.
This is the fourth debate, the fourth debate that you would be voted in the first 20 minutes
as the most obnoxious blowhard in
America. So shut up for a little while. We're now 25 minutes into this debate,
and he has insulted Nikki Haley's basic intelligence. Not her positions, her basic
intelligence. She doesn't know regions. She wouldn't be able to find something on a map
that his three-year-old could find.
I've known her for 12 years, which is longer than he's even started to vote in a Republican primary.
This is a smart, accomplished woman.
You should stop insulting her.
So I'm going to take this.
So it was interesting how the camera got her at the end for the listening audience,
just kind of looking down almost demurely and then back up.
And I know it's nice,
like it's nice for him to defend her. I have to say she wants to be commander in chief. I really
wanted her to say, Chris, thank you. I got this. And to interrupt him and to defend herself. She
didn't. Megan, I see what you're saying. And by the way, let me echo what Rich said. You must
have felt like the lion tamer or the
ringmaster in a circus last night except all the animals were cocaine bear uh it was just you know
damn damn the torpedoes i'm holding nothing back i i saw what you're saying about cnn says they're
going to do two debates but you know for this could be the last time we see chris christie
and Vivek
Ramaswamy on stage as presidential candidates. So I'm sure their attitude is we're holding nothing
back. You could see Bruce Banner turning into the Hulk on stage in front of us. And so I think
that's like in that kind of environment. Look, we all know Nikki Haley can be really tough when she
was at the United Nations. She was blessing all those hearts up there. I think she's proven her toughness. I think often women candidates,
there's this question of, oh, is she tough enough to be the commander in chief? I think
Nikki Haley cleared that threshold a long time ago. I think everybody can find, whether you
think the appropriate comparison is Margaret Thatcher or whatever past woman leader strike you as the ideal, I don't think anybody looks at Nikki Haley and says, oh, she's a squish, which is why DeSantis is, oh, she always backs down attack.
Just struck me as like that doesn't fit.
I wasn't sure where that came from.
Yeah.
I'm sure he wants to say like, look, everybody wants to say I'm the fighter.
Going back to Howard Dean, the easiest brand to sell yourself as is everybody else in this party is a weak, squishy sellout.
And I'm the fighter. I'm the one who's representing the Democrat side.
And it's opposed, by the way.
But almost all of them have some version of it.
And it's particularly egregious when it comes from Ramaswamy. In one of the earlier debates, there was like, you know,
the Republican Party has been losing. What do they need to do? Vivek Ramaswamy, you've never
been elected to anything. What do Republicans need to do to win more? Which I think was a
less than ideal person to ask that kind of question. So and I just she's beat up on Ramaswamy in like several
debates. Now, I think we've all seen that. I think this was Chris Christie, you know,
like he wanted to pull open the shirt and show Superman and kind of to show up any kind of
playing to type we all remember that the one Christie debate moment everybody remembers is
when he used Marco Rubio as a tackling dummy back in 2016. And I think he's been waiting to do that.
And his whole presidential campaign was predicated on this idea that at some point he'd be on a stage
with Trump and he'd get a chance to really let into Trump. And we've never seen Trump really get,
you know, a blistering attack, you know, from a one time ally.
This is the thing about Christie is he is say what you will about the guy. And I realize most of the Republicans are not fans. He is the best there is at forensically diagnosing a candidate's
obfuscation or frailties on that debate stage. That's what he did to Marco Rubio. He listens.
He's smart. And as a lawyer, he hears it. He hears it when they're dodging, when they're evading.
He called it out last night when he was talking about how Ron DeSantis did not ask the question about Hamas and the hostages.
Here's a bit of it.
Stop four.
This is the problem with the first three debates.
Ron gets asked a question and he doesn't answer it.
Your question was very specific.
You said, would you send American troops as commander in chief?
And he went on to this minute and 30 second hosanna about his knowledge of the military and what we need to do and didn't answer your question.
Look, when you're president of the United States, you're not going to have a choice whether to answer that question or not. Your generals, your secretary of defense, your secretary of state, your national security advisor are going to present plans to you. They're going to look at you
and say, do we go or don't we, Mr. President? And you can't give a 90 second speech about your
military service. Oh, my gosh. That was good, Rich. You got to give it to Christy on that one.
I'm totally with you. It shows tremendous forensic skill. And this might sound like a stupid thing
to say, but it's hard to think and talk at the same time. And it's hard to listen to other people
when you're on a stage like that, because you're thinking, well, what question might come to me
next? What would I have said to this question that just was asked to another candidate that
might come to me? And it's hard to just focus in detail on what other people are saying. And
Christie has the ability to do that. That was a good hit on DeSantis. And DeSantis had no
rejoinder. And Christie came back on a couple other answers and pointed out the same thing.
On one of them on whether Trump is fit as a matter of age, I thought most people listening
to DeSantis would have thought he answered that, right? He's saying he's not unsuited,
but he's too old and now needs someone younger.
But no one else is better on his feet than Christie. The problem he has is he had a couple assumptions going into this race.
One is that Trump would be on the stage. Right. And he's not.
Another would be rewarded by being a truth teller and being willing to say things about Trump that no one else will say.
And a lot of people don't want to hear because it would translate as toughness, translate as forthrightness.
And it's just made him radioactive.
He wasn't in a strong position going into the race, but I was struck at some of the same numbers you cited to him.
And one of the questions, New Hampshire is his state.
And that's where he's at 14 percent, which in the context of this second place battle is respectable. Sixty percent of people have an unfavorable view of him
in New Hampshire. You know, two thirds of people would be angry or dissatisfied, as you noted,
if he got the nomination. That's in his state. And that's just why there's a path for him.
He might overperform in New Hampshire because independents and Democrats can vote.
But that's not true everywhere else.
You know, that can get you to 20 in New Hampshire, which might be enough to be a distant second or to trip up Nikki Haley if she has a chance against Trump.
But it's not getting him the nomination, which is why he shouldn't, even though he's good at it and he has a zeal for it, he should not be on that stage.
So I'll give you guys some news. All over the internet last night was a video that
went viral of somebody in the balcony filming Chris Christie coming over to yours truly during
a break at the end of the first hour and kind of getting up in my grill. And there was all sorts
of speculation about what was happening there. I will tell you what was happening there. It was
not off the record. He was pissed off. He was mad that he wasn't getting enough questions. And he said, you know,
I made it up on this stage and I haven't been able to speak in a while. And, you know, I should
have been brought in on that last debate. And, you know, I had a couple of minds of it. I said,
we're coming to you. You're going to be happy in the second hour, which I lived up to. But number
one, he was right that in the last run he had been excluded.
And the reason that happened is because we let them fight in the first 40 minutes of the debate.
And therefore that comes at the expense of something. And where you insert yourself,
Chris Christie, on this earlier fight or that's it's all at the expense of something else that's
coming, which is fine. We were not wedded to our rundown. We are. We had like 40 questions
going out there. Our goal was to ask 10 of them, you know, in a perfect world, but the producers in the truck have to rejigger
the rundown and move like our whole Trump block was supposed to be playing much earlier in the
show. We had to move it. And anyway, the long and the short of it is the, the sort of even
distribution of questions got mucked up by all the arguing. Having said all that, I knew very
well that Christie was going to
get asked a Trump question having to do with immigration at the top of the next hour. So it
was totally fair to him. And he's polling at two percent. OK, in no debate ever. And I've now done
six of them. Have we given as many questions to the guy who's at three percent as to the person
who's in the lead, at least amongst the candidates
on the stage. I'm sorry, Governor Christie. That's the way it is. And all said and done,
CNN says this is the timing on the stage. Vivek got 22 minutes, DeSantis 21, Haley 17,
Christie 16 and 52 seconds. So he was a half a minute behind Haley, who's tied up there for number one. So I
don't want to hear it. Frankly, we did right by him. He got a ton of airtime. That's what he was
mad about. I like the guy, but just to break some news on what people are speculating on, Jim,
they never like it when they don't get to speak. Yeah. I gonna say one it by the end of it it didn't feel
like any of the candidates had been significantly shortchanged um and i think those numbers bear
that out if you need further support i checked the real clear politics national average this morning
uh christie is actually at 2.5 percent so that's that's looking better but to point out tim scott is still at two percent and
he left the race a month ago so he's still uh so you know chris christie is half a point ahead of
the guy who dropped out a month ago so that's that that's the momentum there um right naturally
yeah whenever you have four candidates one of those candidates is going to be the last one to
speak i think he got to speak like 14 minutes in. And I can understand that kind of, you know, rankling on him. But if
you like, you know, not that many people came to see Christie. Yeah. Others were jumping in and I
was allowing it. You know, it's like, I, you can lead the horse to water, but he didn't. And I said,
you're like, Hey, I see you over there. We're coming to you, but good stuff's happening here.
And nobody had said, Hey, can I get in? I was like, they were just going for it. It was
great stuff. Anyway, he got in. He had his say. All was said and done. And it was good. And he
and I, I think, are fine. He left the debate hall seemingly unhappy. He gave an interview to Dana
Bash on CNN, and he seemed rather angry. In fact, we have some of that. It's Sat 16. He was most
unhappy with Vivek Ramaswamy. Here it is.
I think Vivek does have a woman problem. I do think he insults women's basic intelligence.
He's done it over and over and over again. And I guess tonight I just had had enough.
I had enough of listening to his garbage. And as I said, his smart ass Harvard mouth,
because that's what it is when he's dictating to me and Nikki Haley, who have committed ourselves to public service while he's been off stealing from seniors to make his fortune.
Yeah, I'm not going to put up with him anymore. And I'm going to tell the truth. If someone's
insulting Nikki Haley in a way that was personal, it was nothing about issues. He was saying she's
not smart enough to know where things are on the map, that somehow his three-year-old son is smarter
than a woman who served as a two-term governor and a U.N. ambassador.
He's a jackass.
So did he take Vivek out in the way he took out Marco Rubio?
No, I mean, there's not taking Vivek out.
I mean, Vivek has kind of been slowly taking himself out.
I mean, every one of these debate performances
has been a little sip of arsenic for him
in terms of his electoral ambition.
And the reason why,
as you pointed out at the beginning,
you know, he shifted a little bit
is that he does apparently care
about being liked by voters and his poll standing.
And he's been slipping since the first debate
when he came out so obnoxious.
But the ultimate goal here is not
really to win. It's to cater favor, as you were pointing out earlier, to a certain segment of the
very online right that is very popular, that has a great market share in terms of the conservative
media, and where he will at least have a home as a constant guest and I would think hopes to have a perch as some sort of host
or moderator at some point. And in those terms, this has been a great success, but it's been a
disservice to the process. He's cheapened everything. He's touched. He has occasionally
important and original things to say. He says them in a swarmy way. Maybe he can't help that.
But the rest of it is just totally unworthy, dishonorable, childish. I mean, the logical endpoint of his performance in
these debates so far, we'll see if they're anymore, was when he held up that piece of paper. I mean,
just give me a break. But there are people like Charlie Kirk on X immediately saying, what a
fantastic moment. You know, Vivek's blown up the debate again. Look, he drew on
it, wrote on his pad that Nikki Haley is corrupt. It's just it's just absurd. And it's a shame.
Democrats don't tend to have these kind of candidates and their process and for whatever
reason, Republicans do. I liked the prop, I have to say, as a TV person, I was like, yes,
visuals. Thank you. We had had no graphics. We had nothing. Thank you. What other graphics can you guys sketch out in the two seconds we have left?
I appreciated the prop.
Yeah, Vivek's not going anywhere, but he's not going anywhere in this race.
And he's probably not going anywhere in the national conversation for some time.
But I don't know.
The problem with Vivek in terms of becoming a host or becoming a very successful podcast host is he really likes
to hear himself talk. And, you know, I think you do better as a host. If you really like to hear
your guests talk, you can get in the mix. You know, he tried that. He went to the Daily Wire
and actually helped. He was over there kind of sniffing around about possibly launching a podcast.
It didn't go very well from what I hear. And now he's launching his own podcast. And, you know,
we'll see whether that's what this is all about.
He's not going to be president, not this time around.
Probably not in the, I don't know.
We'll see.
Anything could happen, but not this time around.
So in any event, he's giving voice to an important part of the Republican Party right now.
So that piece of him, I appreciate because it keeps things saucy.
Stand by.
Quick break.
More with Rich and Jim.
You do not favor a ban on trans medical treatments for minors, saying it's a parental rights issue.
The surgeries done on minors involve cutting off body parts at a time when these kids cannot even
legally smoke a cigarette. Kids who go from puberty blockers to cross-sex hormones are at
a much greater likelihood of winding up sterile.
How is it that you think a parent should be able to okay these surgeries, never mind the sterilization of a child?
Because Republicans believe in less government, not more.
In less involvement with government, not more involvement in people's lives.
And you know what, Megan? I trust parents.
And we're out there saying that we should empower parents in education. We should empower parents to make more decisions about where
their kids go to school. I agree. We should empower parents to be teaching the values that they believe
in in their homes without the government telling them what those values should be. And yet we want
to take other parental rights away. And we're going to put
my children's health and my decisions in their hands for them to make those decisions, for Joe
Biden to make those decisions. For me and for my wife, let me just say this. This is not something
I favor. I think it's a very, very dangerous thing to do. Welcome back to The Megyn Kelly Show. Back with us now, Rich Lowry and Jim Garrity of National Review.
So his defense was parental rights.
And then I followed up with, you didn't seem like such a big fan of parental rights when you were governor. Jersey that, among other things, said the teachers don't have to tell the parents if a kid is, quote,
transitioning or going by an opposite identity from their actual. And he denied it. And it was
a false denial, as I said on the stage that night. He did. Go look it up. He passed the law. He
required that this trans guidance be provided, including, he specifically said, to protect
the confidentiality of the trans kids, to protect
their transition, to make sure that they could be in the sports and use the facilities of their,
quote, identity. He just, I don't know if he didn't remember it or if he just felt uncomfortable and
he wanted to lie about it. But I'm sorry, the last half of that question was, aren't you way
too out of line on this for the Republican voters? And I asked that because that's what I think. That's what I think, Jim. Am I wrong?
No, you're not wrong. And I think that basically Christie can argue that the first half of that
answer, the I trust parents, that's probably the best defense he could make of the stance that he
has. And no doubt there are probably some Republicans who feel that way. There's probably the best defense he could make of the stance that he has. And no doubt there are probably some Republicans who feel that way.
There's probably a more libertarian minded section of the voters.
You're probably going to find more of them in New Hampshire than you are in Iowa.
Maybe I'm broadly stereotyping the kinds of people who show up for the caucuses and primaries
out there.
But I think the Ron DeSantis position and I think kind of the, you know, context of your
question of, wait a second, wait a second.
This is completely ridiculous that you're going to say that kids can do this without parental consent for this, but they can't get parental consent for tattoos or some places they can't get, you know, ear piercings without parental consent.
So, like, isn't this a wild disparity in what we consider appropriate for kids to make their own decisions about?
Yeah, you know, I think that's going to be a losing issue for Chris. wild disparity in what we consider appropriate for kids to make their own decisions about.
Yeah, you know, I think that's going to be a losing issue for Chris. He may, you know,
he could either flip flop and say, oh, I was totally wrong when I was governor. This should be banned. Or he can make the best thing he can put on it. You know, that's what he should have
said. I was wrong. Things have changed. I've changed. A lot of people have changed in this
issue. That was really wrong. Now I see the harm. Now I, he should have said, I know the case now, Chloe Cole, it's outrageous, but you know what?
His stuff on the trans medical procedures has been said over and over recently. So he couldn't
wiggle out of that. The only thing he was trying to wiggle out of was this notification to parents
in schools. He favors these medical procedures on minors. He does. He thinks a parent can consent to the sterilization
of her child. It's amazing. Like we're not paying attention to what these, just the drugs,
nevermind the surgeries are doing. Ron DeSantis, in my view, best moment of the night,
brought the crowd almost to its feet with this response in 21. Watch, it's not 21.
You do not have the right to abuse your kids.
This is cutting off their genitals. This is mutilating these minors. These are irreversible
procedures. And this is something that other countries in Europe, like Sweden, once they
started doing it, they saw it did incalculable damage. They've shut it down. I signed legislation
in Florida banning the mutilation of minors because it is
wrong. We cannot allow this to happen in this country. And I know Chris disagrees with me,
and I think he has an honest position. Nikki disagrees with me. She opposes the bill that
we did to ban that. She said the law shouldn't get involved with it. You said the law shouldn't
get involved with it. She also, though, I think, and this is flows from what she did as governor
of South Carolina, you know, they had a bill to try to say that men shouldn't go into girls'
bathrooms. And she killed that bill. And she bragged that she killed that bill. Even to this
day, she bragged that. I don't think men should be going into little girls' bathrooms. I think
it's wrong. And I think we have every right to protect them from that.
Rich, I'm not sure how he could have done better on that answer.
Home run, absolutely his best moment of any of the debates. And what we saw last night,
and this is born partly of desperation, right, is that he was much more willing to mix it up.
The first three debates, almost every time, here's my set speech, right? Even when he got hit,
you just ignore it and go, here's my set speech.
And that's just not, it doesn't create moments.
It's not very interesting.
They believe very much in, you know,
it was a three yards ahead
and a ball of dust kind of approach.
Use the form to get your message out.
But he mixed it up much more last night.
And this, he's just on the strongest substantive
and political ground.
And it goes to Christie.
You know, it's not like he was governor 20 years ago,
but what his position was back then,
which he's now stuck to, unfortunately,
was kind of the conventional wisdom,
say with Nikki Haley back then.
That's what you did if you're a respectable politician.
And DeSantis represents a much more current position,
has actually walked the walk down in Florida.
So that's, if there's a moment that
really helped him last night, it was that. Mm hmm. And I mean, we'll see whether it changes
any hearts and minds, because I will say Ron DeSantis appears to me to be more.
What's the word anchored in principle on this than Donald Trump? That's what I think. Donald
Trump is now he's now saying the right things, but I'm not sure his heart is in it the way DeSantis is rich.
Am I? What do you think? No, I think that's absolutely right.
This is something we're clear that I think most things, you know, there's some exceptions.
Ukraine, I don't think DeSantis is particularly sincere. Ukraine funding.
But on this, he feels it passionately. He understands the case and can, can state it strongly.
Now the thing with DeSantis, and I think the reasons why he's, he's had such trouble,
one is Donald Trump, right? This is the greatest showman on earth. People are still attached to
him and he's gotten indicted four times and people hate it. That's the fundamental thing
that's gone wrong. But with DeSantis, there's also, you know, last night, even though I thought
he was good, he has that sort of Nixon-esque five o'clock shadow thing going on.
He never feels relaxed.
You know, he always feels as though he's trying a little too hard.
We all saw that viral moment with the conservative leader in Canada eating the apple, you know, while he's getting.
Yeah, it's great.
Who says that?
That's total relaxed.
You know, most people can't pull that off. But DeSantis feels, even last night, it's a little bit too much of an attempt to hammer every single point home.
It's not modulated very much.
There's no subtlety.
There's no humor.
So I think that plays more than it might because he's not running against, at the end of the day, conventional politicians, he's running against this incredibly talented communicator and entertainer that people feel an emotional bond to.
And it's just hard, hard to match that. Um, let's switch over to another candidate. I want to go
back to Vivek Ramaswamy because he, I tell you when, when this moment happened on stage, I was
like some of the moments when Vivek was speaking, I was like, he's good. This is good stuff.
Like this is very well said and well argued.
And then we heard stuff like this where I was like, what?
Wait, what?
Watch.
Here's my issue with all three of my other colleagues on this debate stage is all three
of them have been licking Donald Trump's boots for years for money and endorsements.
Ron DeSantis, you've been a great governor, but you would have never been one without actually
begging Donald Trump for that endorsement. And you attacked him in your book a year ago.
Same thing with Chris Christie as a lobbyist, begging them for COVID money for his special
interests in New Jersey, prepping him for the debates last time around. These people are now
Monday morning quarterbacking some decision he made. I think the real enemy is not Donald Trump. It's not even Joe Biden. It is the deep state that at
least Donald Trump attempted to take on. And if you want somebody who's going to speak truth to
power, then vote for somebody who's going to speak the truth to you. Why am I the only person on the
stage, at least, who can say that January 6th now does look like it was an inside job? That
the government lied to us for 20 years about Saudi Arabia's involvement in 9-11? That the
great replacement theory is not some grand right-wing conspiracy theory, but a basic
statement of the Democratic Party's platform? That the 2020 election was indeed stolen by
big tech? That the 2016 election, the one that Trump won for sure,
was also one that was stolen from him by the national security establishment
that actually put up the Trump-Russia collusion hoax that they knew was false.
A lot, a lot, a lot in there. Jim, would you like to take a shot at that one? Uh, um, Megan, Rich, we don't talk directly about religion on this program very much,
but I think of myself as a believer, but I'm not going to lie.
There are times my faith is challenged.
And when Ramaswamy can be up on that stage and accuse the other three of being bootlickers
to Donald Trump, the fact that Ramaswami was not struck by lightning makes me question the
existence of God because there was ever a moment for God to say, nope, that's a lie. It's
thunderbolt. Here you go. You can't say that kind of thing. That would be it. That would be, you
know, um, to paraphrase, uh, some comedian Ramaswami calling you a Trump bootlicker is like
Michael Jackson calling you weird. Um, it's just kind of a guy who defines the term. So look, I could rip into Ramaswamy all afternoon. But one of the
things that jumps out at me last night, he began by saying that Nikki Haley, like Joe Biden,
wanted to send troops into Ukraine. She's never said that. I went and I checked. If Nikki Haley
had said we should send U.S. troops
into Ukraine to fight Russia, that would be a big deal. You would have heard about it by now. This
isn't that you missed it somewhere in the news cycle and only Ramaswamy picked this out or
something like this. Now, we can have a legitimate argument about Ukraine. We can have a legitimate
argument about how much aid should we send? What kind of weapons can we spare? What kind of weapons
can we not spare? Is there a longer longer term this is a legitimate debate to have
but when you begin it with my opponent has a you know if you make up your opponent's position
you want you muddy the waters and then he goes back to the same well later and he says
she's doing that she wants your children to die so she can get a bigger house does he know that
Nikki Haley's husband is in the South Carolina Army National Guard and is currently deployed in
Djibouti, Africa for a year? Like, do you know a lot of military moms who are like, yeah, let's
have war. I want to have as many casualties as possible. What the hell is wrong with this man?
So, yeah, I could I could rant all day, but that gives you the gist of my.
Can we just spend a minute on it, though, because I am interested in what's happening to this piece of the Republican Party, because I know a lot of MAGA voters, people who love Trump, who do not think January 6th was an inside job, have questions about 9-11 or maintain that both elections, 2016 and 2020, were stolen.
Like, there is a, like, slice within MAGA, maybe it's growing,
that seems to be really latching on to these things.
It's like, yeah, we see the inside truth.
Deep state is everywhere, doing everything.
What do you think about it, Rich?
You guys follow this for a living.
Yeah, so it's clearly not everyone. It's not a majority of the parties. It's not a majority of
MAGA, but it's a really engaged part of MAGA. And again, an element of MAGA that's very loud online
and that has big social media followings and is making Vivek a folk hero so i i just think what's happened is he slowly slid this
way over the course of the campaign and i think it's based on the affirmation of those kind of
social media influencers that you know they they are important they have important bases uh important
voices and important audiences so you know you can run through those things. No, January 6th is not an inside job. The
government did hide the Saudis' role. Now, he's presenting it in a way that plays into this
broader conspiratorial thinking. What the national security establishment did after 2016 was terrible,
and he's wrong about the 2020 election. But it's all to go to this radical doubt that's afoot
in the Republican Party about everything that the establishment or
conventional opinion believes. Now, some of that skepticism is called for. Megan, you obviously,
you represent it and have been a very important voice on the vaccines and the mask mandates and
all that and how insane it was even when they're trying to shut down debate. But this tendency
kind of runs out of control, especially if you don't care what you're saying, you don't care about being responsible
the way the vague is. So it's working for him. If you have a very stovepipe goal at the end of the
day, which I believe he he does, but it's not it doesn't contribute to the discourse and it's not
contributing to his efforts to win the Republican nomination to the extent that matters to him at all. He's like he's got a nugget of truth in there and he expands it
like, again, well beyond where the facts would support. For example, we've seen the videotapes
on January 6th of, yes, cops letting people in. We'd like to know more. How many federal agents
were there? OK, we haven't we don't have full answers that quite. That does not mean that it
was a quote, an inside job, that everybody there was a Fed, that there were more feds than
there were rioters, that the people spraying bear spray in the face of cops. I mean, it's just he
goes too far. And the thing about Saudi Arabia, 9-11 is a cover because he originally said it's
totally fair to inquire how many federal agents were on the planes that hit the towers
in the Pentagon on 9-11. And then many of us in the press hit him for that nonsense.
And looking for an out, he found, oh, there was a question about how much Saudi Arabia cooperated
and helped the 9-11 terrorists. That's what I'm going to exploit to say the government has been
lying to us about its role and what it knew, the facts, the truth about 9-11. That whole thing was born as a cover
of something absurd he said. And now he's like, I'm owning it. I'm the only one who'll tell you
the truth. So the average voter has to work very, very hard to find the truth in what he's actually saying and the nuggets of its
origins. All right, let me end with this. I don't think anybody thinks anything really changed as a
result of last night. So once again, Trump won because if nothing changed, he's the winner.
He's 50 points ahead. So now what, guys? Andy McCarthy had an editorial on National Review
saying he really thinks Judge Shuckin might not
let Trump go free on bond when he is likely convicted in that federal case in D.C.
There will be riots. The country will burn if she sends him to jail prior to November 2024.
And Andy's the smartest guy we all know is saying, don rule it out so where do we go from this day to that
well um earlier earlier this week i i had uh pitched the idea of you know look you look at
the dynamics of this primary uh desantis and haley should form a unity ticket either haley
desantis desantis haley i don't know particularly strong preference one of the other but you know DeSantis and Haley should form a unity ticket, either Haley, DeSantis, DeSantis, Haley.
I don't know, particularly strong preference one or the other.
But, you know, that's the one way you could get most Haley supporters to jump on board with DeSantis and vice versa.
The reaction online is uniformly negative.
It is all they just say, oh, my God, why would one associate with a neocon warmonger like like Nikki Haley and Nikki Haley?
Why would we why would we associate with this you know theocratic maniac from Florida um but here's the thing I'm kind of in this Dr.
Philman thing like how's that working out for you so far uh what these guys have done is fought for
a very distant second place neither one of them is really they need like 20 points in the next
six weeks in Iowa in New Hampshire in Carolina, and they need like 30 to 40
points nationally. And we're seeing this kind of insane little infighting over this small slice of
a much bigger pie that they need to win if they have any hope of being the nominee. If Trump's
the nominee, we're in totally uncharted waters. And I would say based on history, don't doubt
Andy McCarthy, even if he's very skeptical about the Jets.
True words are never spoken. Guys, thank you. Thank you both so much.
All right. Coming up next. Thank you. Our pal Glenn Greenwald joins us and we'll get into what happened when Rumble went down. Just as I asked my question about COVID vaccine injuries.
We've got some reporting for you.
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Joining me now, Glenn Greenwald, he's host of Rumbles system update. Glenn, welcome back. Great
to have you. Great to be with you, Megan. And I don't like to start any appearance by praising
the host, but I nonetheless want to say how great it was to see you back in that chair where people knew that the rules were going to be enforced and there was
not very much funny business. And I think that was largely due to your presence. So it was great to
see you doing what you do best. Thank you. Thank you, Glenn. It was great to be back out there,
I have to say. Also, I have an update for the audience now. With this just in on the debates
that we reported on earlier. See, I knew it. Like,
I really did not think that the RNC would offer another debate. I just don't think that
the RNC, I think, is kind of aligned with Trump. I mean, they recognize he's the party leader.
And I know they they're trying to be fair to everybody. But are they really going to have
more debates? That's why I'm surprised to hear that there's two more debates, one in Iowa and
one in New Hampshire. And now this just in from Brian Steinberg, a variety. CNN plans to host two Republican primary debates
next month, one in Iowa, one in New Hampshire. Events appear to be organized without the
sanction of the RNC, without the sanction. So I think what's happened here is the RNC has basically
said, you're released, go do your own thing. We're no longer participating in the debates.
And if you guys want to do it,
do it on your own. So that's kind of interesting. I don't know how much point the debates are going
to serve at that point in the contest. I don't know how much point they're serving right now.
It's kind of like, Glenn, we give them the chance to land some knockout blows and change their
trajectory. Given the fact that Trump's 50 points ahead. I'm not sure that's even come close to happening. What was your take on last night? Yeah, I mean, there's an obvious gigantic
elephant hanging over these debates, which is that the person who, by all indications,
the voters of this party actually prefer to be their nominee is not participating in these
debates. And the more he doesn't participate, he doesn't suffer any harm.
And on some level, maybe he even gets stronger. But I also don't think the candidates are doing
themselves a lot of favors because I heard the end of your last segment. I didn't hear all of it,
but you would think that they are seeing these same poll numbers as we are. And if they're
really serious about winning, they would be doing things to try and undermine that fact by uniting, by having a joint strategy to at least attack Trump.
And they just won't do it. And so when they sit there and bicker among themselves, I saw some focus group with that.
I think News Nation had convened and the overwhelming sentiment in that focus group of Republican voters was that the winner was Trump by a pretty good distance.
And that's been the dynamic that they haven't been able to break.
This is what led to Chris Christie raising the following on stage last night. Listen to Sot3.
Respectfully, Governor, you have not stopped, Mr. Trump, and voters may wonder how you could
possibly become the nominee of a party that does not appear to like you very much? Well, look, Megan, it's often very difficult to be the only person on the stage who's telling
the truth and the only person who is taking on what needs to be taken on.
I look at my watch now.
We're 17 minutes into this debate.
And except for your little speech in the beginning, we've had these three acting as if the race
is between the four of us.
The fifth guy who doesn't have the guts to show up and stand here, he's the one who,
as you just put it, is way ahead in the polls. And yet I've got these three guys who are all
seemingly to compete with, you know, Voldemort. He or she will not be named. They don't want to talk about it.
A totally fair point, right?
We gave them a whole Trump section.
Here's your chance.
Try to take a shot at the front runner.
They were too afraid.
But here's the reality.
And I mean, actually, Chris Christie alluded to this, which is you can think it's wrong.
You can complain about it.
A lot of people do.
The Republican voters love Trump. That is just the reality. And I don't think they love him
just because he's Trump and all of his charisma and personal characteristics that they seem to
really like. He represents an ideology that has really stimulated their interest and passion
about politics, mostly based in the idea that the
establishment wing of both parties, the kind of status quo power centers that run the United States
are fundamentally corrupted and not interested in what their interests are. And so when you
have politicians up on that stage like Nikki Haley and Chris Christie, who very much represent
that kind of establishment Republican ideology,
even if they were to do what one might think they should do.
I don't think it would resonate very much with these voters because I don't think these
voters like them.
That's what you pointed out to him.
And I think one of the things Ron DeSantis and Vivek are interested in and thinking about
is their future in this party.
And I think Chris Christie even said that, like they may be thinking about four years from now,
you don't want to alienate those Trump voters because they're a gigantic part of this party.
Yeah, it does make some sense. I mean, because they've all been pretty diligent about not doing
it. Like they're careful. They have to hit them on some things, but they never go too far. And look, I still believe there's a point in having and it's actually important having these debates to some extent because we do need an alternative.
There has to be first alternate given all the legal jeopardy that Trump said.
There must be a first alternate just in case.
I mean, truly, Glenn, if Trump's in jail as of the trial supposed to start in March, this March, that's what, four months away.
I don't know how quickly it's going to go.
There is a scenario. It's slim. It's not likely, but it's that Trump's in jail this summer when they're having the Republican National Convention.
What are they going to do? Like call like you have a collect phone call from the D.C. correctional
facility. Yes, I accept the nomination. Not a plan. We don't know. We don't know how any of
this is going to work. I mean, for one thing, he has a gigantic Secret Service detail that
has to guard him for the rest of his life. He's entitled to that by law.
And there's nothing
in the Constitution that bars you from running if you're in prison. We had a candidate, Eugene Debs,
who was in prison under Woodrow Wilson for opposing the U.S. entry into World War I,
got charged under the Espionage Act of 1917 for that, was convicted, and he ran for president
as a socialist leader and got a fair number of votes. So there's precedent for people running from prison. And it's the huge unknown. Like, is this obvious distrust that
people have for institutions of authority so fundamental and so entrenched? Obviously,
they're not willing to hold it against Trump that he was charged or indicted. Is it that
entrenched that even if he's convicted, that still won't cause
support and in prison?
Will that be looked at as a form of political persecution where the want to kind of double
down on their support on Trump?
I mean, Tucker Carlson just said, I've never supported a candidate as a journalist.
And the only time I decided I would was I became a Trump supporter when they raided
Mar-a-Lago.
I think there's probably a lot of people who see it that way.
And we don't,
I just don't know. I can't pretend I know. Yeah, I know. None of us, we're in really
unchartered territory here and only time will tell. All right, let's talk about Vivek because
we've beaten up on him a little bit here tonight and it's not all, he did some good stuff last
night and he's very interesting. And I was saying to the guys before you, there were moments last night where you kind of become mesmerized by him. He's such a good
speaker. He makes his points so well. He's got, there's a bit of theater to him that's compelling.
You know, he knows how to sort of like capture your attention and deliver a line and like the
rise and fall in his voice. it can kind of suck you in.
Van Jones felt differently over on CNN.
He was not sucked in.
Here is his reaction on CNN after the debate,
SOT18.
And the smug, condescending way that he just spews this poison out
is very, very dangerous
because he won't stop Trump, but he's going to
outlive Trump by about 50 years. And you're watching the rise of an American demagogue
that is a very, very despicable person. And I literally, I was shaking listening to him talk
because a lot of people don't know that is one step away from Nazi propaganda coming out of his mouth.
Oh, we got the N-word, Nazi. And he's shaking. Vivek made Van Jones shake.
Yeah, I mean, look, when, you know, the New York Times has this little thing they do after every debate where they all, their columnists rank the participants and see who they think wins and see
who they think loses.
And they've ranked Nikki Haley as the winner of all three debates.
I don't know what they did last night.
And I think the vague always comes in last or second to last.
These people, I don't think this is breaking news, are not even a little bit in touch with
the sentiments and perspectives of Republican Party voters because Ban Jones has cried on
the air about Donald Trump and how sick and fearful he gets when he hears Donald Trump. And these are the people these
Republican voters hate. So I know that, you know, I don't know who was packed there last night. I
went to the first one. I know that the RNC usually gets to pick and choose who's there. So the
reaction of the crowd, too, is often disparate from what American voters in the Republican Party are reacting to.
But they don't respect these people.
They don't like these people.
And I know I think Vivek is purposely kind of seeing what Trump did and more or less following in that path.
You know, I talked to Vivek two and a half years or three years ago about an unrelated
thing, and I hung up the phone and I knew I said to my friends, that is going to be
a politician very shortly.
It was clear that he had this kind of ambition to be a public figure in that way before he was.
And he is skillful and talented. And of course, he's not going to his audience is not his target
audience is not Van Jones and New York Times columnist. But if you want to be successful
in the Republican Party, that shouldn't be. They love Chris Christie and Nikki Haley. So when when he's dropping the N-word
on Vivek in that moment, the other N-word, it was in response to Vivek this. You know,
I listed the things that Vivek said, like January 6th was an inside job. And this and the one thing
he said in there that I will give him is the great replacement theory is a Democrat thing. It's not a Republican
thing. He's 100 percent right about that. But the Democrats will never admit that they want to say
talkers are racist. And I'm sure Vivek's a racist. Vivek's a Nazi. And Dana Bash asked Vivek about
that after the debate. Take a listen. It's not 16. But when people hear great replacement theory conspiracy theorist,
I'm the kid of immigrants. But when the Democratic Party and Biden, the leader of the Democratic
Party now, as recently as 10 years ago, with Mallorca sitting at his side, expressly talking
about nonwhite populations, exceeding white populations, that being a good thing and
immigration policies, they've advanced to achieve that result, remain in Mexico, which they're not enforcing.
Let's have that debate rather than saying this is a dog whistle. This is going to cause violence.
A lot of it grounded in truth to be able to have that debate without labeling somebody one question, a xenophobe or a racist or a denier or anything.
Let's just say I'm not going to use the term anymore because it is a dog whistle for people out there who are looking for reasons to go after people of color and Jews. But let's just assume that that was something that was
happening. Is that so wrong? So what's wrong with what's wrong with people? First of all,
let me just pause right there. Let me just pause right there. This is a legitimate discussion for us to have.
In my views, I don't care about skin color.
I could care less for skin color.
Do you share the ideals of this country?
Wow.
Wow.
What did you make of that?
It's such a microcosm.
I mean, it's a perfect clip to pick because, first of all, it really drives me insane,
Megan, and it has for quite a long time now.
This idea that the great replacement theory is something that white supremacists like Tucker Carlson say to provoke mass murders like they tried to blame him for in Buffalo.
Even though the guy left a gigantic manifesto about all the people who influenced him and not only didn't he ever mention Tucker or anyone on Fox, there's no indication he even knew Fox News or had ever watched it, but they don't care about that. The great replacement theory is 1000% a Democratic
Party idea. There are Democratic Party operatives, mainstream ones who wrote books saying that the
key to an enduring permanent Democratic Party majority is ensuring that we have so much
immigration that it changes the demographic composition of our country. And these newly
arrived immigrants will forever be Democrats and there'll be no way for us to
lose elections because of these demographic shifts. So the Democrats can say that that's
their plan, but that you can't point it out that that's their plan. That is insane. But I also
think that there are legitimate debates about things like immigration and what the effects are that people like Dana Bash and CNN and the whole liberal commentariat have tried to say is off limits and they just scream racist and they yell at you that you're provoking violence. People, as we know, Democratic governors and Democratic Party mayors, the minute large
numbers of immigrants started showing up on their door, illegal ones, they started screaming
bloody murder and calling for the Biden Justice Department to do more to secure the border.
But there's this idea that if you're in a neighborhood like where Dana Bash lives or
people like her live and you're all ensconced and you don't have the kind of immigrants
in your neighborhood that many other people do, then you can call
everyone racist for caring about it because it doesn't affect you. And that is the breach
between, I think, elite culture and ordinary Americans that has become so destabilizing.
Yeah, couldn't agree more. By the way, speaking of Tucker, I should tell our audience,
Tucker will be joining us on Monday. Very excited to bring him to the show. This is the first time
we've spoken many times privately, but this is the first time he's been on the show since he left
Fox. And guess what? He has a big announcement when he comes on. So you will hear that only here.
Don't miss that. Yeah. Okay. So Vivek, it's kind of fun to watch him be provocative towards the
left. He really stirs up a lot of feelings. And then he starts up a lot of feelings in the right too, but on, on different issues.
I don't think he, he told me after the show, he's not going anywhere. He does not plan on
dropping out. I think he's in this now for other reasons, because Vivek is not going to be the
president this time around. And, um, you know, he's, he's accomplishing something. So let's talk
about, cause I know you're not a Nikki Haley fan and he was her chief antagonist.
DeSantis got in on the act more than ever.
But Vivek was the chief antagonist last night.
And I'm told by the team that this particular exchange captured one of your complaints about her.
It's not 12th.
I want to go back, though, to Nikki Haley's comment from earlier that she is somehow not responding to the will of these donors.
Nikki, you were bankrupt when you left the U.N. After you left the U.N., you became a military
contractor. You actually started joining service on the board of Boeing, whose back you scratched
for a very long time and then gave foreign multinational speeches like Hillary Clinton is.
And now you're a multimillionaire. That math does not add up. It adds up to the fact that
you are corrupt. What was it about that exchange you liked?
Well, the facts are true, first of all, that when she left government, she spent her whole life in
government and she did struggle with a lot of personal debt, which I personally don't consider
a moral failing. Most Americans at some
point in their lives struggle with that. It's a very American thing. In fact, I think it's actually
a good thing if you're running for president to have had that experience. But it is true that
she immediately converted her political celebrity and political influence into enormous amounts of
personal wealth, using that Hillary Clinton, Tony Blair, now very common way that when people leave Washington, they get very rich
by meeting in private with activist groups, giving speeches to them, serving on the board of Boeing.
And when you look at Nikki Haley's policies, the one on which she's running,
those policies completely align with the interest of all of those big donors and those corporations
that made her personally very wealthy and that are now funding her campaign. Now, the question always is, the eternal question is, are they funding
her campaign because she agrees with them or does she agree with them because they're funding her
campaign? Usually, you can't really draw that line. It ultimately doesn't make a difference.
The influence of money is so great in our politics that you might kind of morph into the kind of
person that you know will attract big donors
and think you're doing it because you really believe in it. But the point is, there's a reason
why Wall Street and my corporate donors are running to Nikki Haley, because they see her as a vessel,
as a tool to advance their agenda. And their agenda is not the agenda of the American people.
Republican Party voters have made very clear they reject that agenda of international globalism and corporatism and militarism. That's not what they said they want
in every poll and the way they're voting. And so I think it's an extremely legitimate question to ask
how is Nikki Haley's campaign being funded by whom and how did she get so wealthy in such a
short amount of time? And I think those answers have now been revealed through investigative
journalism, including some of the work we did about where her money came from.
I really wrestled when I was coming up with her electability question on between two things. Well,
three things. The candidates, because the way you do it is you come up with all sorts of research
on the person. Obviously, hopefully you have a working knowledge of what matters to Republican
voters and what the party looks like and what it's saying. And you look for her vulnerabilities. And for her, there
were a couple of lanes. There was one accusing her essentially of being a political opportunist
because she's flipped and flopped back and forth on Trump many, many, many times.
One was how hawkish she is in a party that is increasingly rejecting that and that has learned some hard
lessons from 20 years of war. And then the third was this lane, which is where I ultimately went
with the money and, you know, being beholden to the banks and the billionaires. You know,
is it are we being too hard on her versus someone like Trump? Right. It's like eventually he did
once he won get all the billionaires. They all
wind up bending the knee once you become the president and they will do it again. So like,
once you get into office, you know, they're all there wanting to control you for money and so on.
And they're all going to try to woo him again if and when he becomes the nominee. So are we being
too hard on her in that way? Well, one thing she said that is true is that all of these people had been backing DeSantis
in the beginning.
They thought he was the best alternative to stop Trump.
And only once they saw his polling numbers and concluded that he wasn't talented enough
on the campaign trail and dealing with people, he wasn't resonating, they switched to Nikki
Healy.
So now he gets to say, oh, she's getting all this money from bankers on Wall Street.
He was getting it at first and lost it to her. But, you know, when once you're president,
of course, everybody in power is going to go and try and, you know, have a friendly relationship
with you because of how much power you wield as a politician. It is true, though, when Trump ran
in 2016, all of this big donor money was looking for every alternative. But Trump, they started
with Jeb Bush.
That was where all those million dollars went.
No, they didn't want Trump.
Then they went to Marco Rubio.
Then they even, even though they hate him, went to Ted Cruz, anything but Trump.
And they went one after the next and ultimately didn't win.
And this is what they're doing here, too.
So you are, of course, right, that once somebody gets very powerful, everybody bends the knee.
But you can look at
who power centers want to become president and who they don't want to become president.
And I'm not saying you should automatically reject the candidate they support, because maybe they
support them because they'll foster economic growth or whatever. But the reality is, as you
said, Nikki Haley supports an ideology, a foreign policy ideology and an economic ideology that the
largely working class base
of the Republican Party has come to detest. That's just the irreconcilable reality.
Well, that's why, you know, we thought it would be interesting in that quick last block that we
had, which was tight, to just ask a question about which president you admire. And, you know,
Christie said Reagan. I think an honest Haley probably would have said Reagan, too. And Reagan,
even though he's been a god in the Republican Party for many, many decades in today's Republican Party, it's kind of controversial to choose Reagan because he had that same foreign policy and some of the domestic policies.
And so Christie did it. He said Reagan. And she said George Washington and Abe Lincoln. Glenn, it was like, oh, it's like a third grade book report. You know, like if you ask any
American kid in like junior high who their favorite presidents are, they're going to say
Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. I mean, it really sounded a little bit pitiful. That was not
a good. I appreciate the Calvin Coolidge reference, though, that that one was actually kind of
thought out. And that is Ron DeSantis. He's well thought out on everything. I said this after my
interview with him. He can go 10 deep on any subject and then some. So I wasn't surprised at all that he had one that nobody else
chose and he had good reasons for it. And then Vivek with the Thomas Jefferson and the swivel
chair. I mean, everybody loves the swivel chair. We've been spending too much time focusing on that
declaration of independence. The swivel chair is the bomb. Thanks, TJ. All right. I have to move on to Rumble. We've gotten to the bottom
of this. You're on Rumble. So one of my questions last night was about the vaccine injured. And
apparently unbeknownst to me, the feed blacked out on Rumble in the middle of the question.
And I totally understand why on that question, it would lead people to go into, whoa, who did that mode? Here's the question, first of all,
unedited. Through Operation Walk Speed, the Trump administration and private industry developed a
COVID vaccine in record time. The program protected the drug companies from virtually all lawsuits
over vaccine injuries. The government has a program to compensate for such harm, but
critics say it is a black hole of bureaucracy. 12,000 claims filed, 10% decided, only eight
payouts so far in a forum with no right to counsel, no hearings, no appeals.
Mr. Trump says he's very proud of warp speed. Should he be?
Okay. And he went on from there. Um, that was the full question. Now we know why the feed went out on rumble. The rumble says it was not fed. Like there was a problem in the feed it was receiving
from news nation. It was nothing rumble did And News Nation had a problem feeding to the spin room as well on
that question and maybe another one I heard. Yeah. Oh, this is what happened. It froze black on
Rumble. That's what the audience. So I get it. Anyway, we just want to clear it up. There's no
conspiracy. News Nation had trouble. It did air live on News Nation. Right. And Rumble also posted
the proof of this. Christina Pushaw, the spokesperson for Governor DeSantis,
said, you know, they absolutely believe that. And if there's any platform that wants an open COVID debate and has done more to foster an open COVID debate, it's Rumble. They allow every last
conceivable view on there. So as Christina said, if there were any other platform, I'd be suspicious,
but not with Rumble. Yeah, exactly. They're committed to all this stuff. But what did you make of this is the first vaccine in which covid or God forbid the vaccine injured was raised. And I like it's been
very annoying to me that nobody else has raised any of this. I realize we're well past covid and
people don't they don't want to be reminded. But the vaccine injured are still out there. And it's
not just people with small injuries.
There have been some people catastrophically injured who are completely ignored.
And you look at those the payouts.
I didn't get to this because the question is going to only be so long.
The payouts these eight people have gotten are like a grand, maybe two.
There's been no big payout and there never will be.
And these vaccines were mandated in company after
company and government after government department. Well, this is a thing, Megan. I mean,
this is, I think, the heart of everything we've been talking about and that actually the Republican
Party is dealing with, which is the reason that all happened is because there's complete government
capture, capture of the regulatory agencies,
capture of the entire executive branch by these industries through campaign donations
and PACs and all sorts of other things.
They have the revolving door
where the executives of these industries
go to run the regulatory agencies
and they run it in favor of these industries.
And when they leave, they get rewarded
by getting hired even better jobs, stock options.
It's legalized corruption.
And so when everything is done from a public health perspective, it's all done to protect the pharmaceutical companies.
So they had this mandate to develop a vaccine. And of course, they want to say, look, if you
want to develop a quick vaccine, we'll do it. But then you need to give us some protections. It's not
totally unreasonable. The problem is that it was rendered taboo to talk about the deaths and the harms from these COVID vaccines because it was deemed COVID nihilism.
There was widespread censorship on it.
The minute anyone talked about it, they were accused of wanting to encourage people not to get the vaccine or to kill people.
And so there was every attempt made to repress it. And that's exactly the problem is the establishment has so many ways of preventing debate that it took until the fourth debate, even in a Republican Party field, which is more open
to talking about this for this issue even to be raised. And I think a lot of people would find it
controversial. And I understand why they would think maybe there was tampering going on to prevent
the discussion because so much of that has happened. I know it's kind of a confluence of
events all at one time. But News Nation aired the full thing on News Nation. They had no desire to censor anything. News Nation love the question. I can speak to that firsthand. It's just sometimes you have these technical snafus and it's available in all forums now online. So you can you can see for yourself, by the way, not for nothing. Here's I mentioned this at the top of the hour. I intentionally did not bring the covid question to DeSantis because it would have been too easy.
But he saw the opportunity and jumped in and did have a powerful message on it. Here he is in SOT6.
We need a reckoning for what this government did during COVID-19. That includes the MNRA shots. They put it out. It was experimental. People wanted it. Then the government started trying
to mandate it to say you don't have a right to put food on your table. If you don't take an MNRA shot that was under emergency use, they tried to take nurses
away. Now in Florida, we block that. We provided protections for everybody so that they wouldn't
lose their job. You also have the FDA approving an MNRA shot for six months old babies. There was
no data to support that. They're doing it because big pharma will make money. So I'm going to go in there. CDC, NIH, FDA. We're going to clean house. There's going to be a reckoning because right now nobody's been held accountable for any of the damage. And they're going to try to do it again. When I'm president, this will never happen to our country ever again. Glenn, the thing is, I believe him. Like, I believe him.
He actually has gotten things done and he lived it firsthand. And unlike so many others,
he wasn't lured into the excessive authoritarian rule that we were getting handed down.
Well, here's the thing, Megan. This is what I don't understand, because you asked me earlier
why they're not attacking Trump more directly, more harshly. And we talked about that. But in
this, these kinds of things, I think is where they could without even alienating Trump voters.
I mean, if you're going to be Chris Christie and just constantly talking about how much Trump
is a terrible human being, of course, Trump voters are going to hate you. But what Ron DeSantis is
able to do, I don't think he does
nearly enough, is say Trump's words were correct. The problem is he didn't follow through with any
of it. He said he was going to build a wall. Where's the wall? I'll actually get it done.
I mean, he did say that. But even with the COVID thing, the reason we had Fauci is because Trump
didn't fire him. The reason we have Christopher Wray is because Trump didn't fire him. The deep
state continued because Trump did nothing about it. Trump had so many appointees, including Nikki Haley, who were in foreign policy positions, even got them to vote for him and the failure of the follow through the actions.
And I think that's where DeSantis could do way more work in saying this is why Trump
failed you, not because he was wrong.
He was right, but he didn't do it.
And I'll do it.
I think that could be a lot more direct.
And obviously, COVID is the perfect example where even a lot of liberals will now look
back and say, even though we attacked and smeared and
maligned DeSantis while it was being done, he turned out to be largely right. He was willing
to read the data and not go along with the herd mentality. And that is an impressive attribute
in a political leader. It seems to me that Ron DeSantis is finally finding his groove
in this race. After the debate with Newsom, at this debate, he's finally finding his groove.
And the question is whether it's too late, whether it's too late, you know, because
if he had found that groove earlier, maybe this race would look a lot different. I don't know.
His future in politics is going to be very long, no matter what happens in this race.
Glenn Greenwald, your future in punditry and journalism is going to be very long as well.
It's always a pleasure, my friend. Great to see you.
Great to see you, Megan. Thanks a lot.
All right. See you soon. All right. Tomorrow, we're going to be back and Maureen Callahan
will be here. I'm looking forward to talking to her. She's always fun. There's so much to
catch up on. And again, Tucker Carlson will be here for the full show on Monday, and then
we'll leave a little time at the end for calls. So set your calendar
for that one. We'll see you tomorrow. Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show. No BS,
no agenda, and no fear.