The NPR Politics Podcast - Who Is Kash Patel, Trump's Pick To Run The FBI?
Episode Date: December 11, 2024He was a public defender and former national security aide. He is a fierce critic of the justice department and longtime ally of President-elect Trump, who wants him to run the FBI. This episode: poli...tical correspondent Susan Davis, national justice correspondent Ryan Lucas, and White House correspondent Franco Ordoñez.The podcast is produced by Jeongyoon Han and Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hello, this is David from Chicago. I feel like in the timestamps that everyone's always doing
impressive stuff like running a marathon or getting their law degree. I'm just hanging out
in my apartment doing nothing, having a beer. This podcast was recorded at 1 22 p.m. on Wednesday,
December 11th. Things may have changed by the time you hear this, but I'll still probably just be
hanging out doing nothing. All right, enjoy the show. Hanging out doing nothing is one of my favorite things.
Sounds amazing. We don't get to do enough of that.
I'm very impressed with David from Chicago.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.
I'm Ryan Lucas. I cover the Justice Department.
And I'm Frank Ordonez. I cover the White House.
And today we're looking at Cash Patel, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to run the FBI. If confirmed by the Senate for the job, Patel could have an outsized role in reshaping the
nation's top law enforcement agency.
Ryan, I think in our respective households, Kash Patel is a household name, but I think
for most of our listeners, he's been a man behind the scenes and not someone people know
a lot about.
So tell us about him.
Who is Kash Patel?
So he's a son of Indian immigrants who grew up in New York. He worked as a public defender in Miami
for many years, ended up working as a prosecutor in the national security division here at Maine
justice in Washington, DC. From there, he ended up joining the staff of then Congressman Devin
Nunes, who was the chairman of the house intelligence committee, Republican chairman.
In that role, he ended up playing a really critical
role, pushing back on the Russia investigation,
digging in on that, um, and finding what they
determined to be faults with how the FBI and the
Justice Department conducted that investigation.
That kind of made him a folk figure on the right.
He then ended up finding jobs in the Trump
White House, first in the national security
council staff, and then he went on to become a deputy at the
office of the director of national intelligence.
Uh, and then the chief of staff at the Pentagon.
So he held some big roles in the first
Trump administration.
Franco, I don't think it's an understatement
to say that this is someone who Donald Trump
trusts explicitly and very much wants in a
senior role in his next administration.
That definitely is kind of an understatement.
I mean, he's one of Trump's most loyal lieutenants.
I mean, even after he left government, he's been by Trump's side,
whether it was with him in court in New York during his criminal trial,
he was on the campaign trail, echoing Trump's points about the deep state.
Patel is kind of like the one who really kind of emblematic
of Trump's vision.
I mean, I see him, unlike some of the other picks,
I feel like it's a story less about Patel
and his qualifications, or at least as much about that.
It's also about what it says about Trump's plans
for the next administration,
because Patel
really has a common cause with Trump. He is someone who Trump kind of feels very similarly
about Patel, like Trump, wants to shake up Washington, really has a distrust of government
agencies. And I think in Patel, he has someone who can be kind of like an enforcer to kind
of do that. I mean, Patel has spent a lot of time in podcasts and public speeches talking about the deep state,
railing about this nefarious cabal that runs Washington, their unelected bureaucrats in,
you know, the FBI, DOJ, CIA, Pentagon, who hold outsized influence and power and work
with the mainstream media to keep the average American down, essentially.
Didn't he actually put a list of names down in his own book?
The book called government gangsters, which is, he says a roadmap for how to
dismantle the deep state and in essence, in his words, get the government back to
into the hands of the American people.
I think that's an important point because he has written a roadmap.
I mean, he is not just someone who follows Trump around
and supports Trump's vision.
I mean, he does do that as well,
but he has his own agenda.
He has his own vision.
And that is where I think Trump sees in Patel
someone who can kind of execute these things
because they have so much in common,
or at least how they view inside the Beltway world.
Ryan, I'm glad you made reference to podcasts because I also think another thing about Patel
that's worth keeping in mind is how he is almost his own big personality within these
conservative media outlets.
If you think of past FBI directors, not necessarily people who tend to talk to a lot of mainstream
media or certainly sort of fringier podcast media outlets,
but he's almost created his own persona.
Like you said, he's almost like a folk hero to the right.
And in that regard, there is an element of like
grassroots support for Patel in this position,
at least from the mega-verse, that other
government officials might not normally enjoy.
And don't forget about the book, the children's book
that he wrote, The plot against the king,
which is all about an applaud to basically
overthrow a king named Donald.
Yeah, that, that has all very much resonated
with the right and Trump's base.
It's something that Patel spent the past four
years lashing out at the deep state and in many
ways, very publicly making clear the loyalty that he has to Donald Trump and the
shared vision that they have.
What is it exactly about the FBI that either
Donald Trump and or Kash Patel see that is so
wrong with it? And have they clearly articulated
what it is they want to change about the agency
other than the fact that there's still a lot of
lingering grievance with how the agency
conducted investigations into Donald Trump during his first administration?
So first thing that I would say is, is it's important to remember what the FBI does. It
does a whole bunch of stuff. What we have talked about on this podcast and in the media a lot lately
has been a very, very small sliver of the sort of work that the FBI does. I mean, the FBI still does a lot of counterterrorism work. There's cyber crimes, organized crime,
drugs, violent crimes, white collar crimes, public corruption, civil rights, kidnapping,
child exploitation, assassination attempts. They work with local state and local law enforcement
all the time. This is a big organization. There are 35,000 plus people who work there,
time. This is a big organization. There are 35,000 plus people who work there, but it's also an organization as you noted that has been very much in the sights of now president
elect Trump because of certain investigations that the FBI was involved in that we're looking
at Trump himself. And so he, yes, he spent a lot of time railing against the FBI as for
what Patel has said himself publicly about how he wants to change the FBI, there are a couple
things that he's mentioned specifically. One is he's talked about shutting down the FBI headquarters
here in downtown DC on day one, making it a museum to the deep state, opening it to the public and
taking the 7,000 people who work there and essentially shipping them out to the field.
Easier said than done.
Easier said than done. It also breaks down to a question of kind of how you want to allocate resources within the FBI.
There's been debate about that.
The FBI has allocated more people to a big campus
that they have in Alabama lately in the past decade or so.
There can be a policy discussion about that.
He's talked about ending illegal government surveillance
on Americans.
I don't think that anyone in Congress wants illegal
government surveillance on Americans.
Really, it's what
he said in general terms about potentially going after perceived enemies of Donald Trump
and folks in the deep state that has caused a lot of nervousness and anxiety on the left
as to whether Cash Patel, if he is confirmed as FBI director, whether he would indeed use
the vast powers of the FBI
to conduct such investigations. I mean, Trump has such distrust of the intelligence community,
you know, all those things Ryan was just talking about. And in Patel,
Trump has someone who he knows will protect them, who's not going to investigate him.
He's going to know what is going on inside the agency. And as Ryan says, he has a person who if he wants to employ the intelligence community
for his own purposes, Patel is the kind of person who would do that.
All right.
Let's take a quick break more on this in a moment.
And we're back.
And the director of the FBI is a position that has a 10-year term.
The current FBI director, Chris Wray, still has a way to go before his term technically
expires, but Franco, Donald Trump has made it clear that he wants Wray to go, Patel to
step in.
Do you have a sense from the Trump side of things, how confident the president is that
he can get through the Senate?
I mean, I think they're pretty confident right now.
I mean, I think because so much of the attention
is on some of the cabinet picks and not so much attention
is on Patel, I think that bodes very well for Patel.
Because I mean, six months ago, when
people were kind of like speculating if Trump won,
who would be part of the administration,
who would have influential positions, Patel was definitely one of the names that was often brought up part of the administration, who would have influential positions.
Patel was definitely one of the names
that was often brought up
because of the reasons that we've been talking about
of being a loyal lieutenant,
how being someone from Trump's circle, the MAGA world.
And in many of those discussions,
Patel was seen as someone who would have a hard time
being confirmed.
But that's not really talked about so much now.
Now, maybe, you know, maybe moving forward in a few weeks,
that will change.
You know, that's obviously something that happens in Washington.
But right now, I mean, I think arguably, things look pretty good.
And I mean, I'd pose this question back to you, Sue,
since you're on the Hill so often talking to senators.
I mean, I guess, what's your thought?
You know, I think if it was a vacuum,
if Patel was the only quote unquote controversial nominee,
he might have a harder road.
But if you put him in the constellation of other nominees
that are fighting their way through Capitol Hill,
people right now like Pete Hegseth,
who's fighting to be the defense secretary,
I think Patel is in a pretty good position.
And I think one of the distinctions I would point to
among these nominees is some of the folks that have
issues like former Congressman Matt Gaetz, who didn't make it through the process to
become attorney general, Hegseth, as I mentioned, former Democratic Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard
for the director of national intelligence, even Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for health and
human services.
They all carry with it some degree of personal baggage, whether it was things that happened
in their past lives, messy marriages, political positions that are unsavory to Republican members of the Senate. Patel doesn't really
have any of that. He shares the policy goals of the president-elect, and it's really hard
as a member of the president's own party to deny a nominee, even if you don't like
the way his policy is going to play out. Donald Trump won that argument by winning an election,
and there isn't much, I would say, backbone
among most Senate Republicans to tell a president
he can't have who he wants,
especially if there's no other sort of glaring personal
or other disqualifying issue about him.
I would also say that conversations that I've had
with folks on the Hill and sources elsewhere,
it has become clear to me that there are a lot of Republican senators, and they've said it publicly, but
there are also people I've talked to who don't have skin in the game at this point, have
reservations about the incoming administration, but who feel that the FBI needs to change,
that the FBI is a broken institution and needs to be fixed.
And they may have reservations about Cash Patel as an individual, but
he's someone who's seen as a
disruptor who will come in and shake things up.
And perhaps the kind of critical parts of the
institution will remain firm,
but there needs to be a shake up. But it's kind of a
distinction between a shake up and a blow up.
You don't want to blow up the institution, but you do
want to shake it up. And some of the criticisms,
I mean, Chuck Grassley, who's going
to be the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee that will oversee this nomination
if it indeed goes forward, sent a letter this past week
in which he railed against current FBI director Chris Ray
and said that he's lost confidence in him
for a whole host of reasons.
What I find a little bit tricky at this point in time
is to get people who are critical
of the current leadership of the FBI to say specifically what it is that needs to change at the institution,
other than kind of.
The sub-morphous.
The sub-morphous.
The culture.
There's politicization there, it's been weaponized, but the desire for change seems to be very
widespread and very real among Republican senators.
I'll add one caveat. Trump did try to put Patel in a high ranking position at the end of his
first term, you know, looking to kind of gain more control of the intelligence community.
Bill Barr, you know, who was Trump's attorney general at the time, actually wrote in his
memoir that he told the then Chief of Staff Mark Meadows that an appointment to Patel at such a high ranking position at the FBI would happen
quote over his dead body. So I do find it fascinating how things have changed and kind
of like the narrative has changed. But I do think that some of those things from Patel's
closet may still come up later on as we move down the road in this process.
One thing I would say too just about the politics of Patel getting through the Senate confirmation
processes, as we noted earlier, he has sort of this own popularity and cache among the
right that other nominees might not have.
And I think that the risk of opposing him carries with it the potential for political
blowback against any Republican senator who
would want to break with the party there, that opposing Patel to me would be very different
than being glad that Gates is no longer in contention or even Hegseth or any of the other
people that don't have sort of their own fandom and political following and could create
a political backlash if they're not ultimately successful in getting through the Senate.
The other point that I would kind of put to both of you is, look, like the FBI director's
job was created with this 10-year term limit, with the grand idea of putting it above politics,
right?
That it would, they would serve beyond the term of whichever president appointed them.
Donald Trump has already fired one FBI director, that was James Comey, during his first term.
But this move and this conversation about replacing Ray, I think it also sort of
eliminates the idea that the FBI director, at least under Donald Trump, is
not going to be a political actor.
Having had conversations with former senior FBI folks and other people in
Washington about this, this very question.
Uh, one of the things that the former senior FBI
official told me is that if you go in and start
removing the FBI director, you are politicizing
it from day one, that's exactly if your complaint
is politicization at the FBI and then you bring
in someone who is outwardly political, you are
politicizing the organization, the 10 year
term. This is also someone who thinks that Ray
should, should be able to see out his, his term.
The other thing is if the Republicans lose the
White House in four years, don't think that you're
going to have Cash Patel staying on as FBI director.
This is going to become, this is going to become a
four year term and every administration that comes
in is going to be.
Yeah.
Is that the new reality for a job like this?
All right, let's leave it there.
I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics. I'm Ryan Lucas. I cover the justice department. And I'm Frank Ordonez. And every administration that comes in is going to be... Yeah, is that the new reality for a job like this? All right, let's leave it there.
I'm Susan Davis.
I cover politics.
I'm Ryan Lucas.
I cover the Justice Department.
And I'm Frank Ordonez.
I cover the White House.
And thanks for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.
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