The Problem With Jon Stewart - Are You There, Congress? with Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick and Tom Suozzi
Episode Date: May 8, 2025In this era of executive overreach, Jon is joined by Representatives Tom Suozzi (D-NY) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA), co-chairs of the Problem Solvers Caucus, to examine how bipartisanship might still ...be possible. Together, they explore the caucus's approach to building consensus across party lines, discuss what leverage remains with the legislative branch, and consider what reforms could help Congress better serve the American people. This podcast is brought to you by Fast Growing Trees, America’s largest online nursery. Visit http://fastgrowingtrees.com/weekly and use code WEEKLY for 15% off. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast> TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod > BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/theweeklyshowpodcast.com Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Researcher & Associate Producer – Gillian Spear Music by Hansdle Hsu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, everyone. Welcome once again to the weekly show podcast. My name is John Stewart. I'll be hosting the program today. It is, I think we might be even taping a day earlier than normally. Yeah, it's Tuesday, May 6th. May 6th be with you. We've got a May 4th and then Cinco tomorrow. May 6th really has got no game. It's got nothing going on, which is truly a shame. The Premier of Canada, Mark Carney, visited the White House today and the President,
once again said incredibly rude and disrespectful things about Canada.
But I am still hung up, quite frankly, on the interview that he did with Kristen Welker on Meet the Press,
where he continues to float this idea that Americans just have too much,
that in this new world order that he is creating,
that it is important for children to learn gratitude and simplicity.
in terms of the amount of dolls.
I don't, he seems to be stuck on 30 to 37 dolls as the magic number of what, what spoils a child.
I'm not sure there is a child that has received 30 dollars in the span of a year unless they are a Trump child, which is, it gets us really to the crux of how fucking wrongheaded his entire,
approach may be because he sees no value in moderation for himself. There is no, he is not leading
through the exemplar of a dignified and less consumerist life. He, as you can see, every time there is
another press conference within the Oval Office, another gold cherub gets its wings,
another gold cherub and another gold leaf frame until, you know,
there is no wall space left in the Oval Office. Fuck that. Fuck you for telling the American people,
oh, you know what? So your kids have to go without, why don't billionaires? Why doesn't he ever say,
hey, you know what? Maybe you don't need $350 billion. Maybe you just need $10 to $12 billion.
Maybe you don't need any of those things. Why isn't his scolding of
excess in any way self-reflective and turned around to the people who have bought and sold
this country to all the interests that are making it more difficult for people to live
better lives. Why not say the same thing to the profits of the insurance companies
and to the banks and the financialization? No, it's people who are buying pencils for their
for their kids who've gotten out of control.
That's what's out of control.
Those people.
Not him in his Saddam-like palace with, you know what?
What if you had 10 golden toilets instead of 20?
Or the font on the giant Trump sign was slightly smaller.
God!
And Congress just stands slack-jawed as it all goes down.
We're so upset about the tariffs.
we've got to do something about the tariffs. Let's have a vote about it. Yeah, I don't know about that.
Why don't we, you know what? Well, let's wait. Let's see what happens.
Which is why actually, so we're going to be talking a little bit about Congress today.
We've got a couple of Congress people that are coming on the show. We're going to talk about the intricacies of it.
The ins and outs. These are a couple of guys who are working with something called the Problem Solvers Caucus.
It's right in the name there. They caucus to solve problems, generally about how many dolls, I'm sure, people can buy.
But let's get to our guests and learn a little bit about why is Congress so passive and what are they going to be doing about the chaos and destruction that is being levied on so many American families as we move forward in this administration from Caligula, for God's sakes.
Let's get to them now.
Ladies and gentlemen, very pleased today.
We have two elected officials of these United States of America, Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick.
And Congressman Tom Swazi, Brian Fitzpatrick represents a lovely district in Pennsylvania.
Congressman Tom Swazzi, areas of Nassau County and Queens, et cetera.
They are co-chairs of the Problem Solvers Caucus, which is a congressional caucus that I think we can only assume solves problems.
Gentlemen, welcome to the weekly show.
I wanted to start by asking you guys about this Congress.
Tell me about this Congress.
It's apparently elected representatives that have the power to enact laws.
They used to be before the president took over.
There are 435 members of the House of Representatives.
There are 100 senators.
Both of them together make up the Congress.
The Senate is two senators from each state, times 50 is 100.
And the 435 members of Congress each represent about 750,000 people.
Very nice. Representative Fitzpatrick, has it been difficult?
The President of the United States, Donald Trump, he signed, I don't know, 150 executive orders.
He has done all these things.
Is he bypassing Congress?
Do you guys feel like you have as strong a voice?
you both, well, Representative Suzzi, you've only been there for a little bit, but Representative Fitzpatrick, as a Republican, do you feel like you still have a strong voice in this administration?
For sure. Tom and I actually came in together. We lost him for a brief stint when he ran for governor. But Tom and I came in together this year.
I ran for governor of New York, got my butt kicked. And then George Santos took my place. Oh, dear Lord. So then they kicked him out and then I came back.
And then Suazi came back. But to answer your question, John.
upgrade. Yeah. To answer your question, I've never been a fan of executive orders, and I think we're
seeing, we're seeing them abuse more and more, where we're seeing presidents come in and really testing
the boundaries of their article to authority. I think they're doing so in an expectation of getting
challenged by the judiciary to rein them in. We've seen that with the AUMF, the authorized use
military force previously. We're seeing it now with tariffs and the like, the Ewing Enemies Act,
with immigration.
But, you know, as far as, has Congress lost its ability to oversee? No. I mean, the budget still
has to go through us, right? I mean, we're going to be voting on multiple budgets.
We're going to be voting on appropriations. It's all got to go through us. The only exception
of that is executive orders. And many executive orders at President signed do exceed the
boundaries of Article 2 authority, and that's when they get smacked out by the courts.
Well, that's an interesting point because we are seeing, you know, when you talk about the budget,
Well, let's start there with the budget.
So this time, you guys represent this problem solvers caucus, which is basically it is a bipartisan caucus that gets together and they try and make recommendations.
And forgive me if I'm getting the details wrong.
But apparently you can't make a recommendation through the problem solvers caucus unless 70% of the members agree to it.
And it's a, is it a 50-50 coalition, 50% Democrats, 50% Republicans, 50% Republicans, 50% Republicans,
Republicans? Is that the idea? It is. It is. If you want to join, you have to find someone from the
opposite party to join with you. There's about 50 of us. Yeah, we're about 25 and 25 right now.
And yes, it's actually 75%. So for the caucus to endorse a bill, 75% of the overall group and at
least 50% of the members of each party need to say yes. Now, if 75% of the group says yes,
the 25% that do not, if it comes to the floor, they still have to support it because it's been
endorsed by the group. So when you join this caucus, you are making a pledge that if the
problem solvers caucus endorses this, then the entire group has to endorse it. So this is an
interesting point then. You're in budget negotiations right now. I'm assuming that the reconciliation
process is what's going to get triggered and that Democrats will not be involved in the in the
budget process whatsoever. Is that a
incorrect assumption? That's a correct deception. Right now, it's been very much my way or the
highway with the president and the Republicans trying to cobble this thing together on their own
without any reaching across the aisle to the Democrats. And if they don't succeed in this or at some
point when they're trying to get something else done, they don't succeed, then we hope that
we'll be available as a group to work together to try and find compromise on things. But right now,
you know, Democrats and Republicans have used the record.
process when they're in power. The main reason they do the reconciliation process is because
it's a provision that doesn't require 60 votes in the Senate. It only requires 50 votes in the
Senate. He's suggesting it's a way for them to avoid the filibuster in the Senate that generally
would require some bipartisan action. Now, so for the problem solvers Congress, you're basically
sidelined in terms of budget. And that is, for the most
part right now in Congress, the large majority of what you guys are doing. There hasn't been,
I think the president signed, what, five pieces of legislation? It's a small number comparatively
with his executive orders. Would that be correct? Yeah, so keep in mind, the only thing that's
accepted from the 60-vote filibuster is reconciliation. So literally everything else will require
bipartisanship because it can't garner 60 votes in the Senate without it. And so that's what makes
it so difficult. Now, my understanding is that the Republicans are going to attempt within reconciliation
to maybe expand the powers of that through reconciliation. So they're also going to deal with
regulation and some other elements that are a little bit more controversial than just sort of
your standard fare. These are the appropriations. Would that also be correct?
Well, I think it's important to note that in order for, so you've heard this term called the
Byrd rule, named after former Senator Byrd, that basically requires that for anything to
fall under the rules of reconciliation, which is a once a year thing, only under certain
scenarios, that it's got to be budgetary in nature. So there's a lot of things they call they get
it, it gets bird bath or birded out. So I'm not sure what you're referring to in terms of
regulations. There's going to be a lot included. My understanding it was about the executive's
ability to pass something that the Republicans wanted, which was.
was a change in how regulations can be struck down? Oh, you're probably, you may be talking about,
um, yes, I think it's called the Raines Act. I think that's, that's correct. So basically what that,
what that, uh, idea suggests is that any regulation that has over a $100 million impact on the
economy has to be revisited. So the criticism is that the code of federal regulations is this
cumulative Bible. It gets added to every year, but nothing ever gets taken away. And regulations that
might have been passed in the 50s or 60s that are no longer germane or relevant are still in the
books. So it would force an automatic sunset unless affirmatively renewed by Congress.
Now, you raise a good question, John, it is unclear whether that would even qualify.
That's right. And would that be the parliamentarian who would decide if that...
It is. The Senate parliamentarian. The Senate parliamentarian. Because the burden rule only applies
to the Senate, not to the House. I mean, the bottom line is, is that it's very hard to change the
laws as part of reconciliation. It's much more about the budget. So, for example, there's a lot of
stuff that's debated about immigration right now. And one of the things the problem solvers is working
on. We have seven working groups. One of our working groups, one of the ones that has the most energy
is behind immigration so that we could try and make a bipartisan deal that will secure the border
for the long term, that will fix the broken asylum system, and will modernize the legal immigration
system so that the dreamers and the farm workers and the health care workers and other people
that are essential to the United States of America and who've been here for 10 or 20 or 30 years,
we can figure out how to legalize them. Now, is that different than the Lankford bill that came out
before the election that there had been bipartisan support for and actually would have passed
had it not been, I guess the president wasn't the president then, intervened and said,
please don't pass this. Is this a substantially different bill than that?
I don't want to say substantially different. A lot of the elements from that are in there,
but it's not that bill. And we're using a lot of different bipartisan bills that have been
worked on over the years, like on the Dreamers, for example, and on the farm workers,
the Farm Workers Modernization Act. We're using those and trying to cobble together something
that's been bipartisan for many years, but never got over the finish line. And we're hoping
that, you know, when the push comes to shove and the administration,
administration needs some help to get something done, this will be one of the things that we can make
one of the first things we're trying to push through. All right. We're going to take a quick break.
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We are back.
Let me ask you both because you're, you know, you're in this situation where the president has a vision of how government should work.
And it's similar to, I guess, how you would imagine he thinks the Trump organization should work.
It's not a public company.
And that he is the chairman and CEO of America.
And this idea of a kind of bipartisan is almost the antithesis of how he has.
of how he has governed.
How does that complicate what you would consider to be
the primary driving force of this problem solvers caucus
when he doesn't seem to be receptive in any way
to that type of bipartisanship or collaboration?
Yeah, I don't share that vision, obviously.
I'm the Democrat here.
Brian's the Republican.
I don't know that Brian shares that vision,
even though he's a Republican.
I'm reasonably sure that Brian doesn't share that vision either
because the division of the United States competition
with three branches of government
that have equal power.
And, you know, the America's founded on the idea
all men are created equal.
It's founded on that we all have inalienable human rights
to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness.
But it's also founded on you can't trust each other,
which is why we have these different branches
to stop any one branch from taking over
because they're always going to fight for their own self-interest.
What article of the Constitution is you can't trust each other?
It's in there somewhere.
It's how it's worked.
That's article one and two.
That's how it works.
Brian, you're in.
caucusing with the Republicans.
And let's let the audience know, Brian's record in Congress.
I think you've been voted the most bipartisan member of Congress for however long.
You both are in districts that voted for the candidate from the opposite party.
Representative Swazi is in a district that went for Trump, even though he's a Democrat.
Representative Fitzpatrick is in a district that went for Harris, even though he's a Republican.
So you're really in the kind of that crucible.
And Representative Fitzpatrick, I want to start with you because within navigating that sort of
Freedom Caucus, you know, really stringent purity testing that goes on as far as the Republican
Party and what Trump wants, how do you navigate not necessarily being on the same page about
these issues like immigration or tariffs or those kinds of things?
Yeah, I don't, I mean, I think navigate John.
I, honest to God, I mean, every time I've run, and I've been, I've run five times now, I was an FBI
agent before I was in Congress and I'd never run for anything before.
And I've been primaryed every single time I've run.
I've been primary by the far right, every single time.
So I'm used to that.
You have kind of a built-up immunity then to the, you know, they always challenge members to
that.
Because it's so, they're so ridiculous.
I mean, they're just ideological purists.
And that's just not how life works.
You know, I, I ask them all the time.
I just marvel. I'll find them on the house floor, and they're rattling sabres and they're mocking,
you know, their fellow American on the other side of the aisle. And I just ask them,
is this how you function at home, right? Could you imagine if we took the attitude towards our spouses
or our partners that if you don't agree with me 100% of the time, you're stupid and a bad person?
That's just ridiculous. And yet you have a lot of adults acting like children here that
conduct themselves that way. I'm a term limits believer, John. It's the first bill I introduce
every single Congress. I think it's so important that this not be a career, that this be a temporary
public service. And I think a lot of good things flow from that, because if you're not trying to
stay here and become a committee chair or build up your little political fiefdom or whatever you want to
call it, it changes the way you approach the job. And I'm a huge term limits believer. I think the
biggest problem in Congress are the people that have been here 20, 30, 40 years. It's never meant to
be that. I love that recently Dick Durbin, Senator from Illinois, he announced at
80, he was not going to be, and he announced it as though it was an unusual announcement.
He's 80 years old.
He announced, I don't, you know, I'm not going to, I'm not going to run again.
I think we should set an example.
And I was like, yeah, at 80, just when he was hitting his prime for the Senate.
I don't remember who it was, Tom.
Maybe you can remind me, but there was a celebration of somebody recently who broke the
record for the longest serving House Republican.
Right.
And they threw a party for him.
And I'm like, what a perverse incentive that is, right?
We're celebrating someone who's been here for 55, 60 years.
That's an embarrassment, I think.
Was the guy from Alaska?
Was it?
Was it Don Young?
Yeah, Don Young.
Well, Clyburn just said he's not, you know, they asked him, because I think he's 82.
He's in the house, obviously.
But they asked him and he said, I'm never leaving.
This is my life.
But I do think there are perverse incentives.
So let's talk about that a little bit because are there structural things within the House
or within the Senate that you guys as a bipartisan coalition,
would change that could, because one of the things that I felt I learned from having lobbied Congress
over these years is it's a surprisingly insular place. It really is perversely removed from the wants
and needs of the people they represent. And the people that have the access really are industry
leaders, moneyed interests and those kinds of things.
Well, they hire people who are professional people who have full-time jobs,
whose job is to understand the intricacies of Congress, not only the laws and the regulations,
but the people and the politics as well.
And that's their full-time job is to work on trying to have influence on particular
pieces of legislation.
Now, a lot of lobbyists, you know, bring a lot of intellect and ability.
to the conversations about the impacts of different laws.
But it also, you know, why have we not been able to fix a lot of big things for so many years?
Because someone's benefiting from the status quo.
In every instance, somebody benefits from the status quo.
So if you want to try and change the status quo, the people that benefit from the status quo
are going to use all of their effort to do everything to make you look like a jackass and beat you
for trying to change the way it is.
So, like, you know, Donald Trump, when he first was elected,
the president in 2016, before he became president, said, these pharmaceutical drug companies,
they're getting away with murder these guys.
You know, the way they charge so much more in America than they charge in other countries.
And then when it came time to do a law to negotiate prescription drug prices,
and it was no longer a priority for him.
I think that that'll come back soon because people want to start saving money in Medicaid and
Medicare and negotiating drug prices using the purchasing power of the U.S. government,
the largest drug purchaser in the world through,
Medicare and Medicaid, using our power to negotiate prices will save us a lot of money.
So it's such common sense.
We passed the bill in the Biden administration where, you know, we can negotiate the prices
for like 10 drugs.
10 drugs.
I mean, we should be doing this with all the drugs.
Yeah.
It was insane.
But that gets us to the crux of the conversation, which is this.
Is the dysfunction within the Congress what leads to the opening for.
a more populist leader like Trump to bypass it through the executive actions.
In other words, is the failure of Congress to understand how to effectively deliver for the
people that are outside the Beltway and not the lobbyist?
Is that how the ground is seated?
And I'll ask you, Representative Fitzpatrick, for someone to come in and go, screw all this,
I'm going to bypass all this complexity and deliver directly.
even if it's very much on the fringes of what may be for the Constitution.
People rightly get so frustrated when they see Congress function.
Or not function.
Right.
Yeah.
John, an illuminating example is when you came and joined me and Tom and many others,
fighting for the Pact Act and the 9-11 Heroes Fund.
And, you know, there are people dying literally every week.
And Mitch McConnell said, well, we'll get to it when we get to it kind of thing.
And you threw up your arms.
a committee hearing. It's a moment I'll never forget because it's sort of illuminated to me.
You're thinking like the average person out there, right? Like, why can't they just fix this?
There's real people that are losing their lives. And you have this disconnected person that's been
in Congress forever saying, oh, well, we'll put it on the docket and we got to, you know, schedule floor time.
I believe regular order. He asked me, right, right, right. He said to me, why are you so upset about this?
I know, I know. I go, well, my friends are dying. So that, that makes a kind of an emotional issue.
But that moment really was so illuminating to the disconnect that exists between how the public thinks,
which is what you were reflecting and sort of this inside the beltway, completely disconnected mentality.
But I will say this.
There are certain institutional impediments that prevent so many things from happening.
Number one is the construct in the house right now, John, is if you get 218 votes on the floor,
you get everything.
If you get 217 votes, you get nothing.
You get nothing.
And yet a 218 to 217 breakdown is reflected.
of a very divided public, right, who probably want us to compromise. So I am a huge believer in a
coalition government. I don't like this all or nothing zero-sum concept because it just creates more
division. I'm also a big believer in something that myself and my Democrat colleague, Jared Golden,
are advancing to open up primaries to allow independence to vote. Primary used to be a now, now it's a
verb. Now it's something you do to somebody. And I cannot tell you how many of my colleagues go on the
floor, we call them the vote no hope yes crowd, where they know voting for something is the right
thing to do for Democrats, it's border security, for Republicans at Ukraine, take your pick on
issues. And because they're worried about their primary, they vote no on a bill that they know
is the right thing to do. Because in a lot of these states, I believe over half, if you dare to
register independent, you are told in one out of two elections, you're not welcome to vote in the
primary. So envision this scenario, you could be a 98-year-old,
World War II veteran who stormed the beaches of Normandy and safe civilization, and you register
independent in a country that was founded on independence, and you go to the polls and you're told
in one out of every two elections you're not welcome here? That is insane. And I think not only
is it, well, cure an injustice, but allowing independence to vote in primaries will allow more
moderates to emerge from the primaries and not these extremists. All these are creating
problems that Tom and I see that are jamming up the system.
Let me just follow up on one thing about the primary system.
What the problem is.
We have 435 seats in Congress.
Of the 435 seats in Congress, 380 of those seats are safe seats.
You can't lose because they're gerrymandered.
They're drawn.
You pack all the Republicans in 190 seats over here.
Well, you can't lose if it's gerrymandered to your political party.
But you could be, to Brian's point, you could be primary.
That's the only way you could lose is a scandal or a primary.
That's right.
That's the threat is you'll lose your job.
And nobody votes in the prime.
primaries, as Brian just pointed out, less than 15% of the people vote in the primaries.
So when you hear the crazy stuff coming out of Republicans' voices or the crazy stuff
coming out of Democrats' voices, they're usually pandering to that small base of people
that vote in the primary, because they don't have to listen to the people or the whole
population because they're going to win the general election.
They only have to listen to this small group that can kick them out in the one way they can
lose, which isn't a primary.
So they pander to those extremes instead of talking to the people general
One of the reasons that Brian and I are the way we are is because we're constitutionally made this way,
but also politically, we have to listen to both sides because we wouldn't win otherwise.
But that's why sort of, you know, there's this sort of platitude of like, well, we all've got to
collaborate.
We've all got to work together.
But the system is not really incentivized for that in any way, shape, or form.
But the second part is the long view of it is if Congress is not able to address its dysfunction,
it will be making itself irrelevant.
You put yourself in a position that it becomes this vestigial arm of a government
because it opens the door for executive order,
especially through these executive orders can oftentimes be incredibly popular.
Well, they're popular, but they're going to be proven, I think, in most cases, to be illegal.
And when that process runs through the courts in the next 11 years,
years. Right. In the next couple of years. And you'll see a response from the people for the things
that are not popular because some of the things that are happening right now, as we've seen, are not
popular. People don't like to see the prices going up. They don't like to see the stock market going
down. They want a secure border and the border is more secure now than it was before, but they don't
like people being shipped away without going through due process. They don't like us treating our
allies the same as we treat our adversaries. So these certain things are unpopular.
But when, so the Senate had an opportunity, just I think it might have been last week or the week before, to address that disconnect.
They had an opportunity to retake for the Congress the power of tariffs.
And it ended up being a theatrical display in the Senate.
Three Republicans, I think, Murkowski-Collins, maybe one other, voted to have that done.
But you knew it was theater because it was just the right amount of senators that would leave it to,
to break the tie. And what does that do to the lawmakers? And what are the conversations
like that we're not privy to, not the ones that happen on the news, where people say, we know
this is theater. We know that probably Senator Thune went, okay, I've got three slots. I have three
people that can vote to retake the power of tariff from the president without us actually having
to do it. There's no way that there's only.
three people in the Senate on the Republican side that believe that the Senate should retake
the power of tariff. So how do we explain that to the American people? That's yours, Brian.
Yeah. Swazi taps out. He taps out. All right, quick break and we will be right back. Look,
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We are back.
John, there is a lot of people in Congress, including in the Republican conference, that are
are very concerned about the tariff situation.
I think if you took a poll amongst the majority of the conference,
the majority of people that have not taken action yet
are people that want to give a limited runway
for the president to do that,
which he said he was going to do,
which is to recalibrate and have reciprocal tariffs on countries.
Tariffs in many ways are a remnant of World War II
in our effort to help Europe reconstruct after World War II.
So listen, we are all hearing it back home about the impact of economic policies that, you know, both, you know, hurt and help businesses.
We heard it in the last administration and inflation.
We're hearing it now with tariffs.
And it's only a matter of time before enough of my colleagues actually step up and do something.
So I will tell you this, myself, Don Bacon, have pending legislation that we were set to introduce.
it's taken, you know, once the president put that 90-day pause, we pause the introduction of it,
but we're prepared to go on it because I sit on the Ways and Means Committee. A tariff is a tax.
Taxes go before our committee. Again, as I said at the outset, I think this is an example of
the president testing the boundaries of Article 2 authority expecting to be challenged in the courts
to provide clarity about what they can and can't do because they're going to get away with
as much as they can get away with legally. There are Republicans that are speaking up, you know,
and I choose as a Democrat as hard as it is because I've got people in my ears saying this is the end of the world.
You've got to fight more.
I've got other people saying, you know, you've got to crack some eggs to make an omelet.
But there are Republicans that are speaking out.
Brian speaks out all the time about the wrongheadedness of the approach to Ukraine of this administration.
Right.
There's a freedom caucus guy named Gary Palmer from Alabama who says the president can't get rid of the Department of Education.
Only the Congress could do that.
He has to go through Congress.
There's a guy from Florida, Mario Diaz-Balart.
He's a chairman of a subcommittee on appropriations.
says, the Congress has the power of the purse.
I zealously will guard the power of the purse.
What the president is doing is inappropriate.
So there are Republicans that are speaking,
Don Bacon that was just mentioned by Brian earlier,
a member of the problem solvers.
There are people speaking out,
but it's not easy in this environment that is so toxic.
It's not easy in the environment
where everybody's afraid about losing a primary.
And all the people that vote in the Republican primaries
are really a lot of MAGA people
to go against the president.
But we've got to keep on encouraging
those people that are doing the right thing to speak out more forcefully.
Well, even more, you know, when Senator Mikowski says, we're all afraid.
And I don't think she was talking about holding on to her job.
I think she was talking about she is physically afraid.
And if we lack the courage to do what's right, I think the frustration as I watch it is,
and you rightly say, there are people that speak out, you know, Senator Cassidy spoke out
about his concerns about RFK Jr. and HHS.
you know, you have Senator Willis today spoke out about Ed Martin and not, you know,
allowing him to become the district attorney for DC and all those different things.
I think what's hard to watch on the outside is to see people speak out on principle
and then vote on convenience.
Awful.
I think that's been the toughest part to watch is you see the theater of it.
but when it comes down to the voting,
there's a real dearth of courage.
And I don't know, you know,
Representative Suasi, obviously as a Democrat,
you guys are in a different position.
You're the opposition.
But Representative Fitzpatrick,
you're probably dealing with this behind the scenes.
Oh, yeah, which is why I think open primaries
and term limits would solve 80% of the problem.
I'm convinced of it.
But that would take congressional action.
And what kind of a Congress would ever willingly
seed their own power. I just can't imagine it.
So how about this? If we can't get enough of our colleagues to do the right thing and vote
against their own self-interest, how about we grandfather in the ones that are sitting? And that way,
at least organically over time, we get back to a citizen legislature. There's a number of ways
we can do this. I like that. Listen, the 22nd Amendment, George Washington, amongst many of
his great qualities, set the tradition for term limits. All he wanted to do was go back home to his
farm in Mount Vernon, live under the laws he helped pass, make wait for a new generation of
leadership. They talked to him to know a second term. He said, no more. It's a tradition that every
president honored up until FDR, who obviously served four terms and died in office, at which
point Congress passed a 22nd amendment to the Constitution. But true to form, the 22nd amendment,
they applied it to the executive that didn't apply it to themselves. So if we can all agree
that term limits make sense for the executive, why pray tell wouldn't it make sense for the
legislature or the judiciary for that matter? If we believe that that,
we want new blood coming in through the system, that that's an essential greeting to democracy,
why wouldn't we support that across the board? Or blood that isn't corrupted by the incentives of the
system, which I'm sure for you guys, look, you know, how much of your job is fundraising,
is trying to get money from all this, the idea that corporations are people and money is speech
has polluted. I'll give you an example. We talked about the Pact Act earlier. I remember when we
first came down to discuss this Rosie Torres of Burnpitz 360s, some veterans groups, John Field.
We met with it wasn't problem solvers. It was for country, the for country caucus. There's got to be,
how many caucuses are there in Congress? Quite a few, but not too many that are actually like
real legitimate caucuses with honor is great, the four country caucus. That's a problem solvers
version, but there are people that served in the military. Tons of caucuses, mostly just resume
padding. It's for the yearbook, the congressional yearbook. A lot of them are, yeah. Yeah.
So we met with them. You know, Rosie had laid out a very compelling case, the veterans that were there.
They were all incredibly supportive of doing something for these burn pits. And as we were leaving,
we got pulled aside by two representatives. And they said, this is something that needs to get done.
There's a lot of veterans that are suffering. Could you guys write it?
Could you guys write it?
Now, we have the best interests of what these groups are at heart,
but what it said to me was, oh, shit,
if Congress is so busy that whoever has a legitimate concern that comes in
is offered a seat at the writing table,
hey, if I'm a bank, if I'm an insurance company,
if I've hired a ton of lawyers to do all that,
It means that industry and lobbyists are in charge really of legislation.
Well, it depends on the issue and it depends on the member of Congress.
So, you know, each member of Congress, we have like, you know, 15 people who work for us.
I've got half of them in my district office.
They deal with a lot of casework.
They deal with a lot of people calling up who have a problem with like Social Security or IRS or immigration or something like that that.
That we help to resolve their issues.
We have a press person.
we have a scheduler.
We have people that mainly do casework.
Down in Washington, I've got a press person
and three people that work on legislation.
A lot of the heavy lifting on the big issues
that you hear about are done by committees,
and not caucuses, committees that are the formal...
Senate, Veteran Affairs, House Veteran Affairs, et cetera, et cetera,
ways and means, appropriation.
And they have massive staffs.
And those staffs are the ones that often
and write the legislation. So over the two people that went to you and said, can you write this,
were probably not on the committees of jurisdiction that had the staff available to write the legislation.
Well, I'll tell you the difference as to why. Maybe you guys can address this is what they realized
is what we were asking for wasn't something that they would have been negotiating against themselves
if they had gone to the Senate Veteran Affairs Committee or the House one.
The House Veterans Affairs Committee.
Veterans Affairs Committee, because they would have negotiated out things that they thought were not
germane or doable. So to get the veterans what they needed, we actually needed independence because
those committees are captured by the same interests that you guys are talking about. It permeates
the entire building, does it not? Representative Fitzpatrick? No doubt, John. I mentioned before I was in
Congress, it was an FBI agent. I ran the FBI.
corruption unit here at headquarters in D.C. And not only was there a correlation, there was a
direct linear correlation between the length of time in office and the instances of corruption.
Because what we found, what we found was that the most principled, well-intended, backbone
people that come into this system, when all you see all day, every day is people flaunting
those lines, that becomes the new normal. And then that becomes the normal way to conduct
oneself. So you are absolutely, you're absolutely right that the lobbyists are way, way too powerful.
Pharmaceutical industry is probably, you know, notoriously at the top of that list, right?
We have the most absurd laws when it comes to drug pricing, drug advertising on television.
I mean, it's insane. It's nuts. There's only two countries in the world that allow drug
advertising on TV, the U.S. and New Zealand. We're the only places in the world that allow it.
Everywhere else, it's prohibited. Right. And listen, insider trading. I mean, there's,
you know, that goes on all the time there.
You just saw that just recently when the tariffs got done.
Not all of a sudden there was a huge boon for all that.
I want to be careful, though, that, you know,
I don't want to just feed into this whole thing that everybody sucks and everybody's corrupt
and the whole thing blows.
Understood.
Most of the people in Congress are trying to do the right thing.
And I think that, you know, the problem that exists is a human nature problem.
When John F. Kennedy was the president of the United States of America, before he was president,
he wrote a book called Profiles and Courage after 175 years of American history was only
eight people in that book. So it's not that easy to stand up to your own party or to the structure
and say, I'm sick of this shit and I want to change it. And so what you need is the people
to hold you accountable. The problem is the primary system where so few people actually
participate in the primaries, the only people holding you accountable are often people on the
fringes, the far right or the far left. They're the ones with all the energy and activity. You're
holding people accountable.
So if you want to get politicians
to do the people's will,
you need more people to participate
in these primary elections.
Brian's idea of open primaries
is a great example of a way to do that.
Mandatory voting, like they have in Australia,
would be a way to do that.
If everybody voted,
I guarantee our politics would completely moderate
because the people would...
Most normal people want the things you think about every day
you talk about every day.
They just don't, they're so busy with their jobs.
We don't get it.
They're busy with their jobs.
They're busy with their families.
They don't take the time to get involved.
Most, you know, the far left is like 8% of America.
The far right is about 8% of America.
Then you have traditional conservatives, traditional progressives.
50 some odd percent of the people are the politically disengaged and the politically
disenchanted.
Ah, the whole thing sucks.
It's rigged.
It's no good.
Yeah.
And I wonder, though, about this, you know, because, you know, we talk about that
a lot, that it's, oh, it's the extremes on one side or the other. But social media has polarized
this country in a way that's far deeper and far more. I think I would have agreed with that maybe
15 years ago. I think now, if you expand it out, these kinds of rigid clinging to dogma or
ideological differences is much more pervasive in our society than it does. And I think our
understanding of government is much less. So we have this more reptilian reflexive understanding of it.
And I'll give you an example of how that works. And hopefully this will resonate with you guys.
So for instance, Doge, Department of Government Efficiency, who could be against that?
You know, the idea that you can make government more efficient. But unfortunately, in the practice of it,
or the idea that there's a deep state that's controlling your life and you have no control over it.
So Doge comes and they do that.
I'll just lay this out for the Zedroga bill for the 9-11 first responder community.
There were 93 people that worked in NIOSH administering this bill.
It was all done to statute.
It was all done really well.
They cut 30% of those people.
They just, as they say, RIF, which is RIF, which is the way that they retire,
people and fire them now, another 16 of them. And what this has meant is, and they say,
oh, we're not, we're just reorganizing. But in the reorganization, there are now people sick
with cancers that can't get certified to the program and can't get treatment. This is the chaos
and confusion of those that don't understand how these things run are created.
real damage down the line for real people.
Yeah, so now people can't sign up for the programs that they have available to them.
And so that's what I'm saying.
So the problem solvers, Brian and I talked about the problem solvers are going to work on helping
to reinstate those people.
So walk us through how you guys might do that because that maybe that gives us a better sense
than of what this, the idea of problem solvers and how you guys can, you know, with with
concerted action can make that difference.
How would you guys go about this?
So the program you were talking about is called NIOSH, right?
National Institute for Occupational Safety Health.
And they fired the guy who was the doctor that oversaw the whole thing named Howard a while ago.
That's right.
And a guy named Andrew Garberino on Long Island and some others.
And we all supported him.
He's a Republican.
He said, hey, you can't fire this.
This guy doesn't make any sense.
And they reinstated the guy and said, oh, we're going to give him from now until June 2nd.
And we'll make another decision on June 2nd.
So everybody's like, okay, you know, the Republicans.
and Democrats, for the New Yorkers especially, are standing up,
and they're not going to do this again.
Well, now they just did it again, like literally a couple days ago,
and they fired these 16 more people again.
And then said they didn't.
You know, when everything's said and done,
this whole thing's been very reckless.
Yeah.
They said, we're going to cut $2 trillion.
And they said we're going to cut $1 trillion.
Billion, yeah.
Now they're down to $150 trillion.
And it's going to end up costing them $150 trillion in lawsuits
and rehiring people and loss of productivity.
Forget about that.
So it's reckless.
Right. So I think that what we can do is Brian and I can get our colleagues, Democrats and Republicans. This is a kind of a no-brainer, I think. Brian would agree with me. Brian, you agree, right? I do. We would team up together. We'd get our 50 members to come out and say, you know, you've got to bring these people back and bring some heft to hold the administration account. Now, the president is going to say, I didn't mean to fire these guys. They shouldn't fire these guys. We got to, I'm sure he's saying that. I didn't know that happened.
But unless we can bring, there's so much going on out here, flood the zone, that it's hard to bring attention to individual issues.
So by getting the 50 of us to work together to bring attention to this, I think that we can help to reinstatementing.
John, way back in 1993, there was this Bill Clinton.
As soon as he got elected, he started, created what they called the reimbending government initiative.
And they, I believe, downsized the federal workforce by 280,000.
and they did it in a normal humane manner.
And the way, if you want to make government more efficient, a good starting point is to go
to the agency head and say, hey, can you find 10, 12% of your budget that you can trim in a
responsible manner?
What we're seeing now is the Silicon Valley approach, where you walk into the library,
you dump all the books off the bookshelf onto the floor.
That's interesting.
And you pick each book back up one at a time that you think is relevant.
It does not work.
I'm a huge advocate of PEPFAR of combating HIV AIDS in Africa.
Right.
You're talking about the programs that we had USAID, some of those programs that had like HIV
that George Bush started.
Right.
George Bush started.
Yeah, George Bush and Bono.
This was their, this is one of their legacy items.
But we're hollowing out.
I think the downstream effects of this, guys, is that we are hollowing out any of the government's
ability to exercise these kinds of.
of programs, they're very complicated. The statutes are written that way. And it's going to be hard
to claw them back in any real way. And the brain drain, too. I mean, the people that were losing
in Africa, you can't replace that kind of knowledge. These are lifelong missionaries that have spent
their life doing this. Moreover, John, once you take these kids, some adults, but mostly kids
off these antivirals, the virus comes racing back. Oftentimes, if you reapply the antiviral,
it doesn't work as well.
And we have basically really contained HIV AIDS.
We could easily find ourselves back in 1980s footing again if we're not, if we're not careful
about it.
Right.
Then you end up with hunger and you end up with AIDS and you end up with other problems.
Look, they cut money from food banks for God's sake.
And then the terrorists come in and use that as a vehicle to come in and provide assistance
to people in their desperate conditions and then they get a foothold in it.
The symbol of Elon Musk with a chainsaw, which they thought was so positive,
the he thought was so positive at the time. It's really a simple of what they did. They came in with a
chainsaw to cut stuff with which required a scaffold. This gets back to our original premise, though,
which is how is Congress going to, we are all talking about devastating consequences of
reckless behavior of people not understanding, and not as a bug, but as a feature of what they're
trying to do. How does Congress regain some
semblance of control so that this hollowing out of American exceptionalism, the brain drain.
Look, you may not like Harvard, but the best minds and the best research is part of what
comes out of those funding grants. If we are to turn our back on all that, I don't understand
how that makes us great or how Congress can keep saying, hold on, guys, let's just give it,
give it another five minutes, give it another 10.
At what point do we reach a tipping point?
All right, we're going to take a quick break.
We shall be right back.
We're back.
Congressman Fitzpatrick.
So it's going to start, John, next month with the appropriations process,
where there are 12 different appropriations bills
that have an open amendment process
where Democrats, Republicans, anyone can offer any amendment they like.
And we are going to have to write these appropriations
in a much more specific way.
that limit executive branch discretion.
What we are experiencing now, all of that is with prior year appropriations.
We've never had a situation, John, where the executive branch is sending money back to the
legislative branch saying we don't need it.
Normally, these agencies are spending every last time they have, even if they don't need to,
to sit to advocate for more money in the following budget year.
So this is unprecedented.
We've never really had this situation before.
So we're really going to have to button up the appropriations process this coming next month
to write it in a way that really protect.
these kinds of things.
Yes, yes.
So what everything said and done, this is not popular for me to say amongst my own party.
It's not popular for me to say with my family even is I think it's going to work out.
I think that the American people responding and saying they are dissatisfied with the way things are going
is going to be reflected in every district throughout the country where the politicians are going to have to respond to their people.
They're going to be more afraid of the people than they are of Donald Trump, like, picking them out.
So I think there are enough people of goodwill, and I think there are enough.
Oh, dear God.
And I think there are.
Do you realize what this is?
This is, as we talked about profiles in courage, it's profiles in fear.
So now you're basic, the basic preface is, hopefully everything goes such to shit that Congress will be more afraid of the voters than they will of Trump.
But that's the way democracy is supposed to work.
Right.
That's the check of balance.
The government is supposed to be a.
afraid of the people. It's not the people who's supposed to be afraid of the government.
Right. Or working in collaboration with them to just not be afraid of them, but to just listen to
them and execute. And the irony of all of this is Trump administration is spending billions more
in their first hundred days than the first hundred days from last year. Right. They're actually
spending more. And the tax, and the tax cuts that are coming from the Republican Party is going to
cause a massive bigger deficit than we've ever had bigger than anything else.
than anybody's ever seen before.
So let's just talk about what within problem solvers,
give me a couple of successes that you guys have had
that you feel really positive about
and that you feel like you can build on
as kind of a, you know, a first couple of steps
to starting to get this done.
And what have you seen from your group
in this new world we're in?
Yeah, I'd say the most recent one
would be the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
Joe Biden ironically touted that as his greatest legislative success of his presidency,
and that was a bill, John, that passed that got across the finish line because there were
enough Republicans that overcame the bleed of the Democrats in the squad who voted against
it. So the Democrats in the squad voted no. There were me and 12 of my colleagues that voted yes
to get it across finish line, a major, major investment in our U.S. infrastructure.
That was exhibit A of how our group can be effective. What do we, what do we,
what are we keying in on now? Immigration, the biggest failure of our country is our failure to get
our immigration system right. We have the ability to bring the best and brightest people from all
over the world that want to come here. And it's the biggest advantage we have in this country. Nobody
wants to move to our adversary's countries. Nobody's looking to move to China or Iran or North Korea
or Russia. Everybody wants to come here. That's a huge demographic and economic security
advantage we have. And we can secure the border. Tom and I want to work together on that.
permitting reform. We got it. We got to streamline this absurd permitting process to yield the benefits
of a lot of our local natural energy. And then lastly, is debt and deficit. It is not hard to figure out
how to solve this. We just have, we don't have enough people with the courage to do what it takes
to put everything on the table, just like we do in our family budgets. You look at revenues,
you look at expenses, you figure out where you can button up expenses, where you can raise more
revenue and solve this debt crisis. Although a country isn't, you know, if my family had a mint,
true, true. They would, they would make money or if my family could sell debt to, you know,
Japan. But we still got to pay these bills back at some point. Yeah. There's a tremendous
amount of energy around doing something on immigration. I mean, it's just like everybody knows
this has to be done. Would the first step of that be to decide what is the level of immigration
a country can safely and appropriately absorb.
And what I never hear in the immigration
is to the positive, which is,
what does it add economically?
What is the amount of people that can be absorbed?
Right now, half the farm workers in America
are probably undocumented.
So is that the first step,
rather than sort of viewing it as this blob,
we start to really tease out what this all is?
The first step is if you want to get the Republicans
to help,
and some Democrats, the first step is really,
we have to really secure the border for real.
So now the president has done a lot of that,
but that stuff's all temporary based upon executive order.
We have to have congressional action
so that it'll be permanent to secure the border for the long term.
The asylum system has to be fixed.
The asylum system is the main, in 1980, we loved asylum.
You remember when Robin Williams did the movie,
Moscow on the Hudson, and everybody's like,
I defect, yes, we win, we're the good guys.
Reagan had the greatest immigrant amnesty program
passed, and that was all in the 80s.
We loved asylum, but the car,
we have to stop the Democrats and Republicans
from fighting each other, and we have to pick our common
enemy. Our common enemy are the cartels
and the organized crime and the coyotes that
get paid $10,000 a person
to bring people to the southern border and tell
them what to say to try and game
the system. So that even though
85% of the people who claim asylum
ultimately get denied, it takes six or eight years for those cases to be
adjudicated because so back.
Representative Fitzpatrick, is there,
you see energy on your side,
for this as well, or is it too politically difficult to find themselves in sort of agreement
with the Democrats on this? Is it too hot right now for the two sides to even begin to come
together on it? I think it's only too hot when border security is not part of the conversation.
I think as long as border security is part of the conversation, you know, that—
Although it was with the Langford bill. That was, to be fair. I supported the Langford bill.
I put a statement out. I wanted it to come to the House. I would have voted for it.
happily. But I think that, you know, to Tom's point, if we can, if we can start focusing,
when you have groups like the Chamber of Commerce, right, typically a right-leaning group that are
all in for the Dream Act, I voted for the Dream Act, are viewing immigration as a positive.
As long as this couple with law and order border security, we should view that as an economic
driver in this country. All of our, all of our adversaries, John, Russia, North Korea,
China have massive demographic problems.
They have a low birth rate.
They have aging populations and nobody wants to move there.
That's the biggest threat they have to their economy is demographics.
We have an endless labor supply in this country.
It's the biggest economic benefit we have.
And if we can get this right, Tom and I are very eager to work on this together.
So you have a unique situation.
I'm a Democrat.
I'm supporting strong border security.
Brian is a Republican.
He's supporting legalizing the dreamers and the farm workers
and trying to bring people into the.
country. Yeah. It's as though it's two people who are trying to make sense. It's we're trying to solve
problems. It's trying to solve problems, John. What the heck? Here's what we need to do. Make Congress great
again. I know it's not the greatest acronym. Exceptional. We want it to be exceptional. Exceptional again,
whatever it is. Gentlemen, I very much appreciate the conversation. It's really helpful to get,
you know, a realistic inside view of what's going on because I think people are just so incredibly
dispirited right now and frustrated by
this runaway train.
So I really appreciate you guys being here.
Representative Tom Swazzy, Representative Brian Fitzpatrick,
the problem solvers caucus, a bipartisan
group in Congress, trying to
get a few things done
before Elon moves us
all to Mars or wherever the hell
we're all going. Thanks so much for joining, guys.
Thanks, man.
Thanks, yes.
Those guys were, I have to say,
a little bit more, they tried to go down platitude road, but I thought they brought it down to a
slightly more honest assessment of like, hey, we lack courage. I love the idea that he was like,
I wish we were less afraid of Trump and more afraid of voters. I think that would be that.
But it is all fear-based. It was- Yeah. Shout out to term limits. Let's go. I love that detail
about the primaries as well. Yeah. Great points. Yeah. I just don't know how realistic.
Yeah, of course. But it's like you hear politicians and there like there's two options. I can either be reasonable and do nothing or be primaried by an ideologue to my right. And it's like, what if there's this secret third thing?
Hmm. What if you were reasonable and did something? Hmm. Interesting.
Something that really interested me that we didn't really get into necessarily was learning how many caucuses exist in Congress.
Yeah. And I'll give you a few just to give an example. Of the other caucuses? Yeah.
Yeah, like, I don't know if this was the 118th Congress or the last Congress, but there's like pickleball caucus and there's the cranberry caucus.
Cranberry caucus? Somebody has to look out for their interests. Yeah, hobbies.
Wait, I could see the cranberry caucus being like a very small subsection of New Jersey because I think we have cranberry bogs.
Yeah, you have cranberry bogs.
Right. How is that its own? We get together and just talk cranberries?
I mean, both of our guests today were on the Quiet Skies Caucus, and it makes sense because they both have districts with airports nearby.
So that's how it goes.
But something else you brought up that I thought was really interesting was that, of course, you spend a third of your time, let's say, fundraising as a Congress person.
But Representative Fitzpatrick is in dozens of caucuses.
Swazi is in two dozen.
If a few of those meet weekly or a few of those have a group chat, like how do you have time for anything?
No. Cranberry caucus is all email. They just, hey, what if we put cranberries in apple juice? What would that be like?
Let's not also forget that Swazi opened the door for bipartisanship by allowing George Santos into Congress.
True. That is crazy. So I guess Swazzi was the representative, went off to run for governor.
Santos got the seat. Yes. And he flamed out.
That was so fast, though.
Sad.
Imagine how big a liar you have to be for Congress to go.
You got to get the fuck out of here.
They're like, it's a little much, yeah.
Look, we lie like crazy, but you, you got to get, that's just too much.
Yeah.
What do we got for, Brittany, what are we dealing with questions today?
We got anybody?
Oh, yeah.
All right, what are we got?
What are we got?
Now that we're 100 days plus out into the Trump administration, is America great again?
or do you think he just needs a couple more days?
It's an excellent question.
I think the tipping points around 111 to 114.
We're almost there.
We're on the precipice of greatness like nobody's ever seen before.
My favorite part of Al.
Because as far as he's concerned, we were great the day he won.
We sucked.
We were a catastrophe.
I don't know if you saw the Welker interview that he did,
but she was saying, you know, hey, these are some things in the economy.
We've lost trillions of dollars in wealth.
There's a lot of uncertainty.
There's some headwinds that are going on here.
Some people are saying there's going to be a recession.
You know, what do you, when is it the Trump economy?
And he goes, well, I honestly believe the good parts of the economy are me and the bad parts are Biden.
I just thought, well, what a simple way to go through life?
Yeah.
Do you think he does that with his kids?
You know, I look at the kids and I think, oh, yeah, the good part is me.
me and the bad part is.
It's so simple.
Whichever of their moms.
And he doesn't have to be specific.
He's just like the good thing.
However you broadly define that is me.
I love this thing like we trillions of dollars in investment like you've never seen before.
We haven't seen it yet because the last time you said the same fucking thing and none of it happened.
Yeah.
And we have seen trillions of dollars in investment.
Exactly.
And then you're cutting that.
Right.
Right.
Nonsense.
Brittany, how do they get in touch with us?
How do they continue?
to send in such specific questions about what day will be great again.
Twitter, we are weekly show pod, Instagram threads, TikTok, Blue Sky.
We are weekly show podcast.
And you can like, subscribe and comment on our YouTube channel, the weekly show with John Stewart.
Nice.
Thank you guys very much.
We had another fine, fine program.
You guys, your preparation and attention to detail is second to none.
I truly appreciate it.
Lead producer Lauren Walker, producer Brittany Mehmedevich.
video editor and engineer Rob Vatola,
audio editor and engineer Nicole Boyce,
researcher and associate producer Jillian Speer
and our executive producers, Chris McShane,
Katie Gray. All right, kids, next week.
We'll see you again,
Weekly Show podcast. See you next time.
Bye-bye.
The Weekly Show with John Stewart
is a Comedy Central podcast.
It's produced by Paramount Audio
and Bus Boy Productions.
