The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Raging Moderates: Trump’s Trade War vs. Hollywood (feat. Sen. Chris Murphy)
Episode Date: May 6, 2025The economy’s on edge, Trump’s tariffs are targeting Hollywood, and there’s chaos in the West Wing as Mike Waltz is out—and Marco Rubio is somehow doing four jobs at once. Plus, Senator Chris ...Murphy joins to break down the GOP’s sweeping budget cuts, the Democratic response, and whether voters are finally starting to pay attention. Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov. Follow Prof G, @profgalloway. Follow Raging Moderates, @RagingModeratesPod. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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["Raging Moderates"]
Welcome to Raging Moderates.
I'm Scott Galloway.
And I'm Jessica Tarlyth.
How are you, Jess?
I'm good, Scott. How are you?
Yeah.
Where do I find you? Because that is not home. I'm in Galloway. And I'm Jessica Tarlov. How are you, Jess? I'm good, Scott. How are you? Yeah.
Where do I find you?
Cause that is not home.
I'm in Hamburg, Germany,
for this big conference called Online Marketing Rockstars.
There's a lot of old money here
and the juxtaposition of like this industrial town
with big cranes and waterborne factories
or water-based factories
with all these brand new steel condominiums,
steel and glass condominiums.
It feels like Karl Lagerfeld exploded into a city.
It is such a cool, interesting city.
I absolutely love Germany, work hard,
play hard, very progressive.
I just, if I spoke German, I would live here.
Have you been to Germany, Jessica?
I have, just to Berlin though,
and I had an incredible time on every cultural level,
like the museums and walking around
and kind of ingesting the history of it,
and then also the partying and the scene,
and just absolutely adored it, yeah.
I was, one of my favorite tourist things in the world
is the fat bike or fat tire bike tours,
especially the one in Berlin.
It goes everywhere and they look at the guard towers
and Hitler's bunker.
And anyways, I'm officially like a hundred years old.
I'm fascinated by anything to do with World War II.
All right, banter done.
In today's episode of Raging Moderates,
we're discussing the economy is one quarter away
from a possible recession.
Mike Waltz gets pushed out.
Trump says he doesn't know if he has to uphold due process.
And we have one of our favorites, Senator Chris Murphy,
joining us to talk about the GOP budget bill
and what Democrats are doing to message
the possible harms to Americans.
All right, let's get into it.
We've got our first major shakeup in the West Wing.
Trump has ousted National Security Advisor, Mike Walz,
best known for launching the world's most famous group chat
and nominated him as UN Ambassador.
Okay, so you're fired, but you get a free toaster.
Yeah, you got a demotion.
Yeah, that's it.
Stepping in at least for now is Jack of all trades
and master of none, Secretary of State Marco Rubio,
who will now be juggling four top level roles
in the administration.
Meanwhile, the White House is touting strong April job numbers,
but the economy shrunk in the first quarter,
and Trump's tariffs have really haven't really fully kicked in yet.
One of them, 100% tariff on foreign-made movies,
which he claims is a national security issue.
Huh, okay.
He's also warning of higher prices and toy shortages this holiday season
and says he's okay with that.
All right, got banging porn stars that has a tacky 757 laced in four carat gold
that goss every other day.
He should lecture us about consumption.
Trump's new budget proposes 163 billion
in cuts to education, health, and the environment
while boosting law enforcement and border security.
He also floated reopening Alcatraz
as a symbol of law, order, and justice.
And said he's unsure whether due process rights
must be honored during these master reportations,
though he'll follow the Supreme Court's lead.
He hasn't so far.
All this comes as Trump and GOP leaders ramp up for the midterms, warning that a Democratic
majority could bring a third impeachment, something they're hoping will rally the MAGA
base.
Jess, let's start with Waltz and the shakeup.
Why do you think it was pushed out and how realistic is it for Rubio to wear all those
hats? so someone had to go and
He is Trump invested so much in getting pete haggseth through the confirmation process that it was
increasingly looking like it had to be waltz and
He didn't want to do anything within the first hundred days because even though it's kind of a made-up marker,
I think he wanted to say, you know, no problems for the first 100 days besides the fact that everyone thinks that you're bringing us into a recession.
So that seems like a pretty good problem, big problem. But that's how it kind of ended up being Waltz.
And I keep thinking about the management of Signalgate
after it first happened.
And you know how Trump came out pretty quickly
and he said, Mike's learned his lesson.
And I think I've mentioned this before on the program
that I'm part of a foreign policy group with Waltz
and he's a very nice man.
Ooh, smell you.
No, I just, I don't know if there's like conflict of interest.
I'm a member of CMR Go,
the new hot members club downtown.
That's pretty cool. Taylor Swift went there.
That's cooler than knowing Mike Waltz.
Me and Taylor.
Okay, well, you'll have to take me,
is basically what has to happen now.
100%. Maybe we'll see Katy Perry.
Is that that exciting now? She's not,
have you seen the weird dancing videos?
She's not that good.
I'm convinced she was replaced with someone on the way back.
I don't think that's her. Like a robot?
No, some alien.
There's something going on there.
Something bad is happening.
But Waltz, so he got Trump's sign of approval
where he said, you know, Waltz is safe.
And then he went on television
and he went on with Laura Ingraham
and he had a pretty testy interview.
She was pushing him pretty hard about it, mostly about how was Jeffrey Goldberg in your
phone in the first place. And we know that the mix up was that he thought he was putting
in the trade representative, Jameson Greer, with the same initials as Jeffrey Goldberg.
But we also know in Trump world that there is nothing more offensive than being someone
that talks to the mainstream press, let alone Jeffrey Goldberg, who was responsible for the suckers and losers story
that keeps Trump up at night still.
He's so mad about that and how it kind of turned public opinion as to how he feels about
those who have served, even though we know what he said about John McCain from the start.
So it was pretty obvious what he thought. But it was interesting looking at Walt's being pushed out.
And he was given some options, some ambassadorships.
He could have been the ambassador to Saudi Arabia,
for instance, or the UN job,
which was supposed to be Elise Stefanik's.
But because Mike Johnson has no margins,
he had to keep Stefanik in her district,
her New York district,
so that they would at least have another vote
because they thought it was feasible that they could lose that seat.
But I was like, oh my God, does this all really come down to a cable news hit?
And I think that it does.
And that Walt's choosing to go on TV, even though he had already appeased his audience
of one, and to essentially look like he was out there for himself was
something that might have just been sitting in Trump's craw for the last month, six weeks,
however long it's been. And when push comes to shove and he needed to get someone out
and Hegseth has had more scandals since then, more signal problems, has had to fire some of his deputies,
who he says are all, you know, liars and leakers,
though he threatened a polygraph
and never gave any one of them a polygraph,
that, you know, would things have been different
if maybe Waltz hadn't done that interview
or seemed like he was more concerned with his own fate
than the fate of the administration?
Potentially. That's what I was thinking about.
What's your take?
It's so hard to try and decide
who was most ripe to be fired.
I mean, Waltz did invite,
it's just so hilarious that they're not,
that the real sin here wasn't a breach of national security
that put our servicemen and servicewomen at risk.
And, as I've referenced before,
if you get pulled over for a DUI,
it means you're likely driven drunk an average of 80 times.
I mean, what else has gone on here?
Right.
I think it should have been Hegseth,
but he likes the way Hegseth looks.
He's been more combative on TV.
I agree with you.
And then the real crime was having
the phone number, the contact information of who's
seen as a progressive journalist. That was the real sin.
So they needed a blood offering. I actually got to say, I don't think it's gotten much attention. You know, I think they kind of they kind of accomplished what they wanted.
I think it's poor leadership to say, oh, here you go do this now. I just thought that was in UN ambassador. I mean I mean, talk about, talk about that's like
what they did with Carrie Lake.
Now she's in charge of what Radio Free Europe
as they cut funding for it.
It reminds me of, do you ever see the movie
broadcast news with William Hurt and Holly Hunter?
Just a wonderful film.
And Julia, I forget her name, she played a Bond girl.
She played Holly Goodhead in one of the Bond films.
And she was in the movie broadcast news
and she's a competitive threat for William Hurt's affections
to Holly Hunter's and Holly, who's the assigning producer,
basically sends her to do stories in Alaska.
So she still has a job, but she's in Alaska.
I feel like Carrie Lake and now Mike Walz
are in Alaska, if you will.
So Laura Loomer, who, you know, self describes
as an investigative journalist
But is really just a crackpot and Trump loves her and they've had to get her away from him
Essentially and because she fills his head with even more craziness
apparently played a key role in
Waltz's ouster and her big thing is that Trump, in order to effectuate his agenda, needs to be surrounded
by true believers.
And Waltz is not a true believer.
He's a convert.
And Marco Rubio is a convert as well, though it seems like he's making the cut in very
serious ways now that he has like four jobs or something like that.
But Laura Loomer, you know, she posted on X after Waltz was kicked out and just wrote
Lumerd. So, you know, take your victory lap.
But she said something that I thought was right and that we should keep in mind as we're
evaluating the administration as it unfolds.
If there's anything that's going to torpedo Donald Trump and his agenda after he survived
indictments and mugshots and multiple assassination attempts, it's going to be the vetting crisis
and unforced errors of his administration.
Contrary to what's been said,
he doesn't hire the best people.
That's why it's so important that there's people
to help support the president, because nobody is perfect.
And that feels like a really good Trumpian organizing principle
for whatever we are about to see
over the next three and a half years.
Yeah, but this guy hasn't learned this guy.
The president hasn't learned the basis of greatness and success.
And that is greatness is in the agency of others.
And you essentially, when you're on a board, your job is to basically decide if and when
to sell the company.
But more than anything, your only job is to ensure you have the right guy or gal.
The right guy or gal needs to be good at what they do,
set strategy, be an external spokesperson.
But the best CEOs, the best leaders
recognize their greatnesses in the agency of others,
and they surround themselves with
just incredibly competent people.
Your ability to build a great company,
a great staff, a great cabinet,
is your ability to attract the most talented people,
hold them accountable, and get them to work together
and not be threatened by,
and show the ability to retain people
that are more talented than yourself.
And when you have the White House and the flag behind you,
you can call on almost any individual.
And the fact that he's brought together this peewee,
bad news bears, village idiot, Keystone, cops group of people. He's
even doing himself a disservice because an incompetent who's really loyal to you isn't
going to serve you well because they're just going to make you look stupid all the time.
Yeah.
It's not loyalty will be absolutely and I believe this has already taken place. He has huge loyalty
or Peter Navarro thinks the guy's a god and Peter Navarro is probably going to be the Nigel Farage
of this age and that is he will be the architect.
He will go down in history is the person we wish this guy,
the president had not listened to.
And he doesn't understand that if he wanted to,
if he had gone about this stuff with less volume
and not made as many really stupid decisions,
case in point, than when he just passed
or is threatening to pass 100% tariff
on any movies coming into the US,
he would probably be one of the more popular presidents
of the first 100 days,
because to his credit,
he's doing what he said he would do
on things that are largely,
at least thematically, popular in the US, right?
Deport immigrants, go after government waste
and inefficiency, restore trade balance,
which Americans incorrectly have determined
has been asymmetric to our disadvantage.
But he just doesn't get it.
He's surrounding himself with idiots.
It will absolutely undermine any benefit he gets from loyalty.
Let's take a quick break.
Stay with us.
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Moving on here, the economy shrunk in the first quarter, and we haven't seen the full impact of Trump's tariffs yet.
Any sense for, have you heard anything about, quote unquote,
this line out the door of people looking to do deals with them?
I have heard it said a lot.
I have not seen much evidence that that's really what's going on.
And when the other countries release statements, like I feel as though the Japanese have been
pretty transparent about how concerned they are about what's going on, because obviously
they want to maintain a good trading relationship with us.
But they basically said the US team is a bunch of yahoos
and they sit down at the table
and they don't even know what they want.
You know, when you go on a first date
and you realize maybe you're not up to it
when you're not feeling it or whatever,
or you're just not in the mood,
so you can't even make conversation
and within 10 minutes,
you're just kind of staring at each other.
I feel like that's what a lot of these traits.
I just want you to know,
I have sat across from that a lot, just a lot.
I've experienced that a lot from the other side.
Yeah, that's what happens.
The women aren't up to it.
Yeah, I see a lot of women.
Just staring at you.
Oh yeah, I gotta tell this story.
I moved to New York on my first date.
I met a woman who was a hostess at a restaurant uptown,
asked her out, she said, yeah, I got her number.
We went to a hotel downtown, I walked in, we ordered drinks. I said, I got her to the bathroom. I came back and I got a text saying, my friend's in the emergency room, I got her number. We went to a hotel downtown. I walked in, we ordered drinks.
I said, I got her to the bathroom.
I came back and I got a text saying,
my friend's in the emergency room.
I had to leave.
Really?
And I'm like, yeah.
Which was, in my opinion, total bullshit.
I mean, that was my first date in New York.
Is the one, as soon as she got on the cab ride
to the restaurant, she decided her friend
was gonna get hit by a car
and she had to leave immediately.
Anyways.
Those are like the old school escape plans
where you tell a friend,
call me 15 minutes into the date, right?
And say, oh my God, you're having an emergency?
Yeah, no, not even, didn't even go through that.
Why'd she say yes then?
She'd met you.
This wasn't like a weird online, you know,
maybe he doesn't look like his pictures.
No, I think there's something about that Galloway charm
that really just really started to scare the shit out of her.
She's probably full of regret now.
Oh, can you imagine?
I mean, I host a successful podcast now.
Look, speaking of the tariffs,
what do you make of this 100% or proposed 100% tariff on foreign
movies coming into the US?
It's totally batch it.
We have a 15.3 billion trade surplus on Hollywood.
That's the thing.
When the Australian said, excuse me, you have a trade surplus.
And I think it was Senator Warner was asking Jameson Greer, the trade representative,
about that in particular. And he said, well, how does this make any sense if we have a
surplus? If his idea is that we have to be even Stevens about everything. And the trade
representative had no answer because there is no answer beyond Peter Navarro was the
only one who satisfied this tariff itch that Trump had.
And I don't know if you saw in the Wall Street Journal, so we're recording this on
Monday morning, Scott Bessent has an op-ed out.
So now he is trying to do damage control and he's defending the strategy.
He says Trump has this coherent three-prong strategy that will benefit Main Street
because their obsession is saying that this is for the little guy, tariffs, tax cuts, and deregulation.
And to the average Republican, that does sound good as long as the tariffs aren't the way
that we're doing it.
They love tax cuts and deregulation.
But it's all anchored in a complete misread of what the tariffs are doing to our economy
and also what these 2017 tax cuts were.
And Republicans, I get this all the time at work,
where they say the 2017 tax cuts benefited everybody,
but they don't talk about the level of benefit that it had.
So 81% of the tax benefits from the 2017 cuts
went to the top 10%, and 24% to the top 1%.
So just because the average person got another $800
in their bank account as a result of this,
doesn't mean that it still wasn't this massive giveaway
to the ultra wealthy.
And I was watching Bloomberg TV,
which I don't do very often, but I thought,
oh, they're probably gonna have people on
that are making a lot of sense
and understand this a lot better than me.
And they had this guy, Gene Soroka, on who's the executive director of the Port of Los Angeles.
I learned more in three minutes from this guy about what's going on.
He had the numbers, right?
We have a 35% drop in volume.
We are going to go under a hiring pause.
The truckers are going to be decimated because of it.
The dock workers, we don't know what's going to happen there.
Five to seven weeks, the retailers are saying that you're going to have shelving problems.
And then if it takes more than a month to get these deals done, which with China, I
don't even know if there's ever going to be a deal, they seem up for whatever this battle
is, that spring and summer fashion and then back to school are going to be the big events
that really jolt the American economy when you realize that you can't get the stuff that you need.
And I don't want to put myself out of a job
because I love being on The Five and I really enjoy it.
But I want more Gene Siroka on TV talking about this
than Jesse Tarloves.
I hope my bosses aren't listening.
Because you get more information
about the on-the-ground effects of these tariffs from
somebody who's actually living it day to day and knows the people directly affected than you do by
all of these talking heads. Yeah, so just to return to the the hundred percent tariff on movies, I've
established a nice friendship with a guy who used to run Warner Brothers Europe. And basically his job was to take the IP of Warner Brothers,
whether it's Big Bang Theory or Batman or Harry Potter,
and then travel around the 27 or 29 member nations of the EU and collect money from them.
Oh, you're in Poland and you're the streaming network and you want to run, you know, Warner Brothers films, this is how much you're going to pay us. Oh, you want to run the
Harry Potter play on, you know, in the London theater district, this is how much money you're
going to pay us. We collect there. America actually does a relatively small number of things
really, really well. Tech and software, education, we make the best weapons in the world,
and hands down, we have the best media in the world.
And we're running a 24 by seven,
essentially commercial on American culture,
whether it's Baywatch,
or whether it's friends and neighbors
talking about the wealth problems of people in Connecticut,
which I'm watching and I think is great.
Jon Hamm, incredible presence.
Anyways. Oh, I know.
Well, incredible presence,
is that your way of saying he's so hot? It's nauseating? Oh, he's ridiculously hot. It's crazy. He, I know. Well, incredible presence, is that your way of saying he's so hot,
it's nauseating?
Oh, he's ridiculously hot.
It's crazy.
And he's like aging in the best possible way.
He's still Don Draper,
but he's also like a great dad.
He's a bad dad, technically,
in your friends and neighbors,
but you know what I mean.
Oh, no, he's like the victim.
It's such a, it's a ridiculous thing.
I know, he's everything.
Yeah, anyways, yeah, he's very attractive.
Anyway, let's just cut to what's gonna happen.
Other nations will say, okay, we're gonna put a 100%
tariff on any of your media coming in here.
Which means we're gonna consume a lot less media.
One of the things we negotiated away with Canada,
at one time Canada, and maybe it's still in place,
but I don't think so, said that 25% of media
on Canadian cable has to be produced in Canada.
And such, they basically had a lot
of shitty Canadian TV shows.
I'm sure that the Boys in the Hall
or something came out of it.
But effectively, this would be a boon
to the local for in the short term.
It'd be terrible for consumers in Poland, but they would get a short-term sugar high
from domestically produced content.
I don't even know how you would calculate the tariff.
But over the long-term,
all it does is the following.
Media becomes much more expensive in those nations.
The media industry in America,
which employs millions of high-paid jobs,
gets crushed, right?
Because this truly is a frictionless export.
You don't need ships.
You don't need docks.
You don't need retail distribution channels or trucks.
Media can be transmitted over cables with zeros and ones.
And we make unbelievable margins.
And to think that these nations
aren't gonna impose reciprocal tariffs,
which will dramatically decrease the demand
of our content overseas, which we haven't,
as you pointed out, an incredible trade surplus,
and this is what will happen.
He will threaten it.
Ted Sarandos from Netflix will call and say,
you realize that this is gonna take Netflix stock
down dramatically as we do 51%
of our content production productions overseas now.
We don't even know how to calculate what the tariff would be.
It'll take our stock way down.
We're gonna get very pissed off,
as will the 315 million people who are on Netflix,
and he will do exactly what he's done
across every single step in this process.
He will blink.
Netflix will be the new Apple.
And that is people will say, well, what would happen to the price of Netflix in all these nations? And
in our nation, if all of a sudden content produced overseas, of which 51% of Netflix
content is now, whether it's the Umbrella Academy or Money Heist, and Netflix says,
oh, we might have to raise prices from $12.99 to $17.99.
Americans started a revolution
that basically resulted in the formation of our nation
based on the action of people trying to raise taxes on tea,
the whiskey rebellion.
So this is again, nothing but chaos and paralysis,
where the most talented people in the world in media,
which happened to reside in America,
essentially have to spend all this time
figuring out what the fuck does this mean?
How do we even respond to it?
Just in case, let's stop production overseas,
let's reroute our supply chain.
We gotta spend all of our time on earnings calls
talking about how we respond to this
instead of how we're actually trying to acquire consumers or produce more media
that's more effective on a lower budget
in our business models.
And at the end of the day,
he's gonna do the same thing he did with Apple.
He'll do the same thing with Netflix
and that is he will blink.
But if in fact the tariff does go through in some form,
it's the small independent producers,
the smaller media companies that will be shit out of luck,
that don't have lobbyists and don't have a cult following
similar to Apple and Netflix.
This again is nothing but a self-inflicted injury.
There's all downside and just shows this guy just does,
even in the industries we are dominating,
we are dominating globally.
The last thing we wanna do is give any nation
the excuse to raise tariffs on our content.
And this is one of the things we have negotiated tooth and nail, our trade representatives,
is that we have ensured that if we produce great IP, which we produce the best in the
world, when we produce, you know, Fast and Furious 12, that Czechoslovakia can't decide
to start tar terrifying it. We have fought for so long to let our content flow free
overseas because it is better content
and we reap the majority of those benefits.
And now he's decided to wind back the clock
and give all of these nations an opportunity
to tax our media anyways.
It also opens the door for people to be concerned about his mental health state,
because there is a not insane thesis that perhaps last night he was watching a movie
about Alcatraz and then decided to start posting that we need to reopen Alcatraz.
And we know he likes prisons and show of force that way
with the Gitmo stuff, but he says,
okay, we'll reopen Alcatraz and also we want to use tariffs
in the movie industry.
Or maybe he was talking to John Voight,
who works for the administration somehow.
He's like the Hollywood ambassador or something like that.
And Politico even had John Voight mentioned
in their article talking about this.
And that makes you think who is in charge here and to be even more deeply concerned
that in the GOP bill, they have taken the right from Congress to administer tariffs,
which is constitutionally protected, and that that's the game here, that it's all consolidation
of executive power.
Mike Johnson is fine with it as long as he gets
his tax cuts through and the cuts that he likes.
And that we have a one-man show and that one-man show
can be swayed by a visit by
Laura Loomer or perhaps a movie that he was watching.
That's a little concerning.
And just to give you a sense, we think,
well, it's not that big a deal
if it's just gonna create some uncertainty
and then ultimately we end up back where we think it is
and that looks more like it did before than not.
Uncertainty is the death metal of markets.
The markets hate uncertainty.
And so far this year, the S&P 500 is down 6%,
wiping out $6.5 trillion in value of
public companies. The value of the US dollar has plunged nearly 10%. And ETFs that track companies
outside of the US is up over 7%. I feel like we're having the biggest lawn sale in the world of $27
trillion in our economy that other people are thinking, okay, especially China and some EU
nations are saying, okay, how do we take advantage of the fact that the US seems to be getting into a trade war
with China?
I know, let's get a bunch of stuff on sale as the fixed costs in Chinese factories, they
want to keep those factories humming so they have excess supply and the EU nations are
going to be able to strike incredible deals on that additional capacity.
In addition, all sorts of trade deals being done outside of the US.
This is essentially well, okay,
well this is a yard sale
at the wealthiest home in the world.
This is, you know, I don't know what the Louvre,
if it was a private residence,
oh, everything's for sale right now
in terms of this economy.
Everything is up for grabs
because this person has gone crazy.
They're not dead soon,
but they've gone absolutely crazy.
And the notion that consumers aren't gonna freak out
when consumers show up to a store and the shelves are empty,
at least American consumers,
their first instinct is to go buy something else,
specifically a gun.
Consumers freak out.
I mean, this is a country that started hoarding
toilet paper and hand cleanser. I did that.
You did that?
You're a hoarder?
I had a whole office full of toilet paper.
Yeah, I didn't do that at all.
What would you do if you couldn't wipe?
Let's be real about this.
My dad was also obsessed with it.
He told me, he's like, go to every drug store.
I lived in Union Square at the time.
He's like, you got a lot of drug stores there.
Please go get as much toilet paper as possible
and then bring it down to me and try, Becca.
Yeah, I was more focused on getting the vaccine, but anyways.
I did that too.
But just for the sad final note on this,
all the things you say is true.
His approval rating is down, stock market, all of it.
And yet CNN asked,
who would be doing a better job right now,
Trump or Kamala Harris, and Trump still edges Kamala.
I mean, within the margin of error, it's just two points,
but my guess would be actually that he would still
get reelected if we had the election, if we did a do-over.
Well, people, I watched, I don't know if you saw anything
from the Berkshire Hathaway Agora,
where they all get together and basically,
it was kind of a farewell to a great American,
Warren Buffett.
And he was really prescient in his comments.
He said that, you want the world to be prosperous,
that when other nations do well, we do really well,
because we make fantastic products,
and when they have more money,
they buy more of our products and it's an upward spiral.
And one of the problems with this administration
in terms of mentality that is just not prosperous
or foots to the age is that they approach everything
as a zero sum game, that if another nation is prospering,
it must be bad for us.
And China's ascent into the global economy
as a kind of a tier one nation has been great for us
And you might say well, it's not great for us only 3% of clothes in America are
Manufactured domestically. How can that be a good thing?
Okay in the last 40 years on an inflation-adjusted basis the price of clothing has been cut in half
Which means Americans can focus on manufacturing things with much higher margin. I don't know chips
media and which means Americans can focus on manufacturing things with much higher margin, I don't know, chips, media. And with that additional gross margin
by focusing on high margin products
and additional profitability, we get to buy more shit.
And at the end of the day, America is about rights,
it's about defending our nation
and giving people the opportunity to buy more shit.
People don't come here.
I mean, a lot of people do come here
escaping totalitarian regimes or they want or asylum, but the majority People don't come here. I mean, a lot of people do come here escaping totalitarian regimes or they want, or asylum.
But the majority of people who come here,
come here because they want more shit.
And what I mean by that is they want to have a more-
We call that opportunity.
Yeah, they want a more prosperous lifestyle.
They want to be able to afford nice things for the kids.
They want to take nice vacations.
They want to have a nicer car.
They want to buy better beer.
They want to wear cooler clothes. They want to wear Nikes. They want to a nicer car. They wanna buy better beer. They wanna wear cooler clothes.
They wanna wear Nikes.
They wanna watch better media.
And the notion that somehow we have not benefited,
since World War II, we have eight X'd our GDP.
Our average household income is about 80 grand.
Granted, it is absolutely not fairly distributed,
but that's our choosing, that has nothing to do
with trade policy right now.
But the notion that we haven't won, we've won folks,
we've won and a big part of that is because
of our incredible trade policy where we've usually been
both parties win, but we win even more.
And he was very eloquent and said, by the way, when other nations are more prosperous
and their children are more prosperous,
your children are safer.
And that is when nations don't do well,
they're just more inclined to declare war on their neighbors
or be really angry at those gluttonous Americans
who appear to be doing well and pulling head without us.
I thought his comments were really solid,
but just a quick rundown of some of the products from China that are imported into the U.S. 99%
of shoes are imported, 90% of microwaves are imported from China, 82% of pots and pans,
70% of utensils, 40% of coffee makers, 93% of children's books, 86% of gaming consoles, 98% of umbrellas, 82% of blankets, 96% of fireworks.
The Republican Party really is genius
at figuring out a way to get people to vote against
their own interests.
And as a result, JP Morgan is now predicting
a 60% chance of recession, Goldman Sachs,
35% chance of recession, Bar Sachs 35% chance of recession.
Barclays, B of A, Deutsche Bank,
all warn of higher recession risks.
What they're not talking about,
which I think they soon will be talking about,
is what's even worse than a recession.
And you're too young to even remember this,
but I remember this from my graduate student instructor days,
stagflation.
And that is traditionally when the economy slows,
interest rates come down,
because not as many people are feeling confident,
want to borrow money.
So banks lower the cost of borrowing money,
people get more aggressive,
it's sort of a self-healing mechanism.
And then when consumers are trying to buy too much stuff,
and there's too many dollars facing too few products,
banks take advantage of that and say,
if you want to borrow money as confident as you are,
you're going to have to pay us more.
And then the higher interest rates temper or dampen
the economy and bring inflation down.
The worst thing in the world is where we're headed.
And it's the following.
And that is productivity goes down
because demand for our products
from reciprocal tariffs decreases.
So the economy shrinks, but at the same time
we're seen as a less sure bet
and capital leaves the US driving up interest rates.
So what do you have?
You have interest rates going up,
which further chases down, slowing productivity
and you have something called stagflation.
And we haven't registered that in so many decades,
people don't even really understand the concept,
but here's what it is.
Stagflation is a bridge to depression.
Recession is a fucking Easter party compared to stagflation is a bridge to depression. Recession is a fucking Easter party compared
to stagflation. That's the worst of both worlds. And it strikes me that essentially these tariffs
and so far the economic policy are effectively said, how can we bring back stagflation? How can
we bring back measles and rubella and stagflation? I've got an idea, massive tariffs. All right, moving on for a second, what do you make of Trump's comments about due process?
Concerning, but when have I not been concerned?
Kristen Welker asking him, do you agree that everyone who is here deserves due process,
citizens and non-citizens?
And spoiler alert, the Constitution guarantees it even for people who are here undocumented
and Scalia amongst others has said as much. And he goes, I don't know, I'm not a lawyer. And Trump has spent his entire
life hiding behind, I don't know, ask somebody else. And that somebody else is usually Stephen
Miller, which spells disaster for all of us. And I should have mentioned when we were talking
about the national security advisor stuff, that I wouldn't be surprised if it was really
Stephen Miller doing it and not so much Marco Rubio.
But the administration is out with an idea for a new proposal that I would love to get
your take on because it at first blush sounds pretty smart to me that they're going to pay
people who are here undocumented $1,000 to self-deport.
And I believe that they're also considering paying for their flights home. And it is deportations and border security, not immigration overall, but those two criteria
or those two aspects are the only areas where he is still above water. And I think that
if there are people here who are willing to go for $1,000, that that is a very good use
of our taxpayer dollars.
Well, it's an interesting idea. And just on a cost level,
it's a hell of a lot more efficient than running planes
for a quarter of a million dollars
and putting them in handcuffs
and shipping them to a place
where they have no family or support.
But it's how we're doing this.
People don't want to acknowledge that,
okay, the secret sauce of America,
a lot of people admit has been immigration, right?
But the most profitable part of that secret sauce has been illegal immigration
because undocumented workers, as I've said before, pay taxes, but don't stress
local, you know, local services.
They don't collect, they don't stick around long enough to
usually collect social security.
There are some examples of crime.
There are some examples of them taxing social services beyond
the value they're adding.
But that is, that is a, that is the exception, not the rule. some examples of them taxing social services beyond the value they're adding.
But that is the exception, not the rule.
And the reason why we have turned a blind eye to illegal immigration for so long is
it's been this magnificently flexible, inexpensive workforce that comes in when there's jobs
and leaves when there isn't.
And the thought, to me, if you were really going to be quote unquote smart about this,
you would say to certain individuals,
I mean, you need to massively increase immigration,
but have it be thoughtful and have it be measured and have some logic to it.
If the price of pistachios quadruples because we can't
come find anyone to come harvest these crops,
well, let's think about how we have some temporary visa,
similar to what Trump does at his hotels.
But in terms of deporting,
often they're incentives,
but we still don't wanna talk about the solution
that actually probably most effectively decreases
or encourages people to self-deport.
And that is going after these nice people
who are business owners.
And that is in some states or some regions,
they estimate somewhere between a quarter
and a third of fast food workers are undocumented workers.
You could make a pretty decent estimate with a pretty tight confidence interval of what
percentage of your workforce is undocumented workers.
And then you go to the employer and you say, we're going to start finding you $100,000
a day unless you get this down.
If the jobs go away, they will self-deport on their own without a thousand dollar bounty
or a thousand dollar incentive.
Because the real solution here is something we just don't want to talk about.
We don't want to acknowledge that, okay, drugs coming across the border, well, let's punish
them for letting fentanyl in.
You can't keep drugs out of a prison.
As long as there's demand for drugs in the United States as a function of people, either
addiction or a man who doesn't get married or in a relationship
by the time he's 30 has got a one in three chance
of becoming an abuser, the fact that we over prescribe
opiates, as long as there is demand for drugs
they're gonna get into the US, as long as there is
a demand in jobs, right, for illegal immigrants,
they're going to figure out a way to get here.
Now, to their credit,
it does seem like immigration has dramatically
just cauterized or stopped.
I think that's a good talking point for them.
Are they going way too far?
Are we probably gonna see a massive hike in inflation?
I absolutely think that's coming.
But let me put it this way.
I think that's the least bad idea they've had in a while.
What do you think?
Yeah, that's how I feel.
But listen, I perhaps got too excited
that it was something that didn't sound insane to me.
And so I said, I think this is a good use
of our taxpayer dollars.
I don't know.
I need to see what the plan is fleshed out,
but they are doing well with,
frankly, putting the fear of God into people.
And folks are self-deporting.
Border crossings are basically nil at this point.
You don't see any action on the southern border.
And this was a key promise that we would get people out of the country who are here illegally.
No.
I want the asylum system to continue to work.
Everybody deserves their due process.
There are innocent people in a foreign prison, essentially serving now a life sentence that
the El Salvadorian president isn't even comfortable with.
That's how depraved what the American administration has done, that Bukele is uncomfortable with
it.
That said, $1,000, when you look at the cost and how overburdened our immigration system
is, we don't have enough judges.
We don't have enough lawyers for these people.
I think maybe if it can help the process along about whether they should stay or go, this is
something to explore. It's so funny in some nations they pay people to actually
come there because they need labor. Yeah. Yeah, it's gonna be. But it's, it's, it
feels that the administration has somewhat snatched a feed from the jaws of
victory because had they not had this El Salvadoran stupidity, most
Americans agree with a pretty hardline approach and the results, I don't think you can argue
with that. The results have been dramatic, right? And it's like, okay, it's one thing
to break a few eggs. It's another thing to like burn the village to save it, right? To
totally go after due process. And some of these stories really are Heart-wrenching. Okay
Let's take a quick break when we come back our conversation with Senator Murphy. Stay with us
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Welcome back.
Joining us today is Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy.
Welcome to the show, Senator.
Hey, Scott, thanks for having me back.
So there's a viewpoint that despite all the tumult,
anxiety, general recognition that a lot of these actions
from the administration are damaging to the economy
and essentially kind of waving a middle finger
at the Constitution that while his popularity is down
and he's had the worst first 100 days,
the Trump administration or Trump is still more popular than the Democratic Party.
And the thesis is that the Democratic Party is seen as weak and that the
American public would rather have an autocrat than a party that's weak.
And you gave a very fiery speech about called a hundred days of corruption.
But in addition to these sort of fiery speeches,
and generally highlighting how corrupt
this administration is, it doesn't feel like that's enough.
It doesn't feel as if the Democratic Party
has shown any real tensile strength
in terms of their ability to push back
on the administration other than speeches.
What could possibly be done here?
Yeah, I mean, Scott, I think there's a couple of things to talk about here.
It is true that the approval ratings for the Democratic Party are in the toilet.
They're bad, but not much worse than the approval ratings for the Republican Party.
People are just down on organized political parties right now.
And a lot of the reason why the Democratic number is very low is because Democrats are upset with the
Democratic Party and that's because Donald Trump has
punched this entire country in the nose and a lot of Democrats
are taking out their frustration with Trump on the leaders of
their own party who they don't believe have stood up an
effective resistance. Some of that is, I think, justified, some of that is not.
But it is also true that the Democratic Party
is not seen as a strong enough alternative.
One of the things I worry about is that,
well, it is true that this is the most corrupt White House
in the history of the country.
Any one of these scandals from the meme coin to Starlink would have
potentially taken down a previous president in a previous time. The Democrats aren't really
seen as a credible anti-corruption messenger for a couple of reasons. One, because we weren't
really serious about taking out corrupt members of our own party. But also, we don't really talk with enough volume about the ways in which we
would clean up government if we were put in charge.
When I started out in politics 20, 25 years ago, campaign finance reform,
getting big money, corporate money, lobbyist money out of politics,
that was a top two or three issue for Democrats.
Somewhere along the line,
we stopped explaining, and maybe we stopped caring as much about unrigging the democracy.
Our sort of democracy talk became voting rights talk, which is really important, but that's
actually not the thing that sort of scratches the itch that most Americans have today, which
is the influence of billionaires
and corporations inside politics.
So I think some of the low approval rings for Democrats
are just a function of sort of the first six months
of the Trump administration
and people taking out their anger against anybody,
including Democrats.
But some of that is because we just don't talk enough
about what we would do to unrig the democracy if we were
put in charge and people aren't going to really listen to our message of Trump's corruption
unless they really believe that we're serious about changing the rules so that there's less
corruption.
So in addition to being taken seriously about being effective change agents, in terms of
just our ability to kind of arrest or cauterize what a lot of people think is sort of an
undoing of the post-World War two order that will take years maybe decades to repair. I thought we hit a low point
last weekend when Schumer said that we had sent a strongly worded letter to the president.
I'll put forward a thesis. Start proposing laws
that say if you're operating black sites in your country or engaging in crypto scans with this current administration, if and when we get control of the house,
we'll propose laws that economically impair your nation or remind some of the people in
the administration and the Republican Party that the statute of limitations on fraud, corruption, or
a variety of other crimes, the statute of limitations is longer than three years and
nine months.
I mean, just to put it bluntly, doesn't the Democratic Party need to start acting like
sort of the party of not fucking around, quite frankly?
I mean, what we're doing just does not appear to be working.
Yes.
That's right to an extent.
I mean, listen, his approval ratings are sinking, and that is really important.
When a president gets down into the 30s, his enablers do start to get cold feet.
I mean, it will be harder for him to pass this massive cut in Medicaid funding in order
to finance a billionaire tax cut if his approval ratings are at 35%.
So I don't necessarily know that the message is in whole not working if in part what your
goal is when you're the majority party is to make the majority party really, really
unpopular so that their legislative agenda gets jammed up.
But yes, we have to be more willing to engage in risk tolerant behavior.
And we have not. I mean, part of the reason that, you know,
I argued that we should be willing to vote against
that Republican continuing resolution
was to show that we are not going to be complicit
with Republicans on a budget that they wrote
without any Democratic input.
The reason why I thought we all should have skipped
the State of the Union speech is because
that would have shown a level of seriousness about not wanting to legitimize his corruption and theft.
And you're also probably right that we're going to have to be clearer about the legal
consequences, you know, should somebody who's on the level eventually get into the DOJ for
the people who are blatantly violating the law.
I think sometimes people expect a little bit too much of the opposition party, but I think
if we were engaging in tactics that were a little tougher and had frankly a little bit
more potential downside for Democrats, that would cause people out in the public to be
more willing to engage in riskier behavior themselves or institutions to engage in more riskier behavior
as they're trying to stand up a response to Trump's extortion
campaign?
I wanted to pick up on what you were saying
about this risky behavior, because there are a few people
within the party, and you're one of them,
that have been looked to as the ones that are
willing to push the envelope.
So Bernie and AOC out on their tour.
You had a huge fundraising quarter, $8 million, right?
And you're not up for reelection for a very long time.
So people are obviously appreciative of what you're doing
and the energy that you're bringing to this fight.
But we know that elections are decided on issues.
And the big issue for the midterms
is going to be the GOP reconciliation bill,
the big, beautiful bill.
So we have $880 billion cut to Medicaid,
also huge tax breaks for the wealthy.
How do you think that Democrats can effectively message what it is that this administration is doing if wealth inequality is a huge issue for them?
This is it, you know, signed, sealed and delivered, wrap it up in a bow. There is no clear indication that Main Street is irrelevant to them than what this bill
has in it.
So what's the plan?
Well, the plan has to be to not be distracted.
And that's tough.
But, you know, we are being gift wrapped a piece of legislation that tells the entire
story about the Trump administration's priorities.
And as you mentioned, it's a pretty simple story. You're talking about throwing
millions of people off of their health care, potentially tens of millions of people off their health care. Medicaid
insures
24% of
Americans in order to finance a massive tax cut for the richest Americans.
It's about a trillion dollars in cuts to child nutrition programs and Medicaid,
and a trillion dollars of tax cuts for the richest 1%.
And so that's a story we need to tell over and over and over again.
And the best result here is, frankly, to stop it from ever becoming law.
And I think we have a really good chance of doing
that. Nobody thought that we were going to be able to stop the repeal of the Affordable Care Act in
2017, but we did. But they still paid a price for it. They got walloped in the midterms because
people didn't really care that it didn't pass. They just saw loud and clear what their values
were, which was to at the time throw 20 million people off their health care. So we needed to dual track this, try to kill this bill, but also message it in a way that
even if it disappears, they have to own the space.
And I think it's okay to still talk about the assault on democracy because I would argue
it's all the same story.
This president's agenda is so historically unpopular, so wildly unpopular, that the only
way that the Republican Party survives this is for them to destroy democracy, destroy
the rule of law, destroy the traditional means of accountability like a free press, a free
university system, lawyers who can defend our rights.
So it's all the same story.
They've got this deeply unpopular agenda, which is about destroying the middle class to empower the billionaires. And they have to destroy democracy
in order to get away with it. I think that's an elevator pitch. That doesn't take more than
a minute, a minute and a half to explain to people. And just don't let his constant
distraction campaign about talking about a third term or invading Canada stop you from being able to repeat that story five times a day.
Do you think that talking about Kilmer Obrego Garcia is one of those distractions?
No, because I think that is sort of central to this case of his attempt to destroy the rule of
law because it's the only way that he gets away with this thievery. I mean, what he is essentially doing with a lot of these disappearances, standing on
top of the legitimization of political violence through the pardoning of all the January 6th
protesters is to try to put a chill when it comes to people who are going to stand up
to him politically so that you don't see the kind of crowds that you've seen in the past several weeks and months out there protesting his deeply unpopular agenda.
And I think that there is deep crossover potential in a way that maybe is unexpected on issues
like Abrego Garcia that dovetail pretty nicely with the crossover message on stopping the
cuts to Medicaid.
It turns out there are actually a lot of pretty conservative folks
out there who don't want any of this.
I've said to folks,
a lot of the people who voted for him thought that he was serious about
lowering costs and he wasn't serious when he talked about being a dictator.
They're finding out that the opposite is true.
He's not serious about lowering costs. He's going to increase healthcare costs by kicking people off of Medicaid.
And he is serious about being a dictator.
And that's a message that sort of gives a permission structure for a lot of his vote
and his base to think about crossing over.
Yeah.
Steve Bannon could be used in a whole lot of ads.
He understood this perfectly.
Scott? So governors, Beshear, Newsom, Whitmer, Moore,
Secretary Buttigieg, senators, Bennett, Klobuchar, Murphy,
we have an outstanding bench.
A lot of very strong moderates who I believe
you're gonna have to have a moderate to triangulate
and have a shot at getting through or winning in the general.
We'll talk about the primary.
Why just as a tactic?
And I'm not asking you to indicate your plans or what you're planning or not planning to
do.
It feels like right now we're leaderless.
That if the leaders of the Democratic Party are Senator Schumer or leaders Jeffries, I
think most people think they're not up to the job of pushing back on this
onslaught of corruption and autocracy.
What do you think of the idea of one of you or more of you announcing now that
you're running for president such that we at least have effective pushback in
someone that the media and the public can turn to on a daily basis for arguments
and evidence around how
wrong this is. I mean it seems to me that part of the problem is we just don't have
visible vocal leadership right now. What do you think of the idea of one or more
of you announcing sooner rather than later that you're running for president?
Yeah I don't know I mean I hear this critique a lot and there have been
different suggestions about how to tackle this
perceived problem. That's the first time I've heard the suggestion about starting the presidential
campaign, you know, two years earlier than normal. There's also this idea about creating a shadow
cabinet, you know, for instance. I guess I don't perceive that problem to be as acute or as real
as you do, Scott. I actually think that this party is pretty entrepreneurial.
Even though Bernie Sanders and AOC have no official role,
they are still drawing tens of thousands of people.
I'm a rank-and-file member,
Max Frost is a rank-and-file member,
but we'll have a couple thousand people in Florida.
We had a couple thousand people in
Missouri and North Carolina last weekend.
I think it might be just a little unrealistic to expect that you are going to have three
years prior to a presidential campaign, there be some consensus in the political class and
the media class about who the one sole leader of the Democratic Party is.
Pause it for a second that one of those high-profile names
did jump out and declare
their presidential aspirations really early.
Well, that might mean that the others do the same,
and then all that you have now is Dem on Dem violence.
You just have a presidential campaign
starting way earlier than it should instead of all of
our energy being trained on explaining
the corruption and the thievery
in the White House.
So I don't see this as big a problem as it is.
I think what you're frankly seeing is a lot of folks rise to the moment and get amplified
voices and bigger stages that might not exist if you had some early contest to decide who the one
person was that is the legitimate anti-Trump voice inside the progressive movement.
All fair points.
So one of the strategies that the administration or President Trump has deployed that I think
has been very effective straight out of the GRU's handbook of flood the zone.
So many outrageous things every day that you're flat-footed, don't know what to respond to, enter into a state of paralysis, end up running after
things that aren't that important. And it feels as if we do need to focus on a small
finite number of issues in a very forceful yet dignified way. One, do you agree with
that? And two, if you in fact agree with that, what would be Senator Murphy's one thing,
if you could only talk about one issue that you think the Americans should be focused
on in terms of how the administration is bad for America, what would be that one
issue for you?
Yeah, listen, right now it's this budget bill that proposes the most massive transfer of
wealth from the poor and the middle class to the rich in the history of the country.
It tells the entire story about the values of this party.
They are trying to hand over our government to the billionaire class and they are willing
to run over regular people to get there.
It exposes him as a false populist in a way that no other issue does.
But as to kind of the tactical way that you deal with how he floods the zone, you have
to flood the zone in return.
You have to create as much content as he does.
And that is a legitimate debate inside the zone in return. You have to create as much content as he does.
And that is a legitimate debate inside the party right now.
There's a feeling that maybe we should just sort of sit back and let them destroy themselves,
that we shouldn't be acting every single day with five-alarm urgency because that kind
of wears people out.
I actually don't think that's true.
I think we have to put just as much content
out there every day as he does.
I think it's okay for us to sort of have our hair on fire
on a daily basis because the democracy is under daily assault.
And as long as we stay pretty laser-like focused
on that transfer of wealth, the cut to Medicaid,
to finance the tax cut for millionaires,
I think we're on pretty safe ground.
You mentioned being out with Max Frost at town halls in Missouri and in Florida.
And I'd love to hear a little bit about what you saw there on the ground.
But also, by doing it with Max Frost, who's the youngest member of Congress, you implicitly
blessed this next gen, which I think is so important in the conversations
that we're having right now about people being too old
for these roles, not passing the torch soon enough.
And someone like Max Frost understands flooding the zone
because that's just how a 20 something operates, right?
I wake up, I get on my phone, not me, I'm a 41 year old.
But Max Frost wakes up and he starts posting,
because that's just what's built into his DNA.
And that feels like a natural way for us to be combating flooding,
the zone where it doesn't feel like you have a 75-year-old in
their car yelling into the abyss to create a video.
You have someone like a Max Frost or an AOC doing this,
and it's like inherent to who they are.
So can you talk about your town halls and also bringing in the next generation in a substantive way?
It certainly is about volume, and you are right that this generation doesn't think twice about posting dozens of times a day.
That's just how online communication works.
And it's important for the older generation to understand that.
Second, it's about authenticity.
It's about removing the filter between you and your constituents and the voters.
And Maxwell does that. I do that.
But most sort of high-level politicians, governors and senators,
still have that filter, still vet their communication
through their communication staff.
So you don't? You post without approval?
I don't. Yeah, I mean I don't. So the feed that I control is my Twitter feed and that is just me.
Nobody sees those tweets before I send them out and that provides sort of the foundation for most of my other content.
But voters are savvy today. They now know the difference between authentic
communication and non-authentic communication, in part because they've watched Donald Trump
show the country what authentic communication full of mistakes looks like. The town halls
are amazing. Any Democrat can show up anywhere right now, and you will have thousands of
people coming out. I think it's really important to be in Republican districts, in part because if you are trying to build a true national movement,
you have got to show that even in the red parts of the country,
folks are having second thoughts.
So if you're just having big turnouts in blue states,
that doesn't really ultimately move the needle.
So I don't think it's coincidental that once we know, once we started to see red states turning out,
like what Bernie did in, you know, Idaho,
and I think he was in, you know,
somewhere in the Mountain West, other than Idaho,
you started to seeing Trump's blue ratings, you know,
move down into the low 40s because Republican
or prior Trump voters looked around and they said,
oh, I guess others who voted for Trump,
others who live in places that look like the place I live in,
have now have the same misgivings that I do.
So that's why Max and I have been primarily going only to Republican districts,
and I think we'll continue doing that.
Yeah. You see, it's pretty rough out there even for like Chuck Grassley.
And I feel like his constituents love him,
but they can't help but be upset at what we're seeing. I love a little bit of a background
perspective on how your Republican colleagues are feeling. I know what they say to the cameras,
but are they feeling as tense about this as I would imagine they should be?
– So I have a little bit of a different perspective than a lot of my colleagues do on Republicans right now.
I really worry that we're giving Republicans
too much credit, this idea that they know
what the right thing to do is,
and they aren't doing it because they are scared
of Donald Trump or scared of losing an election.
I think way more Republicans than you think
have in their heart given up
on the project of democracy.
This work to undermine democracy inside the Republican Party
that's been handled and midwifed in part
by the pseudo intellectual infrastructure that
surrounds MAGA, it's been ongoing for a decade.
It's deep.
It's serious.
And so especially in the House of Representatives
I think the vast majority of Republicans there are absolutely willing to give up on elections if that guarantees
Republicans rule forever
many Republicans most Republicans in Congress have come to the conclusion that
Progressives writ large are an existential threat to the nation. And so their number one goal, their mission is to stop Democrats from ever ruling again.
They'd like to do that without destroying democracy, but if that's what it takes, then
they're willing to do it.
I just think you have to understand that instead of living in this world where, you know, they,
oh boy, they're all really wringing their hands about what Trump is doing to our democracy and they just, you know, can't say it out loud because
they're so afraid of him. In the Senate, yes, there's, you know, a good group of maybe 15 to
20 who do know what he's doing is wrong. And those approval ratings sitting in the 30s for a period
of months, you know, that may be the key to getting more of those Republicans to speak up or perhaps voting against some of the worst of this agenda, including the Medicaid cuts.
But I don't mean to paint a hopeless picture.
I just think it's really important not to sugar why it's time to transition America to a kind
of autocracy or quasi democracy that can keep up with China.
Democracy is just antiquated, it's outdated, it doesn't work in a 2025 global context.
That's what a lot of Republicans think today.
So Senator, young women going slightly more moderate or progressive, young men
significantly more conservative. And I would argue that it's not that they're moving towards
the Republican Party, it's the Democratic Party has moved away from them. And when I was at the
Democratic National Convention, I saw a parade of special interest groups really robustly representing
their constituents. But the one group that wasn't discussed or referenced
is the group that, in my view, has fallen furthest fastest,
and that is young men.
And I think it really hurt us at the ballot box.
One, do you agree with that?
And two, if you do agree with that,
what specific programs or ideas can the Democrats deploy
to try and arrest the decline,
or at least nod how poorly young men are doing in our country.
I completely agree with that. I mean, how can't you if you look at a lot of this polling data?
I think that what's important to understand is that while a lot of the attention has been on
young men, there has been a significant pull away by young women from the Democratic Party as well. This is
a phenomenon that exists most acutely with young men, but it exists with young people writ large.
I do think it's worth really examining why the only movement on the left that has drawn large
numbers of young people, but especially young men over the last 10 to 20 years is
Bernie's movement.
And I think you really have to, there's a lot of people who say, well, you know, Bernie's
brand of politics is toxic.
It's going to be the downfall of the Democratic Party.
But let's be honest, you know, whatever you thought of the Bernie bros, there were a lot
of young men who were
attracted to what Bernie was selling.
And I do think that that's because young men and young women together, but maybe young
men in particular, because of the very quick downfall of the economic patriarchy, see the
consequences of a system that is totally and completely rigged.
And they are looking for an explanation
about who did it to them.
For young men, you know, the conservative movement says,
well, women did this to you.
Women did this to you.
Their rise in the workforce,
combined with the Me Too movement,
has been the source of your unraveling and undoing.
Well, what Bernie says is that, yes,
somebody did this to you, but it's
not women. It's the billionaire class. It's the corporate class who has rigged an economy to make
sure that no young person can succeed as quickly as they could 30 or 50 years ago. And I just don't
know that you'll win young men back or you'll win young people back if you don't have a source for
them to root their frustration, if you don't have a source for them to root their frustration,
if you don't have a story to tell about why
their life got so difficult and so miserable all of a sudden.
So you talked earlier about
a moderate candidate being the only path forward.
I'm not even sure that center-right-left works any longer in
describing how the political positioning exists today.
I think you probably win with a candidate who is
more big-tentous on social and cultural issues,
who is less judgmental about people who may not think
the way that most progressives think on climate or guns or gay rights,
but is pretty populous on economic issues,
is willing to call out the way that corporations
have rigged the economy and have some pretty big solutions,
especially for young people, about how their life
is going to get better much more quickly.
SHARA KESSLER-KLEIN Yeah.
Sherrod Brown was a loss on a whole host of levels,
but you're basically describing him in what you just said.
MICHAEL SHERROD Yeah.
And Sherrod, you know, I mean, Sherrod's bona fides
on choice and gay rights, on climate
right rock solid.
But like Bernie, Sherrod A, just chose to spend 80% of his time talking about an economic
message.
And B, I think the perception in Ohio, even though he lost, was that he was less judgmental
of people who thought differently than him.
And we have applied these litmus tests, we just have, as a party.
And we let the online left engage in a pretty regular shaming
of anybody who isn't inside the conventional orthodoxy.
And I think in the past I've been a part of that.
I think a lot of us have been a part of that, either in taking part in it
or looking the other way when it happened.
And when I think about how the Democratic Party recovers,
I don't necessarily think it's in sort of
becoming more moderate on economic issues.
I think it probably is confronting the failure
of neoliberalism pretty directly,
but it probably does mean becoming less judgmental
and less preachy on the non-economic
issues.
So if we were a household, we're taking in $50,000 a
year, we're spending 70 household debt of 370,000
that when we die, our kids will assume that debt.
We're either going to have to, it appears to me,
raise taxes or cut spending.
And the answer is probably both.
And I'm now of the mind that probably the
only way to substantially decrease spending would probably be to attempt to really go
after healthcare costs, which is the biggest part of our, you know, biggest consumer economy
or biggest consumer spending item with terrible outcomes. One, do you agree with that? And
two, how could we in fact address a healthcare system
where we spend eight times more for Humira or Ozempic
than other nations and where hospital systems
have figured out a way to make pricing
totally non-transparent?
What, I mean, it just feels like Washington quite frankly
has just been weaponized
by the healthcare industrial complex.
And as a result, we have worse health outcomes
with, for, you know, for more money.
How would you address healthcare costs?
So this is at the heart of the corruption story
and it's a bipartisan corruption story.
This town is owned by the healthcare industry
and that's been true for 30 years.
The reason healthcare costs are so high in this country is
because the for-profit healthcare industry has been able to
rig the rules so that they are able to collect
a large amount of the total dollar spent in healthcare,
whether it be on the private pay side or on
the Medicare and Medicaid side, and keep it for profit, returns to
shareholders or massive CEO salaries.
It's just not a coincidence that America is obviously spending twice as much as
other nations on a per capita basis, and we don't utilize the power of the federal
government to control and regulate prices. There's no way ultimately to solve for this problem,
the massive amount of money that the government spends on
healthcare without the government getting involved in
helping to curb the amount of profit that the drug industry,
that the hospital industry,
that the hospice industry is making off of healthcare.
It's frankly a really critical moment right now because you are
now seeing the private equity game in healthcare at scale.
The for-profit hospital companies and the drug companies,
they are thieves, but at least you can see the thievery.
When you get to the point, you know, five,
ten years from now where half of the, you know,
healthcare system is owned by third parties, by
private equity or hedge funds, and you can't even
see the ownership structure.
It makes it a lot harder to kind of understand how
to pull the levers to try to keep costs down.
So, you know, part of the reason that I think
Democrats haven't done as well as we should
when it comes to healthcare is that our ideas are too small.
You know, we talk about, you know, our prescription drug policy for a long time was, you know,
bulk negotiating the price of the top 10 prescription drugs.
It's like it's good policy, but it leaves people feeling cold.
People want a hard cap on all drug prices, all drug prices.
They want a limit to the amount of profit that drug companies can make.
They want the ads off the air
and all that money plowed back into,
you know, prescription drug price reductions.
So I just think the Democrats are gonna,
you know, whether it's a single payer system or not,
the Democrats are gonna have to talk about the government
getting involved in the healthcare system
to limit the amount of profit that the private sector makes
and taxing long- those savings to consumers.
So speaking of big ideas, we of the G7 spend double what the other G6 spend on healthcare
with worse outcomes, and most of them have nationalized or socialized medicine, whatever
you want to call it.
Would you be up for something along the lines of lowering the age eligibility of, say, Medicare
by two years for 30 years and eventually having national healthcare?
I'm certainly game for that.
There's another idea that I prefer,
which is a national Medicare buy-in, right?
To put Medicare as an option for every single individual and every single business.
It's not an easy thing because you'd have to price
Medicare into the private sector,
but I actually have a piece of legislation to do it.
There's other pieces of legislation out there.
Medicare then would exist on
every individual insurance exchange.
Every business would have the ability to buy
the Medicare plan for its employees.
It's a way to test the idea. You its employees. And it's a way to kind of test the idea, okay?
You think private insurance is better insurance,
it's cheaper insurance,
well, let it go toe to toe with Medicare.
I think what would happen is very quickly,
individuals and businesses would choose to go on Medicare
because it just is better healthcare for lower price.
And you'd have a very natural market-based transition
away from what we have
now to something that looks like Medicare for all.
Once Medicare had 60,
70 percent of the business,
frankly, the other companies probably couldn't operate.
So that to me is the big idea that gets it to where we probably need to get to,
but it does it through consumer and business choice,
which is just a whole lot more politically easy than what Bernie is proposing,
which is to just have a big legislative fight over requiring that everybody be on Medicare
and banning private health care insurance.
That's really interesting. I hadn't heard that. Yeah.
That's why we have them on, Jess. That's why we have them on.
That's why we have you on.
There's a couple of good ideas out there that you guys haven't thought of yet.
Well, and we need a new title for the podcast
because moderates aren't where it's at.
We have to be more lefty.
All right. Senator Murphy, thank you so much for your time.
Hopefully you'll come back again sometime soon.
Thank you, Senator.
Thanks, guys.
All right, that's all for this episode.
Thanks for listening to Raging Moderates.
Our producers are David Toledo and Shinene Onike.
Our technical director is Drew Burroughs.
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This week, I'm talking to Representative Ro Khanna, who's a personal favorite of mine.
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See you later, Scott.
See you, Jess.