The Tucker Carlson Show - Ken Paxton: How Soros Protects Drug Cartels, Being Blacklisted by Fox News, and the Laken Riley Act
Episode Date: February 12, 2025When you care about Ukraine’s borders more than your own, things tend to fall apart. Texas AG Ken Paxton on how John Cornyn and other negligent buffoons allowed drug cartels to take over the state. ... (00:00) Donald Trump vs. The Mexican Drug Cartels (3:40) How George Soros Controls Our Politicians (11:04) Why Soros, Obama, and Establishment Washington Wants to Destroy the US (17:49) Ken Paxton's Legal War to Save the Border Wall (19:54) John Cornyn Is a Puppet of the Left (30:02) Why Paxton Is Blacklisted From Fox News Paid partnerships with: PureTalk: Get an iPhone 14 or Samsung Galaxy for $0 https://PureTalk.com/Tucker Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Glad to be here. So the most pressing problem, I think it's fair to say, as an outsider in Texas is immigration.
It's totally changed your state in every way.
Do you expect that the new administration and the executive orders in the first couple of days are
going to have a material effect a noticeable effect i know they are just because i saw what
happened four years ago or eight years ago when trump came into office i mean i went through
i've been in politics since bush was in office and and i've seen how republicans and democrats
have dealt with immigration they have not dealt with effectively because they have not enforced
federal law.
Trump was the first president to use the force of our federal laws, which are good and designed to protect us, whether it was Romania, Mexico, or whether it was Title 42, or it was stopping catch-and-release, basic common sense things like building a wall.
Those things work.
They just absolutely work.
And just what he's done in the first couple of days is significant.
Yes.
We as states don't have much authority to stop illegal immigration, now the military, our military force can be used against them rather than just using border patrol and leaving the states subject to the cartels' crimes.
You do wonder about the power of the drug cartels.
They've, you know, a lot of the weapons we've sent to Ukraine have been sold by the Ukrainian military onto the black market. That's a fact. A lot, up to half. And a lot of them have been purchased by the drug cartels you see in Mexico, pitched battles, military engagements between the cartels and the Mexican military, where they're very, you know, they're well-armed. Are you worried about that happening in Texas? Absolutely. I think the Biden administration has indirectly funded the cartels.
They have encouraged, by saying no deportations on day one of his administration, they've encouraged illegal immigration.
And that's a profit center for the cartels.
They make $8,000 to $12,000 a person.
If you just do the numbers on $14 million, that's a lot of money.
They're making billions every month.
And then they can go and use that money to buy weapons from Ukraine, which we're funding.
We're sending that over free.
So indirectly, they're part of the whole process of, one, allowing the cartels to have access to our country and allowing them to make a profit and then to use that money to arm themselves in a significant way.
That's our government.
Well, it's horrifying.
I mean, because, you know, some of the weapons are surface-to-air weapons.
So you wonder, like, what's the threat to commercial air travel?
You can see things kind of starting to fall apart.
Is there, like, widespread acknowledgement of this in Texas crime that people see as it relates to the cartels moving into our state.
And that network that they built is not just in Texas.
They are building that network all over the country.
And they're not going to want to give it up.
They're making too much money on drugs, sex trafficking, other crimes, and the importation of people.
Every big construction site in this country has prostitution run by the cartels, often
of children.
I don't see anyone doing anything about it.
And it makes you wonder, like Mexico is completely, utterly corrupt because of cartel money.
Politicians, judges, journalists, all on the payroll.
You see this in other Latin
American countries. I mean, our politicians are not that expensive. Like you could do that in a
state like Texas, right? Or California. Well, here's one of the biggest problems we have. We
have it in Texas. We have it in other parts of the country. George Soros has figured this out.
He's gone in and elected DAs in Democratic counties, Austin, Houston, Dallas, San Antonio. So 70% of our population
controlled by Soros DAs. He went in and knocked off Democratic DAs because we can't get elected
Republicans in those areas. So he went in and knocked off DAs who were actually prosecuting
and replaced them with Soros DAs. Now our legislature could fix that. They haven't.
They could come in and say, AG, you have concurrent jurisdiction
to go after these crimes.
But because they haven't done that,
crime is proliferating in all of our cities,
financial crimes, other types of crimes,
because they will not prosecute crimes.
And so the cartels have an open invitation.
So do other cartels from other countries.
So if you go out to our financial crime unit in Tyler,
they will tell you about all these crime groups coming in from other
countries because they know they can get away with it.
And our legislature so far has not fixed that.
Why?
Okay.
Then the question of motive arises, like why wouldn't you want to stop crime in your state?
That's a very good question.
I find that DAs, they have more power in Texas than any elected official I've ever seen because
they're not accountable to anybody. If they commit a crime, no one can prosecute them. If it's a state crime, they'd more power in Texas than any elected official I've ever seen because they're not accountable to anybody.
If they commit a crime, no one can prosecute them.
If it's a state crime, they'd have to prosecute themselves.
And they can allow any crimes in their area.
And they can go after, in Texas, it is so easy to get an indictment.
You just walk in.
You can tell the grand jury anything you want to.
You can lie.
Once you have the indictment, you've got it.
There's no getting out of it.
And so I think a lot of our politicians are afraid of their DAs, even if they're liberal Democrats.
But if we don't get control of this in our state, in another state, and give somebody like the Attorney General, I'm not going to be there forever, give that authority so that there's another way to prosecute when the Soros DAs, and Soros has figured it out, but the Republicans have not.
I mean, it's so obvious just in your 45-second explanation that it makes sense.
So is it that they haven't figured it out or do they have a higher loyalty?
They're afraid of the DAs.
The DAs come in and lobby and everybody's afraid of their own DA that they'll get indicted if they do it.
There's just that power because to get an indictment in Texas, you don't have to have – there's no recording of it.
It's only one side of the story.
You can, and if they lie and they get the indictment, there's no remedy.
There's no consequence to the DA and there's no remedy for the victim of that lie.
You are going to trial.
You can even, if somehow you could find out what happened in that secret grand jury proceeding, which I have before, it doesn't matter.
You can go to judge and say they lied.
You still are indicted and you're still at risk of going to prison.
You have to tell your kids you've been indicted.
And you might be in prison. You might be in front of a jury that doesn't know the truth
and you go to jail or you're in a Democratic county, you might go to jail
on something that they made up.
So you really think, I mean, I'm sorry to be so naive, but I grew up in this country and we didn't have things like this that I was aware of in 1985.
But you think that members of the Texas legislature are afraid they'll be indicted if they push back against the DAs?
I think there is a fear and there is this lobby.
These DAs have so much power.
Otherwise, why would they allow Soros to control the major cities?
It's obvious that they're not prosecuting crimes.
They won't even prosecute shoplifting.
If you have a free ride, as long as you take $750 a day in Dallas County, whatever the number is, and you go to different stores, you can do that every day.
The DA there said, we will not prosecute you.
But why would you want that unless you were trying to destroy a civilization?
Soros, that's exactly what he wants to do. So there's no political goal here.
It's just destabilization. Right. And it's so easy. It is literally so easy to do that. And
he also, I believe, got control of our court of criminal appeals, which is our highest court. We
have a bifurcated system in Texas. We have the Texas Supreme Court,
that's the final appeal in civil,
and the Court of Criminal Appeals.
But no one knew who they were,
and suddenly they strike down a law
that directed me to prosecute voter fraud,
and they took it away just by saying,
oh, it's unconstitutional
because you're in the executive branch,
and separation of power says you can't be in court.
How insane is that?
So I've had to go run three,
I'm trying to take that court back,
but right now I can't even prosecute voter fraud,
which opens us up to unfair elections in Texas,
which I was prosecuting plenty of voter fraud
before that happened.
So who's supposed to prosecute voter fraud?
The Soros DAs.
So that's where we're at in Texasxas so that's why i ran this
is a nine-member court six-year terms they waited until two days after the filing deadline to
announce their decision this is a 1951 statute that has thousands of cases of precedent and they
came up with this insane idea that it was unconstitutional for the attorney general to be
in court because i'm in the executive branch if If that's true, every AG in the country is violating the constitution. So that was a
rationale. I had to wait two years. I recruited three people to take out the three people that
were up. So we've replaced three. We've got one good one on there, but we're still down 5-4. So
until we fix those things in Texas, we're at risk. Oh, big time. Oh, big time. So do you think that these Soros DAs
have hesitated to go after the drug cartels? They don't. They don't go after crime in general.
They do political crimes, but they generally are not there. They don't do their jobs. They
don't prosecute. Even when people get killed? Hit and miss, hit and miss. But they generally are not there. They don't do their jobs. They don't prosecute. Even when people get killed.
Hit and miss.
Hit and miss.
But they're not.
The message from Soros is let as much crime go as possible.
It's amazing that a non-U.S. citizen who hates the United States, hates the West, could have that much power in our country.
It's just his money. It doesn't take very much.
To elect a DA in a Travis county, which is Austin, you're in a Democratic money. It doesn't take very much. To elect a DA in a
Travis County, which is Austin, you're in a Democratic primary. It doesn't take that many
votes. I was working with a DA there who was a Democrat. I didn't agree with her on everything,
but she was doing her job. He spends a little bit of money, takes her out, and suddenly now I've got
a DA who won't prosecute anything. Same in Bear County, which is San Antonio. I worked with a DA
a lot in Bear County, a guy named Nikola Hood.
His brother is now converted to Republican.
He's a state rep.
He was awesome to work with.
And he was a Democrat.
He was a Democrat.
He did his job.
Guess what?
Soros replaced him with money.
So that's what, it doesn't take him that much money
and controls our whole situation with crime
and controls our judicial system,
at least on the criminal side,
and we're sitting here letting it happen in Texas and other states.
What did you think when Joe Biden gave George Soros the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
Disgusting.
I mean, the guy's done more to, I mean, as far as I know,
there are not many people in the world that have done more harm to our country,
and he's being applauded by Joe Biden.
It's not surprising because Joe Biden has the same motivations.
Yeah. I mean, what did Joe Biden do that was good?
Can you name it?
I can't.
No, they worked from day one to destroy what future,
what past generations had built this amazing country.
And it had to be on purpose.
And the reason I say that is because you would think that randomly
he would have done something good if it weren't purposeful.
He would have had something economically, internationally,
the border, something would have been right,
right? Just randomly.
The law of averages suggests
a victory once in a while. The bell curve
tells you he would have had something good. He didn't have
anything good. It was all on the other end of the curve, the downside
of the curve, which was harm to Americans.
That cannot be accidental.
And to individual Americans, I think that's absolutely
right. But again, I'm so fixated on this.
Why would you want to do that?
I truly believe that this, and this started, I think, with President Obama.
First president, I believe, that didn't love America.
That really thought we were a bad country.
That thought we were racist and that we deserved to be taken down to another level.
And I think they operate under this idea that we're a
bad country there were bad people and that we we don't deserve this and they fundamentally don't
believe in what was created here i i truly believe that and they want to destroy it take it down
dismantle because they think it's bad they think we're bad i i don't see another explanation there's
hate behind it there's no doubt about it i mean how could you how could you wind up with it with
the outcome with people dying of drug ods on the street and stores closing because of stealing and kids cutting their own genitals off?
Like, you would have to hate someone.
Do you remember the contempt that Obama said?
They cling to their religion and their guns and their God.
There is contempt for that, what the founders put in in place a bunch of white racists who had
slaves and so that that permeates his view of america and yet that's not there's no excuse
for slavery we we messed up in that we had we fixed it we were moving in the right direction
but his view is we're broken because of that and therefore we we deserve to be dismantled because
we don't it's not about that i mean there are countries where state slavery is still practiced um in certain countries
but there were like critical u.s allies that had slavery until the 1970s and no one ever 1970s and
no one ever mentions that what holds them responsible obama has no problem taking money
for speeches in those countries that's why it doesn't make sense. It's slavery around the world forever.
And it's awful.
It is awful.
And the U.S. and Great Britain were the reason that we don't have it anymore.
And globally, for the most part, and no civilized country would tolerate slavery.
But if you're against slavery, by the way, why would you be for the drug cartels,
which practice slavery, which sell people?
All I know is it seems like the things they focus on do the greatest harm to America.
Oh, I totally agree.
But it doesn't, I think it's a mistake
to take their explanations at face value.
I think there's something deeper,
like they just hate, want to hurt people.
They do not have an abiding love.
Look, I didn't like Jimmy Carter as president.
I think he did a good job,
but he didn't have a hatred for this country.
I don't think so.
I don't think he did.
I think we've had a lot of mediocre to bad presidents
who still didn't want the country to be disbanded.
I agree.
But I think it started with Obama.
Biden didn't know what he was doing.
He was being told by others he wasn't competent.
And this was the third presidency of President Obama.
And he didn't have to worry about being popular anymore because he limited himself a little bit because he wanted to get reelected.
He didn't care if Joe Biden got reelected.
You think it's over for Obama?
His influence is permanently diminished?
I think it's been impacted and affected.
It could be.
If we continue the momentum, we don't mess this up.
If we get caught up in not focusing on the best things for America, he can come right back in.
If we don't take care of the American people and make that our number one focus, what's best for the American people?
If we stay on that track, we have a really good chance of being successful for a long time.
If we lose sight of that and we start worrying about our power and our-
I agree.
Once we start taking care of ourselves, then they have a chance back in because the American people will see that.
I think that's really wise.
I'm concerned about that.
Not because of any individual acting in bad faith, but because human nature is what it is.
It's exactly right.
The Presbyterians actually had that right when they set this government up.
It was based on the depravity of men it was the reason they wanted three branches of government that made it so frustrating to get things done it's because
they didn't trust people in power because every human i wouldn't trust myself in power at all
i don't want power because i don't trust myself i don't think any an honest person can really say
my motives are pure right no i agree that. We all have this pull towards.
Yeah, and anyone who doesn't admit that's a liar.
Right.
So, yeah, I want oversight of me.
Right.
You know, and then you see Chuck Schumer,
and you're like, that guy needs a lot of oversight,
like armed oversight.
You know what I mean?
Like all of us do.
Yeah, I think you got it right in your speech
at the Bible Museum during the inauguration
about humility and realizing your need for God's work in your life.
And without that, we all have a tendency to go down the wrong path.
A hundred percent.
And you lie to yourself, oh, I'm doing this for the greater good.
You know, I have known people personally who've killed other human beings because they thought or they convinced themselves, you know, this is actually you know some the humanity will benefit from oh yeah that's what we all convince ourselves
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So can I ask you, I was reading in the final weeks before the election that the Biden administration was selling off portions of the materials for the border wall. Is that actually true? I believe it is. And here's what happened. We had sued the Biden
administration a couple of years ago. And you know, these cases, these federal cases don't
happen overnight. It took us a couple of years. We sued him and we said, Congress appropriated money
for the building of the wall. You are not building that wall. You're actually selling off assets. So
we sued him. We won that lawsuit. And in May, we got an injunction from a federal judge saying, you, DOJ, you, Biden
administration, cannot sell any more assets off. So then I get a call from President Trump a month
ago, and he said, they're selling assets off. So would you sue them? And I said, well, I don't
have to if I've already done it. So I already got an order. So we go back into court. We tell the
judge, hey, they're selling off assets.
We've been told they're selling off assets.
We went into accounting.
And before we got there, DOJ is calling us, begging us, hey, we're not selling.
We swear we won't sell any more assets.
They didn't say they hadn't.
They said we won't sell any more.
So they signed an agreement and said we wouldn't sell any more.
But the judge, which we asked for, there's going to be an accounting and there's potential sanctions if they lied and they follow it, they did not follow that order.
We don't know that yet,
but we're going to know that soon
now that DOJ is switching.
We're going to know that soon.
I truly believe they were selling off assets
in violation, not only of federal law,
but in violation of a court order
that we got in May saying,
you can't sell off assets
because we were trying to protect those assets
so that if Trump won, we would come back
because I knew Biden
would never build that wall, even if he was instructed by Congress to do so.
How hard is it? I never have really understood. Why is it so hard to build a,
seems like a pretty straightforward infrastructure project.
It is a pretty straightforward infrastructure project, but they hate it. It's some kind of
symbol of, I don't know, racism or whatever, but it's not. It protects us from exactly what we've
had.
So why not pass a law that says anyone, any elected official who opposes the building of a border wall is prohibited from putting a lock on the front door of his house?
Well, that would affect a lot of our public. I mean, my own senator would have trouble with
that. John Cornyn, because he's been against the border wall saying it wouldn't work. But
we all know that walls do work. They do work. And I've seen it. I've seen how it works.
Why would John Cornyn be opposed to a border wall
protecting his own state? I don't understand it. I've seen quotes from him. I've seen video clips
from him over and over how it's not enough. It doesn't work. It's a bad idea. He is opposed to
the border wall. But he's, I mean, boy, he's helped appropriate billions and billions and
billions of dollars for border security in other countries. I know. It's really odd that he thinks it works
other places, but it doesn't work in Texas. And he's sort of mocked it and said it doesn't work.
It's not effective. I'd love to hear him mock Israel's border walls. Do you think he will?
No. Well, I'd love to hear him mock Ukraine's territorial integrity. Do you think he will?
Nope. Never heard him do that. What is that about?
I don't understand it.
I mean, I think the Bushes had the same idea that open borders were relatively good.
I don't think that he or the Bushes- But only for us.
No one's calling on China to open its borders.
I don't know why they have this view.
But they, I mean, even under the Bush presidency, I don't think they took immigration seriously.
The first president I've ever seen take it seriously is Donald J. Trump.
How did John, I mean, this is a question I could ask if so many, no offense.
I say this as a Texas lover who's got a lot of relatives there, including a child.
So I love Texas.
However, I think you've got some of the worst politicians in the country.
How did that happen?
How does that happen?
So I, you know, I think about the Texas House and
what's going on there, what's gone on there for 16 years, where a small group of Republicans
for power aligned themselves in the House with the Democrats so that the Speaker is elected by
mostly Democrats and a few Republicans. They just did it again. Dustin Burroughs just got elected by
a minority of Republicans after he put the rules in place that the caucus,
the Republican caucus, would decide who the speaker was.
And when he lost that vote in caucus, he walked out, cut a deal with the Democrats,
and he just became Speaker of the Texas House.
That is for power.
That is for his own personal power.
And the Republicans that do that have traded getting good policy done,
getting property tax done, school choice, protecting the border, not doing impeachments of guys that just got elected.
They traded that to have power.
That's all it is.
With all this drug cartel money in your state, it's not going to get better.
Because you could just buy a member of the Texas legislature.
What would that cost?
Not too much, right?
Not too much.
I mean, these guys, I mean, they only make $600 a month.
So, you know, anything is good after that, I guess. We're pretty vulnerable that way. I think
we are. And I think a lot of these people, because Texas House, you get paid $600 a month. So most
people that run have to have money. You can't. Of course. And if you don't have money, you're
getting paid somewhere for something because it's impossible to live on obviously $600 a month. So
everybody has to either work, and it's hard to work when you've got a job that may take a year out of every two years.
So specifically on John Cornyn, how did he get to be a senator when statewide in Texas?
So this goes back to George W. Bush appointed him to be a U.S. Supreme Court judge in, not U.S.,
but a Texas Supreme Court judge. And when he did that, he authored an opinion that created this
thing called Robin Hood, which takes from the wealthy school districts and gives to the poor,
supposedly. And what that did to our system was it created a mediocre school system because it's
just socialism. Instead of just letting the wealthy school districts
make their schools however they want to,
we've got to take their money away.
Why don't we just fund the poor school districts?
It makes no sense.
But I think-
Because it's not about helping the bottom.
It's about crushing the top.
It's about making it all equal.
That's socialism.
It doesn't work.
It's never worked anywhere.
We have no example that it actually works.
So, and yet John Cornyn did that for George W. Bush
because George wanted to be president.
He didn't want to pass a major tax increase,
so he let John do it judicially.
It was a 5-4 decision.
John Cornyn was on the 5-4.
Really?
And I'm pretty sure he authored it.
This was in the late 90s.
Yes, and for that, they pushed him,
Rove and Bush pushed him to be the Attorney General of Texas,
first Republican, actually,
and then they pushed him into the U.S. Senate. So he has been pushed and funded by that group. And fortunately, Texans have caught on to that and realized that group, whatever they say they's out there campaigning for Planned Parenthood, voting for Kamala Harris.
I was with him two days ago and Obama at the inaugurations right next to him, across from him.
I watched him, you know, pal around with him.
You know, he's friends with Obama.
That's his world.
Right, that's his world.
That's all well known.
But what's pretty distressing was running mate endorsed Kamala Harris and his sad little daughter campaigned for Kamala Harris.
So that whole world is now they're all Democrats.
But John Cornyn is still an elected statewide elected official in Texas.
He's a puppet of the left, obviously.
How does that continue to happen. So I think it's because people weren't as aware of what the Bushes did and what he's done,
but they've become more aware because of people like you and others who have outed that. So he's
never had a real problem. He had four people running against him. None of them had money.
Nobody had ever run before. No one even knew who they were. It was all fake. And he claims,
you know, you got 76% of them. Of course, he had nobody running against him that I could tell you
who it was. And I'm pretty involved in politics.
Somebody needs to run against him this time because he has been there for, what, 16 years?
Just in that position, count his AG, that's four years.
He was Texas Supreme Court Justice.
And before that, he's been doing this a long time, and he's gotten away with this.
It's about time that he be held accountable because I can't think of a single thing that he's done for texas that's good he has no claim for doing things good for texas or no he's helped zielinski and that's pretty much it so um how do okay so what's the process the guy i mean i've never met anyone who
likes john cornyn never met anyone who thought he's achieved anything never met anyone who thinks
he's smart he's pompous he's quite a self-righteous little guy. So I think he's very unpopular with every person I've ever met in my
life. And yet all things being equal, he gets reelected. So how do you stop something like
that? So I'll give you an example of what you're just saying. So right after I beat George P. Bush,
who he came out and endorsed, of course,
and then he made disparaging comments about me being an embarrassment to Texas,
and he made some comment about me
being part of Russia propaganda.
Oh, you were Russian propaganda?
Oh, I don't know how that happened.
I'm in Texas.
I became part of the Russian propaganda
because I criticized him on Ukraine.
He said that you were Russian propaganda?
Yes, yes.
That's what he said.
Crazy stuff.
People didn't used to say things like that. well guess what so who's the more loyal american you
or or john cornyn like i'm who's more focused on the fortunes of his own country and his own people
you or john cornyn who obviously doesn't care at all didn't say anything as his own state was
invaded and lectures us endlessly so tool the intel agency's lecturing us about ukraine but
you're the disloyal american it's actually like you shouldn't say things like that it's a tool the intel agency is lecturing us about Ukraine, but you're the disloyal American.
It's actually like you shouldn't say things like that.
It's crazy.
And so justice.
The crazy thing, we have a Texas Republican convention shortly after the election where I win by 38 points against George B. Bush, which is a pretty significant margin and a primary.
So we have the convention.
There's 12,000 Republicans there.
He and his wife walk up on stage and for 10 straight minutes, he doesn't say a word, he gets booed. For the 20
minutes that he's speaking, he never adjusts his speech. He gets booed the entire 20 minutes. He
gets booed 30 minutes straight. I'm standing waiting to go on stage. I walk away because
I'm afraid of what I might say after he's said these things public to me. I go up and get a
standing ovation. So there is the people of Texas know John Cornyn,
and I don't think he'll survive another primary.
So how do you stop this cycle?
So I think in Texas it's very doable because people realize now who John Cornyn is.
We have a primary next, not this March, but the next March.
So somebody needs to run against him in that primary.
So in a year, basically in a year and two months, you have a primary.
Yep.
So that primary.
Ooh, it's imminent.
It's coming.
Yeah, absolutely.
So he's, I don't think he's long for this Senate world.
So, well, I'm sure he's got such an enormous reservoir of skills and talent that he'll thrive in the private sector.
Doing what?
I don't know if he's ever been there.
He couldn't start my truck on a cold day.
He has no idea.
He has no skills.
But anyway, sorry, I'm being too mean, but it's all true.
How do you beat him in a primary?
So, I mean, I don't know.
I'm running for sure.
I'm looking at it probably in the next few months.
I'll be talking to people around the state.
But, I mean, I've run two primaries against George P. Bush,
another guy, Dan Branch,
who was one of George W.'s close friends.
I knew Dan Branch, yeah.
Yeah, one of his close friends,
but very moderate.
You're a nice guy.
I beat him nicer to you than he was me.
Yeah.
I served in the House,
wasn't always so nice to me.
65-35 him, he had a lot more money.
Same with Bush.
I beat him 68-32.
So primary voters, if they're educated, will make good choices based on what you've actually done.
And that was always me.
With Dan Branch, we were in the House together for 10 years, and I moved over to the Senate for two while he was in the House.
And I said, don't listen to the rhetoric.
Look at the record.
We both have a record.
Go look at the record.
Compare them.
See if they're the same.
They're not.
He can say what he wants.
He is not what he's – he's running on my record. Look at his record. And that works in
primaries. And the same thing with John Cornyn. I bring out what he said about Trump and how
disparaging he was at Trump in 2016 and 2000, just in this last election saying he shouldn't run.
He's not the right guy. I mean, John's wrong about most everything. There's very few things. He tends
to side with the swamp in Washington and he does what Karl Rove tells him to do.
So that doesn't work in Republican primaries, not in Texas.
What does Karl Rove have?
I mean, Karl Rove is, I mean, he's got to be 70 anyway at this point, I would think.
He's been around, I mean, I've known him for pushing 30 years.
I don't think his track record is something anyone could brag about
at all he's been wrong about he's sub genius i would say for sure i'm a genius no you're not
and um his records just he's not and so like why does he still have influence does he is he still
effective let's be honest he's propped up by fox news he has the platform they take care of him
he he can keep people, like for instance,
I can't get on Fox News anymore.
He's still on Fox News?
He's still on Fox News
and he's kept me off
for a couple years
because when I ran against Bush,
they got Bush on
and took me off
and all the shows
I used to be on,
almost all of them.
Are you serious?
I know that for a fact.
I don't have a TV
that's a disadvantage.
Karl Rove is still on Fox.
He's still on Fox.
I just saw him
during the inauguration.
He's there a lot.
I used to go in studio at the same place in Austin.
I used to trade out with him.
Yeah, I've been to that studio.
Yeah, and he got me cut out for sure.
And I know that from hosts of shows who have said,
sorry, weak.
They will even like, I will have a case.
They will, we will get, we will,
Jesse will talk to my communication.
We'll talk to them.
They'll book me.
Then they'll cancel me. Then they'll go try to find another AG, they'll call the Republican administration, can we find another AG, or they'll ask for somebody else in my office other than me.
That was Karl Rove blacklisting me on Fox.
Karl Rove is booking shows at Fox News.
He just goes around and he controls.
That's so crazy.
No, I've been told by people you know that have shows.
I know everyone there.
I just don't want to out them.
Yeah,
no,
I get it.
That have told me we can't have you.
And for the last two years,
I've been on Fox,
like maybe a couple of times.
I used to be on every day.
Sometimes.
Imagine if I can just say,
since I know these systems,
I lived it.
Imagine you're the host of a show and you get a call saying the sitting
Republican attorney general
of the second biggest state is not allowed on your air because of reasons we won't explain
because like carl rove it's like a totally discredited buffoon doesn't like the guy be like
buzz off well i think he went to like paul ryan the board and just got it's like i am why would
you cave to that like no job is worth taking orders you
didn't cave to that well i got fired exactly but that i wouldn't even consider that like what
i would always say on the three or four times they ever said anything like that to me i'd be
like that's totally great just put it in writing just send me an email explaining why we can't
have this guest the rationale for it and and and i'll assess and i'll respond in writing
the second you say put it in writing,
they're like, oh, they never call you again.
I'm just telling you.
Just put it in writing.
It's totally fine.
You know what?
I've got some hearing issues.
So if you could just write it down,
explain what exactly about Ken Paxton is like verboten.
I was supposed to go on a show.
There was still one host that would sort of have me
and I was supposed to go on this show
and I had two different settings to go on, and both got canceled.
I was told, you got canceled from the podcast.
We're moving in another direction.
Yeah.
Even if it's my case.
I mean, I file a case, and they want another attorney general to come on and talk about it.
Yes, I would just never put up with that.
That's what they do.
I would always call and say, like, what is this?
Well, the decision's been made.
By whom and why?
But that's why Karl Rov still has his platform because it's all the most disgusting kind of
power which is like stealthy feline power behind the scenes power rather than just say you know
here are my views and this is what i think and i'm happy to debate it or whatever i think you're
wrong i don't like you know ken paxton's evil here's why they'll never do that because they're
not honorable people and i'm not talking about at that company. I mean, more broadly in our society, like the people who win every bureaucratic battle are exactly the same was done in three days, no due process. I didn't get any information. I wasn't allowed to participate or
respond all behind closed doors. And then they leak stuff to the media. That's not even true.
And I've got a gag order on me and I can't talk. It's so dishonorable. How do you survive that?
It's really hard. How do you live with yourself? Like, how do you live with yourself? If you
operate that way, convince themselves, I don't like someone. I'm always delighted to call him
on the phone and say, I don't like you and here's why.
They convince themselves that I deserve it
because I'm a bad person
because all of this stuff is true,
but none of it was proof.
You know why?
Because it wasn't true.
But why do it behind the scenes?
Because, I can tell you why.
So I had friends that were called
into the Speaker's office,
Republican House members,
and they were saying,
look, we need you to vote for this impeachment.
They said, well, can you just show us some evidence?
Well, you have this three-hour hearing.
Well, there's no evidence there.
Can we see some evidence?
No, you're not getting any more.
Well, can we have a little more time to kind of figure this out?
We've only had three days.
We're going to vote on this in three days.
No, we're not giving you any more time.
What about, can we talk to the witnesses?
We don't even know who they are. None of them were sworn in.
We don't even know who the witnesses against
him are. And they said,
no, we're not going to let you do that. And they said, well,
why is it that we can't
see the evidence? Why is it that we can't see
the witnesses? Why is it that it has to be in three
days over Memorial weekend? And they said,
because if we give Ken more than three
days, he'll win. That's
what they told him.
That is, you know, if you find yourself living your life like that,
you have to make a change because that's really deceptive.
That was the Republican, supposedly the Republican House,
controlled by the Democrats.
Oh, they're all like that.
I got called in one time by executives of a company,
and they're trying to tell me that Roger Ailes was a rapist who I, you know, I knew
well and really loved, you know, flawed guy like we all are, but I didn't feel like a rapist to me.
Pretty sure he wasn't a rapist. And I remember saying like, okay, who did he rape? Well,
we know this. We just know this. You know, we had Robeson Gray do this investigation. He raped
people and well, okay, who were they? Because I know everybody. I work there. I know this. We just know this. You know, we had Robeson Gray do this investigation. He raped people. And well, okay, who were they? Because I know everybody. I work there. I know everybody.
No, I can't. Just trust me. If you saw what we saw, you, and I was like, okay, but can you just
tell me like, what were the circumstances of the rape? This is like an elderly man who's got
hemophilia. I don't think he's raping anybody. And they were very annoyed that I asked the basic
questions. And look, I don't know so many things I don't know, but I did come out of that meeting thinking he didn't rape anybody.
You know what I mean?
Oh, absolutely.
I see it all the time where people get accused of things, then they get overwhelmed by media, and then they're—
They get overwhelmed.
People always say the same thing.
We know this.
We know—look, I've talked to people.
We know this.
Look, let's just start there.
We know this.
Karl Rove did that to me.
He went to people and said, we know this.
We know this.
We know this.
And they're like, well, where's the proof? I've got it somewhere. It's the vaccine safe and effective.
Okay.
Then it turns out it's not safe and effective.
And then they don't have enough self-respect to demand an accounting of those lies.
Like you told me this turned out not to be true.
Why did you do that?
No one ever does that.
Or that Karl Rove shows up and is like, we know Ken Paxton's a criminal.
Okay.
Where's everyone's self-respect?
Like I'm an adult man.
You can't lie to me
okay that just seems like i'm kind of baseline it is a baseline and that's why when i was in
the middle of that impeachment and i had no voice i could not respond i'm getting beaten up every day
told my lawyers i know you i know you think i'm going to resign but i haven't told no one i'm
going to resign because i'm not even allowed to talk to the media so how could i even tell
because there were printing stories i'm going to resign i said'm not even allowed to talk to the media. So how could I even tell? Because there were printing stories I'm going to resign.
I said, I want you to know, I don't care how bad it gets.
I don't care what they say.
These senators are going to, I'm going to make them vote.
They're going to, I got elected four and a half months ago by the people.
Let them vote me out. If they do, they will be accountable to voters, but I will not give in no matter what.
I watched it up close and you won it was it was amazing it was it was it was hard
to so how many times did you win at the supreme court with the pre the bite administration how
many times yeah gosh i mean we had 106 cases we won over 75 of our cases but several months that
we i can't even keep okay but yeah 106 a 106. A lot. We went there a lot.
You sued him 106 times.
So I'm kind of thinking, since this is politics, that that may have had a role in your impeachment.
I have no doubt.
You know how I know they were there?
I'm convinced that the Biden administration went to the house, Texas house, with the Democrats
that we want him impeached.
And then Biden sent two lawyers from the Department of Justice to help the General Investigating
Committee, which is five member committee, three Republicans, two Democrats.
They had four lawyers.
Two of them came from the Justice Department, just randomly showed up to help.
Was the Biden administration involved?
I don't have proof.
I'm not stupid.
That's unbelievable.
So do you expect that Karl Rove will be involved in this primary?
Oh, absolutely. He will do whatever he can to stop. He does whatever he can to stop conservatives in Texas in general.
But not just in Texas, nationally.
Yeah. His fundraising, everything he's got to help Republicans, he goes into primaries to get Republicans, to take out conservatives.
He is not there raising money to go after Democrats.'s there to go after republicans what do you think he's doing i mean it's amazing the number of republicans who are republicans who are
mobilizing against trump's nominees particularly bobby kennedy and tulsi gabbard he must be have
i i don't know this but do you think carl has a hand in any of that i would not surprise me at all
wouldn't surprise me not at all and the reason they want to go after those two is because they're gone they're effective they're courageous of course
and they're going to change america if they're given the opportunity exactly right in there
you know so sad to see um some republicans who i know well mobilizing against bobby kennedy and
they're saying we're doing because he's pro-choice. And while I'm vehemently, passionately pro-life, I have always been, I will always be.
But these are all people who are themselves pro-choice, who supported plenty of pro-choice nominees.
And it's not about that.
It's about the fear that Bobby Kennedy means it, that he's sincere, and that he'll get something done.
And by getting done, it's like fighting the corruption that controls Washington. The thing that's most missing in political leadership is not knowledge of what to do or how to do it.
It's courage.
And the thing that Bobby Kennedy has, he will take on the Democrats, his own family, and the food, the big food world.
That's exactly right.
And they know that.
And that's what they're afraid of.
So they have to stop him.
Yeah. It's the testosterone level that scares them. It's totally, you're exactly right. And they know that, and that's what they're afraid of, so they have to stop them. Yeah.
It's the testosterone level that scares them.
That's totally, you're absolutely right.
Unafraid.
He's unafraid.
So in September, we went across the country, coast to coast, 17 different cities on a nationwide live tour, and it was amazing.
We brought the entire staff with us, like we always do, because we've all worked together for so long and enjoy traveling together.
And one of our producers is a documentary filmmaker. And so he decided to make a documentary film about our trip a full
month across America with some of the most interesting people around. Different people
join us every single night. Bon Gino and Russell Brand and Bobby Kennedy and J.D. Vance and Donald
Trump, et cetera, et cetera. We had the best time. And the fruit of that is a documentary called On the Road, the Tucker Carlson Live Tour,
which is available right now on TCN.
On the Road, Tucker Carlson Live Tour is hilarious.
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T's and Z's apply.
It's interesting. Do you think it's
fair to keep a list? I mean, I'm probably
too fixated on this just because I've lived in a Republican world in Washington for so long, but I think it's fair to keep a list? I mean, I'm probably too fixated on this because I've lived in a Republican world in Washington for so long, but I think it's fair to keep a list of like the Republicans who are working against reform, who are working against Trump's best decisions, which are reform minded decisions like nominating Bobby and Tulsi. Like we should keep a list of them. And it should be open. We should be transparent. We should tell the world,
like, who's working against us
because they've done all this
and they try to do this
in secret.
And then they go back
and tell their constituents,
well, yeah, I did my best.
No, they did not do their best.
They were behind the scenes.
This is John Cornyn's career.
This is what these people do.
Transparency,
just like my impeachment,
the transparency of a trial
actually helped me
because the truth comes out.
Transparency is what we need in government and we don't get it with people like the people you're talking about.
I think that's really deep and true. The thing they hate most is exposure. I've always thought
that's why they hated Trump. They were worried he was going to declassify stuff or say secrets
out loud that implicate the people running things. They hate him for that. And they
hate him because he also is courageous and he doesn't, his agenda is the American people.
Yeah, no, I think that's interesting. So you, do you think you may run against Cornyn?
I'm strongly considering it. I haven't made a decision. I have the spring to kind of work it
out and, you know, I'm still doing my job. I had a lot to do under Biden before he left. It's a lot
easier with Trump
because we're working cooperatively instead of having to be adversarial and everything. So,
you know, I'll be looking at this spring and seeing what people see. I'm going to travel
the state and get a feel for it. But my sense already is that John Cornyn is not loved in my
state by Republicans. He may be loved by the Democrats, but he is not loved by the Republicans.
How long do you think Texas has before it becomes a democratic state?
It's totally up to us.
We can preserve it.
We can, just like with this thing I told you about America, if we do the right things and we take care of the people in our state and we give them opportunity, we give them a good education, which the state is responsible for. If we provide opportunities for their children, if we provide just freedom to go be the best you can be and not get in their way with regulations and taxes, we give them, we will be a Republican state. Because it doesn't matter what your skin color is, if you get a chance to be successful, you're going to vote with the people that gave it to you i think that's right i think that's right and i and i'm embarrassed to say um that i kind of bought i guess intuitively i
didn't really think about it but the idea that demographics is destiny and i do think that's
there's a lot of truth in that however you know texas went from a majority white state to a
really a majority hispanic state and but that doesn't mean that it has to be
like a dystopian left-wing state at all.
Hispanics are conservative socially.
They are hardworking.
They are family people.
And they want to be successful too.
Well, but it's interesting.
So that, I first heard that line from Karl Rove, actually.
How surprising.
My next door neighbor.
And he would always say, you know, Hispanics are natural conservatives. And I would say, well, I. How surprising. He was my next door neighbor. And he would always say, you know,
Hispanics are natural conservatives. And I would say, well, I'm from California.
And that became majority Hispanic state. And it just went right off the cliff. It became,
you know, really, really dark socialist dystopian place. And I would say, so what do you make of
that? What I didn't realize was it was actually the liberal whites who are the problem.
I mean, that state's run by Gavin Newsom.
He's not from Oaxaca.
You know what I mean?
He's from Martin County.
And a lot of the decisions are made by people like that.
And actually, Hispanics are conservative.
I mean, that's real.
Look at El Salvador. And so what's happened, though, is that the party is controlled by neoliberals like Gavin Newsom, like Karl Rove, and they use the power of the Hispanic vote to affect outcomes that I think a lot of Hispanic voters reject, right? Yeah, and look, Trump is winning counties in Texas that have never been won before.
And we are having more and more Democrat, Hispanic politicians move to our party.
And their positions are not changing.
They're just realizing that the Democratic Party, allowing all this illegal immigration
and hurting their areas and all those types of things, they don't want that.
They're leaving the machine.
I guess the only
thing I would say, just as an outside observer, is if the drug cartels are allowed to control
the machinery of democracy in Texas, it could become Mexico. That's why the whole DA thing
that I was telling you about is so important. I remember when I was coming into the attorney
general's office, avid to serve, as long as serving AG in Texas history, 12 years,
becoming governor. I'm now about to tie that, but long as serving AG in Texas history, 12 years, becoming governor.
I'm now about to tie that,
but it was,
he was the one that told me the most powerful
elected officials
in the country
are the Texas District Attorneys
because they can do
whatever they want.
They can allow any crime they want.
They can let their friends
commit crimes
and there's nothing
that can be done to them.
They are free
to do what they want.
Well, so we had problems
like this in the 50s and 60s after Brown versus Board where, you know, certain states just didn't want to comply with federal law.
There was – and, you know, Eisenhower sent the 101st Airborne to Little Rock and said, I'm sorry, you can't violate federal law.
You can't – you're not your own country actually.
And you wonder like how serious could the Trump DOJ be in reining in this crap. No, you're not your own country actually. And you wonder like how serious
could the Trump DOJ be in reigning in this crap? No, you're not allowed to have chaos in your
state. This is an American state. No. I agree with that. And I think you're already seeing it
on the board. He's already sent federal troops down there. And I think he, as long as it's
following federal law, I know that Trump is going to be aggressive at protecting this country.
I hope so.
I believe it.
So here's a question I've been obsessed with recently, and I don't know the answer, but you're an attorney general.
How are states allowed to have sanctuary cities in open violation of federal law, and that's not insurrection?
Because we've allowed it. To me, that should – I mean, like in our state, we banned them.
You cannot have a sanctuary city, and we can remove people from office that put that in place.
But can states just say we're going to ignore federal law?
I think we had a civil war over that, didn't we?
No, as long as the federal law is constitutional and it is not infringing upon states' rights.
Not every federal law is correct, right?
But the ones that are, that are correct, then yes, it has to be followed.
Well, these are the borders of the nation.
Yes.
Right.
So what states do with immigration affects the other 49, any individual state.
Exactly right.
Because it does seem like there was a standard in place under Biden where illegal aliens who are by their presence committing a crime were held to a lower standard than American citizens.
We had to sue the Biden administration.
We sued them specifically over letting criminals into this country, known criminals.
And they fought us on it.
They fought us on a very, yes, we are in litigation over whether the Biden administration can purposely bring criminals.
And of course, all these countries were emptying their prisons to get rid of their bad people from all over the world. And Biden say, come on in.
That's when I say evil, like I don't believe they were trying to do good for America. You cannot do
that. And tell me you were trying to help America. How hopeful are you that we can deport millions of
people?
Look, I've seen Donald Trump do things that I never thought could be done.
He said he's going to do it.
I think it's, you're not going to get every one of them.
But I think Tom Holman, I love that guy.
I think there's going to be a real serious effort to get as many out as possible.
And that's really all you can do. But I think it will be a success in the end because they're gonna one stop the you got to stop the bleeding right we've been bleeding like profusely and then
second start moving they don't accept the fact that these people came in here illegally and and
just let them stay um there will be a lot of forces arrayed to stop that, obviously. I already know the Democratic AGs.
I mean, I know the game plan.
What's the game plan?
The game plan is to sue Trump
and stop him at every turn legally.
Go to a liberal judge, try to get an injunction,
and then just slow it down.
So I know, I think California AG,
they've already allocated $25 million to this fight.
To stop Trump from deporting criminals.
And to stop his agenda in every possible way.
So the Democratic attorney generals are going to be suing and trying to stop all of this.
The good thing is, you know, I've got one of my guys that was my offensive coordinator
to sue the Biden administration.
He's, if he gets confirmed, he'll be in a strategic position and he knows exactly the
game plan and how to deal with it.
If you go and beat Cornyn in the Senate, which I certainly hope you will, is there someone coming up behind you who can get elected who will be as aggressive and focused on the needs of Texas?
So one of the reasons I didn't want to leave last time, one is I didn't want to be forced out.
I didn't want to step away under their terms because I just thought it was wrong.
That's the spirit.
So second was, I didn't,
I mean, I ran against three people
that I just thought would be horrible for that job.
They didn't know what they were doing.
There are certainly people that will run that,
I mean, there are lawyers who've never practiced law
that want that job because they're in politics.
That's not the right way.
I want somebody who knows how to practice law,
that understands the law.
And yes, there are a couple of people that I know that could run and I think might run. Otherwise, I'd have a hard time walking
away from it because I don't want to give, this is such a crucial position really for the entire
country. The Texas Attorney General has the largest Republican office with the most resources
and has the most ability to go fight. We can attract talent. And so we have a lot of ability to take DOJ
straight up. That's why we've run up one over three-fourths of our cases, because we can fight
them toe-to-toe. I just think it's, you see this weird dynamic in Texas where, I mean, there's so
many great people in Texas, but all the money, not all the money, but a lot of the money in Highland Park and River Oaks,
your richest zip codes, pretty liberal.
What is that?
And by the way, I know a lot of those people and I really like them.
I'm not attacking anybody personally because I know a lot of them.
But boy, they seem to be funding people who will not continue Texas as currently organized.
It's exactly right.
So a lot of that, it's very strange.
So this group, Texas for Lawsuit Reform, used to take a lot of that.
They would funnel their money through them.
So it wasn't them directly.
And that's the group that spent, you know, 10 million recruiting the Supreme Court justice who was a DEI person.
As it turns out, that's how we exposed that.
And she blew up.
That's who they supported.
I don't totally understand it,
but it's-
Well, they don't like you, too.
They're like,
oh, Ken Paxton's so embarrassing.
I know.
It's because-
But if you asked them
to write on a piece of paper,
like, what are your political priorities?
They would be not so different from yours.
Is that whole-
But they don't like it
when you actually try to implement
what you say you believe.
Here's part of what I think happened.
I think that when I ran against Dan Branch, he was W's one of his best friends.
Of course.
I knew Dan Branch.
He was not, his deal was always this.
I've spent 10 years with him.
I would say, hey, we need to do this.
This is the right thing to do.
He goes, man, what are the optics here?
I'm like, who cares what the optics are?
This is the right thing to do.
It was always the optics.
How does it look? And his voting record, you can look at it, is
not consistently what
most voters, most Republican voters
would want, but it was for Highland Park.
I don't know what it is. Which is an affluent
part of Dallas. Yes, and same with, you were talking
about River Oaks in Houston.
Those, that Bush
world that supported Bush and
I have family in both those places and I think they're
wonderful. They're not, no, they're not.
And I like all the people.
And as I said, I like Dan Branch.
I mean, I think I'm probably susceptible
to charm in a way I shouldn't be
because I like all those.
They're all good guys.
But in the end,
it's considered somehow gauche
or bad to actually try and do
what you say you're going to do.
That's why they don't like you.
I've just, no offense,
hope it doesn't hurt your feelings,
but I've been at dinner and people are like,
oh, Ken Paxton, you know, ooh, ooh.
Ken Paxton's like, why?
Because he's doing what you say you believe?
The same thing happened.
What the hell?
It's the same thing with Trump.
People have, I mean, I don't know.
No, you're right, it is.
I was at his announcement at Mar-a-Lago.
You know when elected officials were there
to support him that first?
There were lots of regular people there.
Me and Troy Nels at the very first announcement.
Really?
Everybody then was like thinking it might be somebody else.
And no one wanted to tell you.
They weren't sure because you had these indictments.
And it's the same thing with Trump.
If you actually go out and do the hard things, then you're controversial.
And then they attack you for being, the media attacks you.
They don't like it.
And then people go, well, you know, we need to see.
And I'm like, okay, you don't want Trump because he's controversial. That means you don't want somebody to actually get something done. The people that aren't controversial are the people that don't get anything done. The media doesn't attack them. And so then all these people are like, oh they don't really feel like these arguments are existential, that they really, really matter.
Whereas, you know, if you make 120 grand a year and you live in Houston and you see the city, like you can't use the hospitals and crime's out of control and like everything is changing too fast to metabolize.
And you can't really, you make 120 grand a year.
You can't really do anything about it.
You're powerless.
And that's, by the way, twice what the average person makes.
You're like, you realize this is not a joke.
They're wrecking my city for real.
It can't be fixed.
I think you've hit it because those people, even those people are affected by inflation, right?
Everything is more expensive.
Gas is more expensive.
No, it's totally right.
The average American and even above average American feels all of those negative effects every day. If you're a
billionaire, it just, you just, it just, it's no, you don't care what it costs to fill up your
gas tank. You don't even think about it. It's just weird in Texas. So if you go to California,
if you go to Marin or downtown San Francisco or the town that I grew up in affluent town,
you know, everyone's kind of openly liberal.
You know what I mean?
Like they're smoking weed with their kids and they're whatever, they're liberal.
You go to Texas and you meet the affluent class in Texas.
Boy, they're just great people.
They're just great people who share your values.
And I think they really do, by the way,
at least the ones I know, they sincerely do.
But they don't feel that sense of
eminence of like, holy shit, we got it. This is like a crisis. They do not feel that.
Well, those are the people that elect me. If you look at my campaign finance reports,
I usually have a massive number of people giving, but at a lot lower level than some of the other
statewide officials. The numbers are just staggering. I raise less money, but my contributions from the number of people I get, I think I had the last report, maybe I'm off on this, maybe it was one report, 8,000 contributors in six months.
Well, I don't think anybody comes close to that, but it's not the million dollar checks.
I don't get million dollar checks.
I have a much lower contribution, but I love it because I like the fact that the people as a group are helping me
yes that's who i'm beholden to those people i think that's right and there's a um by the way
i just want to be clear especially in texas like the rich people i know in texas are good people
with nice you know love their families their children turn out well like they're good people
for real i love them actually but i and they would agree with everything you say,
but in practice, it freaks them out.
And you see this with Bobby Kennedy, too.
Like, anyone who's kind of tuned in realized,
yeah, Bobby Kennedy was like a turbo liberal.
He's a Kennedy.
You know, he said all this crazy gun-grabby pro-abortion nonsense,
but then you watch him and you're like,
oh, no, that guy's on the same wavelength as me,
and he might actually get stuff done.
It's only, it's, it honestly, it's the rich Republicans who he freaks out.
He scares them.
For the same reason you scare them because you mean it.
And they're like, ah, this is embarrassing.
Maybe I can't fully control it.
I'm not sure I'm for this.
Part of the problem is they all talk to each other and they all get their ideas from like
each other. It's get their ideas from each
other.
It's just almost too inbred.
They don't get down to talk to the people that you and I are talking about.
They don't know them.
They are not around them.
They don't live with them.
So they don't feel it.
It's part of what your original point was.
They just don't know these people.
If they knew those people, I think, like you said, they're not bad people.
I think if they can connect with people that are not billionaires instead of just with each other, it would help them.
I think it's totally right.
I grew up in a rich person world.
The greatest gift I ever got was spending time in a non-rich area for a portion of every year.
And it really changed my worldview so dramatically.
Just having contact with people who aren't you know in that
world like just getting out of it a little bit it's called perspective a look i don't have a
ton of perspective but i have like a little bit of perspective right you know what i mean so like
that's super helpful it's super helpful it is it's super helpful and um wow that's so interesting
can you win if you don't have the support of the big money in Texas?
Well, all I can tell you is I've been statewide for 12 years,
and I've won my closest primary runoff when there weren't four people in the race was 65-35.
The last one was better, 68-32.
So I just go to the people.
And I usually get outspent.
As long as I can be within like two to one spending,
I have a really good chance of winning a primary. And I think anybody that whole is consistent on
views that take care of their constituents, that's the key to winning, is take care of your people,
care about them. Yeah. Well, I've always thought that, but then I up and down the ballot and state
after state, you see people elected who are basically promising to destroy their own constituents.
And all the black leaders in Chicago who are like, you know, lecturing about black political power and how important it is.
And then they make this the city Hispanic.
Now they have no political power.
It's like, I mean, whatever you think of identity politics, I'm opposed to it.
I don't think you should be running on your race anyway.
But it's just a fact that they did exactly the opposite of what they promised their constituents. And really
now nobody cares what those people think. It's the same problem. People like that were taking
care of themselves. They were not actually looking out for the people they said they were looking out
for. And then they, they leave them in a terrible situation. They're not better off. What Donald
Trump, supposedly the guy that doesn't like those people, when he's finished, these all categories
of people, black, white, Hispanic, are better off.
That seems like a good thing, right?
I know.
But yet he's a bad guy.
It's amazing.
So here's a complicated issue that I think I know that you've addressed it in court.
Data privacy.
The idea that you ought to be allowed to have conversations without other people listening to them.
The idea that people should be able to steal information about you and profit from it
where are we on that so you know my first term was about stopping obama yeah and so i think in
two two years that he was there i've seen him 27 times now i stepped it up a little bit with biden
but we had four years with trump and the reason I ran the second term was to deal with exactly that issue.
I saw big tech and I saw big corporations and people felt powerless because all their information is being taken.
They have no control over it.
They're being censored.
And I'm like, how do I solve this?
So I went out to Palo Alto.
I spent like a year of my life going out there, talking to professors, talking to lawyers who were tech experts.
And we ended up putting together many lawsuits several against google several against facebook we just had like
we sued facebook because they there's a texas law that says you cannot steal somebody's face
take somebody's face or their voice without their permission and then once you've taken it you have
a certain amount of time a reasonable period of time to keep it and then you have to destroy it
and you can't sell it without their permission. Well, guess what? Meta, now Meta, they were doing it.
They just did it anyway.
Yeah, why do they care?
So we sued them, and we got the largest settlement between a state and a business ever, $1.4 billion.
We have sued Google, I think, five times.
We've won two of those cases.
We had two settlements, but the three biggest are coming.
One of them is about the same thing that Meta did.
They stole our faces.
Another was about
incognito, where they told people, by the way, you go into this incognito, you sign up for this,
we will not track you. Lie. They tracked us anyway. That's a deceptive trade practice in
text, where they tell you one thing and do another. They lied. And they're so big and
they make so much money, they just think they can win everything. Well, the final one was,
this is one that everybody thought was crazy, but we did it. And then DOJ filed a copycat case under Biden, actually, where Google controls 97% of the ad market and they destroy the competition.
If you're competing, and we believe they cut a deal with Facebook to keep them out of it, pay them off.
And they destroy you if you're small enough.
They buy you if you're big enough.
And they cut a deal if you're super big.
And all of that's illegal under antitrust law. we in april we are going to trial in texas they delayed me for two
years by forced me into what's called a multi-district litigation and i got put in new york
but we got a piece of legislation stuck on a bill that got us back out of that so we're back in
texas so we are going to take on the big tech companies we're taking on general motors because
general motors would sell you a car and they wouldn't tell you that their OnStar system, when you signed up for it,
was tracking all of your driving. And then they're selling that to insurance companies.
And then you get canceled and your insurance goes up because they're tracking every turn of your
car, what time you're driving, how many miles. They don't tell you. That's a deceptive freight
practice. And of course, we sued Pfizer for lying to us about the vaccine.
It was a little weird after all of that
to see Larry Ellison stand up and be like, everyone's getting an mRNA vaccine for cancer.
What? I mean, it's crazy. I don't even know. I'm trying to digest all that. Maybe just living in
Lanai, you know. Yeah, exactly. But do you have a hope? It does seem, look, I'm not against, well, that's why I'm against technology, but I don't think I should be against technology. I should be a little more open-minded. But, you know, there's a place for technological progress, of course, there is. But it does seem like it's unrestrained. It does, you know, I believe in force, counterforce. I believe in balance. I believe in marriage, which is that. You know what I mean?
Two forces having to accommodate one another.
And in that, you find peace.
I don't see that dynamic with tech right now.
It just seems unrestrained.
The charge of the elephants.
Like nothing can get in the way.
So that is the reason.
I saw that if we didn't step in soon,
and I didn't see anybody else doing it.
DOJ wasn't doing it. I didn't see anybody else doing it, DOJ wasn't doing it.
I didn't see other states doing it.
So that's why I ran the second time.
My mission was,
if we don't stop this now,
they make so much money.
They just buy their way out of everything.
So they get sued by the European Union.
They just pay two billion.
They just jack up their prices.
When you're making $130 billion a year,
that's just a minor little tax, right?
For Google.
So that is why I didn't just,
I'm not just doing this for money. I'm asking for restructuring of Google. I don't want them to be
able to do this to us anymore. They need to divest things so that there is competition in the
marketplace. I'm not, I am totally free market, but one company that controls 97% of the market
and then destroys competition, that is not good for consumers. And that's why we have antitrust
laws. So if we don't stop them now, they'll control all our speech.
Wait, we still have antitrust laws?
We do.
You'd never know it.
We brought them back.
And by the way, DOJ copied our Google case.
Exactly.
Biden did.
Is there any hope?
There's hope. And I think the fact that you see, after we settled with Mark Zuckerberg,
he's shown up at Trump.
So he spent, what, 400 million
trying to beat Trump last time?
Yeah.
You're seeing these CEOs come in.
Now, they're trying to keep their profit motive going.
And it's hard to get anything done in Congress
because they give so much money.
But I think the state AGs
and hopefully DOJ with Pam Bondi are key to making sure that they play fair.
Look, go make billions.
I don't care.
I want you to.
Go make a lot of billions.
I want American companies to do well all over the world.
But play fair and allow consumers choices.
Don't destroy choice.
Yeah, and just acknowledge that what you do has an effect on a lot of other people. And, you know, it's okay for other people to weigh in and have an opinion. It's you get this. I mean, I know all these people, you get this scent. They're so annoyed. If there's any impediment to what they want, like so annoyed, like they can't even believe it. Like what you're getting in the way of progress. It's like, well, first of all, I'm not totally convinced this is progress. Like, that's a subjective term.
We can debate what that is.
But second, like, I don't know.
There are all kinds of things I want to do,
but I have to negotiate with the people who are affected by those things
to reach some accommodation.
That's just what life is.
And you see this with some countries, too.
Like, oh, you know, our neighbors don't like it.
Tough shit.
It's like, I don't know.
That's not what life is.
Like, everything is a give and take.
Compromise.
Where do we get these attitudes?
I just get to do exactly what I want.
It's going to totally overturn your life.
And if you don't like it, shut up.
These are super companies, right?
Companies that are bigger than most countries.
They have more money.
And I think that arrogance that we talked about in politics, it happens in business.
And so not only do they want to control every market and control every transaction on the internet, but they also want to tell you what
to say and what you can say on their platforms. And then they tell you they're not censoring,
but they are. And so even with the Pfizer case, where we went and sued them, we sued them not
just for lying about the effectiveness of the vaccine, which they did do. But secondly,
for trying to censor people once they found out that their vaccine didn't work.
I want to do that with this podcast.
So what I want is Congress to pass a law
preventing anyone from suing me no matter what I do.
And then anyone who criticizes me
is pulled off the internet and called a racist.
That's a pretty good deal, don't you think?
Absolutely.
And then if you happen to like not participate
in their little scheme
with the vaccine,
then you lose your job
and you're socially...
Listen to my podcast
or you're fired.
Right.
Yeah.
That does seem like
an unfair business advantage.
It's pretty unfair.
And I actually,
it's crazy
because then there's no incentive
for them to test it.
They didn't test the vaccine.
Of course not.
They don't have to.
Why would they?
They test it for like six days. Well, they're fully't have to. Why would they? They test it for like
six days. Well, they're fully indemnified.
There's nothing you can do to them. So we got
actually sued Pfizer over the vaccine.
We got dismissed by a federal judge who said
we didn't have, because of that federal
law, our state laws don't apply. I don't think that's right.
So we've appealed to the Fifth Circuit saying, wait a minute.
They have their federal laws, but our state law,
if you deceive someone, you lie to them,
that is a violation of state law. Who cares what the federal immunity thing is? It has nothing to
do with our state laws. And that's our argument. Man, you guys, you know, there's so many arms
available in the black market. I think Texas should buy some just to get a little more influence.
You know what I mean? That's not my department. I always tell people they want me to go,
why don't you do something? Why don't you do something more? I said, well, I am, but they didn't give me any guns.
They just gave me, like, lawyers.
All I have is lawyers. Be like the drug cartels.
Buy them on the dark web.
Hilarious. Ken Paxton, thank you so much for taking
all this time. Oh, I enjoyed it. Thanks for having me.
And I hope you crush that John Cornyn. I really
do. I'm rooting for you. Well, thank you.
No one else agrees, but I'm in Highland Park,
but I'm on your side. Hey, thank you. Appreciate it.