The Tucker Carlson Show - Tucker Carlson and Russ Vought Break Down DOGE and All of Trump’s Cabinet Picks So Far

Episode Date: November 18, 2024

Russ Vought ran OMB under Trump the first time, and hopefully will again. Here’s what he learned about how the deep state actually works. (00:00) What is the Office of Management and Budget? (07:57...) How Our Intel Agencies Overrule the President (34:21) What Will the Congressional Hearings Look Like for Trump’s Appointees? (42:18) The Evil Think Tanks Trying to Undermine You (49:48) They’re Trying to Leave Trump With WWIII (58:06) The Root Problem of Government Corruption PreBorn Save babies and souls https://PreBorn.com/Tucker Liberty Safe https://LibertySafe.com/Tucker Promo code “Tucker” PureTalk https://PureTalk.com/Tucker Get 50% off first month Alp Pouch Shop now at https://AlpPouch.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So you ran OMB before, and you don't ability to turn on and off any spending within the office of management and budget. Office of management and budget. It has the ability to turn off the spending that's going on at the agencies. It has all the regulations coming through it to assess whether it's good or bad or too expensive or could be done a different way or what does the president think? And then all of government execution. So anytime you have cabinet executive branches conflicting with each other or working together on something, for instance, you know, the wall, the president wanted to fund the wall. We at OMB gave him a plan to be able to go and fund the wall through money that was the Department of Defense and to use that because Congress wouldn't give him the
Starting point is 00:01:05 ordinary money at the Department of Homeland Security. So it really is presidents use OMB to tame the bureaucracy, the administrative state. Welcome to the Tucker Carlson Show. We bring you stories that have not been showcased anywhere else. And they're not censored, of course, because we're not gatekeepers. We are honest brokers here to tell you what we think you need to know and do it honestly. Check out all of our content at TuckerCarlson.com. Here's the episode. It was really pioneered, honestly, by FDR.
Starting point is 00:01:48 And then President Nixon also was really learning from FDR on how to use it to tame the bureaucracy. And we would have seen that. Did he create the office, Roosevelt? The office was formerly the Bureau of the Budget for the last hundred years, right? And then Nixon renames it Office of Management and Budget, and it becomes kind of more of a statutory thing, reporting directly to the president, no longer within Treasury. And so since then, you've had it still there, still really important,
Starting point is 00:02:22 viewed by the country largely as a budget cutting exercise. But it is it is the president's most important tool to dealing with the bureaucracy, administrative state. And, you know, the nice thing about President Trump is he knows that and he knows how to use it effectively. So you can't get any of your domestic policy done without OMB, it sounds like. and you have to have statutory tools at your disposal that force that bureaucracy from the White House to get in line. And that is really the main thing that OMB can accomplish in addition to what everyone would think of
Starting point is 00:03:15 from a budget office, which is, yeah, you cut spending, you figure out how to deal with your fiscal finances and all of that. You're making me anxious. I mean, I can't handle a disobedient dog. I can't imagine what a disobedient federal agency looks like. How resistant are they to democracy? They're incredibly resistant. I mean, think about Ukraine and the president in
Starting point is 00:03:38 that first term wanted to cut off funding for Ukraine. Why? Because it's a corrupt country and we didn't know how it was going to be spent. It's a totally normal policy process to go through that people lost their minds about. But the bureaucracy was literally just ignoring it. And quite frankly, his political appointees, like John Bolton, were ignoring him as well. And what we then did at OMB was, I been personally told, look, you know, I want the money cut off until we can figure out where it's going. And we cut the money off. And it was like all hell broke loose within the bureaucracy. We got impeached.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Yeah. And so. Yeah. And so you have the ability at that point to bring them to come to heel and to do what the president has been telling them to do. And we can do that in foreign aid. We can do that all sorts of places. It's kind of crazy. I mean, everything you're saying I'm familiar with.
Starting point is 00:04:31 But if you think about it, that's the end of democracy because the only authority in the executive branch comes from the president and the vice president, also elected. But it comes from voters as expressed through elections. So bureaucrats in the federal agency and appointees in the federal agency have no authority to act independently. That I'm under our constitution, do they? No. And this is really the left has innovated over 100 years to create this the regime, this administrative state that is totally unaccountable to the president that lets it move in the direction that it has been going. But the president is accountable to voters, so are members of Congress. And the system is designed that way. That's why we say it's a democracy or a constitutional republic, because the voters convey, bestow the authority on their leaders. And so this seems not only illegal, their behavior, but unconstitutional. I mean,
Starting point is 00:05:32 at the most basic level, unconstitutional now. Totally unconstitutional. And if you would have seen Woodrow Wilson bemoan our constitutional system, he would have wanted constitutional amendments. The left stopped talking about constitutional amendments because they innovated to this new fourth branch, which is totally different than anything the founders would have ever understood. The notion of independent agencies that think of and Congress has designed them to be divorced from the president. But even the notion of like this is this is we're supposed to be technocrats and experts and we don't have to listen to what you what you say. We work for and I caught this, Tucker. People would say, well, we we work for the office of the president. Huh?
Starting point is 00:06:15 What? What is that? It's a way. Where does it get its authority? They get their authority. They have essentially taken authority. They have no legitimate authority. They have no legitimate authority. They have no legitimate authority in the Constitution.
Starting point is 00:06:28 But they are part of this fourth branch that I still believe reports in large measure to congressional leadership and in the K Street interest, right? You have very powerful interests that direct them to keep going in the direction that they want them to go. It's why these bills are written in such a way that they are anything you could read anything into them. Right. When Nancy Pelosi says we're going to find out what the bill says, she wasn't actually being inaccurate. That's their strategy. They pass bills and then they let the experts fill them in. But over the phone, they put massive pressure on them to go along with their directions and their ends. And lo and behold, you get conservatives, Republicans that take office, and then you find that it's incredibly difficult to wield power to get them to deal with all of that muscle memory
Starting point is 00:07:23 to get them to do what you want. And so you got to have statutory authority that a president kind of steps in and says, I am fully aware of where I sit in the Constitution. I am fully aware of the tools at my disposal. And I'm going to use them on behalf of the American people because I just won a massive agenda setting election. And I'm going to go do what I said I would do. That's democracy, correct? That is democracy.
Starting point is 00:07:48 That is not oligarchy. And when they say we're going to preserve democracy, we know that they have been meaning all they want to do is preserve their kind of amorphous oligarchy administrative deep state. I don't think that's an overstatement at all. I mean, I just think I don't even see the kind of argument against what you just said. So let's just, if you don't mind walking us through what happened in the example that you gave Ukraine. So you just said the president comes into office in 2017 and says, why are we sending all this money to Ukraine?
Starting point is 00:08:17 Where's it going? There's no audit. We don't know. It's the most corrupt country in Europe, one of the most corrupt in the world. Maybe we should find out. We don't know. Okay, we're cutting off till we know. I think that's what you said. And the agency's like, no,
Starting point is 00:08:32 we're going to continue to fund Ukraine. How do they do that? They ignore the president. And officials ignore the president. And I think one of the things you'll see in this next Trump term is policy officials, his political appointees that are not looking to get out of what he has clearly told them to do. So let's assume that issue is solved. But at the bureaucratic level – The issue – I think what you're saying is let's assume that he appoints people who agree with him and will do what he asks. Correct. Okay. So, for instance, my staff was part of what we call the policy
Starting point is 00:09:06 process, right, where you would go and you defend and you would articulate what you're trying to accomplish. And we had put the hold on the Ukraine funding. And my guy goes to all of these meetings and he's like literally the only one in the room that wants to do what the president has asked him to do. Everyone's kind of just ganging up on him. And that is, think of that often for all of our political appointees. They are surrounded by people that have no idea about what the reasons and the agenda that the president has been put in office. And they're just bombarded with reasons of how can you do this? What are you thinking? Did you know that you can't do this? Most of the time, that's not true. And so, you have to cut through all of that and to have the courage of your convictions and, quite frankly, Tucker, the know-how to have read the law, to get in the
Starting point is 00:10:02 granular details yourselves, to not be staffed by your, your, your people working for you. You, this notion that you can just come in and preside is not true. You, you have to, you have to be in the weeds and to drive these agencies to be able to fix where we have, you know, the, the undergrowth and the muscle memory that we've had for decades. So why can't you just, so if the president says, again, to refer to your example, I don't think we should be funding Ukraine, I'm elected, we're going to cut this off. If Congress wants to fund Ukraine, they can go ahead and do that, but the agencies are not going to fund Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:10:37 So why wouldn't you just fire the people who disobey, who try to subvert democracy? You've got to know how to fire them. And there are tools to do that. And the president was innovating in that space himself with what's called Schedule F, of essentially saying, if you work for me in your policy, a career official, think you're attorneys who are writing regulations, then we're going to create a new classification for you. And you are, you are going to be what most of the country is, which is at will employee. That's where we're headed. But there was also ways that why I don't understand a system where a president, any president, Obama, Biden, Donald Trump comes in and doesn't have control of the executive branch
Starting point is 00:11:24 because constitutionally he does have control. So, like, how come you can't fire them? Why is it just not as simple as saying you're fired? It should be. And this is one of the mountains of the administrative state. You know, this is how they have built their institution by essentially having it be incredibly difficult to hire and fire employees. And so I'll give you another example. When the president decided to take money from defense to build the wall,
Starting point is 00:11:52 we had clear legal grounds to do it that Congress had given us. It's called transfer authority. And I told this to the Hill, and obviously this was controversial. It shouldn't have been controversial. Congress had given us very clear transfer authority. I must have had at least three times someone relitigate that decision from the career staff who work at OMB. Are you sure?
Starting point is 00:12:16 Are you sure? I think we should oppose. I think this. Because guys, the decision has been made. Execute the decision. And you see that everywhere, right? And if you don't drive it, you're going to get better. You're not going to be able to accomplish what the president needs you to accomplish. a leader, he carries out their will. Anyone standing in the way of that is subverting democracy. We will not allow that. Anyone who does that is fired instantly. Could you do that and just say you're fired for unconstitutional behavior? You can do that increasingly when you
Starting point is 00:12:54 move towards a Schedule F system. And there are other tools in the toolbox. But under the current system, what would happen if you tried that? Lawsuits. Lawsuits, yeah. But if you fire them all? Look, you've got a lot of tools on the table. It's just so infuriating. Look, it is one of the most infuriating things that you could possibly imagine. But I think that the good news, and this is, I think, the good news, not just in hiring, firing, the good news at large is that most of the time they have been able to get as far as they can because of just, it is the way it is. It's precedent and laws that are not drafted precisely, but purposely vague. And as a result, we can then do it in reverse. You can have a president who steps in and says, you know what,
Starting point is 00:13:45 there's no constitutional amendment for me to take control of the administrative state. I'm going to do in reverse everything that you have done. And I think that is the great hope. What you need is people who are able to absorb political heat. They don't have a fear of conflict. They can execute under withering enemy fire. They are up to speed and they are no nonsense in their own ability to know what must be done. And they are unbelievably committed to the president and his agenda and truly believe in their bones that they're not there for their own agenda. They're there for what President Trump was elected to do. And so his commander's intent matters a great deal.
Starting point is 00:14:29 And that's the view that I always had, Tucker, is how do I get in the mind of the president to think through what is he trying to accomplish? And then I'm going to go figure out how to do it. Yeah, because once again, he is the authority and no one else does because only he was elected. And I just, I'm fixated on this question of like, where do career bureaucrats think they derive the authority to make these decisions? Like who made them God?
Starting point is 00:14:52 I think it's very no one ever asked that question in D.C. or considered a freak if you do. But I think it's a key question. So one of the problems that you had last time was the media. Explain how that works, how the media works in conjunction with the permanent state and the Congress to thwart the president. Well, I think, number one, they are always framing narratives and messages that both are lies and are also designed to destabilize the Republicans in control who want to be for however that narrative is being framed. You used one already with democracy, right? If you're not aware that when they say democracy, they mean oligarchy, you're like, I don't want to be anti-democratic. Actually, the whole point is preserving democracy. It's what we just did.
Starting point is 00:15:40 And, you know, if you have a plan to deal with the administrative state and then they frame it as authoritarian, you don't want to cast of your own allies saying, I don't want to be anti-authoritarian. We saw this in COVID, right, where if they define something as anti-science or anti-public health, it causes our political appointees to just completely wilt. Right. It causes our political appointees to just completely wilt, right? And so that's, I think, the beauty of President Trump is he's kind of immune to these media-generated narratives that conflict with common sense reality. That, I think, is the main one because that is controlling the skies from a military standpoint, right? Like that is their ability to shape the conversation in such a way that it makes it very hard. Number two, they're obviously working in conjunction with leakers and individuals with know-how to know, you know, when a hold has been put on Ukraine to be able to send that and have
Starting point is 00:16:42 it explode in the public arena. And so you have to, you have to be prevent leaks. You have to govern well from the get-go to be able to manage all of that as best you possibly can. And, but I also think there's an opportunity there because they will, they will, they will report on conflict. They will report on confrontation. And when you, when they do that, you can get the word out as to what you're doing. At least you can get the word out on shows like this and in the new and developing ecosystem. Well, that's kind of it right there. I mean, that was the basis of my question. I do think things have changed, right? I mean, if you still care what the New York Times or Washington Post
Starting point is 00:17:21 say, or Ken Delaney did NBC News, like, I hope you're not working there. Right? Do you think anybody still cares what they think? No. The whole ball game has shifted, right? Like, I don't even know why you would do many of these interviews at all, because if you can't get, you know, you've got to be able to get your words out without just complete combativeness. And I think the best example is remember the Caitlin Collins interview with President Trump. I mean, it's just constant interrupting and misuse of lies, actually. And so, like, that's the kind of thing that you're up against. But you can shape them. You can, particularly the print media. And I think it's important
Starting point is 00:18:11 to at least attempt to do that. But you have to make the measure of the person that you're dealing with. And sometimes they're just, you know, they're complete activists themselves. Do you remember when Democrats used to refer to abortion as something that should be safe, legal, and rare? Well, they've changed their view on that. It went from a right to a sacrament. This isn't the pro-choice movement you may remember from 30 years ago. This is something much darker. And that's why we have joined forces with Preborn, they're a sponsor of the show and of our speaking tour, to do something about it.
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Starting point is 00:20:27 Shop now at nofrails.ca. It does seem, I'm going to ask you about the intel agencies. It does seem like one of the main vectors of control is briefings. And the number of people I've spoken to, Congress executive branch, like, oh, no, no, no. If you only got the briefing, I think I live there too long. I just don't believe the briefing. You know, maybe sometimes they're accurate, sometimes they're not. But they're almost always designed to control the person being briefed did you see that i did
Starting point is 00:21:08 and i very rarely ever learned anything particularly interesting is that true yeah they didn't tell you who killed kennedy they did not right and so you know i think i came away with the similar skepticism of these briefings and the information and the over-classification in the system. They classify everything. And you're reading this thing, and you're like, you realize that's all just normal stuff that's out in a congressional research service. Yeah, it's on Twitter. Right. And so, I think that's a huge thing that we've got to fix, over know, over classification and system. But I think they both create this environment where it's very exclusive. They are trying to bring you into their kind of priestly
Starting point is 00:21:52 role so that, no, I saw the briefing. If you had seen the briefing, you would be okay with us not having a FISA warrant requirement. You would Right. You would be OK with us just another hundred billion dollars for Ukraine. Just we just we can't have Ukraine fall. None of it is rigorous analysis. And honestly, I think that's the biggest thing that I was bemoaning is the extent to which rigorous analysis that I thought would be there wasn't there. What do you mean by rigorous analysis? I don't expect people to agree with me constantly. I want well-prepared memos that have a conviction to them and then support them.
Starting point is 00:22:42 These are not like, I'm going to plant the flag and then we can, we can just say, okay, who's right. Who's that? Who has better supporting? No, no. It's like, I'm going to give the blob an exercise to report on something. And the blob is going to kind of like all, it's not a Google spreadsheet, but it's going to all be a, you know, an interactive Google spreadsheet to just spit out something that is a consensus document.
Starting point is 00:23:07 And you're reading this thing, and you're like, this makes no real claims other than to affirm the narrative that we just talked about. Right? So what's the point other than to preserve the status quo? At that point, the point is just to know what the intelligence community is writing on. Because you're not going to learn anything from it. I talked to someone recently in the last few days who works in the Intel community, the IC, who is saying that you can see people who come to Washington for the first time in high positions and other branch before and after their briefings. And they're like different people and they, they fall for it.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Like all of them fall for it. You know, now we're going to tell you all the things you wondered about. We're going to tell you the truth about the presidents, especially Trump seems, as you said, immune from this and he's done it before, but this person said, you should see how much they change like deep inside. Once we let, you know, lay the bullshit on them, they just, they're not the same. Have you noticed that? Oh, I haven't seen it. You know, I think part of the problem, and this is endemic of not just the IC, but we don't read enough in general. We don't have our own convictions. We don't search for understanding ourselves.
Starting point is 00:24:15 And so you have people go in and they're like, I kind of need this career staff to tell me what to think. I don't want to look stupid. Right. career staff to tell me what to think. I don't want to look stupid, right? And so, that has killed us on our side of the aisle, the conservative side, to say, we don't have people that are driving policy and bringing their own opinions and their own history. And so, they are susceptible to feeling like, and they still believe that these people have an authoritative stance on things, and they don't have enough skepticism that, in fact, the emperor has no clothes. And you've got to bring that perspective in. They're weak inside, is what you're saying, a lot of these people.
Starting point is 00:25:00 I do think that's the case. And from the standpoint of the IC, the other thing that they would do is they would keep you from being briefed, right? The briefing, we've already discussed what the brief is, and sometimes what President Trump is saying, I'm not going to necessarily get the brief, right? But I would find that I wasn't read into certain things until they needed my signature. So once they needed some reason to get my signature, then all of a sudden I get this brief, right? And that's not the way it should be. If you're trying to provide oversight and accountability, you don't know what you don't know. And so you have to be able to have the whole entire landscape of things that you could, oh, that's interesting. We should do something.
Starting point is 00:25:50 President Trump wouldn't like that. And I find that was very restrictive unless they needed me. And so I basically said, look, I'm not going to, you are not getting my signature unless you get me briefed up. And I want access to all of these things that I need to be able to provide oversight for the federal government. And one of the things that we did, Tucker, is that since the rise of OMB, that ability to turn funding on and off had always been done by a career individual, not a political appointee. And so we changed that. And it was like the world was going
Starting point is 00:26:27 to end. They said, look, you're going to destroy the agency. You can't handle the bandwidth. You can't handle the bandwidth. Chaos will be unmatched. And we changed it. And next thing you know, everything's flowing across our desk. Oh, that's interesting. We're not doing that. You know, it was just amazing. And if you don't know and have that thesis that says this is what must be done, you could be the most incredible conservative in the world. You could be the most policy consistent person with the president.
Starting point is 00:27:07 But you don't know how to put your hand in the glove and use that agency for the president's behalf. The president's not going to be able to be well served at that agency. I saw David Ignatius, who is a longtime water carrier for the CIA. I don't know if they're paying him, but they should be because he does their bidding and has for decades at the Washington Post. And I heard him saying yesterday that we can't have Tulsi Gabbard at DNI, Director of National Intelligence, because it will cause, quote, chaos, because the intel community doesn't like her. And basically he's making the argument
Starting point is 00:27:34 that we should not have civilian control of these agencies because the agencies won't like it. Just say it. That's what you really mean. Well, I think that's basically what he's saying. So that's, again, that's dictatorship is what he's describing. But he used chaos as kind of the threat. Okay. But you've been there.
Starting point is 00:27:56 If you really did everything that was needed in order to root out the corruption that defines our government, you would cause some chaos. You would. Wouldn't you? It our government, you would cause some chaos. You would. Wouldn't you? It will certainly read on the papers like chaos. That's good. Fair. You know, as to what just is normal, good government behind the scenes, managing, pushing, pushing through whatever, I think it can be done very wisely and done in a way that anyone who had a bird's eye view into that would be able to say, that's exactly what we put this administration into office.
Starting point is 00:28:34 But yeah, you're going to have to kick over people's paradigms. You're going to have to kick over people's turfs. You're going to have to change people's understanding of things that they have invested their whole life into a view of the world. And none of this is – their views of the world aren't rooted in the Constitution. In some cases, any version of the facts. But you're going to – that's going to cause a lot of turmoil within these bureaucracies, and you've got to fight through it. And then they're going to overlay the aspect of, oh, my gosh, guys are racist. And you know, you guys don't care about us as people, you know, you're gonna have to deal with that too. Right. They are, you know, one of the arguments
Starting point is 00:29:14 that they're using in the press against me right now, as they say, he, he, he called for trauma within the bureaucracies. Yeah. I called for trauma within the bureaucracies. The bureaucracies hate the American people. They want to put a 77-year-old, and did, a 77-year-old Navy veteran in jail for 18 months for building four ponds on his ranch to fight wildfires. That's not the Department of Justice. That's the EPA. You go to every agency, and it's not just big government. It's weaponized against the country. Of course. And so, yeah, we I would want to provide trauma against that bureaucracy in a way that frees the American people from the people that have assumed the type of power that the Constitution and no law, no public debate ever gave them. Does that mean we dislike everyone working at federal agencies and want them to have a bad life? No, of course. There's a lot of people there who have come to serve and do great public service, and we want to affirm that, and we want to turn over the bureaucracies that are traumatizing the American people. Yeah, and the outcomes are terrible, and they're terrible
Starting point is 00:30:18 because it's corrupt. That's why it doesn't change. And the D.C. metro area is the richest in the country, and they don't make anything. So it's just like that's the most obvious marker for corruption I can imagine. Tell us about what congressional confirmation hearings are going to look like for Trump's appointees. They're going to be exhilarating if you have the right approach to them. But they're going to come at everything we've got, right? Or everything they've got with what they are able to put someone in the dock. And that individual is going to have to face the balance of wanting to defend everything that they have done in life and
Starting point is 00:31:06 belief. And at the same time, the thing that's a little hard about is you're no longer yourself, right? You are yourself, but you are also going to do a job for a person. So what I think about a particular issue doesn't mean as much as what the president thinks about something like that. And so it is a different thing than coming on and doing an interview about what your viewpoints on are in particular. No, that's exactly what's happening. It's not a cable news hit. Right. No. So, but I think, look, I've had experience, you know, Bernie Sanders went after me very, very hard in my first confirmation hearing as deputy OMB for essentially believing in John 3.16.
Starting point is 00:31:50 And it was – Wait, he hit you – he attacked you on the basis of your religious beliefs? He said I was a bigot and I should not serve in the federal government because of my Christian faith and believing something that essentially comes down to what's articulated at sports games with John 3.16. And that was most clues. Who's the bigot? Who is the bigger, right? That's the perfect question that goes back. Most nominees will not go through what I went through, but I will tell them, you will get through it. You will get to the other side, and it will be the most freeing thing in the world. You will come through the end of a process like that, and you will, I find it to be at that point exhilarating because it prepares you to take on enemy fire. Are you afraid of being called a bigot, racist, Christian nationalist, authoritarian. If you are not afraid of these attacks and you give them no credence,
Starting point is 00:32:48 no credibility, then you will be able to get through these things. You will be able to convince enough senators and you'll be able to serve and you'll be served more effectively. But the bright lights will be on in these confirmation hearings. So how much of it is like theatrical and how much of it is real? So you go into a hearing like that, your confirmation hearing, do you know the outcome at the beginning? Or do you think that votes really change based on the testimony of nominees? I don't think most votes change at all. I think that you may have one or two anomaly senators that are trying to, you know, have you answered something to their satisfaction or they're trying to get a feel for you that they haven't otherwise. But I think increasingly in the partisan world that we live in,
Starting point is 00:33:37 the Democrats are voting no. And it's a matter of making sure you've convinced and you've brought in the- So you get no, I mean, what's interesting- I got no Democrat votes. But the Republicans are always voting for the, I mean, Lindsey Graham will vote for any Democrat. Sorry, I'm not going to put you in an uncomfortable situation. But there are plenty of Republican senators who are liberal Democrats effectively, and they vote for all kinds of nominees. But you don't see that on the other side. You never see that on the other side. You never see that on the other side. And they have an appreciation that they have to attack our people at every level because
Starting point is 00:34:11 they know that every level is the stepping stone for- The next level. Exactly, right? Right. So they don't make it saying, oh, this is just like the undersecretary. Yeah, exactly. No, we're opposed to that. That guy will be secretary someday.
Starting point is 00:34:22 Correct. Well, you're, I guess, a perfect example, aren't you? Well, certainly the first term, right? I become deputy. And next thing you know, Mick goes to the chief of staff. And so I have an opportunity to serve as director. And so that is, they understand government and they understand the career path that is opening for people and they when they sense it's not always the case but when they sense that this is a committed conservative it's a partisan line down the road for 35 years
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Starting point is 00:36:02 Why are you walking so close behind me? Well, you're a tall guy. You throw a decent shadow when I'm walking in it to keep out of this bright sun. It hurts my eyes. Okay, well, you know what? Specsavers, you can get two pairs of glasses from $149. And, oh, you'll like this. One can be a pair of prescription sunglasses. Sounds great. Where's the nearest store? Not far. Come on. Let's hurry then! To my count! It was ridiculous, but it was also a metaphor for the way our leaders run this country. They're constantly telling you, everything is fine.
Starting point is 00:36:48 Everything is fine. Don't worry. Everything's under control. Nothing to see here. Move along and obey. No one believes that. Crime is not going away. Supply chains remain fragile.
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Starting point is 00:37:39 Take control of your life, protect your family, be prepared. Go to AmmoSquared.com to learn more. Isn't it the role of Republican leaders, particularly now, since Trump won the majority of the popular vote, overwhelming majority of electoral votes, House and Senate are Republican majority of state houses, majority of governorships. That's a mandate. So that means that Republican leaders, the two head guys in the House and Senate, should be helping. Are they going to? I have high hopes that people are seeing what Trump just accomplished and are going to be pulling the oars to get things done as soon as possible. And I think the jury is out, right? I think I want to see and I'm hoping to see people looking for ways to move these appointees through the process. And sounds like they're trying to do that. We'll see. But, you know, we have to do things not based on how it has been done recently, like this whole notion of the recess appointments, right? You have some people out there who are
Starting point is 00:39:00 saying this is unconstitutional. It's not the way it was meant to be, it's totally wrong, right? It is a specific provision in the Constitution to be able to allow a president, if he has to stand up an administration quickly and he's dealing with a Senate that won't move quickly enough to be able to install his people so that he can actually function as a government, right? That it's specifically mapped out and yet you have- So in the Constitution. In the Constitution. So it's by definition, not a constitutional fair.
Starting point is 00:39:28 Fair. So yet you have Republicans, one of them in particular, like Ed Whelan right now, who's attacking Trump for even mentioning... Who's Ed Whelan? He writes one, he's one of the main kind of legal luminaries on the right and ethics and public policy are one of those think tanks. And he's out there opposing the whole notion of recess appointments for whatever reason I don't know, other than he thinks it's unseemly and not the way the founding decision. I mean, this is a whole separate question, and it's a broad brush, but in general, conservative think tanks,
Starting point is 00:40:05 with some exceptions, are not conservative. They're tools of the left and sort of repositories of broke down people with no other job prospects. Why would anyone pay attention to them? I think they should increasingly not be. Yeah. And by the way, there's some good ones that I, you know, I love Kevin Roberts and Heritage, and there are good people in some think tanks for sure. But in general, it's like the world of Jonah Goldberg. It's like, who cares what you think? It, they only matter to the extent that people in the arena listen to them. Right. And that is increasingly, they're not being listened to. And I think that's part of one of the reasons why they're so up in arms about it. Right. I mean, that's national review
Starting point is 00:40:40 itself is that's phenomenal. National review. That was a magazine in the 50s, right? So, and I think that's, but my point is the extent to which people have opposed Trump and the America First agenda, I think ultimately is a loss of power because they didn't get to set the agenda. They don't get to be the traffic cop. They don't get to kind of say, oh, this offends my sensibility anymore. And no, if you have a radical constitutionalism, and that's really what I've been calling for, given this crazy unconstitutional situation that we're finding ourselves in. If you have a radical constitutionalism, it's going to be destabilizing. You may find that you can use the, James Madison could have put a whole lot more recess appointments in than you would have ever imagined.
Starting point is 00:41:28 But it's also exhilarating. And why, if you're trying to preserve the country, would you make arguments against that? Why wouldn't you be making arguments for it? So that's one of the reasons we just put out a five-page paper. We'll put out a 40-page paper next as to this is the constitutional grounds for recess appointments. President Trump hasn't decided to do it, but if he does, he will be in the same vein as our founders. It's a little weird. And again, you haven't, well, as of right now, so it's November 18th, you've not been nominated.
Starting point is 00:41:59 No. Yeah, I think you will be. Hope so. But you haven't been. So I don't want to put you in an awkward spot because if you are, you're going to have to deal with this. But why would Mitch McConnell, still the Senate leader of Republicans, why would he say we're not doing recess appointments? Again, I haven't spoken to Senator McConnell on it. My guess is that the Senate is going to want to know the argument.
Starting point is 00:42:24 And they probably have been told, and may have been told, and I'm going to just keep it as positive as possible, that this is inappropriate. You can't do it. And I want to show them, and no, in fact, you can. It is entirely appropriate. And to win the argument, and then if you win the argument and then people are like, no, we don't want to do this, then it's a different matter, right? It's like, it just kind of reveals that they're not actually on board with those particular nominees going into office. And that's a different issue. So I think that we don't know yet to whether, will the Senate have an issue.
Starting point is 00:43:13 I mean, to some extent, the Senate knows it has an issue because they couldn't move these nominees fast enough in the first term because the Democrats were filibustering everyone. Right. And so and by the way, you know, a lot of these hearings and you read the history books and people got approved by the Senate in a day. You know, like the system wasn't meant to be this slow and it has been bogged down and slowed down. And we'll see, you know, Senator Thune, Majority Leader Thune will have a chance to put his own imprint on the Senate. And I want to see how he does. Yeah, I've got, you know, high expectations, low hopes. Hope I'm wrong. It'd be one thing if the outcome was positive, if the country was thriving. You know, you know, high expectations, low hopes. Hope I'm wrong. It'd be one thing if the outcome was positive, if the country was thriving. You know, you say, okay, the system's dysfunctional, but you don't really need a lot of change right now, so that's fine. But the outcome is not positive at all.
Starting point is 00:43:53 It's total destruction of the country we grew up in, so got to fix it. Why would you want to enter back into this? Well, you know, I've always said the last four years I would never want to miss out on another chance to be at the president's side. I find in him to be someone who's so uniquely situated for the moment. And you go back, and I've done some reading on this. You go back and read some of the Federalist Papers, and they actually designed the system for someone like him whose interest would align with the country's interest to such an extent to which it actually works. Like separation of powers is meant to have strong, opinionated, convictional leadership that go as fast as they can and hard as they can in their direction, and for the system to then have
Starting point is 00:44:47 true separation of powers, right? An example of that is what he's proposing on recess appointments. If the Constitution allows you to do it, why wouldn't you do it if it's in your interest? And then let's see what Congress does in response to that. But that's real separation of powers. It's not like this kind of fake fourth branch administrative state where none of it works and it's all kind of cartel behind the scene, where all you get is kind of different parts of each of the branch coming together almost as a blob. And I think he's so unique in terms of being a historical transformative person that we can actually save the country. And that's really what it comes down to.
Starting point is 00:45:31 The hour is late. It's 1159. It's not too late, but it's really late. And this isn't an election where you can just have seesaws. We'll be up and you'll be down. No, if we don't win and he's won an electoral mandate, now it's time to actually execute. If we don't execute, we may never have this chance again. And so you have the president who's ready to go.
Starting point is 00:45:56 Now you need know-how people who can do that and do it with the attacks that are coming, and they will come, right? They will come hardest at the people that they believe are the greatest threats. But that's what the president needs. The president needs those types of people where he's not going to be successful and the country won't be saved. And I just – I think that it's incumbent on those of us who have that skill set, who have had the experiences we've had, you know, we're put here for a reason. We're here because God has given us a particular purpose for a particular time, and it's incumbent on us to be responsible with those moments that we're given. So, I don't know what the future holds. I don't know if I serve or if I continue at my center to be championing the ideas that he's working on. I'm happy with both of those scenarios, but it's incumbent on us to give
Starting point is 00:46:53 everything we can to be successful in this moment, because I don't think we will get another moment like this. And if you doubt how serious the opposition is to the public, not just to Trump, but to the majority of the country that voted for Trump. They're trying to leave him with World War III on the way out. I can't imagine a more desperate or evil thing for Tony Blinken, who I think is desperate and evil, in my view, to do. Leave him with a war? A lame duck president trying to start a war with the world's largest nuclear power, Russia. What do you make of that? It's incredibly insidious. And then add to the fact that he can't put two sentences together, and he's largely not in control of his own government. And so you have almost an unelected president with individuals behind the scenes that are doing this.
Starting point is 00:47:47 It doesn't surprise me, though. I mean, these are the same people that have weaponized the Department of Justice, have the lawfare. I have a colleague of mine, Jeff Clark, who's, you know, has, they're trying to disbar him because of the care that he had on behalf of the president to deal with voter integrity and election fraud after 2020. And so the system has thrown everything at the warriors that are on the field. You're seeing that with Tulsi. You're seeing that with Matt Gaetz. I mean, why is all of this stuff being thrown at him slanderously? Can I just say, I thought, I'm sorry to digress, but since you mentioned Gates,
Starting point is 00:48:25 we don't accuse, look, DOJ leaked that he was a child sex trafficker, okay? So at that point, they have a moral, I would say legal obligation to charge him for child sex trafficking and prove it in court. And if they can't shut the F up. But they didn't do that. They did not. They leaked that Matt Gaetz, a guy they didn't like, whose views were a threat to them, is a child sex trafficker. Then they just let it hang in the air and all their repulsive little minions
Starting point is 00:48:55 like Joe Scarborough, like he's a child sex trafficker. You want to live in a world where the secret police can just slander you through the media? I read in my Bible this morning that you don't believe something unless two or three people are witnesses and say, and there is none of that.
Starting point is 00:49:11 And in fact, the weaponized Department of Justice said, we don't have the proof to pursue these allegations. I know. And so then you read in the story. But they accused him of it. They accuse it. They make the case. The reporter said read it this morning. And then they say it should be known that Matt Gaetz denies that these allegations has occurred. Of course, he denies it because
Starting point is 00:49:34 they're not true in the Department of Justice. There's no accounting of the fact that these things have been proven not to be not to be true. And yet people and there's a tendency on our side. And this is very troubling. It's not just the left, which is kind of state regime propaganda. There's a tendency on our side to believe that if there's smoke, there must be fire. Why do we do that? Why do we why does our side? Why does Republican congressmen, Republican senators believe that where there must be smoke, there must be fire only because this person has been a confrontational, courageous, convictional leader
Starting point is 00:50:11 in a true generational talent, I might add. So that's that what the last point is indisputable. That's just a fact. I mean, Gates is the most articulate member of Congress. It's like, no, it's not even close. Right. So they hate him for that because he's a danger. My explanation, of course, I've noticed that Republicans believe most of what they're told. Part of it is I think there's an IQ gap, if I'm just being honest. Part of it is they believe in the system and Democrats just don't believe in the system at all. They don't believe in any system that curtails their power, basically. But Republicans really believe in it, to their great credit. And so they're like, well, it's the
Starting point is 00:50:49 DOJ. I mean, it's kind of corrupt on the margins. You know what I mean? There's some bad apples, but most of them are really great. Really? Why haven't the great ones resigned? Right. Right. I don't think there's any evidence they're mostly great at all. I think they're really dangerous, heavily armed. Maybe that's the answer. I think that is fundamentally, it's twofold. I think they're really dangerous, heavily armed. Maybe that's the answer? I think that is fundamentally, it's twofold. I think the left is made up of revolutionaries. For sure. Right. And they're Marxist. If you've read Witness, everyone knows that, right? That's not a new phenomena. It's become militarized over and over. Witness was written in like 1955. Correct, right.
Starting point is 00:51:25 So now what that looks like is not someone who's a behind-the-scenes spy. Now that looks like, you know, some of their members of Congress, right? Like an AOC. Their Marxist revolutionaries are voting in Congress. So that's their side. And our side doesn't really grapple with that. We don't make every decision realizing like that's what they think and that's what they're doing. So I'm not going to listen to what
Starting point is 00:51:49 they just kind of chit chat conversation. I'm going to, to govern and make decisions based on what I know they are pursuing. Know your enemy. Secondly, we do have trust in kind of the media and the the institutions like tony fauci can't be lying right it can't it can't really he he must not have been doing gain-of-function research if he said he wasn't he's tony fauci right like that's what we were up against and and and totally true and that is the wrong approach you got to have a skepticism in all of these people and their institutions and their bureaucracies. Okay. What needs to be done? And just, I'll shut up.
Starting point is 00:52:36 I'll stop with my stupid editorial comments. You just go through the top three or four things that you think this incoming administration, which has a rare mandate, should achieve in order? I believe that there's a lot of policy issues downstream, the border, inflation, wars across the world. All of them are downstream of one reality, and that is we don't, the American people currently are not in control of their government and the president hasn't been either. And so, we have to solve that. We have to solve the woke and the weaponized bureaucracy and have the president take control of the executive branch. So, my belief for anyone who wants to listen is that you have to, the president has to move executively as fast and as aggressively
Starting point is 00:53:27 as possible with a radical constitutional perspective to be able to dismantle that bureaucracy in their power centers. And I think there are a couple of ways to do it. Number one is going after the whole notion of independence. There are no independent agencies. Congress may have viewed them as such, SEC or the FCC, CFPB, the whole alphabet soup. But that is not something that the Constitution understands. So there may be different strategies with each one of them about how you dismantle them. But as an administration, the whole notion of an independent agency should be thrown out particularly with the department of justice in which there's literally no law all it is is precedent from the watergate era that the the attorney general and those lawyers don't work
Starting point is 00:54:18 for the president and who do they work for they think that they work for themselves they think that they are so they have the power to kill people just because they awarded themselves that power? They have the power to kill people. I mean, they believe that they have the power for all of the prosecutions and that the president doesn't get a say in any of that. And we have to go at that as hard as we possibly can, whether that's the military. We have a whole military industrial complex of generals. And Tommy Tuberville kind of exposed this this last year with a fight about life. But it really became a fight about whether we have essentially a military
Starting point is 00:54:58 that is not subject to civilian leadership. So you can apply the concept of destroying independence at every agency. I even saw it in aspects of OMB with regard to who gets to make the decisions on statistics, right? There are little pockets of independence that have to be just – we've got to remove those, right? They're unconstitutional. Number two – Would you include the Fed in that list? So I am not a huge fan of the Fed. I can't look at the Constitution and the massive decades-long decisions that they have made totally undemocratic and see that that is a place where there deserves to be an exception for the Fed.
Starting point is 00:55:46 I don't even understand who controls the Fed. I mean, and where does their authority come from? God? Are they speaking directly to God? What is this? No, because they're wrong, and they've been wrong for decades, right? Right. Let's go to zero interest rates for 11 years, see what happens.
Starting point is 00:56:00 And see what happens. So President Trump hasn't run on that, and so i'm not going to speak but i'm just interested as you've looked into the question of what authority does the constitution bestow unto whom no and give you an example if you go on t if you were watching news you're going to have seen in the last two years ads saying oppose the fed Fed's regulations on capital, bank capital, right? Well, who are they supposed to call? They're not calling a congressman. A congressman has no power. The issue is like the call to action is against the Fed.
Starting point is 00:56:36 Well, sorry, you're kind of out of luck. What's the lever we would use to influence the Fed? There is no lever, right? And so they have existed with this notion that they have this priestly ability to make decisions. And in fact, I don't actually think they're that good at it. I think people like President Trump are, in fact, better at it. And there's no reason that they should be exempt from the normal democratic process. And if Congress wants to come along and pass rules, it says, you know, this is how we want the money supply to go. All of that is in their purview.
Starting point is 00:57:11 But I think, you know, this is not some exception to the rule. Doesn't mean in any way that, you know, President Trump has any interest in doing anything in this area. But I don't think it's the exception that proves the rule on independence being something that is important downstream to the CDC, the NIH. I think everything that people like Bobby Kennedy have been running on and others is about, no, you're not some priestly role. You are politicians yourself. You just don't have to face voters, right? So independence is, I think, first and foremost. Number two, bring back the notion of impoundment. And this is something that of what of impoundment, the ability to not spend money for 200 years. system. It had been a paradigm that had been brought from the UK and how we understood.
Starting point is 00:58:06 The constitutional principle is certainly power of the purse means that Congress gets to set the ceiling. You can't spend without a congressional appropriation, but you weren't ever meant to be forced to spend it, and it has become a floor. So, 200 years, presidents are using impoundment. They get money for something. The president says, I don't think it's a good idea, or I certainly can do it better, or I have events that are happening overseas that cause me not to want to spend on the gunboat when I want to get some treaty done. All manner of executive decision-making that would be a part of that. In the 1970s, at the lowest moment of the presidency, Congress steps in and to some extent the courts, and they pass the Impoundment Control Act, which was really the Impoundment Elimination Act. And from that moment, they had destroyed separation of powers on spending and on fiscal issues. But it was beyond that. It wasn't just about dollars and cents.
Starting point is 00:59:04 It was about control of the bureaucracy. So that law effectively meant the executive branch, the president's agencies have to spend every dollar they're sent by the Congress. Correct. And I believe as a budget guy, that was the original sin on why we can't do anything fiscally from that moment on. It's also why we get omnibus bills. Because if I only need you to get your signature and I lose all of my ability to, throughout the rest of the fiscal year, to push and pull and not spend and make different decisions, I just got to get your one signature. So I'm going to put everything in that one bill, thousands of pages, and I'm going to push it through at the most, the hardest time for you politically. You might have
Starting point is 00:59:50 some diplomatic visit that you're going on. Yeah, totally. And so impoundment is vitally important, not just to save the country fiscally, it is vitally important to be able to wrest control of the bureaucracy. because when you combine congress giving the agency's vast authority to interpret the laws that they passed overly broad make law essentially make law essentially that has no repercussions on the people who voted it right they don't have to vote on what the right blend is for ethanol that's right um and then you say that your funding is going for congress, and the president has no ability. Sorry, Mr. President, you don't have to – that's illegal.
Starting point is 01:00:28 You can't turn off my funding. Now, imperial Congress still exists, just a lot more subtle. So that's number two, bringing back impoundment. Number three is dramatically going at restoring at-will employment as far as you can. A lot of ideas on the agenda. So all these companies are always telling you how much money they're giving to charity. Oh, we're so charitable. But what are the charities they're giving to? These brands that you buy that you have in your house, you don't even want to know. Very often they're charities that don't have the same values that your family has. Sometimes they're charities that don't like your family at all. But when you
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Starting point is 01:04:10 Like, why would you want that? You only want it from the standpoint of control if you want to be able to say you're going to spend what I tell you force the president to spend X amount of money. But again, it's never just about that. It's always about where they have tried to innovate it from really the progressive era. Like they wanted congressional government. That was the title of Woodrow Wilson's book. He wanted a system where essentially the agencies largely worked out of the Congress or associated with Congress, not unlike what you would see in the House of Commons, right, where their cabinet lives in their House of Parliament,
Starting point is 01:05:01 and it's largely, you know, the monarch, the executive, over time becomes toothless. That's essentially what they have wanted and have pursued at every turn here. And you saw that on steroids with them using the events of Watergate to promulgate new paradigms and ways of binding the constitutional system from working. So everything post-Watergate is largely, you can just make an assumption, it's not the way it was meant to work. And so you have our guys defending post-Watergate paradigms instead of trying to think through, okay, let's go back.
Starting point is 01:05:37 Let's go back to what the founders would have actually envisioned. Amazing. Okay, so to your third point, thank you for this, by the way. So to your third point, thank you for this, by the way. So to your third point, that the president has to be able to fire people who are subverting democracy. Why can't he? How did federal bureaucrats wind up with a kind of super tenure, where no matter what they do, you can't get rid of them. Like, I don't understand. They work for the public. Laws that have been passed, perhaps not challenged, laws that have been passed that give them bargaining power,
Starting point is 01:06:13 that give them certain processes that have to be followed before they can be dismissed. But I think in that, and it certainly made it very, very hard to hire and fire, the current system needs to be changed, but it also can be used to deal with these same kind of actors if you're willing to do it. And I don't want to get into all of the tools that are available, but they exist. You know, one of them is the reduction in force. I mean, you can, and Vivek has talked about this, I mean, you can proceed on the basis of what is good for the efficiency and the effectiveness of the agency to be able to dramatically lower at a macro level the size of the workforce. And that will give you certain legal abilities to begin to move people off of the
Starting point is 01:07:07 payroll. So there's a lot of things that are being creatively discussed in this space, but it has to be front and center. Schedule F that President Trump has already run on, that seems to be like a day one thing he has already instituted in his first term. We just didn't get to get it across the finish line. Every agency has to go and categories how many of his employees are policy and therefore subject to at-will employment. I put 90% of OMB in that category because I wanted, A, it was true, and B, I wanted to set a high bar for the rest of my colleagues at agency heads that this should be viewed maximally. You're willing to fire your own staff, which is another way of saying you're willing to relinquish some power because personnel, manpower is power. And it's always not just about firing, although there's certainly going to be
Starting point is 01:07:57 mass layoffs and firing, particularly across some of the agencies that we don't even think should exist. But what I found was that you get better staff work when people are now in their mind realizing, okay, I'm not immune from all accountability. And I would tell people, you know, you'd have to have these conference calls where in the middle of COVID and explain, you know, what we're trying to do. And a lot of people were very upset. I was like, guys, we're Republicans. We don't believe in these laws that give you these protections that we think make you less good at your job of serving a particular president. So it's just on its face outrageous, like everyone else in the country faces the vicissitudes of the job market. I've been fired
Starting point is 01:08:42 so many times with a lot of kids. And I'm not whining, but most people have had moments like that where it's like, oh, wow, I'm out of money. Why are the people that we pay with our tax dollars immune to the pressure that the rest of us feel? It's like so crazy and outrageous. It doesn't mean that you can't tell your boss what you think. Like, that's the most crazy thing in the world.
Starting point is 01:09:03 Like, we what? Yeah. You know, I've worked for some pretty authoritarian people, by the crazy thing in the world. Like, we what? Yeah. You know, I've worked for some pretty authoritarian people, by the way, over the years. And the last people I worked for, very nice to me, I will say, but, like, they had really strong views on a couple topics. And I, like, kept my views on those to myself at dinner. Yeah. They're my bosses. I mean, I don't really understand, what what how does an entirely separate set of rules
Starting point is 01:09:26 apply to our employees the public's employees our housekeepers this is how i think of them they work for us and when they when your housekeeper works for you you get to fire steals from you you get to fire her correct yeah and there's no other way to run any business any government but it's like on what on what grounds do they get to be treated better than every other category of employee in the world? Yeah. And they're also some of the suckiest employees. As the son of a federal employee, I can tell you, some of them are great. Most are not great.
Starting point is 01:09:57 Sub-great. Which is why we have so many contractors running federal agencies, correct? And that's... Like, why is Deloitte, you know, at NSA? Right. Because most NSA employees, like, suck. And that's... Why is Deloitte at NSA? Right. Because most NSA employees suck and they don't come in because of COVID. They take three-hour lunch breaks.
Starting point is 01:10:10 They're not effective. Am I telling the truth here? You're telling the truth. I know. That's why you've got to have a massive effort to dramatically reduce this so that the good ones rise to the top and everyone else is finding other work.
Starting point is 01:10:26 Okay, sorry to get so wound up. No. So, you know, and then the last thing is, is dismantling all of the specific things like over classification, the FBI background checks, all of the things that deny information to the political class that are the political appointees that prevent them from doing their job okay but this is where people start getting murdered or getting cancer or whatever they're doing to maintain control because if you start threatening i think this is why they're terrified of tulsi gabbard you start threatening to expose things to let the public know what its government is doing you're going to be exposing crimes because they're committing crimes i know that for a fact.
Starting point is 01:11:05 I know that you know it too. So that's like kind of a scary mission, is it not? It is one that causes you to count the costs. But the notion- You're so judicious. I love it. Tucker, the reality, and I think this is,
Starting point is 01:11:21 I would encourage everyone to think this way. There is no place in America where you're going to be protected from the walls closing in on you and your family. And the only extent to which that may not be true yet is which Kevin Bacon's degrees of separation, you don't have someone that's immediately in proximity to the FBI raiding their house or being the victim of lawfare. I mean, I know two people very, very closely who have been in jail. I know four people that have multi-million dollar lawsuits. And so they're coming. And the only way to stop that from happening for people that are in this community trying to rebuild from a storm or run their coffee shop. The only way to keep it from happening is for those of us in the political arena to stand tall and unabashedly and to lean forward no matter the costs.
Starting point is 01:12:20 And that's the moment that we live in. And so it's not meant to be provocative. It's just meant to know that if you are not loud and proud, that's the wrong way to think about it. But if it is aggressive and public and articulate in how you go about it, it will make it so that more and more people can come along beside you and make it so that the president has enough people that are willing to take on the system. And I believe that he has a growing number of people that are like that, and it will make it very difficult for them to move against individual actors. And the nice thing about being out of office is you get to read and kind of understand what happened, you know, and to have new perspective. And I'm just blown away by the number of people that they went after individually, like wounded individuals. And we never heard about them. I didn't hear about them until after the administration. Adam Lovinger, Mark Moyer, these are individuals that blew the whistle on corruption and their
Starting point is 01:13:26 agencies conspired with their political appointees to make them go away. And I don't think they'll be able to get away with that this time around. And in some cases, really hurt them. They wasted three or four years. They're dealing with stuff in their families. Life happens and you're dealing with the in their families, life happens, and you're dealing with the intel agencies, multiple working behind the scenes together, never giving you due process. And I think that is, we know their playbook. And we know not only what to look for,
Starting point is 01:14:02 but how to be prepared to ensure that that cannot happen again. I've noticed, and I don't think I'm imagining it, that a huge percentage of people who criticize the intel agencies wind up with kiddie porn on their computers. One of the reasons I don't use a computer. I don't think that's because they're disproportionately perfect. I don't know why you would use a computer. First of all, you can't respond to anything without it being FOIAed, right? And so we have to have a totally different view about going into government. But the intel agencies are not allowed – well, most of them are not allowed to operate domestically, period. Well, they were never allowed.
Starting point is 01:14:43 They do it. But they're definitely not allowed to play in American politics to influence election outcomes, and they they were never allowed. They do it, but they're definitely not allowed to play in American politics to influence election outcomes, and they're absolutely doing that. How do you stop that? Well, I think you need to have people that are there who are fearless, and obviously Tulsi and RFK, and not Intel, but there are certainly health aspects of national security, Matt being at DOJ. Those are the types of people that you need to get under the hood and to push as much as you possible. You've got to shut their funding off until they can prove to your satisfaction that things are.
Starting point is 01:15:18 But wait, we're not even allowed to know what their funding is. We don't know what the CIA's budget is. We don't even know, like... When you're within government, you can know those answers. And so those individuals can... You can know the size of the black budgets. Correct. Right. So I have never been in government, but I've certainly been around this a lot. They're huge. Yeah. Yeah. No. And... So why do we have black budgets? It's a great question, Tucker. I mean,
Starting point is 01:15:44 there's dramatically more transparency needed. And I would say it's one of those areas where, not unlike the over-classification, there are things we need to know a lot more about. And I can't tell you, well, what's the optimal level of transparency on that front? But the extent to which you can't have, as a citizen, an understanding of what the size of your IC community is, that's kind of a problem. I just think you're ensuring corruption. And the size of these buildings. Like, you go around and you realize, oh, wow,
Starting point is 01:16:20 that alphabet has an enormous institutional presence that the country's never even heard about. Has a real estate footprint that's beyond what you can imagine. I lived as a child with my brother in a house in Georgetown in high school that was owned by CIA. So there's just a lot. You go out to Northern Virginia, Tyson's Corner, take Chain Bridge from D.C. into Northern Virginia, and how many of those office buildings are owned by the CIA or some other intel agency? A huge number. Why can't we know that? I don't understand. We need to know a lot more, and we need to demand that we know more.
Starting point is 01:16:59 How is Congress, and yeah, they can go into a skiff and they can be given a brief. Debates are supposed to happen on the House and Senate floor. And you can't, you're providing no ability to be able to share with your voters and us as voters. Whether, did we ever vote for this? Did we ever vote for this military industrial complex, this Intel community, the extent to which it sprawled all over the country? Like, who got a say in that? It doesn't seem like the Intel- I would say it's rather undemocratic.
Starting point is 01:17:34 Well, the Intel committees, the oversight committees in Congress, whose job it is to oversee, restrain, keep the intel agencies within constitutional bounds. In my whole life in D.C. from 1985 until now, I've never seen a single member of an intel committee who wasn't in the pocket of the intel agencies. That's my perception. Have you? I don't want to, I would just say this. Devin Nunez was kind of a unique character
Starting point is 01:18:03 in his ability to provide leadership in that. And they came after him with everything they got. I know. And he survived. And I think he's a model not unlike that. When you say they, you mean the intel agencies? The intel agencies. The forces that are, you know, some out-of-government, non-government organizations, the press.
Starting point is 01:18:21 Oh, yeah. And working with the intel agencies. Running it through foreign countries. I mean, it's never like some guy at Langley, you know. And so why don't we have more Devin Nunes? That would be the question that I would ask is what fear factor is there that, and I'm not making an accusation of anyone. I'm just saying that with all Congress and with all non-government
Starting point is 01:18:46 organizations, even our organization, there's this point where you're like, if I don't, if I go after these individuals, this issue set or this area of corruption or this policy set, I saw it right after Mar-a-Lago was raided and we came out really quickly and said, you know, the FBI should be radically reformed. I think I thought it should be, you know, exploded into a thousand pieces, right? Yeah. Why do we have such fear that that is such a provocative position? Because you don't own the government.
Starting point is 01:19:20 Right. And so that's what we've got to go after. And I think it's a systemic issue that we've got to tackle with everything we've got. I couldn't agree more. And you don't have to respond. But I would just say, you know, if there are members of the, you know, intel committees providing oversight of the intel agencies, they shouldn't be allowed to serve if they have spouses who work in the intel community. Sorry, that's like such an obvious conflict that it's pretty ridiculous that that could exist, and yet it does. So, tell us on a much happier note, sorry for the dark digression, what exactly are Elon and Vivek going to do, do you think, with this Doge enterprise? Well, I think they're bringing an exhilarating rush to the system of creativity, outside-the-box thinking, comfortability with risk and leverage. Boy, both those guys are comfortable with risk. I mean, it's amazing.
Starting point is 01:20:18 It is amazing. And the reason I love it is, I mean, in some respects, this does feel like an intractable problem that we're up against. Yes, yes, exactly. And I don't think it is, but I think it feels that way. And we're bringing people that, you know, are trying to get to Mars. So I'm pretty sure they can handle, you know, the ability for us to balance our books and run a government that's much more efficient. So I think that the things that I've heard them say are things like really going after or from a deregulatory perspective all of the recent court cases that have said and chopped at the feet of this administrative state. You don't have the ability to just come up with new major questions, rank agency, rank and file agency.
Starting point is 01:21:03 You've got to have actual specific language from Congress. You don't have the ability to get the deference for every position that you've taken as just because you're a federal agency. These have been big axe cuts at these at the administrative branches. And so I think what they want to do is to use those as the basis for a massive deregulatory agenda and game on. I also think they want to look for as much that you can do to start cutting costs without Congress or with Congress, but to be really aggressive in some of the areas that I've mentioned. Empowerment would be a huge part of that, the ability to just not spend the money. And then, of course, being as radical or aggressive as you can in eliminating and reducing
Starting point is 01:21:55 employees, full-time employees, individuals, and going after contracts that make not make sense. So I think that that's where they're headed. And I think it'll be an enormous boon to the country. Can you do it from so neither one of them is going to become a federal employee himself? That's my understanding, correct? That's my understanding as well. I mean, they're not. I'll just say that. So how do you do that from outside? Well, I think that you, you know, they will be working with the agencies that do this. I think they'll be working with OMB, whoever's in that role. They'll be working with Treasury, who's ever in that role. And they will be rallying the theory of the case. I mean, I think ultimately that's what's most needed, Tucker, is a specific theory of the case about
Starting point is 01:22:41 what can be done. That's right. And then you give it to the people, and hopefully that's been a two-way conversation, but you give it to the people that are on the president's executive team and his administration, and they run with it. And then you've got Doge out there providing a political support for what must be done. I'm Tucker Carlson for ALP. Now, as you know, the FDA requires us to warn you. Well, I'll just read you the warning. Quote, warning, this product contains nicotine. Nicotine is an addictive chemical, end quote. We're required to tell you that by the federal government, but we don't shy away from that. It's addictive and there's an upside to it. Yes, nicotine is an addictive chemical. That is true. There are a lot of things in life you forget. Your car keys, your wallet. One thing you're never going to forget is Alp.
Starting point is 01:23:27 Because nicotine is an addictive chemical. You may forget to put your shoes on in the morning. You may forget to kiss your wife on the way out. You may come home and not remember your own dog's name. But one thing you're not going to forget is your Alp. Why? Because you're addicted to it. Because your body will tell you, hey, better bring
Starting point is 01:23:45 your ALP with you. And you will. I do. I'm never anywhere without my ALP. It's by the side of my bed when I go to sleep. It's there when I wake up in the morning. It's in the front pocket of my pants as I head out into the world. ALP is always with me. It's on the desk as I do interviews. Everywhere I am, ALP is. Because it's an addictive chemical. chemical That's exactly right And we're not afraid of that We're not ashamed of it It's addictive in the same way that air, water, and sex are addictive They're so great and you want to do them every day Thankfully, it's easy to have ALP with you at all times
Starting point is 01:24:14 Just go to our website, alppouch.com And never be without it Nicotine Yes, it's addictive That's why we like it. I think that's right. I mean, even just to publicize the ideas, I mean, the U.S. government at this point is like a bankruptcy or stage four cancer. I mean, it's like so overwhelmingly bad that you don't see a way out of it. At least that's how I feel when I assess it from the outside. Like, how would you even fix something like that?
Starting point is 01:24:56 I mean, we haven't had any spending reductions in like 20 years, right? But we're bankrupt, right? But we're bankrupt, and there's just this notion that nothing can be done about it we still pass 100 billion dollar ukraine checks is it like even if you thought it was a good idea like you can't afford it like you never have the affordability conversation at all is that is that true that's totally true like literally no one ever talks about affordability what we can do and these foreign heads of state show up and like demand money from us. And nobody ever says, you know,
Starting point is 01:25:28 I like your country or I don't or whatever. I think you've got a good point. Love to help you, but we're just out of dough. Like nobody even suggests that or dares think that. Like, what is that? They just assume the gravy train's going to keep on going. I dealt with the most within the military, right? But like-
Starting point is 01:25:44 What's that like? Well, they, they, they, they, you've got some road miles on you. You've been, you've done some stuff. Well, you know, I, I want to understand these things. I want to understand these systems and these institutions, why people say that what they do. And there's just, there's no understanding what, so there's like There's like no fiscal conscience at all with regard to the individuals. It's like, nope, we've got to perform a particular function in the world. I read that somewhere in my educational system. I now believe it. It doesn't matter whether that was never voted on.
Starting point is 01:26:18 It doesn't matter if that's kind of anathema to where our founding fathers would have envisioned. And so we are going to maintain our presence everywhere in the country. I, the military, get to define my requirements about what's necessary to win that military objective. You, civilian, don't get to ever question my requirements. Those requirements now automatically cost X amount of money. And we wonder why we can't ever have any cuts to defense. And we wonder why then defense spending becomes the Praetorian Guard for the non-defense spending. Right. Okay. I know what you're talking about, but will you flesh it out a little bit? Because I think you've hit on one of the keys. So for what we have been unwilling to cut any non-defense spending, the bureaucracy, which is the, quote, discretionary spending.
Starting point is 01:27:08 Members have a vote on it every single year. They don't have a vote on entitlements. Those are on autopilot. They have a vote on the bureaucracy. So everything they hate about government, their members are voting on. We haven't been able to have cuts to non-defense, not because Republicans are unwilling, although many of them are unwilling as well, but because there has been a view that those two things have to be growing at X percent to deal with the threats in the world. And that requires you to then bring additional non-defense spending to be able to be for that political coalition. And ultimately, if you get your average Republican member, they ultimately care a lot more about the defense stuff than they do about the bureaucracy. Can you say that again?
Starting point is 01:28:06 Ultimately, you have your average Republican member cares more about the military industrial complex than they do about the woke and weaponized bureaucracy that is oppressing their— They care more about flexing their power abroad than about fixing their own country. I think that's— I know that's true because I know them. They have zero interest in anything that's happened. Not zero, but they have very limited interest in what's happening in the United States and the 100,000 people dying of drug ODs every year. That's bad.
Starting point is 01:28:33 That's so bad. My heart bleeds. The invasion of more than 10 million foreigners into our country without permission. Oh, that's so bad. Yeah, yeah. I got to seal the border. But what they really care about is toppling some government they don't like or moving missiles to this military base or whatever. And why is that? Well, I think it goes to the unhealthiness of the Republican coalition for like 50 years, but particularly in since 1989. Tell me what that means. So, your kind of National Review Coalition, your fusionist
Starting point is 01:29:08 Republican coalition was anti-communist. It was social conservatives, traditional conservatives, and it was kind of fiscal libertarians, right? That was your coalition. And it worked until, you know, at a certain level when we had the Soviet Union. But when we don't have the Soviet Union, it kind of takes on a life of its own. And now you have to keep us everywhere in the world to be able to justify all of the institutional buildup and the complex that has been built up, all of these, you know, defense industrial companies and things like that. And Pat Buchanan actually talks about this in his book where he says, look, this was a specific strategy hatched out of the Department of Defense by some of the neocons at the time to be able to continue to justify the largest from a defense standpoint that we continue to be tied down to. That I also think, you know, is, so that's a big part of, I think, why your average Republican that grows up thinking
Starting point is 01:30:14 like, okay, I'm going to be pro-defense, I'm going to be free market economics, and I'm going to be a social conservative at best, right? That's what you grow up to be. And you don't actually then think through, okay, what does that mean? Does that mean I have to then be for every war that's been hatched? Do I not to be for making a defense that we can actually afford? Does that mean that I think that from an economic standpoint that we're not actually citizens before we're consumers? Like there's just a lot of unhealth in all of those. Yes, and it's not a natural coalition. I mean, famously you see this in the Democratic Party
Starting point is 01:30:54 where you've got, you know, Hispanic immigrants alongside transgender activists and they clearly have nothing in common. Everyone says that. But fewer say the obvious on the Republican side, which is that social conservatives aren't natural pro-war people. Most of them are Christians, for one thing. So why would they be in favor of killing innocents?
Starting point is 01:31:16 Like, they're not actually. They're believers in a religion that specifically prohibits that, specifically and repeatedly. So I don't know how they've hung together for so long. I'm going to be obvious about my position on this. I find them repugnant, murderous. So, that's my view. But I don't think I'm alone in that. Why are Christian conservatives naturally defense hawks?
Starting point is 01:31:38 That's what I'm saying. Not just defense hawks, war hawks. What happened in that? Well, how did Christian conservatives wind up? And I don't want to get too controversial because I don't want to hurt you because I want you to get this job. But yeah, I'll just stop there. Yes, I agree with that being too specific about it. But there are all kinds of acts of violence against Christians around the world.
Starting point is 01:31:59 In fact, it's almost always against Christians, I have noticed, that Christian leaders, including the Speaker of the House, like defend on Christian grounds. And I just don't think, obviously I find that evil, but even if I was in favor of it, I would recognize like that's not something that can last for long because it doesn't make any sense, right? Well, I do believe this is why we need
Starting point is 01:32:20 to be less doctrinaire on the right. Gosh. And to think, actually think, you know. Read those books you were mentioning earlier. Read and to be thinking through and ask the questions and trying to learn more and realize like, you know, a history book may have been written at a time to just to, to, with a particular political benefit and meaning to it. And so maybe we don't take everything, you know, I don't know, maybe some skills we learned in school and just common sense, intuition. This is, this is a,
Starting point is 01:32:51 right. Something that I think is something seems off. It's off. And we, that's, that's a God given skill that we have. We were born with it. I think it was given by God, but even if you don't believe in God, we were born with it and we don't use it. And you see it in some of the attacks on RFK. They say, well, this hasn't been proven. There are gaps in our understanding, our scientific understanding. That's like their bureaucratic way of saying, yeah, your intuition's right. We just haven't proved it to be able to. Well, they train you not to use your intuition. It's like, wait a second. I remember being in high school, reading an abnormal psychology textbook that I bought at the school bookstore that had an entry on autism that was like two paragraphs long as this esoteric disorder whose
Starting point is 01:33:35 origins we were uncertain of, whose parameters were unclear. But it was, and I remember thinking, wow, that sounds awful. And, you know, 35 years later, it's like a central feature of life in America. Like, what the hell? And you're trained. And by the way, I don't know what has caused a massive spike in autism, but there has been one. And so it takes a lot of training to get people to ignore that. And I do think the training is all designed to get you to ignore what is obvious. I think it is. I think that that's the systems do it. People get into these and that's where they kind of get to the paradigm level. I'm not going to do anything that would hurt national security. I came to DC, I'm not going to do anything that hurts national security. And I
Starting point is 01:34:14 think that's how we lose people when they go into the skiffs, just to go back to our earlier conversation. And you've got to have courage to say, look, what happens if your time in office, you missed a big issue? Like, Maha is a new issue to me. I admit it. I'm trying to read. I'm trying to read the means book. I listened to your podcast. You know, it's a new issue. But like, if I didn't get my head wrapped around it, future generations would have to indict me for me being irresponsible on an existential issue facing our country. So, I don't think most people think like that. But in general, I think our Republican coalition is unhealthy and has been for a long time because we have, and if we are, the country will be
Starting point is 01:34:59 too secular, too imperialistic and global, and too economic. And I come out of the free market economist lane, right? That's where I got my start. But we're not consumers. Like the notion that the end of all economic good is consumption and so consumers get the veto on everything, it's not actually what a citizen in a country and a nation are. And so in each of those... I'm sorry, I feel like you're saying something really important
Starting point is 01:35:24 and I just want to make sure that it's fully explained. What do you mean by that? Too economic. Too economic. So you're not a socialist. I know you're not. No, I'm a free market conservative, right? Of course you are.
Starting point is 01:35:34 But I don't believe that just because Facebook is a corporation, that means that they get to not have to answer questions about how big they are, what they use, what the impact is on our country. Whether they're wrecking my kid's brain. Right. Amazon giving me, you know, same day service on a book or a, you know, a product is awesome. I love it. But that doesn't mean that everything that Amazon does is something that we shouldn't be thinking through and that our normal disposition of free market economics may make us bad at assessing companies once they get too big. Well, it does seem like there, as you said a second ago, we need to be less doctrinaire and I as someone who grew up around
Starting point is 01:36:25 as a conservative around conservatives there were these pillars you know hawkish on defense free market and to a much lesser extent socially conservative
Starting point is 01:36:35 which no one in DC actually took seriously at all and they had total contempt for people like you I assume you didn't grow up in DC I did not
Starting point is 01:36:42 right thankfully the son of an electrician and a schoolteacher. Yeah, so this is exactly the kind of person everyone in D.C. despised. Like some Christian electrician, please shut up. That was their view. Sorry, I'm sure you know that, but it's a fact I was there. But on the free market stuff, if you asked any questions at all, it was like, shut up, socialist.
Starting point is 01:37:01 And you sort of don't want to be a socialist because that hasn't worked. And it was embarrassing. But they kind of maintained control of people on behalf of some of the worst interests in the world by invoking that. That slur, you're a socialist. Oh, you're a socialist. Did you know what I'm talking about? Yeah. I mean, they do in the foreign policy. That's a, you're a useful idiot for Russia or, you know.
Starting point is 01:37:23 Wait, they call you a useful idiot for Russia? Well, they're saying that about Tulsi. They say that about Tulsi, right? Yeah. I've lived that, yes. You've seen that? I have, yeah. In every one of these things, when they don't want to have the conversation, they shut it down with a slur.
Starting point is 01:37:36 Of course. And that's. But on the economic questions, I think I've been almost hesitant to draw obvious conclusions because I don't believe in government controlling the economy to a greater extent than it does. I just could not go at it, and it just, it abets corruption, so I'm against that. But it doesn't mean that we have to, like, be in favor of usury, right?
Starting point is 01:37:59 Like, why is it good to charge 20% interest on a credit card? Do I have to nod along with that just because I'm a conservative? And that's where if the coalition was working, you'd have a lot more interesting conversations. You'd have your Christian conservatives being upset with that, having debates with the free market coalition to say, where's a place that we can land in ways that previously the conversation wasn't? Because in this to say, okay, that's something that would come out of the mouths of our adversaries. And we need more of that, I think. And you're going to see it in trade, right? Like, yeah, trades like the one big domino that
Starting point is 01:38:38 president I think finally has now, you know, toppled with his election. But there will be a sizable number of Republicans that are very grudgingly going along or opposed to what he wants to do with what I think is a no-brainer policy with regard to universal tariffs and higher tariffs for China. And I want the money to be able to balance the books, but I also want this country to be a manufacturing producing hub. And what I found, Tucker, is that even I can win arguments with those who are free traders because they themselves have ceded the ground of independence. You know, if you're comfortable with other countries making your stuff, that may or may not be important from a national security standpoint or just period because we won't want to have to wait for six months to have a, you know, a refrigerator.
Starting point is 01:39:31 You know, if you want independence, you got to make it here. If you don't want to have to rely on China and have Xi shut down his whole economy because he's dealing with the COVID, then the answer is independence. And how do you get to making things more here? And just, I also zoom out from a standpoint of like- If my parents are paying my rent, I'm still a child. It doesn't matter how old I am. Right? That's right.
Starting point is 01:39:53 And like, there is a balance in every community where we're not all going to be carpenters or plumbers or electricians, right? Like, you're not going to be independent as a person or a community across the board. But you would kind of hate it if we didn't have any carpenters in your community, right? You'd hate it if you didn't have any plumbers in your community. And we've gotten to the point as a country where we don't
Starting point is 01:40:15 make this stuff anymore. And that's a real problem. And I think it's just kind of an intuition way of getting at something that has been suppressed for decades. What has been suppressed, and there are specific institutions that have made it their mission to suppress it. One is the Wall Street Journal. The other is the American Enterprise Institute, which for my whole life, 55 years, have been sort of leading standards in the right-wing firmament. You know, AEI, Wall Street Journal, like people really care on the right what they have to say. And I can't wait for both of them to collapse. I will celebrate. I really will celebrate when they go under. I mean that. But like, why haven't people who want
Starting point is 01:40:57 to put the country first, its actual interest first, built their own institutions to rival the Wall Street Journal and AEI? I don't get it. This has been my life's work for the last four years, and hopefully, you know, over the next 50 is, if I live that long. 50? How old are you, Russ? That's a little excessive. Well, you're big in the MAHA thing now, so maybe it's possible. That's right, you know, get that 50 on. Look, I think this is what is needed as new institutions.
Starting point is 01:41:23 It's why we created the Center for Renewing America, because we wanted to make sure there was a home to give elites, both in D.C. and in the grassroots, this is actually how you articulating something that must be done, we felt there needed to be an institution to actually take that and turn it into the regulations, the translating into actually public policy. And that has to be new. Some exceptions exist. I mean, Kevin is doing a great job at Heritage, but that's the exception rather than the rule. My view is that you've got to create new institutions that are scrappy, are hungry. It doesn't take them two weeks to write a paper. It takes them one day to write a paper. You get it out there. And if that paper's not read,
Starting point is 01:42:17 you go and you like get it in front of people so that they understand it. And then when they have read it and you figure out why haven't you acted on it? What's, you know, like you have to work it hard. And that's going to come from not sitting around a board table at a prestigious organization. That's going to come from people who are hardened, battle-tested and really awesome in their mind as to what they think and what they know. I mean, since we've moved toward an economy where like you can't really do anything without a billionaire on your side, I've noticed. Luckily, you know, good people now have Elon Musk. He's our billionaire, which is great. But big picture, it's super bad to need a billionaire to do anything meaningful. And you wonder, are Republican donors coming around to the idea that, you know, America needs to be saved and
Starting point is 01:43:06 that what we've been doing isn't working? Do you think they see this? Look, there's a lot of awesome conservative donors. There are? Yeah. You would know. And many of them are coming to our banner over time. I think the issue is, you know, do they know about your organization, the impact? And there's a lot of grift on the, and that's the problem is like, you've got to kind of show yourself. There's so much grift, right? It's unbelievable. You kind of have to acknowledge,
Starting point is 01:43:32 you know, there's a lot of grift out here, but at the same time, do everything you can to just get up in the morning and do your job and do it effectively. And then people come where I feel like the issue is, is that with everyone you're educating them on the same journey that I think you have. I think you've talked about it, and I know I have, of this trying to, like, what has been off about conservatism for a while and been, I think, the reason why we have lost and been on the edge of tyranny. And sometimes there are folks that still have viewpoints on that. Like, when we took Ukraine, we were the first organization out to oppose Ukraine funding. That was risky, right? Because Putin had just invaded and gone over them.
Starting point is 01:44:13 We didn't want that, but we knew where this was headed. And that was a long time for us to educate all stakeholders. Can I just ask now, I'm being like mean and bitter, but why would anybody who thought that was a good idea have power ever again? Like, shouldn't that be a litmus test? I do believe Ukraine should be a litmus test for the national security team for sure. Well, it hasn't been, unfortunately. Well, it's certainly in terms of like getting a read on where someone is and then you can have whatever conversations you want to have with them. But like.
Starting point is 01:44:44 That was obvious to me. I'm just a stupid cable news host. Not a national security expert. But I've been around it a lot. I'm just trying to apply common sense. Like that was so obvious in February of 2022. This was going to hurt the United States
Starting point is 01:44:57 in very serious ways. And it has. And it has. And so over time, that coalition, that conversation we're having about what conservatives need, what does conservatism need to be to save the country? Not protecting, you know, your little niche within that, that conversation and the ideas is why when you come to one of our events with our donors, I hand out books. Like I want, I don't want you to just necessarily read our policy paper. I'm sure you're going to do that anyways. I want you reading Weirker Chambers.
Starting point is 01:45:35 I want you reading Rusty Reno, Return of the Strong Gods, right? I want you reading this stuff. We're giving out Pat Buchanan books. Like I want the whole conservative movement to be going deep in these books so that you're both enlightened, encouraged, and you come out of fighting force, whether you are the practitioner here in D.C., the funder on the outside. And that's a long-term project, honestly, but I think it's one that's absolutely vital. Last question. In retrospect, one of the things I'm most guilty about was being used by, well, Bill Kristol in particular, but just as a young man, I was used by the forces that control Washington to attack both Ross Perot and especially Pep Buchanan. You know, whatever, they're human human beings say, flaws, obviously.
Starting point is 01:46:25 But big picture, they were kind of right about a lot of stuff, correct? Yeah, they were absolutely right. They were. They were. Yeah. And this has been an undercurrent that has been popped up at times, but is largely suppressed by the Republican establishment and their intellectual Praetorian Guard, National Review and others, and Pat Buchanan was a major opportunity for it to punch through, and then Donald Trump really punched through. And now it's ascendant, and it's about us going back and trying to think through, like, what are some of these viewpoints mean? Like, where were they right or wrong?
Starting point is 01:47:03 What does it look like in health? What does it look like with AI? What does it look like in all of these different areas? But I think it's primarily remembering that we're individuals with souls. We're a nation. We're not just an economy. These are the kinds of kind of first building blocks that if you get in place, then you can have a much more coherent, convincing, and satisfying public policy life. But ultimately, I think it's like Whitaker Chambers married to Pat Buchanan married to someone like a Donald Trump. I think that movement over time is something that trying to find how to give it flourish in life and institutions and will ultimately be successful in saving the country. Man, if you wind up in this administration, I will sleep better. I mean that.
Starting point is 01:47:51 So thank you, Russ. I appreciate it. Thanks for having me, Tucker. Thanks for listening to Tucker Carlson Show. If you enjoyed it, you can go to TuckerCarlson.com to see everything that we have made. The complete library.

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