UNBIASED - November 25, 2024: Trump Nominates Pam Bondi for AG, Scott Bessent for Treasury, and Russell Vought. Here's What to Know About Them. PLUS Trump's Election Interference Case To Be Dropped, and More.
Episode Date: November 25, 2024Welcome back to UNBIASED. In today's episode: Trump Nominates Pam Bondi for Attorney General. Here's What You to Know About Her Career (0:30) Trump Nominates Scott Bessent for Treasury Secretary. He...re's What to Know About His Career, His Role, and His Views on Tariffs (3:24) Trump Nominates Russell Vought for Director of Office of Management and Budget. Here's What to Know About His Career, His Role, and His Ties to Project 2025 (7:13) Trump's Cabinet Is Officially Full (Pending Confirmation). Here's Who He Chose (11:18) Quick Hitters: Jack Smith Files Motion to Dismiss Federal Election Interference Case, Bluesky Sees Huge Increase in User Numbers, Macy's Delays Earnings Report After $154M Error, Judge Merchan Indefinitely Delays Trump's Sentencing, TX Education Board Allows Bible-Based Lessons in Classroom, Caitlyn Jenner Announces Run for CA Governor (12:41) Daily Critical Thinking Exercise (16:53) Listen/Watch this episode AD-FREE on Patreon. Watch this episode on YouTube. Follow Jordan on Instagram and TikTok. All sources for this episode can be found here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome back to Unbiased, your favorite source of unbiased news and legal analysis.
Welcome back to Unbiased.
Today is Monday, November 25th.
It is a short week and this is your daily news rundown.
As always, if you love the unbiased approach that this episode provides,
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Without further ado, let's get into today's stories.
Since Friday, Donald Trump has nominated and selected many individuals to fill both his
cabinet and his executive office, and his cabinet is officially full.
Now we won't be able to cover all of the recent picks,
but let's go over a few of them.
And then at the end, we'll do a quick recap of everyone
that he has nominated for his cabinet specifically
and their positions.
On Friday, just one day after Gates withdrew
from the attorney general nomination,
Trump nominated Pam Bondi for the position.
As with any cabinet position, this is a position that requires Senate confirmation.
It's ultimately the reason that Gates withdrew.
He didn't have enough support in the Senate.
And if confirmed, Bondi will head the DOJ.
A little bit about Bondi.
She started her work as a prosecutor in Florida.
She worked as a prosecutor for 18 years before becoming Florida's first female
attorney general in 2010. She is known for leading famous cases out of Florida, like the case
challenging Obama's Affordable Care Act and a Florida case where she fought to protect the
state's ban on same-sex marriages. That was pre-Obergeville, which of course is the case
that legalized the right to same-sex marriage. She also strongly
fought to combat pill mills, which are facilities that prescribe pain medication without an actual
diagnosis or proper documentation. She worked on fighting the state's opioid crisis. She was a
prominent animal rights activist supporting a state ballot measure to ban dog racing in 2018.
And she also focused on various human trafficking issues.
In 2013, Trump's foundation gave a $25,000 contribution to Bondi's political action
committee during her reelection bid for Florida attorney general.
And this led Democrats to allege that that donation influenced Bondi to drop a pending
fraud investigation into Trump University.
However, it's worth noting that a Florida ethics panel cleared Bondi of any wrongdoing
in the matter.
Bondi has also been a lobbyist lobbying for some large corporations like Amazon, General
Motors, and Uber, and currently works as a partner at Ballard Partners, which is a Florida-based lobbying firm
where Trump's pick for Chief of Staff,
Susie Wiles, also works as a partner.
Bondi was on the defense team
in Trump's first impeachment trial
and is now listed as the chair
for the Center for Litigation
at the America First Policy Institute
where she helped lead the Institute's work
against the quote unquote,
weaponization of the Justice Department and more
recently during Trump's first administration, Bondi worked on
Trump's Opioid and Drug Abuse Commission. Now, obviously that
is not everything that you could possibly know about Bondi. So,
if you are interested in learning more, I of course have
many sources linked for you in the sources section of this
episode. Moving on to Scott Besant,
Trump's nominee for Treasury Secretary.
Besant is a 62 year old hedge fund manager
and founder of Key Square Capital Management.
If confirmed, Besant will be the first
openly gay Treasury Secretary.
As far as the Treasury Secretary's role, it is one of
the most crucial hires in any administration because of the ties to
the economy and also because the Treasury Secretary is essentially the
President's quarterback when it comes to executing the President's economic
plays. The Treasury Secretary is also responsible for formulating and recommending both domestic and
international financial, economic, and tax policy and
managing the public debt. And then of course, as we've
discussed, the treasury secretary also oversees all of
the agencies and offices within the treasury department.
Bascent has been critical of the Biden administration's
quote unquote reckless spending and donated
roughly $3 million to Trump and other Republicans this election cycle, calling Trump quote,
very sophisticated on economic policy, end quote.
Before founding Key Square, he served as the chief investment officer at the Soros Fund,
analyzing macroeconomic and geopolitical risks, and he is known for his role in the
fund's bet against the yen, which garnered more than a billion dollars in profits for
the Soros Fund in just three months.
Now perhaps the biggest talking point when it comes to the economy is tariffs.
We all know there has been some controversy surrounding Trump's tariff plans.
Some are in favor, some are against,
but Besant is of the belief that tariffs are not inflationary. He has pushed back on the
criticisms of tariffs, which he calls quote-unquote absurd, and instead describes tariffs as a,
quote, negotiating tool with our trading partners. End quote. In an opinion piece for Fox News,
Besant wrote, quote, critics of tariffs argue that they will increase the prices Americans pay for imported goods,
but the facts argue against this.
President Trump's first-term tariffs did not raise the prices of the affected goods,
despite predictions back then that the tariffs would prove inflationary.
He also believes that tariffs can,
increase revenue to the Treasury,
encourage businesses to restore production and reduce our reliance on industrial production from
strategic rivals, end quote.
And while he believes in the power of tariffs, CNBC has reported that strategists expect
Beesent to push Trump to consider a softer approach and take some of the sting out of
Trump's more extreme economic
views.
According to an article from the Wall Street Journal, Bascent has advised Trump to create
a 3-3-3 policy, which involves cutting the budget deficit to 3% of GDP by 2028, pushing
GDP growth to 3% via deregulation, and pumping out an additional 3 million barrels of oil each day,
which would result in the US producing around 16 million barrels of oil per day.
Bascent offered a roadmap of his vision for the economy during Trump's second term, saying,
quote, restarting the American growth engine, reducing inflationary pressures,
and addressing the debt burden from four years of reckless spending." He also called for an overhaul of bank regulations,
preserving the American dollar, reforming Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, and a
renaissance in American energy investment and free and fair trade. In his first interview,
following his nomination, Besant said his policy priority would be to deliver on Trump's various
tax cut pledges,
which include making the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017
permanent and eliminating taxes on tips,
social security benefits, and overtime pay.
Now let's go over one more pick,
Russell Vought, who Trump chose to head
the Office of Management and Budget,
a position that Vought previously held
in Trump's first administration. I'm covering this one, notought previously held in Trump's first administration.
I'm covering this one because not because it's in Trump's cabinet, but because a lot of you had
questions about him and his ties to Project 2025. Now, despite this position being part of the
president's executive office and not in his cabinet, this position is still subject to
Senate confirmation. So let's talk a little bit about the role and then Vought himself and his role in 2025.
The OMB oversees the implementation of the president's vision across the executive branch,
i.e. oversees the performance of federal agencies and administers the federal budget. Vought has
worked for more than 24 years in DC. He worked on Capitol Hill at one time, serving as the policy director for the House
Republican Conference, the executive director of the Republican Study Committee, and as a legislative
assistant in the Senate. He also spent seven years working as the VP for the Heritage Action
for America, which is a sister organization to the Heritage Foundation, and he joined Trump's administration in 2020 as the director of OMB.
Vought describes the OMB as the president's, quote,
air traffic control system with the ability and charge to ensure that all policy initiatives
are flying in sync and with the authority to let planes take off and at times ground planes that
are flying off course, end quote. As mentioned, Watt is a co-author of Project
2025's Mandate for Leadership. He specifically wrote chapter two, which is titled, quote,
Executive Office of the President of the United States, end quote. Remember that the president
has an executive office and a cabinet, two different things. Watt's chapter discusses his
vision for the president's executive office, which includes
notes for many of the components within the president's executive office.
So the Office of Management and Budget, which is what he has been nominated to run, the
National Security Council, the National Economic Council, the Office of the US Trade Representative,
the Council of Economic Advisers, the National Space Council, the Office
of Science and Tech Policy, the Council on Environmental Quality, the Office of National
Drug Control Policy, the Gender Policy Council, and the Office of the Vice President. Most of those
offices that I just mentioned are older offices having been created between 1939 and 1976.
The newest of the offices are the Office
of National Drug Control Policy created in 1989,
the National Space Council also created in 1989
but was non-operational from 1993 to 2017
when Trump revived it,
the National Economic Council created in 1993,
and the most recent is the Gender Policy Council
which was created in 1993, and the most recent is the Gender Policy Council, which was created
in 2021. Of these 11 offices and councils that Vought wrote about in his chapter, he
lays out his vision for 10 of them. The exception is the Gender Policy Council, which he recommends
eliminating completely. He wrote, quote, The president should immediately revoke Executive
Order 14020 and every policy produced on its behalf. Abolishing the
Gender Policy Council would eliminate central promotion of abortion,
comprehensive sexuality education, and the new woke gender ideology which has
as a principal tenant gender-affirming care and sex change surgeries on minors."
Vought further recommends in addition to doing away with the Gender
Policy Council, adding
an appointed position which would help facilitate the implementation of policies related to
the promotion of life and family in the United States.
And of course, if you want to read more about Vaught or his views on the Executive Office
of the President specifically, I do have many sources linked for you in the sources section
of this episode, including chapter two of project 2025 mandate for leadership. Let's take a quick break here.
When we come back, we will do a quick recap of all of Trump's cabinet picks,
plus quick hitters and critical thinking. Welcome back. Okay. So I think we've covered in total
over the last couple of weeks, 15 or so of Trump's picks for both his cabinet and executive office.
We obviously didn't get to every one, but let's do a quick recap of just those in his cabinet.
Remember, the cabinet consists of 15 seats, one for each head of department,
and each of these roles is subject to Senate confirmation.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Secretary of Health and Human Services,
Laurie Chavez de Remer as Labor Secretary.
Scott Bascent as Treasury Secretary.
Marco Rubio as Secretary of State.
Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense.
Pam Bondi as Attorney General.
Doug Burgum as Secretary of the Interior.
Brooke Rollins as Agriculture Secretary.
Howard Lutnick as Commerce Secretary.
Scott Turner as Secretary of the Department
of Housing and Urban Development, Sean Duffy as Transportation Secretary, Chris Wright
as Energy Secretary, Linda McMahon as Education Secretary, Douglas Collins as Secretary of
Veterans Affairs, and Kristi Noem as Homeland Secretary.
Of those 15 nominations, we have covered RFK Jr.,
Scott Bessent, Marco Rubio, Pam Bondi, Chris Wright,
Linda McMahon, and Kristi Noem,
and that does not include all of the executive office picks
we have talked about as well.
So if you do wanna learn more about any of those individuals,
just go look through the episodes
over the last couple of weeks.
And now we can get into some quick hitters.
Special counsel Jack Smith said he will be dropping the federal election
interference case against Trump. In his request for dismissal, Smith wrote,
quote, the Justice Department's position is that the Constitution requires that this
case be dismissed before the defendant is inaugurated. This outcome is not
based on the merits or strength of the case against the defendant."
Up until now, what's been going on is the judge has been in the process of
considering which of Trump's alleged actions were covered by immunity as per
the Supreme Court's recent decision. However, once these charges are dropped,
the judge will no longer
have to make that determination because the case will be done. The social media network Blue Sky
has added 7 million users since Election Day, and the COO is saying that the 20-person team is in
quote firefighting mode, end quote. Many users post-election left X for Blue Sky, saying that Blue Sky is like the quote-unquote
old Twitter, and that Elon Musk has used X as a political megaphone in his support for
Trump.
Blue Sky is an app which was created in 2019 as this internal project at Twitter.
It launched as a separate company in 2021, and it launched a beta version of the app
just last year where users could join, but only if they got an invite. Blue Sky is competing with
both X and Meta's Threads app, so it'll be interesting to see how the app performs compared
to those two. Macy's is delaying the release of its quarterly earnings result after it found a possible
$154 million accounting-related issue that goes back years.
An independent investigation and forensic analysis found that a single employee with
responsibility for small-package delivery expense accounting intentionally made erroneous
accounting accrual entries to hide roughly $132 million to $154 million of expenses from the fourth quarter of 2021 through the fiscal quarter ended November 2nd.
Macy said the person behind the conduct is no longer an employee and that they hope to have the internal investigation completed by December 11th, at which point the quarterly earnings result will be released.
On Friday, Judge Mershon indefinitely postponed Trump's sentencing in his falsifying business
records case.
So this is the case where Trump was found guilty of 34 counts of falsifying business
records in the first degree after he wrote checks to reimburse his former attorney, Michael
Cohen, for payments made to Stormy Daniels.
After the Supreme Court issued its recent presidential immunity ruling, Trump sought
to have that conviction overturned.
And since being elected, things have been further complicated.
So to clarify what the judge's Friday ruling means is that Trump's sentencing date of
November 26th will not go forward and there has been no new
sentencing date scheduled. The judge will now have to decide whether to dismiss the case entirely
based upon the Supreme Court's recent ruling and Trump being elected as president. The Texas
Education Board voted on Friday to approve the inclusion of Bible-based lessons in public elementary schools.
The curriculum is optional for schools to adopt, but includes a financial incentive
for schools to do so, which is $60 per student.
The new classroom materials would feature lessons on Christian teachings, like stories
from the Book of Genesis, and moral principles like the Golden Rule.
At the board meeting earlier this week,
more than 100 people did express both support and opposition
to the lessons, which signals that we may likely see
this new Board of Education rule challenged in court.
And finally, Caitlyn Jenner has declared her intention
to run for governor of California as a Republican.
Her announcement comes after her
previous attempt in a recall election in 2021, where she only garnered about 1% of the votes.
And now it's time for critical thinking. It's been a minute since our last critical thinking
exercise, but I figured we could bring it back today since we're almost back to normal post-election.
For those that may be new to the podcast, this is a segment where I just pose some questions to get
you thinking deeper about any given issue. It's nothing crazy, the questions
aren't too complex, it's quite literally just to open the door to thought because
nowadays we tend to be really set in our ways when it comes to our beliefs and
sometimes we just need to challenge those beliefs a little bit, take a look at
the other
side and just kind of like think, right?
So my goal with this exercise is always to get you to be able to argue for the other
side regardless of what your stance is.
More often than not, the critical thinking exercise will tie back to a story that we've
covered in the episode, but not always.
Today, it does not.
So last week, Jose Ibarra, he is an illegal Venezuelan immigrant,
he was found guilty of murdering 22-year-old Georgia nursing student Laken Reilly. The case
was pretty straightforward, the evidence against Ibarra was overwhelming, and the case was a pretty
big talking point this election season. If you want a little recap of the case and the conviction,
go check out Wednesday's episode from last week. But following Ibarra's conviction, obviously every news
outlet did a little write-up on the story, right? But it was MSNBC's coverage that got a lot of
attention, specifically the headline that MSNBC chose for this article. The article was originally
written on November 21st at 7 o' 7 p.m. Eastern Time, the night of the conviction, and the headline
read, quote, Lake and Riley's killer never stood a chance, end quote. And a lot of people took issue with the way it was worded, so about 14 hours later,
the headline was updated to instead read, quote, the guilt of Lake and Riley's killer was never in
doubt, end quote. Now, the subtext underneath the headline, that remained unchanged, and it says,
quote, for all the political controversy surrounding Jose Ibarra, the case against him was always a simple one. End quote. Now here are the questions I have for you. When you hear that
original headline, Lake and Riley's killer never stood a chance, how do you interpret that? What
message do you feel that MSNBC is trying to convey? And I want you to actually pause the episode and
think about not only your initial interpretation, but also a second interpretation.
Because there are really two interpretations here
that make sense and they each fall
on opposite sides of the spectrum.
So take a minute here and come back.
Okay, now that you're back,
I will tell you the two most popular interpretations.
You could interpret that headline
to mean that Ibarra never stood a chance
because the evidence against him was so overwhelming.
Or you could interpret the headline to mean that Ibarra never stood a chance because he
was an illegal immigrant in the United States justice system that would have never been
given a fair shot.
Now that's obviously not, you know, that's not the only, those aren't the only two ways
you can interpret this, but the interpretation that came to you initially will more than
likely correlate to how you feel about MSNBC and its reporting. So like I said,
my goal in this is to always get you challenging the way that you think. And even if it's just for
a second, thinking about the opposite argument, the opposite side. But there's also a second
takeaway here, and it's something that I've been preaching for two years. Always read past the headline. Always, always, always. The headlines never tell the full story and in fact, the
headlines often twist the story in ways you didn't even know were possible because the headlines are
meant to be clickbait, right? So always read past the headline. And I do want to give those of you
praise that thought to yourself in the midst of this exercise
Well, what does the article say because the article will always add color to a headline?
So I want you to get used to thinking that way like seeing a headline and then thinking well
Let me read and see what that says
So that's that the media will continue to do what the media does and twist narratives and spark controversy
But that is why I am here. So that's what I have for you today
I hope you have a great night and I will talk to you tomorrow
for the second and final episode of the week.
["Dreams of a New World"]