What A Day - Trump Passes The Buck To Bondi
Episode Date: February 6, 2026We're just one week into February, and a lot has happened already — from the fallout over the Department of Justice's Epstein file dump, to President Trump's claims the U.S. should "nationalize" el...ections, to the decision to pull 700 federal immigration agents out of Minnesota on Wednesday. It's been a lot to follow — so we spoke to Tim Miller. He's writer-at-large at The Bulwark and host of The Bulwark Podcast.And in headlines, lawmakers are nowhere near an agreement to fund the Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. and Iran are set to hold nuclear talks in Oman, and the Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots face off in Super Bowl LX.Show Notes: Check out The Bulwark Call Congress – 202-224-3121 Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8 What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcast Follow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/ For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, February 6th.
I'm Jane Koston, and this is what a day.
The show that really enjoys the deep, empathy and care President Donald Trump showed for religious Americans,
like House Speaker Mike Johnson, at the National Prayer Breakfast Thursday.
You know, Mike Johnson's a very religious person.
That he does not hide it.
He'll say to me sometimes at lunch, sir, may we pray.
Say, excuse me?
What happened to lunch?
You know, the awful, it's okay with me.
You're praying is ruining the whole vibe, Mike.
On today's show, is it the weekend yet?
We're gearing up for a face-off between the Seattle Seahawks
and the New England Patriots in Super Bowl 60.
And the U.S. is gearing up for a face-off.
I mean, talks with Iran in Oman.
But let's start with...
Well, a lot has happened in the last week, hasn't it?
I mean, the Department of Jopold.
Justice released three million files related to its investigation and convicted sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein just one week ago. And since then, we've learned that many of our bestest and brightest
spent a lot of time sending Epstein misspelled messages begging to hang out on its island.
Then President Trump argued Monday that the United States should, quote, nationalize elections.
Then the White House said he was actually referring to the SAVE Act, which would require voters
to prove they are U.S. citizens in order to cast a ballot. And then on Tuesday, Trump made it clear
during an Oval Office Press conference that, yeah, he wants to nationalize elections.
Look at some of the places that terrible corruption on elections, and the federal government
should not allow that. The federal government should get involved.
Great. And there was more. Clearly seeing some poll numbers, the administration didn't like,
Borders are Tom Homan ordered 700 federal immigration agents out of Minnesota on Wednesday.
A decision Trump took credit for in an interview with NBC Nightly News that night.
But Congress is still fighting about.
whether or not it's okay for immigration officers to be unidentifiable masked weirdos who smash car windows.
So for more on the shit show that kicked off February 2026, I spoke to Tim Miller.
He's writer at large at the Bullwork and host of the Bullwork podcast.
Tim, welcome back to what a day.
It is good to be back.
What a day. What a day? For a lot of days in a row now, actually.
Yeah, I mean, to that point, somehow, it's been a week since the Department of Justice released
more than 3 million Epstein files.
What were your biggest takeaways from that drop?
Hmm.
I feel like my biggest takeaway was just a deep shame about our society.
I was going through emails, I had this craving that there was going to be one person that just said,
hey, you petto piece of shit, I don't want to go to dinner with Larry Summers.
I'm not interested.
And it doesn't feel like anybody did that, at least in the emails I've seen.
And that's very distressing, just like that there's just a general lack of any sort of red line when it comes to networking among our elite.
And it's not surprising, but it's depressing for it to be so stark.
Besides that, look, I feel a little bit unsatisfied because obviously Trump is covering up something.
But I don't think that this process is going to yield anything worthwhile unless there are other co-conspirators that are.
brought to justice. And like at this point, it's like basically Andrew formerly known as Prince
and Galane and Jeffrey. And that's it. Yeah. I mean, at a certain point, there's only so many
of Andrew's homes he can be removed from. Like they've started kicking him out of places that I think
he kind of forgot he had. Right. One of the most interesting documents, too, is that the original
indictment of Epstein in Florida that Alex Acosta kind of threw in the trash and kind of returned
an insanely lighter indictment.
I mean, that's almost an understatement, to put it like that.
But all the counts were everything we've known, we've come to know since.
But there are other co-conspirators in that original indictment besides him, and there's
three others.
I assume one of those, Maxwell.
Who are the other ones?
Yeah.
And I think that is an element of this that's still missing.
And I think the victims, obviously, cannot feel any thing even close to closure if, like,
the end result of this is, you know, pointing and laughing at, like, a handful of elites that
were way too cozy with him in emails. Yeah, I mean, obviously, we actually didn't get all of the files.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the DOJ held back about half of the Epstein files for
various reasons, like protecting victims and withholding content-related child sexual abuse.
The problem is they didn't properly redact many of the files they did release.
This says to me that this was done because they had to do it, but they don't actually give a shit at all.
Yeah, well, it's also rushed.
It's like, it's an unserious process.
You know, if they, if this was a real process where they were trying to identify, A, co-conspirators or B, other people that were involved in illicit behavior towards young women and girls, then, like, there's a way that they would have gone about this, right?
You know, you go back to the 2007 indictment and then you release this.
you have somebody who's an expert inside the FBI or the DOJ and child sex crimes, like, writes
a memo at the top.
And it's like, here's the context of these files and here's why we redacted this and that, right?
Like, there would be a way to do that.
I think that the administration's excuse, quote unquote, would be that, like, well, they gave us
this legislative deadline.
And so we're just dumping it all out.
And you guys get to go through it.
But, like, they're not acting like people that want justice for anybody.
I mean, hell, Trump even said that he's feeling bad for Bill Clinton.
Right.
Like Trump, Trump is demonstrating the only kind of empathy we've ever seen him demonstrate,
which is the empathy for, you know, men who have been accused of sex crimes.
And like, it seems to me, like, their main concern here is, like, protecting people from being falsely smeared or whatever.
And there is not any serious or judicious effort to, you know, uncover new information that would be valuable.
Right.
But it's been a really weird week.
earlier this week, President Trump said Republicans should, quote, nationalize the voting when he was on ex-deputy FBI director Dan Bonino's podcast, his spiritual home. It was interesting how a bunch of administration figures tried to say this was about the Save Act. This was about like, oh, requiring a passport to vote. And then Trump was like, nope, that's not what I meant at all. This is wild on a ton of levels. But like, should we be concerned about this actually happening? Or is this more like concerning because,
he wants this.
Well, I'd like to bring my old Republican hat on here for a second and say that maybe the pro-democracy
movement should consider some kind of negotiation with the MAGAs if they want to mandate a
passport for voting.
Yeah, because you're well aware of who owns passports in this country.
I think a passport mandated voting would yield results that I would prefer.
I mean, we'd see how that would shake out.
It's just something to consider.
We shouldn't throw the baby out with the groundwater, I guess, on that idea.
Yeah.
As far as the accusations about nationalizing elections, and obviously they can't do that.
I was pretty alarmed for the fact that he kept using that number 15.
I don't have the exact quote in front of you, but it's something the fact that we have to take over the voting in, you know, the places where there could be problems.
You know, there might be like 15 places where we might have to take it over.
And then that number 15 came up again in a press conference.
And I'm like, well, Trump has the kind of lizard brain where like little rink.
random facts sticking his head. And to me, as a Trump observer, I watched that. And I was like,
I think that there were some people briefing him about how there are 15 areas where they're going
to try to monkey you at the midterms. I don't think you would have just made up that number.
And so I think it's relatively alarming they're taking it seriously. Your friend Steve Bannon
was yesterday talking about how they want to be putting ICE agents around voting booths,
or not the booths themselves, but voting locations in certain precincts around the country. That's
kind of alarming. So, you know, there's a little.
little bit of a gang who can't shoot straight element to this, like their effort to rig the elections
through gerrymandering backfired badly. A lot of times voter suppression efforts backfire badly
because people don't like having their vote suppressed, none too much. So I'm not like at the
far end of alarmism. Like we're not going to have elections again in the midterms, but I do think
we need to be vigilant. Right. I mean, Trump cares most of all about the 2020 election, which he will
tell you over and over again. And we talked about the DOJ's recent raid of an election's warehouse
in Fulton County, Georgia earlier this week,
with Director of National Intelligence,
Tulsi Gabbard, present.
And there's been this, like,
amusing back and forth
in the Trump administration
about why she was there.
In a letter to the Senate Intelligence Committee,
she said President Trump asked her to be there,
but now Trump is saying
Pam Bondi told her to go.
It seems kind of weird
that no one wants to take responsibility
for Tulsi Gabbard
being in a place where Tulsi Gabbard
doesn't need to be.
Yeah.
I mean, you've got to assume that Trump is lying
because that's just a good,
safe baseline bet here?
Why would Tulsi say that Trump told her to go if he didn't?
She's weird though, so who knows?
And they're all liars.
Right, that's the thing.
Like, this is a real, it's just, you know, a real bureau of liars.
So.
Yeah.
It's not really a credible testimony to be had here.
It's extremely strange that she was there.
Like, the only possible rationale you could think of for her being there is that, you know,
part of her remit is.
foreign interference in the elections.
Now, traditionally, you know, people in her role as Director of National Intelligence
would be focused on preventing foreign interference in elections.
It's possible that she might kind of see her role as a little bit of an inverse of that
and allowing certain types of interference.
But none of their explanations are any better, by the way.
It's like the Attorney General demanding that the Director of National Intelligence is at a raid
in Georgia?
In Georgia of ballots based on
conspiracy theories that have been debunked multiple times in court and been debunked by Republican
elected officials in the state. I'm like, it's fecocked anyway you look at it.
Yeah. I mean, Trump will take responsibility for some things. And I found this interesting.
On Wednesday, White House Borders are Tom Holman announced the withdrawal of about 700 federal
officers from Minnesota. A decision, unlike Fulton County, President Trump personally took credit
for later in an interview with NBC. And that tells me, Democrats,
are winning the perception fight over immigration enforcement.
You worked on the campaign for Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush.
Immigration reform is a big thing there.
What is your view here?
Can the U.S. actually come to a consensus on immigration?
Because it seems as if, like, you know, in 2024, Americans voted with regard to immigration
on not that.
But now you're getting the, oh, not that either.
That seems terrible.
So where do we go next?
Well, I think that the Democrats would be wise to focus.
is their messaging for now on the second batch of not that's to use the way you framed it,
right?
I think that trying to put forth some future grand bargain where you bring in, I don't know,
Katie Britt and Lisa Murkowski, it's hard to imagine.
And I think it would be hard to execute.
And I think at this point that the overreach of the Trump administration is so extensive
that you had this, like article.
yesterday in the New York Times with the aforementioned Katie Britt, who was like trying to act
like she really cares about Liam Ramos, that five-year-old in the Beanie who was victimized
by ICE and sent to Texas.
So if Republicans are going to the failing New York Times to say, hey, I'm one of the good
ones.
Yeah, that is a tell.
It's always a tell.
It's like, I mean, you saw that with Mike Lawler.
When you want to go to the New York Times and say, like, wow, I'm very worried about what's
happening.
I'm like, somebody showed you a poll.
Yeah, that's a tell that they know that, yeah, they're a new.
trouble politically. So I think the Democrats should run through that door and try to create a lot of
rules that will have broad appeal, you know, beginning with taking off their masks and
maybe funding for more immigration judges and creating limitations on what children can be detained
and how people that don't have arrest records can be dealt with, right? I like, there are a million
ways that you could do this, I think, where you're not getting into the sticky questions of like,
do you give citizenship for somebody that's been here for 15 years? And then,
just try to enshrine some more legal protections for people who are being abused, frankly, and scared by this administration.
Tim, as always. Thank you so much for joining me.
Girl, any time. We'll see you soon, all right?
That was my conversation with Tim Miller, host of the Bullwork podcast and writer-at-large for the Bullwork.
We'll link to his work on the show notes.
Good news. You've made it this far.
Just a little bit of news to come before you're home free for the weekend.
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Here's what else we're following today.
We have one week and one day left to pass the Department of Homeland Security
of Corporations Bill.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune said Thursday lawmakers are nowhere near, an agreement that would enable them to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
Congress is trying to renegotiate the DHS spending bill after it was separated from a larger spending measure.
But from the sound of it, it isn't going too well.
Thune warned that the DHS could shut down next week if Democrats do not work with Republicans and the White House.
I would hope that the Democrats will come to the table.
The timeline that they asked for has been granted.
and I hope that they are finally ready to get this done.
It's important for the American people.
All these agencies, federal emergency management agency,
which oversees disasters in this country.
We've got a number of weather-related disasters in this country
that are going to require the able attention of FEMA.
A lot of important agencies, Mr. President,
that won't go funded.
If they remain in this posture of,
resisting anything that doesn't give them all of their demands.
But worse yet, Mr. President, not only insisting on all the demands, most of which are,
as they know, very unrealistic and unserious.
Let's stop him right there.
On Wednesday, Democratic Minority Leaders Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffreys released an expanded
list of 10 detailed guardrails to, quote, rain in ice and stop the violence.
Those demands include better identification of DHS officers, new use of four standards,
and a stop to racial profiling.
You tell me if that sounds unrealistic.
The FBI is organizing a mysterious conference call in late February
for local election officials from all 50 states.
The plan?
Discuss the midterm elections with federal law enforcement agencies.
This is all according to an email obtained by What a Day's newsletter writer, Matt Berg.
The exact purpose of the call remains unclear,
but it's raising concerns after President Trump called for state elections to be nationalized.
When asked for an explanation, an FBI spokesperson wrote to Matt, quote,
Thank you for reaching out.
The FBI has no comment.
Nevada Secretary of State, Cisco Aguilar, told what a day he's never heard of a conference call like this,
being organized by the FBI between state officials and federal agencies.
Aguilar said in a phone call, quote,
I was just like, what is this?
It's a strangest thing in the world that the FBI is reaching out to us and trying to coordinate election security.
He added, quote, they're just sowing this confusion and chaos to try to try to
intimidate us into compliance. So more of the same.
They're negotiating that. They don't want us to hit them. You know, we have a big fleet going over to Iran.
President Trump also casually spoke of war at the National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday.
Maybe I don't really know what the National Prayer breakfast is, as I assumed it involved prayer
and maybe some breakfast. The U.S. and Iran will
hold nuclear talks today in Oman.
Trump has turned up the heat on Iran recently, moving U.S. military assets into the Gulf and
threatening the possibility of strikes.
And earlier this week, a U.S. warship shot down an Iranian drone that flew too close
to a U.S. aircraft carrier.
So it's safe to say that tensions are pretty high right now.
According to the Associated Press, the talks will center mainly on Iran's nuclear program.
Secretary of State Mark Rubio said earlier this week that the U.S. hopes to discuss other
issues like the protesters killed Iran, the country's ballistic missile program, and aiding proxy
groups across the region. But Iran has made it clear that it intends only to talk about its nuclear
program. The Seattle Seahawks will face the New England Patriots on Sunday in Super Bowl 60.
And if you're wondering who to root for, here's a tip from White House press secretary, Caroline Leavitt, on Thursday.
The president has wisely chosen not to make a prediction in Sunday night's game, but as a
Native girl from New Hampshire, go Patriots.
Got it. Go Seahawks.
But the Super Bowl is more than a game, and no, this isn't the start of a paid Nike ad.
It's a look inside how politics are reflected in America's biggest sporting event.
For one, Trump is skipping the big game.
Last month, he told the New York Post, quote,
It's just too far.
The game is in California.
But according to one report from Zateo,
the real reason Trump skipped out is because his advisors warned him, sir,
you're probably going to get booed.
And what about immigration and customs enforcement?
The NFL said earlier this week that it's, quote, confident that ICE won't conduct operations at the Super Bowl.
That's contrary to what Secretary of Homeland Security Christy Noem said in October, that ICE would be, quote, all over the event.
Stop it all off, Bad Bunny, a vocal critic of Trump, is slated to perform at halftime.
Bad Bunny made history at the Grammys last week, becoming the first artist to win album of the year for an album sung 100% in Spanish.
So, we don't know who will win the game, but we don't know who will win the game.
we do know that Trump has already lost.
And that's the news.
Before we go, this week on Hysteria,
Aaron Ryan and guest host, Akela Hughes,
connect the dots on the latest Epstein files dump,
from fertility clinics and finances to Fortune, the FBI, and everything in between.
Then they break down how the Super Bowl, Olympics, and Oscars
put athletes and performers in impossible positions
and why those moments still matter.
Plus, a petty deep dive into ballerina farm
and the dangers of unlearning things we figured out over.
100 years ago. Listen to Hysterio wherever you get your podcasts or watch on YouTube.
That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, stand with the
audience at the AEW Dynamite Pro Wrestling match in Las Vegas Wednesday and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just about... Like me, what a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe. I'm Jane Koston and, as is always true,
there's a lot we can learn from the world of pro wrestling.
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