Amanda Carpenter: Welcome to Coalition Government
show notes:
Amanda on the pardon power
Amanda's piece about Trump's attacks on the courts
Bill Kristol's interview with Mark Esper
The Times' Mike Bender on Trump's VP contenders
Trump being scared of a bald eagle
Trump claiming a protester was from ISIS
Tim's playlist
Press play and read along
Transcript
Speaker 1 is Matt Rogers from Los Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang.
Speaker 2 This is Boen Yang from Los Culturalistos with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang.
Speaker 4 Hey, Bowen, it's gift season.
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Speaker 3 or Best Gifts for Me that were so thoughtful I really shouldn't have.
Speaker 1 Check out the guide on Marshalls.com and gift the good stuff at Marshalls.
Speaker 9 Get ready for Malice, a twisted new drama starring Jack Whitehall, David DeCovney, and Carice Van Houten.
Speaker 11 Jack Whitehall plays Adam, a charming manny infiltrates the wealthy Tanner family with a hidden motive to destroy them.
Speaker 16 This edge-of-your-seat revenge thriller unravels a deliciously dark mystery in a world full of wealth, wealth, secrets, and betrayal.
Speaker 20 Malice will constantly keep you on your toes.
Speaker 7 Why is Adam after the Tanner family?
Speaker 15 What lengths will he go to?
Speaker 21 One thing's for sure: the past never stays buried, so keep your enemies close.
Speaker 7 Watch Malice, all episodes now streaming exclusively on Prime Video.
Speaker 6
Hello, and welcome to the Bullard Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller.
I'm here today with Amanda Carpenter.
Speaker 6 She's back, editor at Protect Democracy, Renaissance Woman at Protect Democracy, Everything, Democracy Saver. What's going on, Amanda?
Speaker 23
Not too much. Happy to be back.
Happy Friday. How are you doing with the daily pods?
Speaker 6
It's been going pretty good, I think. You know, we're trying to mix it up a little bit.
And I do tell you, it's like every morning. There's no doubt about that.
It happens every morning.
Speaker 6 So, you know, that's a little bit of a change.
Speaker 23
Yeah. Well, you have been mixing it up like the array of guests.
I know it looks great on the outside, but I'm just wondering about you adjusting to daily grind.
Speaker 23 I listened to the commercials about you having to take things to counteract the drinks to get up in time to do the pods. So I'm just
Speaker 6 checking on you, Tim.
Speaker 6
I do have a young child and a social life. And I will say, I was going to mention this during the minute.
We're doing a mailbag at the end so people can stay around.
Speaker 6 I was going to mention this in the mailbag segment, but since you asked me, and I've taken over the host responsibilities, you know, Jazz Fest is here the next two weeks.
Speaker 6
And so, you know, if I'm going a little slow on Fridays, ask a little grace. All right.
It's going to be a long year, a tough year. We got to fucking watch Donald Trump every day.
Speaker 6
And I live in New Orleans, so sometimes I can have a few cocktails. But I am going to still effort to just strap it on, as JVL would say, the chin strap.
We're talking about the chin strap.
Speaker 6 And get and put out a good podcast every day. I'm with Sarah on that one.
Speaker 6
I'm with Sarah on the whole. I appreciate your concern, though.
I appreciate your concern. And let me know if you feel like I'm falling short, people.
I'm here for you. All right.
Speaker 6 While we're having fun, Donald Trump was at trial. I want to hear a little bit from him after the court yesterday.
Speaker 24
And it's a shame. It's a shame.
And I'm sitting here for days now, from morning till night, in that freezing room, freezing. Everybody was freezing in there.
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6 all for this.
Speaker 6
So cold. Poor little Donnie.
So cold in there. I want to put on a sweater.
Speaker 6
What do you think? Do you feel bad? I I noticed you're wearing some merch, actually. I noticed you're wearing some bulwark merch.
Never Trump from the jump.
Speaker 6
Everybody go to thebulwark.com, click on store. You can look like Amanda.
What do you think about poor Cold Donnie in trial yesterday?
Speaker 23
I was thinking of the Beyonce song. This ain't Texas, but this ain't Mar-a-Lago.
I mean, you can't control the temperature in the courtroom. Yes, it's very difficult.
Speaker 23 But more broadly, I understand a lot of people have hang-ups about how the trial is going, what's going to happen, et cetera.
Speaker 23
It is still extremely productive and healthy for us at this stage, even if he gets off and everything, that he has to show up. He is showing up.
He does have to do as the judge says.
Speaker 23 You know, he can't control the circumstances. Yeah.
Speaker 6 You're not in charge, big guy.
Speaker 23
Yeah, yeah. He will be judged by a jury of his peers.
Those aren't his sycophants, his political appointees, his fanboys at Fox News. They're New Yorkers, right?
Speaker 23 Like, even though you're a former president, you are going to be judged by New Yorkers who were pulled in at Ramdur because those are actually your peers.
Speaker 23 And so I don't know, I get a little like gay America watching this because it shows that even though we have a lot ahead of us, the rule of law is holding. We do have systems designed to do this.
Speaker 23
I mean, we've tried mob bosses, all kinds of things before. We can do this.
We can do this, people. And we're going to go through the process.
And that's very, very healthy.
Speaker 6
New Yorkers are spicy, too. I've been the jury selection has been fun.
I just, I keep coming up to that word that what's that, the cold salad where it's all mixed together, the salmagundi.
Speaker 6 I'm like, it's like just the whole human experience.
Speaker 6 You know, you got everybody, you got the deviled egg in there, and you got the cold pasta, and you know, you got the guy in the t-shirt that says sarcasm font.
Speaker 6 It's a weird crowd, and Trump's gonna have to deal with it.
Speaker 6 On the more serious side of this, or earnest, maybe less than serious, Chris Don Egger wrote this morning that, like, we're in this situation where there are more than 12.
Speaker 6 It is now settled on 12, but there were dozens of people that are trying to do their best, you know, that are trying to live up to the expectations of a country with a rule of law.
Speaker 6
There's a judge that's trying to do that. There are lawyers.
And there's just one asshole that's trying to break all the rules and wants to be treated differently and wants to be treated specially.
Speaker 6 And that we continually have to rein him in. And it's just unfortunate that that is the person that like is the former president of the United States, you know?
Speaker 25 Yeah.
Speaker 6
Yeah. We've got some good people in there, though, which I like.
Okay, we'll see. We'll see how it it goes.
Oh, one, I want to quote your boss, I guess, Ian Bassin over there, Protect Democracy.
Speaker 6 We love to protect democracy. This is what he wrote about this.
Speaker 6 There isn't another defendant in the country who could thumb their nose at pretrial conditions of release the way Trump has and remain walking free. Not one.
Speaker 6 Trump has been given special treatment that no one else would get. If you'd done what Trump has done, you'd be in jail.
Speaker 6 We all know that listening to the Bullwork podcast, but I like that he said that so bluntly.
Speaker 6 And I think that's important to continue to say, because I think there are a lot of normies out there that, you know, haven't ever been arrested, don't know how the process is supposed to work, you know, who maybe are buying his thing that he's getting treated badly when that's just not right.
Speaker 23 Yeah. I mean, this has kind of been this thing, too.
Speaker 23 It's like, oh, well, they're violating my constitutional rights and that I can't threaten and intimidate jurors, witnesses, prosecutors, and judges. And they're family members, right?
Speaker 23 Like that's another big aspect of this.
Speaker 23 If people want to go deeper on this, there was a really good piece in Politico from their legal affairs editor talking about all the special treatment that he's gotten through this process.
Speaker 23 And I do think people are sort of reflexively, they don't like the idea of gag orders because it's like, well, he should be able to defend himself.
Speaker 23 But I wrote a piece for our Protect Democracy substack called If You Can Keep It, subscribe to it, talking about how little Ben Franklin call back there, little Ben Franklin call.
Speaker 6 Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 23 Isn't that cute? You know, I was a little unsure about it at first, but it has grown on me, and I really do like the name, If You Can Keep It.
Speaker 23 But the threat that underscores not just this hush money trial, but all the trials is how he tries to continually destabilize our institutions of accountability with threats and intimidation, right?
Speaker 23
And that spurs people to violence. And it's all for the purpose of obstructing legal proceedings.
We saw this in January 6th.
Speaker 23 We see how he tries to undo accountability for that riot by promising pardons. And now we see how he's trying to intimidate the process in these trials.
Speaker 23 And there is a reason why not just the judge in this trial, but judges in other trials, and even Eileen Cannon has had to speak to the fact that Donald Trump's rhetoric does pose a threat to the process.
Speaker 23
That is the reason why we have the gag orders. You are not allowed to interrupt the proceedings in this way.
And that's so you can protect it.
Speaker 23 And we have to have that kind of protection because if a judge or witnesses or members of the jury are afraid to do their job, the whole institution falls apart.
Speaker 23 It is just like we kind of saw Congress fall apart in the second impeachment impeachment where members of Congress were afraid to impeach the president because of threat of violence.
Speaker 23 And so you see this coming at it from all angles. And I do think it is hard to track because we look at like, oh, okay, this is the hush money trial and this is the this and this is the that.
Speaker 23 This is the big thing swirling around all of it about how he wants to destabilize our institutions with threats of violence. And so I just want people to keep that in their head.
Speaker 23 And that is what the gag orders are designed to protect. And that is why the gag orders must be enforced.
Speaker 6 Amen. And
Speaker 6 well, much better put than I've been talking to putting it on here. So I'll just leave you and Ian on that one.
Speaker 6 You also, I was going to get to this later, but you mentioned the promising of the pardon. So let's just get right to it.
Speaker 6
You wrote for the bulwark this morning with Grant Tudor, your colleague at Protect Democracy. Trump is wrong.
The pardon power is not absolute. It's interesting.
A lot of what.
Speaker 6 you guys are doing at Protect Democracy is kind of looking around corners, potential threats.
Speaker 6 Nobody wants to close their eyes and imagine that Donald Trump's the president again, but somebody's got to be prepping for that in case that happens.
Speaker 6 Talk to us about this element of it, because I've always thought that, to me, it's underappreciated, you know, the potential danger of just the specter of pardons that Trump puts forth, you know, that would like, that makes people feel like they can act with immunity.
Speaker 6 And, you know, I think that'd be very scary in the process of people who are bureaucrats, of course, you know, who have the power of the government state behind them.
Speaker 6 It's also very scary just in the concept of like the Gen 6 folks and like that, that people that are doing political violence might feel like, even if they don't actually, they might feel like they're going to get pardoned.
Speaker 6 So anyway, talk about the limits of the pardon power and what you got, the kind of work you guys are doing on that.
Speaker 23 Yeah.
Speaker 23 Well, just to kind of level set, this is where we see an area of concern for a possible Trump 2.0, but just generally as well, in the fact that people sort of implicitly accept the idea that the pardon power is unfettered.
Speaker 23 And that is largely because presidents have policed themselves within constitutional constraints.
Speaker 23 Sure, you did see like pardons like Bill Clinton got accused of a quid quota with Mark Rich and then Congress did an investigation. Trump got away with a lot of pardon abuse.
Speaker 23 Like he was issuing pardons for Janine Pirro's ex-husband. He had what I call henchman pardons that were in the full light of day for Paul Manafort, Steve Bannon, Mike Flynn, et cetera.
Speaker 6
The Paul Manafort pardon was literally treasonous. I wrote about like, I think that was the headline I wrote.
It was either treasonous or traitorous.
Speaker 6 Like there's just no way to put any you know, better spin on it than that.
Speaker 6 It was absolutely disgusting, but it was in this, that period of time where there's so much happening, like the news cycle just moves on.
Speaker 23 Yeah.
Speaker 23 Those, those henchmen pardons and those veins for those allies affiliated with the Russian investigation were pretty much for the purpose of obstructing justice, like saying, don't break.
Speaker 23 You know, I don't want you to break hold strong. And then, voila, you get a pardon later.
Speaker 6 Okay.
Speaker 23 So going forward, he will be, if he's elected even right now, if he's the only person in the position to even test the idea idea of a self-pardon because we haven't had presidents accused of criminality in not one but numerous courts around the country so we do have to think very seriously about this and he said before i do think it's absolute and complete essentially saying i think i can do whatever you want and you even see some constitutional scholars kind of like agree with him
Speaker 23 but that is largely rested on the idea that it hasn't been tested yet like just because the idea hasn't been tested or the supreme court hasn't like made a decision on the self-pardon doesn't mean it's unconstitutional Somebody like pushed back on me on Twitter about this today.
Speaker 23 It's like, listen, like I haven't jumped off a building, but I know I can't fly.
Speaker 23 And that is because the Constitution, you can't pick and choose parts of it, right? Like you have to read it as a whole document.
Speaker 23 And you can't let the 20-word pardon clause be a free pass to run roughshod over the rest of the Constitution.
Speaker 23 Like we didn't break apart from the English monarchy so a future president could be like, oh, pardon clause.
Speaker 23
And now I can be a tyrant again and self-pardon myself and reward criminality in any way I see fit. That is not what it's for.
It has constraints.
Speaker 23 And that constraint is you cannot use the pardon power to violate other clauses of the Constitution. Lots of other things are read like that, like the Commerce Clause.
Speaker 23 Congress has the ability to regulate commerce, but they can't say like, oh, I don't like this paper run by a black editor for these issues. Therefore, you can't ship it across state lines.
Speaker 23 That's just not how it works.
Speaker 23 And so in this paper that we published on Bulbark, which is based on a larger report that my much smarter than me colleague Grant Tudor and Justin Florence did, talks about the four constitutional constraints and the way that we see this should not be used, if it ever did come up, primarily to place the president above the law, but then also to license law breaking, which is clearly what the Gene Race pardons would do in rewarding that kind of political violence to advance the president's aim.
Speaker 23 So there's ways to go deeper on that, but like this is part of getting ahead of that question. Should it come up? We need to test the idea that it is unfettered because it absolutely is not.
Speaker 23
The court has ruled, you know, put restrictions on it in the past. Congress has investigated it.
So I just want people to become familiar with the idea that it is not absolute.
Speaker 6 Yeah, it's good. The one thing that jumped out at me in the piece was this is not untested, right? The Supreme Court has put limits on presidential pardons before.
Speaker 6 You know, it's kind of a complicated case.
Speaker 6 There's an example that you give of where essentially it seems like Woodrow Wilson was trying to pardon a newspaper editor preemptively so that they would testify.
Speaker 6 And, you know, essentially that the court held that the power of the president of the Constitution to grant pardons, but
Speaker 6 does not also change the Fifth Amendment right of a witness, right, to not testify against, I assume it was against the president in this case.
Speaker 23 But yeah, the one thing that is not tested is the self-pardon.
Speaker 6 The self-pardon, right?
Speaker 23 Yeah, that's like people are like, well, we don't know what would happen. Like, you might be allowed to do it because we haven't president due before.
Speaker 23 No, like, let's let's read the constitution as it is written i i think any reasonable person can come to the conclusion that a self-pardon to violate other clauses the constitution would not be constitutional amen i love that okay i'm glad that we got that's uh that's getting out there into the bloodstream we're getting wonky on friday morning we're getting wonky we're starting with wonky because trust me we've got some dessert coming we got some dessert all right got it got it
Speaker 6 before we get to the dessert i guess we have to compliment mike johnson again for the second strike podcast i'm okay with it i will will salatan and i went deep yesterday on just
Speaker 6 kind of the Augustinian moral questions of how you deal with a sinner who does the right thing, who comes to the Lord.
Speaker 6 So anyway, we've had a rules committee vote passed since we met yesterday, nine to three.
Speaker 6 All the Democrats voting with, I guess, a slight, a bare majority of the Republicans.
Speaker 6 Three voted against the rule to advance this package of aid bills and then the weird TikTok, you know, fourth grab bag to the floor.
Speaker 6 Now that's got to pass a a real vote on the floor, but it seems like it's going to. There's some Republican Twitter back and forth this morning between the various Republican.
Speaker 6
You love Republican on Republican infighting. It was like, I love crazy on crazy infighting, especially.
It was like Derek Van Orden was shouting at Matt Gates on Twitter.
Speaker 6
I'm like, all right, we're in business now. So anyway, there's some frustration within the Republican conference, but it's going to come up for a vote.
Hasn't happened yet.
Speaker 6 We're taping this Friday morning. But it seems like we're on path to this passing.
Speaker 6 And it's just, I guess my questions for you is: number one, is this, how many cheers do we give Mike Johnson for this?
Speaker 6 And two, is this the growing on the job everybody told us that Trump was going to do? But like it turned out Mike Johnson did it.
Speaker 6 Like, you know, you can be irresponsible and you have a childless job as a backbench congressman, but all of a sudden you're in a skiff and you're seeing video of Ukraine get attacked and you get serious.
Speaker 6 Is that, do you think, what happened here?
Speaker 23 I am not prepared to say that Mike Johnson has turned a corner and has seen the light. What I am prepared to do is say that Tim Miller was was right.
Speaker 23 And I've kind of been screaming this in my head as I've seen this kind of come together, but this really nailed it for me in the Politico Playbook newsletter this morning. It says, new house rules.
Speaker 23 Welcome to coalition government.
Speaker 6 Welcome to coalition government. Thank you.
Speaker 23
Tim Miller has called that shot. I mean, it's kind of obvious, but like.
This is the Tim Miller thesis coming to light because it is the obvious conclusion. It is the only way to go forward.
Speaker 23 And if Mike Johnson wants to to say, well, I did it because what I saw in the skiff, even though anybody turn on the news and listen to any speech by Zelensky to come to that conclusion,
Speaker 23 I guess I'll take it. But the only reasonable conclusion to come from this is that Tim Miller's right.
Speaker 2 Thank you.
Speaker 6 I'm so glad you mentioned that because for a week, I was just chatting.
Speaker 6 Joe Strauss, the Texas speaker who I hope listens because he should because he's just like a core bulwark Republican ended up as a literal coalition speaker because the Republicans couldn't get their ship together in Texas.
Speaker 6 And so he won the speakership with the votes of some Republicans and some Democrats in Texas. We had an article about in the Bulwark.
Speaker 6 I recruited a Texas journalist to write for us about what the model would look like for Congress.
Speaker 6 And that would have been better, like a literal coalition government where like Brian Fitzpatrick or Don Bacon was the speaker.
Speaker 6 Like these people aren't perfect, but it would have been preferable to Mike Johnson. And we would have had Ukraine aid many months ago instead of now.
Speaker 6 But an unofficial coalition government where the Democrats kind of wink, wink, nod nod and say hey we'll save you mike johnson is better than the alternative you know and that's like where we're at walks like a duck talks like a duck they won't say i'm a duck but you're a duck you're a coalition it's a coalition government it's a coalition government duck that's exactly right me and gates have been going back and forth on this on twitter this morning a little bit oh i didn't see it because my point going back was that it had kevin mccarthy that just gutless, blow-dried piece of garbage.
Speaker 23 You're talking about Donald Trump's future chief of staff there, Tim Miller.
Speaker 6
Or maybe VP. He floated himself for VP in the New York Times.
I don't know if you noticed that.
Speaker 6 The New York Times is doing a story on VPs. I wish I had it in front of me.
Speaker 23 Well, it says RFK turned it down.
Speaker 6
RFK turned it down. So Kevin McCarthy jumped it down.
Yeah, the New York Times was doing this story. Mike Bender is a great reporter.
Speaker 6 He was doing this story on categories of people that Trump's looking at for VP. And weirdly, Kevin McCarthy is on the record quoted in it.
Speaker 6 And we'll put the link in the show notes so you can see the exact quote.
Speaker 6 But his quote is like, you know, Donald Trump really needs somebody that he knows is loyal, that has experience working the halls of Congress, that can get his agenda passed.
Speaker 6 And I'm like, wait, wait a minute. Is this Kevin nominating himself for VP? I think it was.
Speaker 23 I mean,
Speaker 23 I guess he has experience getting fired by Trump before.
Speaker 23 So he's qualified for the job.
Speaker 6 That's relevant on the job experience.
Speaker 23 He knows how to pick out the Starburst.
Speaker 6
None of these people will listen to me though. I'll be like, oh, you guys have TDS.
This would never happen.
Speaker 6
Had Kevin McCarthy just listened to us and gone to a few normal Democrats and said, hey, guys, I know you're mad at me, but let's cut a deal. Da, da, da, da.
We're going to do this. You guys get this.
Speaker 6 I get this. He would still be speaker and the Republicans would still have a bigger majority because that motion to vacate
Speaker 6 was only powerful if the Democrats were going to vote against him, right? Gates only had nine people.
Speaker 23 Well, as I remember, the Democrats were not willing to entertain that because of what he did about January 6th.
Speaker 6 And so maybe it never would have happened. But I just think if there's a hypothetical world where Kevin, had Kevin humbled himself
Speaker 6 and went to Hakeem, yeah, he didn't try. Had he humbled himself and went to Hakeem Jeffries instead of just going on TV and dunking on Democrats and blaming Democrats saying, oh, the Democrats
Speaker 6 are going to put a crazier person in. Remember that argument? And we got chastised by people on fat right-wingers who are like, you guys are Democrats.
Speaker 6
You're going to put a crazier person in because of Kevin McCarthy because you have so much TDS. It's like, look what happened.
And the Democrats did it. They got rid of Kevin McCarthy.
Speaker 6 They got a person that's maybe crazier and is like, you know, if you're going down a checklist of views, but it's turned out to be more responsible.
Speaker 6
It's turned out to be more responsible with Kevin McCarthy. So it ends up being a good trade for everybody.
Fingers crossed.
Speaker 6
You're right. You're right.
We're knocking. We're knocking on one here.
Speaker 23
Okay. Just get that money to you, Cray.
Like, get it. Get it done.
Speaker 26 Amazon has everything for everyone on your list.
Speaker 28 Like your husband who hauls out the 40-pound canister vacuum to address a single dropped popcorn kernel.
Speaker 30 He'll spend 12 minutes setting up, plugging in, and maneuvering.
Speaker 31 It's like using a fire hose to water a houseplant.
Speaker 34 Get him a cordless vacuum, and with Amazon early holiday deals, you can save big on home electronics.
Speaker 37 Now Dustin can skip the project planning phase and go straight to tactical crumb elimination.
Speaker 9 Get ready for Malice, a twisted new drama starring Jack Whitehall, David DeCovney, and Carice Van Houten.
Speaker 11 Jack Whitehall plays Adam, a charming manny infiltrates the wealthy Tanner family with a hidden motive to destroy them.
Speaker 16 This edge-of-your-seat revenge thriller unravels a deliciously dark mystery in a world full of wealth, secrets, and betrayal.
Speaker 20 Malice will constantly keep you on your toes.
Speaker 7 Why is Adam after the Tanner family?
Speaker 15 What lengths will he go to?
Speaker 21 One thing's for sure: the past never stays buried, so keep your enemies close.
Speaker 7 Watch Malice, all episodes now streaming exclusively on Prime Video.
Speaker 26 Amazon has everything for everyone on your list.
Speaker 28 Like your husband who hauls out the 40-pound canister vacuum to address a single dropped popcorn kernel.
Speaker 30 He'll spend 12 minutes setting up, plugging in, and maneuvering.
Speaker 31 It's like using a fire hose to water a houseplant.
Speaker 33 Get him a cordless vacuum.
Speaker 34 And with Amazon early holiday deals, you can save big on home electronics.
Speaker 35 Now Dustin can skip the project planning phase and go straight to tactical crumb elimination.
Speaker 9 Get ready for Malice, a twisted new drama starring Jack Whitehall, David DeCovney, and Carice Van Houten.
Speaker 11 Jack Whitehall plays Adam, a charming manny infiltrates the wealthy Tanner family with a hidden motive to destroy them.
Speaker 16 This edge-of-your-seat revenge thriller unravels a deliciously dark mystery in a world full of wealth, secrets, and betrayal.
Speaker 20 Malice will constantly keep you on your toes.
Speaker 7 Why is Adam after the Tanner family?
Speaker 15 What lengths will he go to?
Speaker 21 One thing's for sure, the past never stays buried.
Speaker 18 So keep your enemies close.
Speaker 7 Watch Malice, all episodes now streaming exclusively on Prime Video.
Speaker 6
There's one topic I didn't prepare you for because it just, I thought it'd be funnier to see you live. I hope you haven't seen this.
Politico was reporting on this yesterday.
Speaker 6 Olivia Beavers, good reporter. This is what's happening with the House Freedom Caucus right now because they're in such shambles.
Speaker 6 The House Freedom Caucus members are signing up to take shifts to guard the House floor in order to prevent resolutions they'd consider unsavory from slipping through that could curb their power under this new rule, per to our sources.
Speaker 6
This floor action response team aims to guard against a voice voter, et cetera, et cetera. I just want to note: floor action response team.
That's an interesting acronym. Floor action response team.
Speaker 6 Okay.
Speaker 6
It's the FART team. The House Freedom Caucus has created a fart team to try to stop the Democrats and Mike Johnson from doing anything they don't like.
Good. So thoughts on that, Amit?
Speaker 23 Yeah, I mean, it kind of reminds me of what we would do in DeMint's office.
Speaker 23 I mean, it's sort of a function of what was called the Senate Steering Committee, but there would be somebody that would police, I don't want to say police, but monitor.
Speaker 23 the phone line that bills would go to the floor at all hours on weekends and things like that to make sure that nothing would be called up for unanimous consent and be passed.
Speaker 23 That seems kind of familiar to me, although they could work on their messaging a little bit and come up with something better.
Speaker 6
You're not going to take the bait on the stink bomb, on Paul Gosar, putting a stink bomb on the house floor. You're not going to take any bait on that.
You're just going to,
Speaker 6 YouTube viewers of the podcast might want to see Amanda's visual reaction, but you're being very responsible as a mother.
Speaker 23 Well, I had in my head, I thought it was going to be, wasn't it the tweet from Sean Davis essentially saying like the real nuclear option is for more Republicans to resign so that the house is deadlocked and nothing can happen from here on out?
Speaker 23 And it was like,
Speaker 23 resign your job to own the lives.
Speaker 6 Please own us.
Speaker 23
Go for that. Please do that.
We would get a better coalition government in the house.
Speaker 23
It's just like, okay, do that. Please do that.
Take Sean Davis's advice. That would be wonderful.
Speaker 6
Go forward. Own us.
Yeah. Sean Davis series.
Speaker 6
If the exact number of Republicans resign to make it even Republicans versus Democrats, then you can't elect a speaker. Who the fuck? These people are lunatics.
Okay. But please, resign to own me.
Speaker 6
All right. Do we want to do happy or sad first? We're going to look at a couple of comments yesterday from former Trump cabinet officials.
Do you want happy first or sad first?
Speaker 23 I mean, just let's get the sad first so we can go on.
Speaker 6 Okay, let's get it out of the way. Let's hear from Bill Barr.
Speaker 38 And I also know you've been asked many times, you've had your disagreements with former president.
Speaker 38
He's the presumptive nominee. We assume he will be the nominee.
Will you support him in 2024?
Speaker 39 Well, I've said all along, you know, given two bad choices, I think it's my duty to pick the person I think would do the least harm to the country.
Speaker 39 And in my mind, that's I will vote the Republican ticket. I will support the Republican ticket.
Speaker 39 I think the real danger to the country, the real danger to democracy, as I say, is the progressive agenda.
Speaker 39 And while Trump, and I said, Trump may be playing Russian roulette, but continuation of the Biden administration is national suicide, in my opinion.
Speaker 6
F you, Bill Barr. Ugh.
I have some thoughts on Bill Barr, but Amanda, I want you to have the floor first.
Speaker 6 I mean,
Speaker 23 I guess he's consistent, right? I mean, he's kind of like maintained this.
Speaker 23 There's this continuing idea, even echoed by George Will in the Washington Post, talking about how, well, Trump and Biden are both equally bad.
Speaker 23 And actually, you know, if you really look at it, Biden is kind of worse.
Speaker 23 Please point me to an instance where Joe Biden has asked the Justice Department to seize voting machines and rerun an election where Joe Biden is accused of criminality in multiple jurisdictions.
Speaker 23 I just,
Speaker 23
you can get away with saying this on Fox. I don't know.
Was this Fox Daytime?
Speaker 6
I don't know where it was. It was Fox Daytime.
Yeah. Fox Attime.
That sounds about right.
Speaker 23 You get no pushback. You have to do no serious inflection.
Speaker 6 Bill Hemmer's like, you got some disagreements. Disagreements is an interesting word for it.
Speaker 6 I mean, Bill Barr did say that he thinks that Donald Trump has a credible criminal case against him for mishandling classified information, that he lied to the country and that his his lies caused the storming of the Capitol.
Speaker 6 You could call those disagreements, I guess. It seems a little bit understated for what was his actual criticisms.
Speaker 23 I mean, I would like to see just a little bit of not even pushback, but hey, Bill Bohr, could you tell me more about how you think the progressive agenda is suicide?
Speaker 23 Like, what part of it, is it the CRT in classrooms that you don't like? Is it the book that you're afraid a kid might read? Like, what part of it makes it national suicide?
Speaker 23
I mean, because it just sounds so specific, please. Absurd on its face.
I mean, Green New Deal is because some protesters accosted Lisa Murkowski, which was bad the other day.
Speaker 23 I don't know if you saw that. That was just really gross.
Speaker 6 Those people are disgusting.
Speaker 23 I mean, take a shot at that, but that's not national suicide.
Speaker 6 Yeah. Why does a suicide look? Can you just paint it out? Like, what's going to happen by 2028? Like,
Speaker 6 what's going to happen with the country? Is Antifa going to take over? I just like, what is the hypothetical suicide? You know, Bill Barr lives in McLean in a beautiful house. He's got a good life.
Speaker 6
His tax rates aren't really particularly high. You know, the U.S.
economy is doing better than its global competitors. There's not immigrants storming McLean right now.
Speaker 6 And like there are problems for sure, but suicide.
Speaker 23 Although I got to say, like, it's just, I mean, it's not funny, but he says Donald Trump is Russian roulette.
Speaker 6 Interesting choice of words there.
Speaker 23 It's roulette versus suicide.
Speaker 6 It's kind of like, maybe you should play Russian roulette if you feel that way. Also, Russian roulette makes it seem like it's not that serious.
Speaker 6 But it's kind of like, I'd like to see Bilbar give Russian roulette a try and see if he actually would pull the trigger. I think probably not.
Speaker 23 All right, Tim, you don't mean that. You mean that metaphorically? No, no, no.
Speaker 6 I think, no, my point is I don't want him to kill himself. I think my point is that would he actually pull the trigger? I think probably not.
Speaker 6 So he's saying that he's going to vote for Donald Trump and that that's Russian roulette.
Speaker 6 But like the metaphor doesn't really work because if I handed Bilbar a gun and put a bullet in one of the chambers and spun it and then handed it to him and put it up to his head and said, Will you pull the trigger right now?
Speaker 6 Your other option is Joe Biden being president for four years. It'd be an interesting, if Bill Barr, if Bill Barr has any friends listening, we can try it.
Speaker 6 It'd be great content.
Speaker 23 It is irresponsible for Bill Barr to say because no one is playing that game. Right, exactly.
Speaker 23 That is not a good metaphor because it doesn't come even close to being analogous to the situation that we're in.
Speaker 6 If I thought that Donald Trump was Russian roulette, I would not do it because I would not play Russian roulette. I guess that's my point.
Speaker 6 I would not vote for somebody that I thought was Russian roulette because I wouldn't play Russian roulette. I want to read one more thing about Bill Barr.
Speaker 6 I think it's gotten missed because I hadn't seen it. Former Attorney General Bill Barr will help lead a new group formed by a business lobbying organization that aims to be an alternative to the U.S.
Speaker 6 Chamber of Commerce, the massive advocacy group that has fallen out of favor with some Republicans. So I think we know what he really means here.
Speaker 6 He's got some big conservative business leaders that are unhappy that the Chamber of Commerce has not gone full MAGA.
Speaker 6 And so he's now getting paid to lead a lobbying organization that is like to the right of the chamber of commerce. And so he needs to represent the interests of those people.
Speaker 6 That's what's actually happening here.
Speaker 23 Okay, so Bill Barr will play Russian roulette
Speaker 23 because he wants to form a new chamber of commerce. That's what brings him to the table for this game.
Speaker 6 And doesn't like some of the regulation cuts. Yeah.
Speaker 23 Doesn't sound that brilliant and smart to me for a guy who has such a fine pedigree.
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Speaker 6 Okay.
Speaker 6
Mark Esper, we'll start to uplift the spirits a little bit. Actually, maybe we'll wait for Mark Esper while we're down here in the muck.
One of the other things I wanted to talk to you about.
Speaker 6 Last time you were on, we talked a little bit about Project 2025 and kind of the broader concerns about that.
Speaker 6 I kind of want to dig into that a little bit more, just particularly, you know, with regards to kind of of what you guys are preparing for as and threat assessment.
Speaker 6 And we were talking about a little bit about this before. So let's talk about that and then we'll get into Mark Esper, because I think it's very related.
Speaker 23 Just more broadly, when I look online and I see some of the chatter and what's in the air, a lot of people view Project 2025 as this existential threat.
Speaker 23 I prefer an approach I've taken at Protect Democracy in our report about the Authority and Playbook 2025 is not to look solely at that document produced by Heritage.
Speaker 23 What is most concerning is where that document has the Venn diagram with the Trump agenda and the middle part where the conservative movement and Republican Party is largely coalescing in authoritarian ways.
Speaker 23 Broadly, what Project 2025 is espousing through all the different policies is that they want a really powerful executive, right?
Speaker 23 They want the president to be able to enact his agenda throughout the federal government and think that loyalists should be installed at every every level so that there's no one essentially that says no to the president's agenda.
Speaker 23 Like that's the thing emanating from all of this.
Speaker 23 And so whether you look at their proposals for the Department of Justice or the Department of Education or the health and human services, that is what it gets at.
Speaker 23 And there are many areas of overlap, in particular regarding the Department of Justice, in which they think they have language in there that speaks to how a president should be able to communicate to the prosecutors and stuff.
Speaker 23 There shouldn't be firewalls of communication to protect judicial independence. They want to do away with that.
Speaker 23 And then when you see Donald Trump take that policy to the logical extension, he's talking about how, okay, I'm going to weaponize the department to go after my political enemies.
Speaker 23 So you kind of have the smarty tart heritage people talking about like, oh, on a policy level, we think this should change.
Speaker 23 And then you have Donald Trump on the campaign trail saying, this is how I would use those changes to go after my enemies.
Speaker 23 And so the way that Donald Trump gets away away with this stuff is that a bunch of people in the news look at Project 2025 and they say, Oh, this is bad. This is what we got to do.
Speaker 23 And he goes, I didn't say that.
Speaker 23 Meanwhile, you know, on Agenda 47, which is his actual campaign platform, in his words, written, printed, scripted out in campaign speeches, he is telling you exactly how he will do that.
Speaker 23 And so I just like the emphasis to be on what he is promising to do, which is what we did with the authoritarian playbook 2025.org.
Speaker 23 You can go find it, where it shows how these things marry together how he would abuse his powers as president in 2025 to enact the authoritarian agenda that heritage buys into now and is laid out in their own 900 page document so don't go through all that just read what i put together and keep in mind the big idea here is they want the president to do whatever he wants article 2 power whatever i want that's basically what they're saying This is the key part.
Speaker 6 And we got into this a little bit with Ross on Tuesday, which was like, you know, his argument was, well, you guys, your case against Trump is resting on the theory that the people around him will be different next time and that it will be worse next time, right?
Speaker 6
Because it won't, that it won't be the same. Yes, sir.
And my point is, like, well, yeah, obviously, they're saying that it will be different next time. They are saying, I'm not saying it.
Speaker 6 It's not TDS. And I think this is, I'm glad you kind of put a finer point on this, right?
Speaker 6 Because it's like, they are specifically saying, you know, the whole objective here is to install people throughout the bureaucracy that are not going to put brakes on Trump because he had too many brakes put on him last time.
Speaker 6 That's what they're saying. Right.
Speaker 6 And so there's reason to believe when you combine that with the other knowledge about the fact that he's not going to have people like Mark Esper around next time, you know, where it's pretty obvious, like the difference and the nature of the threat.
Speaker 23 Yeah. And it's kind of a one-two punch, right?
Speaker 23 Like There's been a lot of tension on Schedule F, which was his executive order that he tried to put into place in October 2020, but didn't have time to do any action, was essentially reclassify federal employees so that he had the ability to fire more of them.
Speaker 23 So he's already promised, like, yeah, we're definitely doing that on steroids as much as we can on day one of my next administration.
Speaker 23 But you couple that with the fact that he's ousting people, number one.
Speaker 23 And then Heritage has this massive job bank to screen people for ideological purity, commitment to enacting the president's agenda first, unfailingly. And then that's who's coming in to do it.
Speaker 23 And then, you know, on a policy level, they really want these monitors essentially accountable who answer to the president at every level. And we're not just talking Department of Justice.
Speaker 23 You're talking places like EPA.
Speaker 23 Imagine that in every department.
Speaker 23 I mean, you saw the craziness with the weather service in his first administration where they wanted to alter the maps potentially with the Sharpie so it would help him politically. We saw this.
Speaker 23 pushing this to some degree with the FDA with the vaccine approval and games that they played with that. And so you just, you don't want all this to become so, so, so politicized.
Speaker 23 But that is the goal so that they can use leverage in any way possible.
Speaker 23 And just to put this in the authoritarian context, the reason why this becomes so dangerous is that once an executive like this consolidates all this power, right?
Speaker 23 Like you have all your appointees, you're pushing your agenda, you know, regulatory retaliation, all this stuff. you can't give it up.
Speaker 23
You can't allow your enemy to win because once they take that power, they're probably going to hold you accountable. Right.
And so that is why authoritarians never leave.
Speaker 23
That's why you see someone like Putin who's never going to leave office. You see Orban win again and again.
That's how it works.
Speaker 23 And it's so plainly obvious when you study how authoritarians come to power and how they stay there and why. Whether he knows it or not, he's following that playbook.
Speaker 6
Bill Crystal had a very long conversation with Mark Esper. So folks can listen to that over at Conversations with Bill Crystal.
We'll put that link in.
Speaker 6 I want to play one clip from it and talk a little bit about somebody who's, you know, maybe not getting an A-plus on the report card, but doing a lot better than Bill Barr.
Speaker 6 Here's Mark Espert talking about the letter that he signed with all of the living secretaries of defense in both parties in 2020.
Speaker 41 That's kind of what brought us together, particularly as we saw things unfolded and as the election denialism continued, there was a growing concern that would the military get involved?
Speaker 41 And we all know now that there was that meeting in late December with,
Speaker 41 I think maybe it was Mike Flynn and others who said, yeah, maybe we should send the military in to
Speaker 41 ballot boxes or to conduct another election. I can't recall the details, but it was quite alarming that the military would be put in that context.
Speaker 41 I was concerned going into the fall that the military would be used at the time of the election, you know, when the results were revealed to put down protests, to do other things.
Speaker 41 And so that became more of my concern, immediate concern at that point in time. And of course, I don't think anybody envisioned that.
Speaker 41 the weeks and months after November 2020 would happen the way they did.
Speaker 41 I mean, in my lifetime, if you had told me 5, 10, 15, 20 years ago that there would be an insurrection on Capitol Hill and people would storm the Capitol and try and seize ballot boxes and threaten to hang Mike Pence, the vice president, it would be like a bad Hollywood movie, right?
Speaker 41 But it was real and it should be a wake-up call for all of us.
Speaker 6 It should be a wake-up call. Refreshing just to hear somebody like, I know that all is kind of a low bar just to say the truth, but like he's saying the truth about what happened.
Speaker 6 He's doing the natural follow-up to that, which is not supporting Donald Trump, given the nature of the threat. What do you think about Mark Esper and what we've been hearing from him?
Speaker 23
This is good. He seems primarily focused on Trump's potential abuse of the Insurrection Act, which he was on record at the time.
He spoke out in real time against it. He got fired for it.
Speaker 23
So that's good. I'm glad he's doing these interviews.
That said, you know, he kind of is in the news a little bit more recently for reasons I don't like.
Speaker 23 And that's because there was a letter recently signed by another letter, not the letter he signed in 2020, a letter that was released this week from a lot of military officials to the Supreme Court explaining why Trump should not have total immunity, which is another case that Trump is taking to the Supreme Court.
Speaker 23 You know, this is the other thing that's advancing next week, where he wants total immunity for any alleged potential crimes he committed as president.
Speaker 23 And so, you know, it was really good that those military officials, officials, which include, I got to look on here, you know, it's people like Mike Hayden, et cetera, other retired generals saying, like, this is dangerous for the country.
Speaker 23 And they're primarily really good messengers for this because members of the military are in position to execute these unlawful acts potentially on behalf of a president.
Speaker 23 When that example came of, well, could the president order SEAL Team 6 to execute his enemies?
Speaker 23 And they're essentially like, yeah, guess who's going to be ordered to do that in that potential scenario? So you absolutely need officials to speak out. And it's good they did so.
Speaker 23
But Mark Esper was asked about that letter last week. And he essentially said, I don't think they should be weighing in on this.
I don't understand this.
Speaker 23 That's his right, you know, if that's really his opinion, but I think he should be pressed on it a little bit more because I think if he engaged in some more reflection and study of this issue, he could get to the right place.
Speaker 23 And I understand, like, it's an uncomfortable place for, you know, the chain of command to be speaking out against a president but you're you're not serving him anymore the military should not be abused in this fashion members of the military should be able to say so and not be put in an uncomfortable position so i would i would like him to get on the right side of that issue because if you're worried about abuse of the insurrection act and you're willing to speak out against that you should be willing to take a position on why the president shouldn't have total immunity for crimes he commits as president i concur with that but i guess i'll say this if mark esper just has a principled view on this been inside the bill, been inside the Pentagon, said that these folks doesn't believe that military officials should be speaking out, okay, well, he is a civilian.
Speaker 6 I'm glad he's speaking out now, and he's going to have to be their megaphone this year. And I hope, I'm glad he's on conversations with Bill Kristol.
Speaker 6
I hope he supports Joe Biden for president. We'll see.
I'd like to see him at the convention.
Speaker 6 And if not, I'd like to see him in some other venue, paid TV ad, something, using his voice as a civilian leader of the military and somebody that saw Donald Trump up close and personal.
Speaker 6
And he might do that. I hope he does continue to do that.
Now, this is a note of encouragement on that front.
Speaker 23 Yeah, when you say speak of the convention, because I think we actually disagree on this one and that
Speaker 23 people in his position should be platformed by the Democratic Party to advocate for Biden.
Speaker 23 I don't think that, like, you know, people like Chris Christie, if people are not comfortable doing so, they're not Democrats. They don't even have to say I'm voting for Biden necessarily.
Speaker 23 But a blanket statement saying, like, I think these things are disqualifying. I don't know who's going to be on the ballot or whatever, but I am going to vote against Trump because he's disqualified.
Speaker 23 I think that would be sufficient, but maybe we disagree.
Speaker 6
I don't know if we strongly disagree, and maybe I'm just in West Wing world, but I'm fine with all that. It's good.
Anything is better than nothing.
Speaker 6 I just, in my head, I just think about my goosebumps when I'm going to be nervous in October. October chill is going to be coming out.
Speaker 6
And it'd feel nice to see Mark Esper come out on stage in Pittsburgh and just be like, we cannot do this. I saw it up close.
It's too dangerous. I'm going to vote for Davis Dave McCormick or whatever.
Speaker 6
I don't, he doesn't even live in Pennsylvania, but I saw it. So he wouldn't say that.
But, you know, I'm still a Republican. I'm going to be for a Republican next time, but we got to be for Joe Biden.
Speaker 6
The country demands it. Country over party, blah, blah, blah.
It just would be nice. I don't know.
If one person did that, it would be, it would just give me the tingles. Would it actually matter?
Speaker 6 I think it would. I do think it would matter.
Speaker 6 I'm not going to malign Mark Esper if he doesn't do that, though.
Speaker 23 Yeah, I will. I will also, if he says a letter to the Supreme Court by former officials is a bad idea, though, because I think he's wrong on that.
Speaker 6
Okay, Mark Esper. Listen to the whole conversation with Bill Crystal.
Better than nothing. Glad he's out there.
We're going to come back on the other side. We're doing a mailbag.
I'm keeping Amanda.
Speaker 6 Amanda's doing the mailbag, too. We'll see you in a sec.
Speaker 6
All right, it's Friday. And by the way, I had a very unsubtle playout song for Amanda last time.
This time I have a medley of unsubtle playout songs for her.
Speaker 6
Both of them, it's going to be our first medley. Both of them will be on the Spotify playlist, which is in the show notes every Friday.
People who ask, Where can I find the songs?
Speaker 6 Playlist is in the show notes. All right.
Speaker 23
Thank you for that. Just because I'm telling you again, I listen to you when I'm on my runs.
And so I let it play out all the way to the end of the songs. And I really like it because I get new recs.
Speaker 23 And so I like it.
Speaker 6
I love it. I love that.
Okay, mailbag. We'll be serious first.
Speaker 6
It's kind of serious. Many people ask this.
Clinton, Virginia, Martin, James,
Speaker 6
basically a similar question. I'm going to read Clint's.
What about Biden promising to appoint senior Republicans to his administration? Haley back to the UN ambassador.
Speaker 6 Liz Cheney is Secretary of Agor Interior. Biden has common ground with some of these people, and these are unprecedented times that require whatever it takes.
Speaker 6 Several people suggested Secretary of State, even for Haley and Cheney. Amanda, what say you?
Speaker 23 Yeah, well, you can't really promise positions to people during a campaign, but do it now.
Speaker 23 I would love that.
Speaker 23 I mean, I think that there's a lot of places where someone like a Cheney, et cetera, have experience that can be used that aren't necessarily going to interfere with his Democratic agenda.
Speaker 23 I think that would... be fabulous, don't you? Because if you're going to say, like, what I don't like,
Speaker 23 again, revisiting the whole like, should Republicans become Democrats, I don't like it when his campaign says, okay, hey, Republicans, there's a place in my campaign for you.
Speaker 23 Like, you don't want to be used as political pauce. Like, just make room and say, hey, you're welcome here.
Speaker 23 I don't like it when he takes it to a political place when it could just be like, yeah, we're working together. If you could show, here's how I can work together with Republicans.
Speaker 23 Yeah, super, super duper. Do that.
Speaker 6
Yeah. My thought on this is I have two parts.
Number one, I don't know how much this really would help, right?
Speaker 6 And so I hate that, like, there was a political article in 2020 where there's like some never Trumpers are grumbling that Joe Biden hasn't promised to put a Republican in the cabinet.
Speaker 6 I think that one of the examples that are floating was Meg Whitman could be commerce secretary.
Speaker 6 Meg Whitman being commerce secretary has literally zero bearing on whether I think that Joe Biden or Donald Trump should be the president, right?
Speaker 6 And I don't think it should have bearing on anyone else's view.
Speaker 6 As a signaling thing, I think picking somebody now and just being a little bit more proactive in demonstrating that this is a big coalition, a big tent, I think that that could be a good PR move and a good signaling move.
Speaker 6
There are a lot of cabinet positions. I don't think the Secretary of State is right, by the way.
I think Biden has enough problems on his left flank in Gaza right now.
Speaker 6 Anyway, I think Tony Blinken's doing a good job. And so, you know, picking a neocon to be Secretary of State is kind of a ridiculous suggestion.
Speaker 6 But I think that, you know, for one of these other positions, demonstrating that there's going to be somebody in the cabinet that is a former Republican.
Speaker 6 I mean, Jeff Flake's already in the administration. Maybe you can move him from Turkey to somewhere, you know, in the United States and do something with that.
Speaker 23 He's just invisible.
Speaker 6 He's invisible. Invisible, right? I mean, we haven't heard anything.
Speaker 23
Like a cabinet position is probably asking a lot, but there's a bazillion task forces and commissions and things like that. Get them involved.
Get them involved. Be great.
Speaker 6
More is more. Okay.
Next question is from Ted. I will say we've had some good life advice questions.
Speaker 6
We've given such good life advice that somebody's moving to Door County, which we've mentioned several times. You should have her on and let her know.
Like just put a phone in. Have her phone in.
Speaker 6
You know, make it easy. Okay.
I don't understand why more after listening, just all the amazing advice we've given. We've not been flooded with life advice questions, but that's okay.
Speaker 6 We have a couple other funny questions anyway. Ted asked, if you were on the board of the Trump Library, which, you know, would never happen, but okay, let's play along.
Speaker 23 Wait, wait.
Speaker 6 Please put me on that board. Amanda's like, sign me up.
Speaker 6
Sign me up. I don't think you've done any vetting, but I'm ready.
What exhibit would you create to bring renewed attention to a Trump event many Americans have memory hauled? This is fun.
Speaker 6 Trump Library. Amanda, what would you do?
Speaker 23 Yeah, well, I'm just trying to imagine what the Trump Library would look like.
Speaker 23 I mean, I just, I see that like the gift shop at Mar-a-Lago, but that's not actually true because I think they're administered by the National Archives. There's a nonprofit board that's set up.
Speaker 23 And actually,
Speaker 23 the Nixon Library is a really good source of information post-Watergate. They house all the transcripts and things that have come out and other books.
Speaker 23 Like, there can be really, really good sources of information.
Speaker 6 It's hard to see Trump going that route.
Speaker 23
Yeah, I don't know how much control they have. Usually they raise money for it.
And I think they have a hand in appointing the board.
Speaker 23 But after a period of time, like Q Hewitt was in charge or he had some role at the Nixon Library at some point, which you can see how that happened.
Speaker 23
But later on, I think it becomes like kind of more serious and you can go through all the materials. Oh, God, they're going to have all his like social media post archives.
That's going to be a trip.
Speaker 23 But I am still dying to know what happened in Helsinki with what he told Putin and what the translator actually observed.
Speaker 23 I want a Helsinki like whole walk-in where you actually go through the press conference and they play the words and then you see what happened beside closed doors because I think that is really impactful in terms of
Speaker 6
you'd hear the Russian and then you'd hear the translators. Yeah, you can put on the headphones.
That would be fun.
Speaker 6 audio experience.
Speaker 23
Yeah, I want a Helsinki exhibit. I think A, informative in terms of what's going on with Ukraine.
B, I want to know what happened. And C,
Speaker 23 the rest of everything would probably be so nutty. Can you imagine like someone going into that library and just walking through like a whole wall of tweets 30 years from now?
Speaker 23 And all like, just you'd be surrounded by it. He'd be like yelling at you.
Speaker 23 There should just be like some kind of audiovisual assault to recreate what it was like like living through that in terms of being surrounded by Trump and not being able to get away from it.
Speaker 23 So that's my fun version.
Speaker 6 This sounds more like a haunted house than a library.
Speaker 6 A little scary. Trump in his orange makeup jumps out at you and yells when I'm sitting there.
Speaker 23 Okay, that's got to be part of it. His makeup kit.
Speaker 6 Yeah, the makeup kit's got to be in the library.
Speaker 23
Yeah, yeah. So I want the makeup kit and one thing where you can get ready as he does for an appearance.
You put on the suit, his beauty uniform.
Speaker 6 That's what we call it.
Speaker 23 There's a beauty uniform where you wear the same thing every day. And it's like the female version of Steve's Jobs turtleneck.
Speaker 23 So it would be his first outfit, the suit with the long tie and the padding and the heel, like whatever, the hairspray that he uses, the makeup. That'd be good.
Speaker 23 And then you can change into golf attire, which is the khakis, the polo shirt, the red hat.
Speaker 23 Yeah, that needs to be part of it. To totally
Speaker 6 embrace. He needs kind of a man's ear for his golf shirt.
Speaker 23 A man's ear?
Speaker 6
Yeah, yeah. Like the bro, the Seinfeld episode, the male.
I know you don't do pop culture. It's like a male bra.
Oh, it's called either a bro or a man's ear. Spanks for men.
That's banks for men.
Speaker 6
Yeah, you got to put them. Man, spanks.
I got to say, I was thinking of what would come to mind to me is all the times Trump has been scared. Is this library ever going to happen? I don't know.
Speaker 6 It's kind of weird that Trump hasn't focused on it.
Speaker 6 A healthy narcissist, like if Trump wasn't a total sociopathic narcissist, if he was just a normal narcissist, he would have lost the election and then focused on building the biggest, gaudiest library ever, you know, with the money that he stole from people over the years.
Speaker 6 And, you know, it would be in South Florida and it would like look like the Taj Mahal and it would make me sick.
Speaker 6 But like at least that would have been a healthy channeling of narcissism, but instead of trying a coup and running for president again. But anyway.
Speaker 23
I don't think you can really make money off it. That's the problem.
It's supposed to be run as a nonprofit and it's not really totally administered by you.
Speaker 6 But that said, since when has he been limited by norms before?
Speaker 23 I want to know what you think about the campaign campaign licensing deal where you have to kick up 5% to the big guy for every time you use his likeness on a mailer, which, by the way, in West Virginia, that is all the direct mail that I get.
Speaker 23 My mailbox just stuffed full of people saying I'm a Trump Republican.
Speaker 23
Like even the billboards that you see, there's a guy running for governor who's like this fighter and talks about how he's going to go. punch people.
It's got pictures of him ringside.
Speaker 23 But the billboard says Trump Republican in big letters before it even says his name down below.
Speaker 6
It's so weird. I do have more West Virginia thoughts.
We'll save it for your next time that you're on.
Speaker 6 My final thing on the Trump library, I want a scared corridor because all of my favorite Trump videos are like the one, like I mentioned the other day, the one where the eagle goes to bite him and he gets really scared and he jumps up when he's sitting on his desk.
Speaker 6
Okay, we'll put that. I have another big day for show notes.
We got to put the Trump being scared montage, New York Times article, the Spotify playlist. The other one is when he's on stage.
Speaker 6 This is one of my favorites. And a protester jumps in the stage, which is a little scary, okay but it was just some liberal progressive you know do-gooder protester which you shouldn't do that no
Speaker 6 but trump gets so freaked out he like bends down like it's like a sniper is out to get him and then they like storm him off and he runs off and the next day he tries to tell people that they thought that it was they thought it was isis
Speaker 6 they thought it was ice it was like warm
Speaker 6 he was like oh it was isis coming after me and then they tried to advance that lie that it was isis when really he just got scared by like some hippie tree hugger anyway a scared Trump that would give me a lot of joy amanda do you have any final thoughts I'm gonna close with a final question that I don't do you have any I assume you don't have any jazz fest Rex I do not okay I'm gonna close with some jazz fest rex you just listen in and then and then we'll we'll let everybody go all right here's the question Asa is headed to New Orleans good name Asa Hodgson are the best Republican candidate for president this year low bar Asa I'm headed to New Orleans for the second week of Jazz Fest I'm curious if you have any can't miss event shows or bars
Speaker 6
We'll also be taking our three-year-old. Would love some insight as to recommendations for kids in New Orleans.
All right, you guys mark this.
Speaker 6 I get a lot of New Orleans requests or grown-up recommendations for Jazz Fest. I'm an uptown man.
Speaker 6
All right, so here's your uptown life: the Maple Leaf, Tipitinas, my buddies own Tipitinas, Rabbit Hole. That's more for hipsters.
Le Benton Roulette. That's a dive here place.
Those are all uptown.
Speaker 6
Look at their schedules. You can't go wrong.
Same with the Toulouse Theater. Good name in the French quarter.
For you, second week of Jazz Fest. Asa, I took a peek of Friday night.
Speaker 6
There's an Earthwind Fire cover band at Republic. Boyfriend, she's awesome.
She's doing Tina Turner at Tips. There's an L C D sound system drummer at Rabbit Hole.
Speaker 6
Tank and the Bangas are Toulouse Theater. Amazing.
All great options. Friday night after the shows.
Anything with my good friend Stanton Moore, friend of the pod, Stanton Moore. Look at his schedule.
Speaker 6
He's a drummer. Any late night brass band show, the TBC brass band is probably my favorite.
I got a shout out Bulwark Super fan, Steve's Uptown Bar, the Kingpin.
Speaker 6 Do you find yourself by Britannia and Napoleon Jefferson-ish? Stop the Kingpin for a beer. Tell him I sent you.
Speaker 6
And if you've got the Kiddos and Toe, Creole Creamery is the best ice cream in the South. That's around the corner.
Other food, Lausas. Am I saying that right? Lausas.
Speaker 6
I'm struggling to learn all the New Orleans pronunciations of things. I'm just embracing being a transplant.
Their barbecue shrimp is my favorite dish in town. Lausas.
Speaker 6
It's right by where Jazz Fest is. Got to be a long line.
It's worth it. Get out there either early or just have a beer and wait.
Inside Jazz Fest. Get the crawfish bread.
It's back this year. Kids.
Speaker 6
The fest is great for kids. Jazz Fest is great for kids.
Come next year if you're looking for somewhere to bring your kids. It's not like Coachella.
You get there early.
Speaker 6
Make sure you got your water and your sunscreen and that they're dressed for the heat. Toulouse wore a black jersey last year.
She was not happy. So, you know, make sure they're dressed for the heat.
Speaker 6 My other big kid advice: the aquarium and insectarium is right by the French Quarter.
Speaker 6 So, you know, you as a parent, you can go get a little hurricane or a little hand grenade or a little adult beverage. Just walk it right over to the the aquarium and insectarium.
Speaker 6
You're walking along the Mississippi River. You can look at the boats.
Three-year-olds like big boats. Go in, you see the insects.
They serve insect food. It's great.
There's a butterfly room.
Speaker 6 You know, there's other stuff you can do for kids, but you can get those if you just Google it. Insectarium Aquarium and French Quarter Combo is a nice little day.
Speaker 6
Guys, those are my New Orleans wrecks. You're welcome.
No charge. Straight from me.
Thank you for listening to the Borg Podcast. Amanda, this has been so fun.
When are you coming to me?
Speaker 6 Yeah, although, you know,
Speaker 23 I'm going to go Google what a hand grenade is because I wasn't aware that's something you could drink. And I've never heard of an insectarium.
Speaker 6 An insectarium. That sounds interesting.
Speaker 23 Would your kids like it, though?
Speaker 6 I bet they would.
Speaker 23
Yeah, they'd probably be game. But I do think you need to organize some kind of a bulwark bar crawl or family-friendly crawl event sometime.
Just putting that out there.
Speaker 6
That would be a lot of fun. Okay.
Well, you let me know when you're going to be here. We can tell people and we can all, we can be, I can be like the Pied Piper.
We can take people around.
Speaker 6 Everybody, I want you to have a wonderful weekend. On Monday, we've got something a little bit different for you.
Speaker 6 We'll have a little bit with Bill Crystal, but it's the 25-year anniversary of Columbine tomorrow. I grew up right by Columbine, and so we're going to talk about that on Monday.
Speaker 6
So, bear down for that. But in the meantime, I hope there's beautiful weather where you are.
Enjoy your weekend. Amanda Carpenter, I love you.
I appreciate you. And hope to have you back again soon.
Speaker 23 Great. Have a good weekend.
Speaker 6 We'll see y'all on Monday. Peace.
Speaker 42
Touchdown. I'm so grateful.
Numbers so low, bitch, be thankful.
Speaker 42 They say don't let money change you That's how we know money ain't you Bitch I've been had, bitch has been bad We buy big boats, bitch, I'm sin bad Downright sinful, bitch, we been full All my dope boys, we like kinfolk Be more burst boom, DC glass pipe, VA scent bells Bout that trap life Blew through thousands, we made millions Cocaine soldiers, once civilians Bought hoes Hondas, took care children Lit my pasta, built out buildings rapped on classics, I've been brilliant.
Speaker 42 Now we blend in, we chameleons. Ah!
Speaker 42 Never have I been locked up in a world of misery.
Speaker 42 I need you, darling, to set me free.
Speaker 42 Come back, baby, try me one more time.
Speaker 42 Oh, baby, I'm about to go out of my mind.
Speaker 42
I can't. Who else got the luxury to drop when he wants? Cause nobody else could fuck with me.
What a show off. Brooking wrist for risk, let's have a glow off.
Speaker 42 Fuck it brick for brick, let's have a blow off. If we go by connections made, I can still climb ladders when complexions fade.
Speaker 6 Yeah,
Speaker 42 white on white, that's the tester.
Speaker 42
Black on black, that's the Tesla. See these diamonds in this watch face? All that shit came from pressure.
They don't miss you till you gone with the wind.
Speaker 42
And they tired of dancing like a yin-yang twin. You can't have the yin without the yang, my friend.
Bring it, let's bring balance to the game. I'm in.
Yeah, can't escape the scale if I tried.
Speaker 42 Interstate trafficking's alive. Push.
Speaker 42 Never have I been locked up in a world of misery.
Speaker 42 I need you, darling, to set me free.
Speaker 42 Come back, baby. Try me one more time.
Speaker 42 Oh, baby, I'm about to go out of my mind.
Speaker 42 I can't do without you.
Speaker 42 I'm going out of my head.
Speaker 42 I can't do without you, baby.
Speaker 42 Without you, baby.
Speaker 42 I may as well be there. I live.
Speaker 42 Oh, baby.
Speaker 42 Oh, baby. Come on back to me, baby.
Speaker 6 I realize I made a big mistake.
Speaker 6 The Bullard Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.
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