Tim Miller: They're Still Humoring Him
Remember one of the worst quotes in history about just 'humoring' Trump after he lost in '20? Well, he's creating another threatening climate. Plus, Tim's reporting trip to Iowa, Pence gets a little loose, and Tim and Charlie share some life advice. Tim Miller joins Charlie Sykes for the weekend pod.
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Speaker 4
Welcome to the Bullwork podcast. I'm Trellie Sykes.
It is Friday, and it has been way too long to have Tim Miller back on. Tim, happy Friday.
Happy weekend.
Speaker 2
Way too long. You're always bumping me for that Adam Kinzinger.
What, just because he, you know, fought in the military and was in Congress and, you know, has a snappy Twitter feed now? That's fine.
Speaker 2 Okay. That's fine.
Speaker 2 If you have a new love.
Speaker 4
But you were always in my heart. I always knew that we were going to do the catch-up.
And of course, you've been being a road warrior in Iowa this past week. I want to talk to you about all of that.
Speaker 4 So, you know, one of the things I was thinking about as I was sitting down here with you, Tim,
Speaker 4 I need your advice on something or just your thoughts on all of this.
Speaker 2
I love that. I've thought about whether we need to add a life coaching session.
Yeah, yes. This is exactly what I'm talking about.
I could be a good life coach.
Speaker 4 But anyway, one of the experiences, and you wrote a whole book about this over the last seven years, is been watching people
Speaker 4 lose their minds. And I don't mean that in some metaphorical,
Speaker 4
you know, existential way. I mean losing their minds.
People have just, it's like you can feel as if all of the neurons have just fried themselves with all the crazy.
Speaker 4 And every conversation that I've had over the last couple of weeks eventually comes back to, so how do you stay sane? How are you going to get through the next year and a half?
Speaker 4 I mean, isn't there part of you where you look at the calendar and you go, oh my God, okay, it's going to be something. I mean, it's a year, but we have to go through this again.
Speaker 4 And when I say that people are losing their minds, I mean, I think people are, they emotionally are fried out by all of this. It's the stupidity, it's the pressure, it's the relentlessness.
Speaker 4
We're all overwhelmed. And let's be honest with it.
I mean, people are listening to this podcast, but then they're probably nodding their heads because there has to be some days where you go,
Speaker 4 it's just too much. So I don't know what
Speaker 4 is your life, coaching?
Speaker 4 How do we not become completely insane
Speaker 4
over the next year? I'm thinking about prospectively. You don't know what I mean, by the way.
Do you think you do? About the last seven years, the number of people who something's happened to them.
Speaker 4
And I understand it. I mean, you cannot be an emotional, intellectual punching bag, you know, day in and day out, week in and week out without paying a price.
So, I don't know.
Speaker 2
Tips. Yeah, there's a lot of broken people.
I've always checked it on the end of COVID that, like, one person on every text chain I'm on has completely broken.
Speaker 2 Um, and uh, you know, and sometimes that might mean going crazy and radical, and sometimes that means just I just don't want to talk about politics anymore, which I understand.
Speaker 2 That just completely checks out. You know, my negative side of what you're saying is I think part of the reason why it's so daunting is that like there's really no
Speaker 2 like light at the end of the tunnel, you know, which makes this a little different, right?
Speaker 2
Even in 2016 and through 2020, it's like, oh, we get rid of this guy, and then things are going to get better. And like, that isn't really there.
There's no light at the end of the tunnel.
Speaker 2 The Republican Party, and you know, we can all quibble over how much everybody likes Joe Biden. I might like him a little more than most, but even still, he's an older,
Speaker 2 and there's no real, you know, it's not like there's some excitement, everybody's so excited that we're going to get to move on to this other thing. And I think that that is hanging over all this.
Speaker 2
You know, for me, there are two things. One, and I hope this is useful for our listeners.
We're going to talk about this. It is actually good for my brain to be out there with the real people.
Speaker 2 And I think that the exception,
Speaker 2 it did not give me, I don't mean this in the Pollyanna optimistic sense, as you're about to find out.
Speaker 2 I didn't go to Iowa and think, oh man, people are really great and good out there and things are going to turn out better. I don't mean it like that.
Speaker 2 But there's just something about the just parade of horribles on your social media feed and in the emails that gets to wear on me.
Speaker 2 And so actually being out there and kind of having an engagement and learning the nuance, and even if it's dark, you know, hearing about people's real stories.
Speaker 2
I mean, I just, I like, I had a very interesting conversation with a woman who was there on January 6th. And you can tell she's one of the broken people, really.
But she had a humanity about her.
Speaker 2
She didn't end up going into the Capitol. She didn't do anything, you know, wrong.
She's one of, she's one of the ones who's been fooled. And we had a very long conversation.
Speaker 2 And in some ways, that was nourishing for me, even though it wasn't hopeful, if that makes sense.
Speaker 2 The other big advice I have for you and for everybody is it's nice to have friends and interests that aren't politics. And I just, this has been a big part of my move here.
Speaker 2 I being in New Orleans, I've got a lot of pals here that don't know about, that don't follow this shit, don't listen to us.
Speaker 2
I've got a couple of pals who listen to us, high guys, but most of them don't listen to us. And I like that.
And I just think that is absolutely necessary.
Speaker 2 And when I meet people who say, I love you from MSNBC, my advice is always maybe one hour less a day.
Speaker 2 I know I'm not, I hope that my the bosses aren't listening to this, but just like one hour less a day, finding something else, read some fiction.
Speaker 2 Just different for everybody.
Speaker 2 You know, bird watching for some people, you know, LSU football is coming up for me, whatever it is for you. I think, you know,
Speaker 2
my book reading is I do one homework, one, one treat. So I just go back and forth on my book reading.
I give myself a treat that's something totally separate from all this.
Speaker 2 So anyway, that's my life advice.
Speaker 4 Yeah, let me maybe pick up right there because
Speaker 4 you made a couple of different points. I do think that one of the reasons why people are feeling the pressure right now is exactly as you put your finger on it.
Speaker 4 Back in 2016 and actually in 2020, we could all sort of
Speaker 4 cling to the illusion that, okay,
Speaker 4 once this is over, we can get back to our lives, right? That you see the end, you see that light at the end of the tunnel.
Speaker 4 And I certainly remember that, you know, people saying, well, what are you going to do next year?
Speaker 4
And I say, you know what, I'll think about next year because we just got to get through this and then things are going to be okay. And four years later, I was thinking the same thing.
Now,
Speaker 4
it is hard to think that it's ever going to get back to normal. And I think that's part of why it feels even heavier after all of this.
So that's number one. Number two, getting out in the world.
Speaker 4 I know exactly what you're talking about. I remember, you know, a few years back, and I, you know, like you,
Speaker 4 we can get caught up in social media and start to think that that's the world and, you know, the kind of the vitriol and the back and forth and everything.
Speaker 4 And I actually remember being down, I think, I think it was, oh, I think it was, was it Tucson or Phoenix? It was at some event. And we were having an interesting conversation about politics.
Speaker 4
And I remember being actually surprised to realize that, hey, this is the real world. These are real people.
And they're not crazy. They're reasonable.
And we're having this conversation.
Speaker 4
And it was really refreshing. So I know exactly what you're picking up on.
As far as the therapy, you know, everybody does have something different.
Speaker 4 I do think it's a good idea to turn it off once in a while. You know, I try to cultivate a sense of humor about all of this, which is very, very difficult.
Speaker 4 And some people, how can you laugh when American democracy is burning? If you don't laugh, American democracy will burn and you will burn with it.
Speaker 4 That's number one. But in terms of like, you know, the way that I step out of it,
Speaker 4 you mentioned your reading habits. I read fiction, but also weirdly enough, and maybe this is just idiosyncratic, it's therapeutic for me.
Speaker 4 to read histories about other dysfunctional periods of history, to kind of realize, okay, we're not the only people who lived through a shitstorm. You know, it used to be really, really bad.
Speaker 4 My favorite television show is Babylon Berlin, 1929 Berlin, because it's kind of escaped us, but also it's realized, you know, you realize that, okay, you know, things have, you know, been worse
Speaker 4
in the past. It is important to do all that.
And also, you know, you moved to New Orleans. I am, have I talked to you about this? I'm kind of preparing for a major lifestyle change.
Speaker 4 It's kind of big for me.
Speaker 2 Oh, no. No, I don't know if you have talked to me about this.
Speaker 4 We're doing it live. I am about to have a teenager in the house again.
Speaker 2 Really?
Speaker 4 I'm about to go to soccer games.
Speaker 2 I love that for you.
Speaker 4 My French grandson has decided that I am the Ferrari of granddads, and he wants to come and live here and go to school for the next semester.
Speaker 4 Now, assuming that all of the papers are all approved and all the passports and everything, fingers crossed, you know, at the end of August, I'm going to have a teenager in the house.
Speaker 2 Wow.
Speaker 4 Again.
Speaker 2
I mean, the teenager, awesome for him. I mean, God, America, you know, sometimes we get down on America.
America is great. There's a lot of great reasons to come here despite all the problems we have.
Speaker 2 But he's going to leave France for Wisconsin. I don't, that's a little bit of a confusing choice for me, but I'm open to hearing why.
Speaker 4
Well, it's going to be interesting to see, you know, this country through his eyes. Because, I mean, obviously he'll have a different perspective, but he's very excited.
I mean, he loves soccer.
Speaker 4
He's signed. I've signed him up for the suburban soccer leagues and everything.
He visited the school, the middle school and everything.
Speaker 4 And because his mom, my daughter, is an American citizen, he and his brother just got their American citizenship last week.
Speaker 2 Got it.
Speaker 4
And so he is a dual citizen, and he's very excited. I obviously, you know, this is one of those things where we're like, okay, this is exciting.
I'm proud for him.
Speaker 2 I hope we don't let him down. You know what I mean?
Speaker 4 I hope the experience is a good experience.
Speaker 2 I'm glad it's dual.
Speaker 2 Dual is kind of nice there. You know, you wouldn't want to come back and
Speaker 2 come back to the Donald Trump MAGA idiocracy autocracy. That would be a poorly timed move.
Speaker 4 But I remember thinking, and when this idea first came up,
Speaker 4
it seemed a little bit fanciful. And now he's coming.
And
Speaker 4 part of me is thinking, well, okay,
Speaker 4 I get this is a flashback. It's kind of a do-over, being dad type thing.
Speaker 4 But also, it's like having, for me, having to go back into real life, having to go to events like soccer matches and parent conferences and meet other kids' parents and things like that.
Speaker 4 So, this is going to be
Speaker 2 I'm excited for this. We should start to have a segment at the end of the Friday pod where I get an update on your
Speaker 2 on fatherhood part two.
Speaker 4 Okay, so let's let's talk about the news of the week. And I want to talk about your ayahua thing.
Speaker 4 I'm going to put this in the category of the least surprising story of the week: that Donald Trump announces that, hell no, he's not going to sign that pledge to support the Republican nominee, which is the requirement to be on the debate stage, which he was never going to be at.
Speaker 2 So damn.
Speaker 4 It's interesting to me watching all these other Republicans, you know, sign the pledge and sign the pledge because they want to be loyal Republicans and they don't want to be, you know, they don't want to be considered a rhino and they don't want to, you know, get on the wrong side of MAGA.
Speaker 4 And there's Donald Trump who basically goes, yeah, screw it.
Speaker 2
Okay, let's start. These people are so pathetic, Charlie.
It's just like really gobsmacking, kind of. And it's like, we lived through all this.
They've learned nothing.
Speaker 4 Yeah, that's why it's exhausting. I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 You know, we spent the first 10 minutes, you know, having to do some little therapy because it's like, we already did this.
Speaker 2 We did the pledge thing back in 2016. I was with Jeb when we were like, this is so stupid that your friend Reince Priebus is making us do this.
Speaker 2 And he's taking the train up to New York to try to get Donald Trump, who's never signed a contract that he's kept in his entire life.
Speaker 2
And he thinks this non-binding piece of paper is going to make some fucking difference. And we're in a Dunkin' Donuts in New Hampshire.
And Jeb just like writes down on a on a on the table.
Speaker 2 It's like voted Republican since 19, whatever.
Speaker 2 I don't want to, I forget what the year was that he turned 18 and and you know tweeted it out and he's just like there that's my there's my pledge asshole.
Speaker 2 And it's like Donald Trump they walk into this bait every time where it's like, oh, you know, if we butter him up, if we if we're just nice to him, if we just try to please him, if we just if we just try to keep the lion in the cage, you know, then maybe he'll behave better next time.
Speaker 2 It's like, how can you still think this?
Speaker 2
How could these guys have been fooled by this? And, you know, Nikki Haley, I don't know, did you see this one? What she did? Yeah, I did. I almost clicked on it almost.
I don't know why.
Speaker 2 Maybe I'm the idiot.
Speaker 2 I had like a false sense of hope of something of that, maybe that Nikki Haley had, you know, an ioda of integrity left because the tweet was a teaser and it said, you know, Nikki Haley signs pledge with one caveat.
Speaker 2 And I was like, oh, what could that caveat be? You know, I clicked on it. I was like, maybe she was like, if the nominee has been convicted three times of felonies,
Speaker 2 if the nominee is convicted of insurrection against the country, then maybe I won't. No.
Speaker 2 In the pledge, she crossed out, you know, I would pledge to support the Republican against President Biden and replaced it with President Harris. And it's like, oh, that's so clever.
Speaker 2 So clever, so cute.
Speaker 2 And it's like so funny that you're making a mockery of this as you, for some reason, have decided to pledge your undying loyalty to somebody that could not give a shit less about you or this country or the Constitution or any of that.
Speaker 2 So anyway, the whole thing is so pathetic.
Speaker 4 So we started off with self-therapy and now I'm having PTSD flashbacks because, you know, to the moment that Reince Priebus, you know, begged on bended knee for Donald Trump to sign the pledge, I actually had a flashback to exactly where I was standing when I was walking the dogs talking on my cell phone to Reince Priebus.
Speaker 4 And he was telling me about this, and I was expressing my opinion on like, Reince, why are you doing this shit? And, you know, back then, you think about the real turning points.
Speaker 4 They were so terrified back then that Donald Trump would run as a third party candidate that they had to do this.
Speaker 4 This was their way of keeping him in the tent, which as you point out, you know, is an absurd episode of self-delusion. And they're still doing it so many years later.
Speaker 4
Again, when I say least surprising story, Donald Trump has made it clear that you either nominate me or I will burn the whole thing down. Right.
I mean, there's no third option.
Speaker 4
Donald Trump will never graciously concede. He will never graciously acknowledge acknowledge that he lost.
He will not graciously support the nominee of the Republican Party if it's not him.
Speaker 4 And this is really not any different than the position that they were in in 2016. And as you point out, they've learned nothing, absolutely nothing.
Speaker 2 This is where, just related to this, actually, the political side of this, this is why I've come around kind of changing my view on this, on this.
Speaker 2 The conventional wisdom still among, I think, the media class and the never Trump or elite class is that anybody would be better than Trump for Republicans. I can't, even among Democrats.
Speaker 2 A lot of Democratic strategists feel this way.
Speaker 4 You mean in terms of electability? Electability.
Speaker 2 In terms of electability.
Speaker 2 Exactly, this point that you bring up about how he's going to burn the whole thing down regardless. I'm like less convinced that that's even true anymore, right?
Speaker 2
I mean, DeSantis' campaign has been so poor. We'll talk about that.
There's nobody else. I mean, I guess Tim Scott, like this notion that Tim Scott's going to win, I think is preposterous.
Speaker 2 And if one of these guys was to beat Trump, or if one of these guys was to win in some kindly contested effort, the idea that Trump is going to send his MAGA forces out to vote for them,
Speaker 2 then maybe there's a pardon at play. And there's a lot of potential interesting things to discuss, no matter how depressing it is over the next year.
Speaker 2 So there are a lot of ins and outs and what have yous. But that said, it's just, it's kind of hard to see anybody else.
Speaker 2 I being able to put together a better coalition, as crazy as that seems, because of, you know, Trump's nature, right?
Speaker 2 Like there's no, there's nothing that you can make him sign that would not make him be, you know, be a happy warrior. You know, I guess, with the exception of, you know, potentially a pardon.
Speaker 4 You know, I heard you make that point the other day, and I winced at first, and I thought, no, you know, you're right, especially with this dynamic that we're describing, you know, in terms of electability.
Speaker 4
I mean, in terms of just substance, no one is as bad as Trump. No one is worse than Trump.
I am sorry. I'm willing to die on that guilt, including Ron DeSantis.
Speaker 4 I mean, because Trump is uniquely awful, dangerous, everything.
Speaker 4 But in terms of electability, that's where that whole argument falls apart because
Speaker 4 which nominee will be leading a non-split party? So
Speaker 4 again, Donald Trump is never going to debate, is he? He's not ever going to get on that debate stage.
Speaker 2
I don't think so. The only exception I could think about to this, he's definitely not going to do the second.
The second one is at the Reagan Library, and he definitely won't do that because
Speaker 2 some internal drama, some story that, you know, even the closest watchers of us don't remember, but that Donald Trump remembers with his lizard brain is when the Ronald Reagan Institute said that they didn't want to have Trump's name on something or whatever.
Speaker 2 So there's some slight of Donald Trump.
Speaker 2
That's what he remembers more than anything. He doesn't know any policies, but he remembers slights.
So he won't do the second one. I think it's 98% likely that he doesn't do this first one.
Speaker 2 And I think that the right thing is just to watch.
Speaker 4 He's not coming to Milwaukee.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 And so the question is: does like the anger of, you know, of DevNorma Tresmond, as you and Olivia have put it, like sitting and sitting in Mar-a-Lago you know just kind of watching all of them talk about him two times can he not handle not having the spotlight on him and not proving that he is the alpha male that's the only thing that makes me think maybe it's more like a 50-50 chance that the third one by the third one also the number gets higher so a lot of the riffraff from his perspective um from our perspective you know the noble candidates uh will be off the stage by then you know it's hard to imagine that the asa hutchinsons of the world who are struggling to get to this first threshold are going to get to the third highest threshold.
Speaker 2 So I don't know, 50-50 on the third debate, but that seems exceedingly unlikely before that.
Speaker 4 I guess I'm more bearish on all of this.
Speaker 4 Now, I know that you and I have a somewhat different perspective on Chris Christie, but part of my reason for thinking he's not going to debate is because he does not want to be on that stage with Chris Christie.
Speaker 4
And I have to say, I would want to get your take on this. I mean, I have been a huge, you know, Christie skeptic, but I was willing to listen.
But man, he is he is bringing it. Yeah.
Speaker 4 I know you're, you're kind of anti-Christie from the foundation, but from way back.
Speaker 4 But I'm looking at these clips of him on social media and I'm going, whoa. I mean, he has dialed this thing up to a 10 and is just pounding and pounding.
Speaker 2 Yeah, calling him a honey-baked ham and the whole thing. I mean, I'll,
Speaker 2 yeah.
Speaker 2
I'll say two things about Christie, one positive and one, one concerning. Here's the pot.
The positive is,
Speaker 2 thank God he's just doing what he's doing.
Speaker 2 And I just, and I think that just as a net comment, it's better to have him out there speaking the truth on Fox News, speaking the truth on that debate stage in two weeks than otherwise.
Speaker 2
And I think that he is doing it. Say what you want about Asa, Will Hurd.
You know, I watched, I was at this cattle call in Iowa, and it's like Asa goes up there and he just, you know, God love him.
Speaker 2 He just doesn't have it, right? He's just not making the case, right? So it's kind of like, what's the point then? If you're not going to make the case, you put those three in the same camp.
Speaker 2 It's like Christie is clearly the one that's making the strongest anti-Trump case. And there is a value in having that case being made and having some people hear it.
Speaker 2 You know, whether he's a convincing messenger, I'm a little bit skeptical, but it's better that people hear it than don't. Here's the thing that worries me a little bit, though.
Speaker 2 Can he help himself if he is on this stage in two weeks without Trump?
Speaker 2 I mean, is he just going to be machine gunning the rest of the field? And then you get to New Hampshire.
Speaker 2 And, you know, if we just kind of play this out from a strategic standpoint, I think right now, Chris, if you had to put a gun to my head, I'm like, who finishes second in New Hampshire?
Speaker 2
It seems like Chris Christie to me. Wow.
And
Speaker 2
okay, yeah, wow. It's right.
But I lived through this, right? So now I go back to my John Huntsman experience, right? We, we finished third actually to Ron Paul, but it was a close third.
Speaker 2
It was, I think it was, you know, Mitt was in the 40s, and it's like Ron Paul, 17, Huntsman 16, something like that. I'm going from memory.
The gap might have been a little wider.
Speaker 2 But okay, so let's say that happens this time, right? And it's like Trump 40, Christie 19, you know, whoever, DeSantis or Tim Scott or whatever, 14. It's like, did that help?
Speaker 2 If the purpose of this was to stop Trump, did it help for you to take that one-fifth of the New Hampshire electorate that kind of likes the moderate truth-telling guys that I worked for?
Speaker 2 I mean, all my guys were from New Hampshire guys, McCain, Huntsman, Jeb.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I didn't work for Kasich, but that, you know, that voter that was like a McCain Huntsman, Kasich or Jeb voter, if you take all of them, but then you don't have anywhere to go after that, you know, did you actually kind of hurt the cause of stopping Trump in the long run?
Speaker 2
It's complicated. And despite my distaste for Christie, personally, there are a couple of folks over there that still talk to me.
And it does seem like they're aware of that. So
Speaker 2 hopefully Christie's a kamikaze guy on Trump, and these concerns I have get fleshed out between now and New Hampshire. But those are the concerns I'd have.
Speaker 4 Okay, so let's talk about your big story this week.
Speaker 4 You were in Iowa, you were covering them, and I want to hear about this. But you had a really interesting piece that got a lot of traction in the bulwark about
Speaker 4 plan B or plan C or
Speaker 4 what are we at for the DeSantis people?
Speaker 2 Emergency Break Glass, I think. I think it's the Emergency Break Glass.
Speaker 4 Remind us what their thinking is for the long game.
Speaker 2 Well, I was surprised this was happening. So I was in and I'm in Iowa and I was following around Vivek in DeSantis.
Speaker 2 And well, just as a brief aside, so I did three campaigns in Iowa and the people from the McCain-Romney era are just off the field. And I think that's kind of an untold story.
Speaker 2 It's like the people that worked on those campaigns, like they just aren't involved in any of these campaigns.
Speaker 2 Like most of the, so I was calling all of them doing the who should I talk to, who should I talk to?
Speaker 2 And they would put me to other people who are either younger or a little crazier or whatever, you know, who are still working for some of these campaigns.
Speaker 2 In one of those conversations, a DeSantis superback person.
Speaker 2 was talking at length to me about how, you know, during this reset, they've got to think about, you know, the short term and getting some momentum back, but they also got to consider the long term.
Speaker 2 And I was like, what do you mean by that? And it's like, well, you know, in Iowa, if you if you get second in Iowa, people are like, he's dead. But is that really true?
Speaker 2 You know, we've got all these legal cases coming out with Trump, and maybe there's an argument for sticking around and getting seconds and thirds and second and going into the proportional states and amassing delegates.
Speaker 2 And we have the money to play the long game in the way that other candidates don't. And I'm sitting there listening and I was like, oh, that's an interesting thought exercise and all that.
Speaker 2 And I was like, but do you guys, are you guys like seriously talking about that and having meetings?
Speaker 4 I mean, so the long game is you basically, you know, pile up delegates. And then what is the latest version of this magical thinking that you're there when what unicorn happens?
Speaker 2 Yeah, okay. So it's like step A, get as many delegates as you can, not a majority, right? Because Trump's going to have the majority.
Speaker 2 And this is basically conceding that Trump is going to win the most of these races, right? So you get as many delegates as you can. And then step B is that Jack Smith does your dirty work for you.
Speaker 2 And we can get into the trial dates and all that. But if you're looking at these spring dates, you know, and step C is a question mark.
Speaker 2 Does Trump decide to get not run because he cut a deal? Does he go to jail? And does he not run for jail? Magical thing.
Speaker 4 Yeah, step C is a question mark.
Speaker 2
So it's like, A, we get delegates. B, Jack Smith trials are happening in the spring.
C is a question mark.
Speaker 2 D, we have a fight on the convention floor where we want to have as many delegates as possible so that we have,
Speaker 2 you know, negotiating power, strength, whatever, as we try to figure out who in milwaukee you know is the actual nominee because it can't be the guy in an orange jumpsuit i mean this is just fantastical thinking i mean it'd be great for the bulwark podcast we'd have a lot to talk about i mean we could we'd be doing live streams all day as they as these guys shive each other on the convention floor in milwaukee but um an open convention wow yeah yeah and then to me the big takeaway was a i mean it's pretty bleak for desantis if you guys are even gaming this out at this point i mean it's pretty we haven't even had a debate yet you know it's bleak it's like that they would say this.
Speaker 2 And I checked. I was like, are you sure I can, okay, like, is this just a thought exercise or can I say that you guys are thinking about this? He's like, you can say we're thinking about it.
Speaker 2
I was like, okay, I mean, I just, the whole thing was gobsmacking to me. But I will say this: it's not a 0% chance, right? I mean, it is crazy and fantastical thinking.
And
Speaker 2 we can't possibly be this lucky to have a Republican convention floor fight with Donald Trump in jail. I mean, you know, pass the champagne if that's happening, but it's it's not a zero.
Speaker 4 The reason why it's not zero, why nothing is zero, is because something truly amazing and unprecedented is going to happen next year, right?
Speaker 4 I mean, something, I think it was David Fromu who tweeted out that Donald Trump is on track to be convicted of felonies and to win the nomination maybe in the same month. I mean,
Speaker 4 so we are in this bizarre moment that anyone who says for sure they know what's going to happen, we don't. I mean, everybody's making it up as they go along, right?
Speaker 2 yeah right i mean i i well i think the one thing that we know for sure at this point is that donald trump's going to win a lot of states yeah but even that you're looking at this and you had this in the newsletter today that jack smith you know is looking at what was it january 3rd i don't have it in front of me january 2nd yeah let's go yeah so iowa's the 15th right and this dc judge seems very amenable and you know listen to the thursday podcast if you want to go in depth on how that you know shakes out from a legal standpoint but like let's say that happens you I do think Iowa is probably the place where he's weakest.
Speaker 2
And he's on trial during the caucuses. And maybe somebody else can sneak out a win there.
And then, okay, then he wins some of these other states. And he's still on trial.
Speaker 2
And then it's like, there's another trial looming. And he can't go and campaign.
And there aren't cameras in the courtroom. There just are a lot.
Speaker 2
We are very much in our uncharted territory here, I guess. So I think having complete confidence in predicting anything is foolish.
That said,
Speaker 2
I guess we can have a lot of confidence in predicting that it's not like Donald Trump's just going to go away. Right.
You know what I mean?
Speaker 2 It's not like he's going to lose, you know, start finishing in fourth place. And that's what we know is not happening.
Speaker 4 Among the anecdotes that you tell about your trip to Iowa, one that stuck out to me was
Speaker 4
you went to an event that the DeSantis people had, kind of a small event. And it turns out not many people were there.
And I think your picture made the drudge report or something like that of
Speaker 2
how sparse the crowd was. It was actually darker than that, Charlie.
I had a moment where I was like, am I the bad guy here?
Speaker 2
Because the picture was at the top of the Drudge Report, and then also Trump bleeded it. And I was like, oh no.
I've given aid and comfort to the content, to the enemy.
Speaker 4 Tim Miller is now a content provider to Truth Social.
Speaker 2 I felt bad about that for about two minutes. And then I was like, you know, who really should feel bad about this? Is Ron DeSantis' campaign?
Speaker 2
I mean, they invited us to, they invited the media to this event. All I did was take a picture.
It's not my fault that only 40 people showed up to your event.
Speaker 4 Now, the dazzling detail, though, that you've had was that Ron DeSantis shows up in a five-car motorcade.
Speaker 4 Now, this is the downsized, you know, so he didn't actually take a private jet in a helicopter there. But this is the trimmed down, slimmed down campaign.
Speaker 4 This is part of the problem with Ron DeSantis. Ron DeSantis, you know, wanted to do the Bigfoot campaign.
Speaker 4 And since we're in the PTSD, sort of reminded me of where Scott Walker was back in 2015, where he was spending money like crazy. His campaign was run by Rick Wiley.
Speaker 4
And their burn rate of money was just staggering. And I think maybe in part the thinking was, let's look as big and impressive.
We have to look like the front runner.
Speaker 4
And of course, he was done by September. And by the way, Walker family inner circle.
They to this day hate Rick Wiley. I mean, they just think he F'd them over, spent all of the money.
Speaker 2 He's on the Haley campaign now. So, you know, the grift continues.
Speaker 4 Perfect. Just perfect.
Speaker 2 Great job on that pledge. That's definitely going to move you from 3% to 4%.
Speaker 4 Okay. So the other dazzling detail that stood out from your account is, you know, Ron DeSantis does his, I mean, look,
Speaker 4 it feels like an old story now that Ron DeSantis is really kind of bad at this, that he's not that great.
Speaker 4
What was interesting was your account of Vivek Ramaswamy, who I think is this cycle's, you know, charlatan, fake candidate in many ways. But he's...
playing well on the on the field, isn't he?
Speaker 4 They like him.
Speaker 2 Yeah, they like him, right? So this is, I'm not making any moral judgments about Vivek.
Speaker 2 He's touching all of the erogenous things he knows how to do this yeah it was a back-to-back event so i see desantis in the morning it's like i go two hours one way from dwayne then two hours the other way you know they're both rural kind of areas but desantis's area was actually more you know there are more towns around uh tama than there are around this place like where i saw vivek this place was called vale i'm friends with the old uh an old chief of staff of a republican governor there and i was asking her about about about these events like just getting her sense she's like i i didn't know vale existed i was like the cheapest half of the gun.
Speaker 2
That's how small it is. So, Vivek is out there in the middle of nowhere.
I mean, he's in BFE. And his crown is three times as big as Ron's.
Speaker 2
His little stump speech is, I mean, a thousand percent more engaging than DeSantis's. People are into it.
Yeah, they're standing ovations, there are cheers.
Speaker 2
Now, these people are actually going to vote for him. You know, he's 37.
I think he just turned 38, actually. He's 37 when I was there.
He's Hindu. The third question was about being Hindu.
Speaker 2
His answer to that was strained credulity a little bit. You know, he kind of goes, well, I see us really as all in the same team.
And we believe in one God. And I believe in Judeo-Christian values.
Speaker 2 And I'm going, I don't know. If I'm an evangelist, I'll come sitting there listening to that and be like,
Speaker 2 I'm not sure that was that convincing of an answer.
Speaker 4 They were queasy about Mormons.
Speaker 2
Exactly. Hindu? Yeah.
You know, with the elephant God, Gunny. You know, okay.
I have respect for all cultures, but I'm just talking to me about Vishnu. Talk to me about Vishnu.
Speaker 2 I don't see that.
Speaker 4 Also, his attitudes about pork seem to be problematic.
Speaker 2 Yeah, it'll be interesting to see how he does at the state fair this weekend.
Speaker 2 So I don't actually think he's necessarily going to win, but his message, which is very Trumpian, you know, very nationalist, hostile to Ukraine, you know, hostile to elite culture in every in every sense, it was hitting their neurogena zones, as you said.
Speaker 2 And if he was a 44-year-old evangelical, I'd be looking at that and going, this guy is clearly in second. He would have dusted DeSantis by now.
Speaker 2 But, you know, because of his drawbacks, you know, who knows if he'll be able to win people over.
Speaker 2 But the other interesting element to this, which shows really this kind of going back to our first question about why this isn't going away and the deep rot here, is that the Vivek event, the people I talked to, many of them were, they liked Trump.
Speaker 2 There was one guy in particular who started talking to me about how he thinks Trump is still in charge of the nukes in the military. And then he says to me, and I was like, oh, okay, interesting.
Speaker 2
Interesting. So you're going to be with Trump then.
But like, let's say Trump can't run or something. Who would you be second? And he thinks about it for a while.
Speaker 2
He's like, I don't know, maybe this guy. I went back to the Vivek staff and I was like, good news.
The guy that thinks Trump is still in charge of the military, you're number two for him.
Speaker 2 So you can mark him down on your caucus count. But,
Speaker 2 you know, there were a lot of Trumpy people there. And the DeSantis, that wasn't true, right?
Speaker 2 Like it was a lot of more kind of established and older kind of Republican types, Chuck Grassley types, people that are playing the field.
Speaker 2 You know, that A, that's got to be a concern for DeSantis, but B, it sort of shows that like those, those folks aren't, they're not going to snap back, right?
Speaker 2 Like maybe Vivek isn't the next, you know, the second coming or whatever, but, but somebody that can offer them, you know, that nationalist grievance-mongering is really going to be it.
Speaker 4 So what do you think is going on with Mike Pence? I was, uh, I just retweeted something.
Speaker 4 I think it was from David French, who had a soundbite of Mike Pence being heckled by some super MAGA people who were telling him, you know, you're a traitor.
Speaker 4 Why did you, you know, know, why did you betray the country, you know, on January 6th? And, and Pence's answers, I don't know, it sounded pretty good.
Speaker 4 I'm kind of, you know, is this the new Mike Pence? Is this the temporary Mike Pence? Is this Mike Pence's moment? What the hell? I mean, look, this guy's not going to get the nomination.
Speaker 4 I mean, this is not the party that's going to, you know, go for the guy that defied Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 What is your take on Mike Pence? Because, I mean, he's been a weak tit for years, and now suddenly it's like, dude.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I think it's just happening more than we think, even.
Speaker 2 There's a video from the fair. Yes.
Speaker 2
It's worth noting that many people push back. Now, this isn't a Republican event.
It's at the state fair. So you have a mixed crowd.
There's some Democrats there.
Speaker 2 But that's a good sign. Just while we're talking positive signs, you know, this is still a minority of, unfortunately, it's a majority of the Republican Party.
Speaker 4 Somebody stood up and said, you should shut your mouth or something.
Speaker 2 So that's good.
Speaker 2
That's happened. There's still some Iowa nice out there.
You know, it's not a total dark wasteland. But I think this is happening to him a lot.
Speaker 2 That woman that I mentioned in the lead-in, Donna was her name, said she'd been there on January 6th and she was disappointed that the other candidates weren't sticking by Trump even.
Speaker 2 As we're on this podcast, going, why don't these guys have balls? You know, Donna's out there going, why are they sucking up to a martyr? Anyway,
Speaker 2 but she said that she told me a little anecdote about how she yelled at Mike Pence recently at an event. So I think he gets yelled at kind of a lot, basically, is what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 You do get on on the campaign trail, having been on a bunch of losing campaigns, you get a sense of freedom. Like once you kind of accept your likely fate.
Speaker 4 That's what I was wondering. Yeah.
Speaker 2
And I thought that Jeb's like best days of his campaign were the very first days. I thought we had a couple of really good days.
And then he gets overshadowed by Trump.
Speaker 2
And it's like, it's a free fall for a while. But around Christmas, when people aren't paying attention, and the only thing people remember is please clap.
And that's fine. Whatever.
It is what it is.
Speaker 2 But he had some very like convicted moments, right? Where, you know, that people aren't going to remember. Nobody's really going to remember these Mike Pence moments probably either.
Speaker 2 But like where he was able to just say what he really fucking thought, you know, about Trump and where, you know, I think that he made the moral argument.
Speaker 2 And I think that that's probably happening to Pence here.
Speaker 4
Yeah, yeah, that's, that makes sense. Because he does feel more comfortable in his skin, which is something that I never would have said about Mike Pence before.
Yeah. Like, right?
Speaker 2
He's still kind of awkwardly. He's like naturally, awkwardly comfortable, if that makes sense.
He's still not the most natural person, but
Speaker 2 it's like he's owning his awkwardness. Did you see the little exchange between him and his wife where his wife's like, I want to go see the bunnies?
Speaker 2 And he's like, yeah, I don't think I'm going to do that.
Speaker 2
It was kind of like, it was kind of frank and comfortable. I don't know.
There was something about it where...
Speaker 4 He said no to mother. He said no to mother.
Speaker 2 It's like he's really standing, you know, yeah, you can stand up to a protester, but when he says no to mother, you know that Mike Pence is really feeling his oats.
Speaker 4 It is interesting that you put it that way because that was kind of my reaction to watching Chris Christie, that he's becoming more and more comfortable with this.
Speaker 4 this he's that this is what i'm doing i i don't need to overthink it in politics obviously there comes that moment like oh my god i i could win it might be close i better watch what i say right and and you have to trim your sails right and so that's when you will inevitably become tight and you will become programmed and you stick to your talking points at a certain point you go eff it i'm laying it out and there is that feeling of liberation It's the Hillary crying.
Speaker 2
It's Hillary crying in New Hampshire. It got her comeback after Obama beat her in Iowa.
That feeling of liberation is there for sure.
Speaker 4 Okay, small trigger warning for everybody here because
Speaker 4
no, I need to have an earnest moment. Okay, great.
We've sort of avoided that so far in the podcast. No, the really serious, you know, okay, so.
Speaker 4 Next week, we're going to have these indictments coming down from Georgia. Obviously, that will be the big story of the week.
Speaker 4
Fonnie Willis is going to come down with multiple, maybe racketeering charges. Might not just be Trump.
It might be the, you know, a whole bunch of co-conspirators
Speaker 4 but here's the deep breath here's the earnest moment the level of the vitriol that is now being aimed at the prosecutors the judges and against vonnie willis from trump and trump world is in many ways just another page from his playbook but
Speaker 4 but the intensity
Speaker 4 The intensity and the vileness of the attacks are ramping up.
Speaker 4 And what's interesting about this, and again, interesting is a weasel word, word, what is alarming about all of this is that the threat of violence has been real and growing for some time.
Speaker 4 But now it feels like we are coming to a real ignition point. So this week we had that confrontation in Utah where a guy who'd spent way too much time online and had lots of guns was...
Speaker 4 Did you see this dude's Facebook page? Yes, I did. Lunatic shit.
Speaker 4 And very clearly, he was tracking anyone who was involved in opposition to Donald Trump or into the cases against Donald Trump, Alvin Bragg, all of those people. He was basically breathing threats.
Speaker 4 And whether he would have acted on it, we don't know. But the FBI had no choice other than to check him out and leaving that aside.
Speaker 4 But just a reminder, there are millions of people out there with guns who are being destabilized. who are being ginned up by this rhetoric.
Speaker 4 And in a normal, rational world, there would be voices out there saying, this is the time when we need to be sober, when we need to be careful, we need to be restrained. None of that is happening.
Speaker 4
So what do we have? Donald Trump, who has decided that a climate of chaos, violence, and fear works for him. He's okay with that.
And so
Speaker 4
he's going to be stoking it. Now, down in Georgia, they're actually running ads attacking Fonnie Willis.
I'm not carrying any briefer,
Speaker 4 but he's actually now, it's one thing for Donald Trump to say that, you know, these racist prosecutors, by which he means they're black.
Speaker 4 So he's going to try to weaponize the race of Albin Bragg and Fonnie Willis because that's what he does.
Speaker 4
But he's gone one step beyond that. The Fonnie Willis had an affair with a gang leader she was prosecuting.
Now, that's like
Speaker 4 she's not just, you know, a black woman, she's a black woman. And you know what he's saying here.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 Prostitute or whatever.
Speaker 4 Yeah. So.
Speaker 2 Yeah, and it was like an affair with a drug dealer or something, gang member. I forget the quote.
Speaker 4 So where are we going on all of this? And we're still only in August. What is the level going to be at in January and February?
Speaker 4 What is it going to be like next summer? And you know that, I mean, we've gone from spending years worried about the threat of international terrorism, Islamic terrorism, radical Islamic terrorism.
Speaker 4 And now the real threat is us, is domestic terrorism being stoked by the former president of the United States. And I'm sorry, this is what I become earnest.
Speaker 4
The alarm bells ought to be ringing off the charts. And so we talk about what's going to happen next year.
One of the things that we need to factor in is just the contingency of an act of violence.
Speaker 4 Because again, it doesn't take 10 million people with guns.
Speaker 4 It just takes a handful. And we don't know what's going to happen.
Speaker 4 But I think that there's that danger that we become so numb to what Donald Trump is doing, the threats, the attempt to intimidate and obstruct and everything, that we think, well, okay, this is, you know, same old, same old, when in fact, no, the context is more dangerous, the language is more dangerous.
Speaker 4 And I don't know where we're going here, but the Fonnie Willis attack feels like we're in kind of new territory, maybe not new territory.
Speaker 4 And I don't know about you, Tim, but I see no pushback from any of his opponents or Republicans saying, hey, guys, whatever you think about this, this is not the moment to be engaging in this kind of reckless behavior.
Speaker 2 Yeah, this is where I was going. In some ways, where it's worse than the rhetoric, yeah, but it's also worse in that there's no dissenting voices in MAGA world and conservative media world.
Speaker 2 Because I think back, so before January 6th, the most heightened fear I had for violence was kind of late in that primary season in 2016 when Trump was doing the rallies when he was when he was like, yeah, fuck him up.
Speaker 2 Yeah. Remember, he had a period of time where at the rallies where he was encouraging people in the crowd to hit protesters and he was saying, I'll pay for for your legal bills.
Speaker 2 And, right, like it was like Trump's always Trump, but but his, you know, his rhetoric waxes and wings.
Speaker 2 Yeah, you know, and so that was a period where his, where his violent rhetoric was the most heated.
Speaker 2 And at that time, you had, you know, his opponents, Marco and Ted Cruz and other people within the Republican Party saying this is uncalled for.
Speaker 2
You know, you shouldn't, we can't have this kind of rhetoric. Some events were canceled.
You don't see that at all to your point now. There is nobody.
Speaker 2 There's been one example show it.
Speaker 2 I'd love to give anybody credit, but I don't see any example anywhere in the conservative media world and Republican world, you know, beyond the Chris Christie's, the myths, of people saying,
Speaker 2
we have to stop this. Like, this is going to lead to something dangerous.
And, you know, they just want to pretend as if it doesn't exist. And I go back to that Iowa bar and I was in that cattle call.
Speaker 2 And it made me feel very uneasy because everybody that goes on stage, all of these Republican candidates, everybody that talked, they just pretended like it all wasn't happening.
Speaker 2 Like they didn't talk about the indictments, they didn't talk about anything. And meanwhile, you had, you know, some people in the room liked that.
Speaker 2 And then you had these like kind of agitated Trump fans that are like, why aren't you fighting for my person? They're at, you know, like those people need to be kind of talked off the ledge.
Speaker 2 And nobody's doing that. Like they're either being stoked by Trump himself and by his most noxious allies, or, you know,
Speaker 2 there's another class of people that are just putting their head in their sand, like ostriches and hoping that this all gets better sometime with some convention floor fight in Milwaukee.
Speaker 2 You know, this kind of fantasy talk.
Speaker 2 And so, that part to me, I think when you combine just the heightened intensity of the drama around actually convicting a former president and how that, how people would respond to that.
Speaker 2 And you saw the interview Von Hilliard did on NBC with somebody who was like civil war, calling for civil war. So, so people's emotions.
Speaker 4 Because obviously, we can't live together if we do this. Yeah, right.
Speaker 2
So, the news will be heightened. The emotions will be heightened.
Donald Trump's rhetoric is heightened.
Speaker 2 the pushback is non-existent, and you know, I think a lot of national security experts, domestic terrorism experts, said the thing about January 6th was that it culminated in a moment, right?
Speaker 2 Like to have real violence, you know, you have your one-off people, that's something to be scared of, but then you have your real violence is when it culminates in a moment.
Speaker 2 We're going to have a lot of those potential moments coming up next year. I think it's so all of that is very unbelievably concerning.
Speaker 2 The only one last thing, the only good positive thing that I think we do have going for him is the way the DOJ has been so tough on that January 6th, the people organizing the violence, the oath keepers, all that.
Speaker 2 I think that has taken some people, some of the people, the troublemakers off the field in a way that is making real, real tangible difference.
Speaker 2 I think that's the only green shoot here in a situation that, as you bring up, is deeply scary and very alarming.
Speaker 4
Well, I agree with you, but... The danger does not come from just organized groups.
It can come from these lone actors as well.
Speaker 4 You know, and I was thinking back to that period before January 6th, and even some of the stuff that you wrote, that I wrote, that we were saying this is really dangerous, this is really dangerous.
Speaker 4 Well, Bill kept saying, I am alarmed, I am alarmed. And yet, in retrospect, we were not alarmed.
Speaker 2 Bill was really out there on this.
Speaker 4 And I remember having a conversation with Denver Wiggleman right before January 6th.
Speaker 4 You know, and he had done some of this work, and he was saying, look, all the signals are this is going to be really bad. This is going to be bad.
Speaker 4 And he laid out the kinds of things that were happening that would lead to violence. I mean, he called the shot, and then it happens.
Speaker 4
And people go, oh my God, this, we are now in a volatile situation. Things are very, very fragile.
But to repeat a theme from earlier in the podcast, we've learned absolutely nothing from that.
Speaker 4 Absolutely nothing. We've seen how people have retconned what happened on January 6th, downplayed it, rationalized it, even now kind of supporting it.
Speaker 4 I mean, there's a real strain of Trumpian rhetoric. And by that, I mean coming from him directly that characterizes that 1776, we're going to take down the government as a virtue, as a good thing.
Speaker 4
So what happened in Utah ought to be a reminder. I think people have already forgotten about it, of how bad things can be.
So what I'm specifically saying is that we're gaming out 2024.
Speaker 4 What we haven't gamed out is what happens if there are assassinations? What happens? if you have witnesses who are killed? What happens if prosecutors are attacked?
Speaker 4 What happens if judges are attacked? What happens then? Fair enough, if you want to accuse me of Trump derangement syndrome or of being alarmist, I am alarmed.
Speaker 4 And you go back again to that pre-January 6th, you know, where Bill, you know, kept saying, I am alarmed, I am alarmed.
Speaker 4 And now, when we know all the things that were going on, we realize that that alarm was completely justifiable.
Speaker 4 I mean, it was way worse, much more serious, much more of a close-run thing than I think we believed at the time. And we were pretty ginned up on it.
Speaker 2 We were pretty ginned up, and it ended up being worse than many of us thought. And you have the other camp, which is the,
Speaker 2 you know, to beat the dead horse on not learning from anything, we have the what's the downside for humoring him crowd. And you remember that, the worst background quote in history.
Speaker 2
What's the downside for humoring him for a few months? Here they are. They're still doing it.
They're still humoring him. You know, even the people that are running against him are still humoring him.
Speaker 2 And I just, it's pretty sick, I think, that you have like these people in roles of responsibility, you know, whether that be McCarthy or McConnell or whether that be the people at Fox, who just are making the same damn mistakes they made before January 6th.
Speaker 2 And I think that
Speaker 2 you can just see,
Speaker 2 hopefully this doesn't happen, but you can just see into the future, which is one of these terrible events that you laid out occurs,
Speaker 2 they express their concern and say the right thing for 48 hours. And then they go back into their bunker as Donald Trump keeps winning primaries and caucuses.
Speaker 2 And, you know, there's not much, I think, that we can do to kind of stop that inevitability, except for what's happening through the justice system.
Speaker 4 So we don't have time to get into some of the other things I wanted to talk about. So let's make a note to talk about this over the next couple of weeks.
Speaker 4 Because I think that over the last...
Speaker 4 the last month, I think there's a growing recognition that even though Republicans have been completely full of shit about some of the allegations they've made about Hunter Biden, that in fact the Hunter Biden thing is a problem.
Speaker 2 That's a cliffhanger for next Friday.
Speaker 4 I mean, this is where holding two thoughts in your head at the same time is one of those difficult things in this concurrent environment that there's no evidence that ties Joe Biden to any
Speaker 4 breaking of the law, any of that stuff. A lot of the allegations that have been made have been completely baseless.
Speaker 2 And yet...
Speaker 4 There is a cloud of sleaz that I think is a mistake to ignore. Can we just like noodle this out?
Speaker 2 I talked to Ron Filipkowski. Yeah, we can noodle on it.
Speaker 2 People can go listen to Ron.
Speaker 2 I talked to him a couple of Sundays ago in the Sunday next level interview, and he was good on this because he's following all this stuff as closely as anybody and all the accusations in MAGA world.
Speaker 2 And his advice is, in short, basically, that the Democrats need to be better about distancing from Hunter because, you know, because even if there's no evidence of what happened with Joe, of Joe doing anything, it is pretty gross.
Speaker 2
And there's some political advantage to distancing. So anyway, we can get into it deeper another time.
But Ron, I had some good thoughts on that that sound pretty aligned with what you're saying.
Speaker 4 Well, and I think Joe Lawrence had a piece in the bullet work about all of this. And I think, look, are there any crimes? Is there anything impeachable? Absolutely not.
Speaker 4 But that doesn't mean that it's not gross.
Speaker 4
And I think that's part of the political reality. And the other reason is because Republicans have this deep, deep, deep psychological, cultural, political reason.
to talk about Hunter, you know, as
Speaker 4 all of the criminality of Donald Trump, you know, becomes impossible to ignore. I mean, what do they want to do?
Speaker 4 They They want to talk about the criminality of Donald Trump, or do they want to engage in whataboutism and the whataboutism of the moment? And for the next year, is going to be Hunter Biden.
Speaker 2 So, you've seen a lot of Jared Kushner coverage from that crowd? I don't know. The Saudis, somebody, how about this for cliffhangers? Somebody left me with a dark prediction for next year, which was,
Speaker 2 what if Trump just flees to Saudi?
Speaker 2
It's like you're worried about Hunter Biden and his shitty and his little small ball bullshit corruption deals. And here we got Jared Kushner bringing in a half billy from the Saudi.
So anyway.
Speaker 4 Okay, so this is what I really like that Christie has done because Christie, without any varnish, with, you know, completely unvarnished, is saying
Speaker 4 reminding people about Jared Kushner working in the White House, then leaving the White House and doing a billion-dollar deal with the people he had been working with. I mean, come on, people.
Speaker 4 You can't show anything remotely like that with the Bidens. But outside of Chris Christie, nobody's really played that Jared Kushner card, which is amazing.
Speaker 2 Amazing.
Speaker 4 Tim Miller, great to have you back on. We will continue this conversation soon.
Speaker 2 Sounds good, brother. Talk to y'all soon.
Speaker 4
Thank you all for listening to the weekend Bullwork Podcast. I'm Charlie Sykes.
We will be back next week and we will do this all over again.
Speaker 4 The Bullwork Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper and engineered and edited by Jason Brown.
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Speaker 1 Copyright 2025 for Pari American, the Orkney York. Never compromised drink responsibly.
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Speaker 5
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