Jonathan Karl: The White House Chaos Is Worse This Time
ABC's Jon Karl joins Tim Miller.
show notes:
Press play and read along
Transcript
Speaker 1 What does Zinn really give you? Not just smoke-free nicotine satisfaction, but also real freedom to do more of what you love, when and where you want to do it. Why bring Zin along for the ride?
Speaker 1 Because America's number one nicotine pouch opens up all the possibilities of right now.
Speaker 1
With Zen, you don't just find freedom, you keep finding it. Find your Zen.
Learn more at Zinn.com.
Speaker 1 Warning: this product contains nicotine. Nicotine is an addictive chemical.
Speaker 1 At Arizona State University, we've made online education better, smarter, and more personalized so you can go further in your aspiring field.
Speaker 3 I decided to pursue medicine once I realized that ASU did have the online program for biological sciences. You're still required to learn the same curriculum.
Speaker 3 You're still being tested on the same content that anyone would be tested on in person. The comprehensiveness of the program prepared me so well for medical school.
Speaker 1 Explore over 350-plus programs at ASUonline.asu.edu.
Speaker 2
Hello, and welcome to the Bulwark Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller.
Delighted to welcome the show, author and journalist. He's chief Washington correspondent for ABC News.
Speaker 2
His latest book, Retribution, Donald Trump and the Campaign That Changed America. He also is a co-anchor of This Week with George Stephanopoulos.
George, is that what you call him? Stephanopoulos?
Speaker 2 It's Jonathan Carl.
Speaker 1 Hey, how's it going, man?
Speaker 2 Do you have a nickname for George?
Speaker 1 No, no, just George. Just George.
Speaker 2
Just George for you. Yeah.
Yeah. Just George.
Speaker 2 Did you give him a finger wag over that,
Speaker 2 you know, over that faux pas that
Speaker 2 cost you guys $17 million or whatever it was?
Speaker 1 I think it was a little less than that, but no.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 1 I stayed very far away from all of that. From that.
Speaker 2 Yeah, that was probably smart. There's a bunch of book stuff.
Speaker 2 I kind of want to do a little bit of a potpourri of some of of the random nuggets in there, but we've got to do a little news first, particularly with regards to the Epstein files.
Speaker 2
We have this vote coming this week. I noticed you were on...
on GMA yesterday, I think it was, and offering a little bit of skepticism about, you know, like
Speaker 2 that this might be the big moment where the damn breaks and Donald Trump just says, okay, let's see it all, you know, worths and all. We'll show you everything.
Speaker 2 You noted the phrase in his bleat that they'll release everything that they're legally entitled to have.
Speaker 1 ken clippenstein noted that there's word unclassified in the discharge petition to cut his eye where do you think we're at like what do you think the state of play is on this i mean there are multiple reasons to be uh totally skeptical of this first of all let's just remember the base fact that if trump actually wanted to uh release the epstein files he could do it right now uh he could have done it a month ago he could have done it six months ago he could have let pam bondi do what uh she promised all those mag influencers yeah the binder i mean technically he already kind of started the release himself without a discharge petition with those binders.
Speaker 2 You remember that binder?
Speaker 1 Yeah, oh, yeah, those binders.
Speaker 2 DC Draino and all the big journalists. You weren't invited, I noticed, but a lot of the other key journalists got invited for that.
Speaker 1
I wasn't. I wasn't.
That's one reason. But the other reason is, I mean, he's coming out and saying, oh, yeah, vote for it after he has done everything in his power to prevent this vote from happening.
Speaker 1 I mean, obviously, the Bobert display
Speaker 1
in the situation room. Obviously, the phone calls.
I mean, he actually made phone calls to Nancy Mace. Apparently, she didn't take the call.
And to Bobert, her attacks on Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Speaker 1 I mean, the House was out of session for seven weeks. I mean, why was it out of session? If not to prevent
Speaker 1 the discharge petition from going through.
Speaker 1 So now suddenly.
Speaker 1
218 signatures on the discharge petition. The thing is going to pass.
It's going to pass with
Speaker 1 40, 50, maybe 60, maybe 100 Republicans voting for it. And that would have been the one big act of defiance that we have seen in the second term from Republicans.
Speaker 1 And he said, well, why don't you all vote for it?
Speaker 2 I mean, they were all going to vote for it anyway.
Speaker 1 I did point out that phrase, legally permissible. That's kind of legalistic language for a Trump Truth Social, frankly.
Speaker 1 So, you know, it's the old ongoing investigation trick. You can't release anything that is subject to an ongoing investigation.
Speaker 1
It kind of reminds me, you remember the tax returns? Of course. He really wanted to release the tax returns.
He really wanted to release them. But that audit.
Speaker 2 Is that audit still going on? I mean, you got to
Speaker 2 finish the audit.
Speaker 1 I mean, you know,
Speaker 1 we keep marking.
Speaker 2
We should check with Howard Nutlick about that. It feels like they should have bring a little more efficiency to the auditing program.
I don't know.
Speaker 1 With all those Doge layoffs at IRS, maybe they just don't have the personnel to do it. I don't know.
Speaker 2 I guess the question is, like, could there be another reason that he folded right?
Speaker 2 Or do we think that they really have a sense that they're going to be able to control the release of this stuff anyway? And
Speaker 2 the initial plan here, let's just be honest, was like they were going to cherry-pick stuff that was embarrassing for Democrats and start releasing that. Like, that was the plan.
Speaker 2 That's what Cash Patel and then wanted to do. And so maybe they could go back to plan A.
Speaker 1
Yeah, I mean, he said Democrats were the ones that were friendly with Epstein. All of them.
All of the Democrats.
Speaker 1
To be fair, when you think about it, back when Trump was really associating with Epstein, he effectively was a Democrat. Right.
So, you know, he might have
Speaker 1 a point.
Speaker 2
Mark Epstein, do you see that? He's been out there now, the Jeffseries brother. He's out on the trail.
Have you chatted with him ever?
Speaker 1 No, I haven't. I haven't.
Speaker 2 No, me neither. He's out there and saying that,
Speaker 2 well, first, there's a thing going on on the internet about Bubba, and that seemed like an obvious joke. And we want to engage in that here with a serious journalist.
Speaker 2 But he's also out there saying today that
Speaker 2 he has a source. I don't know why he would have a source.
Speaker 2 What filing center or whatever it's called in Winchester, they're already going through and scrubbing anything related to Trump out of there.
Speaker 2 I mean, I think that the questions will remain, I guess, is my point.
Speaker 1 Yeah, I mean, look, even if they suddenly released everything in the DOJ files, are people really going to believe what they see?
Speaker 1 I mean, this is kind of actually a fundamental issue, not just trust with this Justice Department or this FBI, but just generally with any official sources. Nobody believes anything.
Speaker 1 You know,
Speaker 1 the war on truth that I know you were talking about
Speaker 1 almost a decade ago is like it's been almost successfully won by those that were fighting the idea of truth.
Speaker 2
Yeah, it's funny. I was looking at something, not really that funny, kind of dark funny.
I was looking at something that Candace tweeted. I'm always right behind her in the podcast rankings.
Speaker 2
So it's good to monitor what the competitors are saying. She's number one in the world, right? I don't know if she's number one, but she's up there.
She's a little ahead of me right now.
Speaker 2
And she wrote this. This was, I guess, a couple of days ago.
They lied about JFK, MLK, RFK, Matthew Crooks, COVID, Russia collusion, 9-11,
Speaker 2 Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine, BLM.
Speaker 2 But the good news is she's being sarcastic, that everything seems to be above board about the Charlie Kirk assassination, which is like the most open and checked case I've ever seen, as far as I can tell.
Speaker 2 I mean, the person admitted it via text message and told people that he did it.
Speaker 2 But anyway, that is just to your point, right? Like, how do you deal with something like that?
Speaker 1
No, no, nobody's going to believe anything. And it's across the board.
I mean,
Speaker 1 since the book came out, I've got that cover picture, obviously, of Trump at Butler.
Speaker 1 I mean, I can't tell you how many people believe that Butler didn't really happen, that it was staged, that it was, you know.
Speaker 2 Oh, I get it. Yeah.
Speaker 1 I mean. Catch up.
Speaker 1 Oh, yeah. And that Elon Musk used
Speaker 1
to Starlink. The wackiest of the 2020 conspiracy theories was the Italian spy satellites that were used to flip votes.
I don't know why the Italians would do this, but.
Speaker 2 You know, I hear from real people, people, not on the internet, like on the street, Uber drivers.
Speaker 2 It worries me, honestly, because it's like the inverse of 2016.
Speaker 2 Like, I remember we're getting in a, it probably would have been a taxi back then, and you know, the driver would be like, what do you do? I'm in politics. Oh, you know, what do you work for?
Speaker 2
Republicans. Oh, Obama was really born in Africa, right? Like, that was like a trajectory that would happen often.
And I'm getting the inverse now of,
Speaker 2
oh, wait, the election was really stolen. Right.
And I'm like, I have to be like, no, I hate to disappoint people. I'm like, it's important to sit with the fact that he won, actually.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 Like that's an important thing for everybody to to deal with.
Speaker 2
You mentioned that Nancy Mace didn't take his call. I'm sorry.
I just don't want to lose that.
Speaker 1 Yeah,
Speaker 1 this is before
Speaker 1
the 218th hall of his signature was on. Trump made two phone calls that we know of.
One was to Bobert. Boebert did apparently take the call.
Speaker 1 Nancy Mace, either she sent it to voicemail or didn't take it, but that conversation, the call happened, but the conversation.
Speaker 2 Maybe she thinks he's trans now with all the makeup.
Speaker 2 She's scared to talk to him. I don't know.
Speaker 2 Running for governor of South Carolina, you'd think you would take Donald Trump's call. That's noteworthy.
Speaker 1 You know, I recently looked back. I did an interview with Nancy Mace back in the days when I had a podcast with Rick Klein.
Speaker 1 We interviewed her on January 6th before the attack on the Capitol, but in the morning of January 6th. And she sounded as...
Speaker 1 rational and as level-headed as you could possibly imagine, condemning her colleagues who were planning to vote to against the certification of the election and talking about how dangerous that was maybe her and margarita green to do like a
Speaker 1 freaky friday has marjorie flipped on the on the 2020 thing yet i don't think so yeah
Speaker 2 on epstein um since you're in the white house uh pool from time to time in the old days especially did you see yesterday after uh he was getting uh trump's getting questioned on the plane you know, by a Bloomberg reporter, a woman, if there's nothing incriminating in the files, why don't you release them?
Speaker 2
She's trying to get that out. And he looks at her and says, quiet piggy.
You see that? Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 1 Yeah. I mean,
Speaker 2 what
Speaker 1 it ceases to, it actually ceases to even shock anymore.
Speaker 2
It is even on the news. Isn't that kind of strange, though? Like, how do you, I guess that's a real question.
How do you deal with that?
Speaker 2 Like, at your ABC, and at some level, I understand that this is Dog Bites Man that the president of the United States calls a reporter piggy.
Speaker 2 And it's kind of ironic, actually.
Speaker 2 She's asking him about why he's covering up potentially his involvement in illicit behavior with women at some level, or at least sex, you know, we don't know exactly what.
Speaker 2 And he looks at her and says, quiet piggy.
Speaker 1 You know, I mean, my approach, just my personal approach to this, when I've been the subject, he's never called me piggy,
Speaker 1 is
Speaker 1 I think that I've lost track of what I'm supposed to be doing if I'm getting in a fight with him about what he's saying about me. So I
Speaker 1 ignore it. The one
Speaker 1 exception was the other day when he suggested, when I asked him about Pam Bondi saying she was going to prosecute hate speech.
Speaker 1 And Trump said, maybe she'll prosecute people like, maybe she'll go after people like you, and because you've been so unfair.
Speaker 1 And the idea that the President of the United States is suggesting that a reporter can be prosecuted because the President thinks that they've been unfair is a pretty that's beyond a personal insult.
Speaker 1 That's actually talking about using the power of government in a way that gets to the heart of what the First Amendment's all about.
Speaker 1 I mean, I remember back in the, you know, back in the first term, there would be some of my colleagues would get up and take real indignant, how dare you say that about my news organization?
Speaker 1 How dare you do?
Speaker 1
He wants to be in a fight with reporters. He wants the world to see reporters as his opposition.
I mean, that's why he calls the, or used to call the press the opposition party.
Speaker 1 If you can portray reporters as simply the same as Democrats, then everything that's reported, you can say, well, that's just, you know, not just fake news.
Speaker 2 Can I spitball another strategy back at you besides fighting with him? Yeah.
Speaker 2
I don't know. Why hasn't he arrested you yet? Like, it feels to me like the Department of Justice is pretty weak.
Like, why isn't Pan Bondi doing her job?
Speaker 2 That might be a question you might want to ask him. Like, I don't know why, I mean, you know, he's such a strong leader and the press has been so tough on him.
Speaker 2 And he's made a lot of threats recently about a lot of people that should be indicted, but I haven't seen anybody arrested yet. Maybe that might be something you should ask him.
Speaker 1 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 I'll take that under advisement.
Speaker 2 That's not something that sounds good to you.
Speaker 2 It's not
Speaker 2 a time when you arrested me yet.
Speaker 2
Yeah, yeah. Well, I don't know.
I mean,
Speaker 2
you do call him. You say in the book, you call him, he picks up.
That's strange behavior. I mean, that's kind of weird behavior, though, I would think.
Speaker 2 I mean, I guess you mentioned about how he does this with Biden. I thought he did this with Jeb, right? Like, it's like you just say the nastiest thing imaginable, and then he's chummy.
Speaker 2 So I guess it speaks to kind of the WWE nature of how he sees his job.
Speaker 2 But I don't know. I mean, that's,
Speaker 2 I guess,
Speaker 2 what do you make of that? The fact that he's trying to jail you on the one hand, and then he's chatting with you on the other?
Speaker 1 I mean,
Speaker 1 it is very strange.
Speaker 1 In that time where he invoked the idea of the Justice Department prosecuting people like me,
Speaker 1 in the very same answer to that question, I mean, because he does a little bit of the weave you know and then he starts talking about washington dc and he said that i should take my beautiful wife out to dinner tonight so you should take your beautiful wife out to dinner tonight i was like well i mean what if i'm on my way to the clank you know you know the good news is i guess because of the national guard i'll be safe at at dinner but the bad news is you know on the way home i mean
Speaker 1 who knows what could happen
Speaker 2 Well, it's a pretty crazy world out there. You know, you got to sit here talking to Jonathan Carl, hearing about the
Speaker 2 now chief of staff to the White House, looking at battle plans or war maps that were stored in the then former president's bathroom in the Uday and Cousin suite in his club in Florida.
Speaker 2 And you start to think, boy, things are maybe a little out of my hands these days. It's hard to
Speaker 2 I need to grab hold of something, you know, to ensure that I'm prepared for what might come. And one of the ways to do that is to get some good insurance.
Speaker 2 For over 40 years, SelectQuote has been one of the most trusted brokers in insurance, helping more than 2 million Americans secure over $700 billion in coverage.
Speaker 2 Their mission is simple: to find you the right insurance policy for your unique needs.
Speaker 2 Unlike one-size-fits-all life insurance companies, SelectQuote's licensed agents work for you in as little as 15 minutes.
Speaker 2 They'll compare policies from top-rated carriers to find you the best fit for your health and your budget. No medical exam, no problem.
Speaker 2 They partner with providers offering same-day coverage up to $2 million without needing to visit your doctor.
Speaker 2 If you've got high blood pressure, diabetes, or heart disease, SelectQuote has partners with policies designed for many pre-existing health conditions so you get the protection you deserve.
Speaker 2 Get the right life insurance for you for less and save more than 50% at selectquote.com/slash bulwark. Save more than 50% on term life insurance at selectquote.com/slash bulwark today to get started.
Speaker 2 That's selectquote.com slash bulwark.
Speaker 2 You see the conversation online about like, oh, you know, why aren't the journalists treating Trump the same way they talked about Biden's age?
Speaker 2 And, you know, there are like a million media criticism elements you can get to that we can just set aside.
Speaker 2
We talked about Biden's age plenty here. You actually talk to him.
I don't. You know, our listeners don't.
Yeah. Is he different from 2016?
Speaker 2 Like, do you feel him like the phone call you write about in the book is very, is pretty strange to me, where he's like kind of browbeating.
Speaker 2 It's the morning after the election and you call him to just congratulate him and he's like browbeating you about what you're congratulating him about.
Speaker 2 He seems angry. How would you assess what his private mental status is?
Speaker 1 I just started calling him during the last part of the of the election pretty regularly. And again, that is entirely, I've never done that with a
Speaker 1 major party nominee weeks or days before the election, let alone the day after.
Speaker 1 I called him Sunday morning, the Sunday before the Tuesday election, and he had just watched me on weekend Good Morning America.
Speaker 1 I don't even know if my wife had watched me on weekend Good Morning America. He was rather upset about what I said.
Speaker 1 And what I said was simply that even his own advisors are concerned that he is off message.
Speaker 1 You know, he's got a, they have a basic message, which is effectively a version of Reagan's, are you better off now than you were four years ago? Are you better off now than you were during my term?
Speaker 1 And instead, he's talking about
Speaker 1 shooting journalists
Speaker 1 or about
Speaker 1 what's his name, how he looks in the shower, and
Speaker 1 all this stuff.
Speaker 2 Arnold Palmer.
Speaker 1
And yeah, Arnold Palmer. Thank you.
Thank you. In Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
Speaker 2 I could never forget any discussion of Arnold Palmer's manhunt.
Speaker 1 Yeah, no,
Speaker 1
that was a high point. And he just starts, you know, he says, I watched specifically to see and you just can't do it, Jonathan.
You just can't do it. And I said, well, it's the weave, sir.
Speaker 1
It's a little bit of the weave. And he says, the weave got me elected president.
So he's like sitting there the Sunday before. He's got this massive, he's doing four, five events a day.
Speaker 1 It's a couple days out. And he is not only sitting there, you know, watching, and I'm sure he's watching the others as well.
Speaker 1 He's got the TiVo, and he's got his DVR, and he's watching everything, and then taking time to brow
Speaker 1 me over that. It showed me that at times,
Speaker 1 the usual thing is to be nasty in front of the cameras and do the attacks, and then
Speaker 1 to be like, ah, you know, I'll take the calls and we'll talk nice. But sometimes he actually does rants privately as well.
Speaker 2 Is he different?
Speaker 1
First of all, I didn't do any of that in the first term. I never once called his cell phone.
There were a couple of times where you would do the trick of calling the White House switchboard
Speaker 1 and you could get through to him that way. But I went through channels, basically.
Speaker 2 You interviewed him.
Speaker 1
Yeah, no, I interviewed him. I talked to him.
Yeah, no, no, no, no. I'm just saying that that was a different thing.
I think it's kind of fruitless to speculate. People talked about his
Speaker 1
alleged mental decline a lot before he came to the White House. I mean, you know, 2016.
And certainly while he was in the White House.
Speaker 1 Remember that time when he had to walk down that ramp at a military event?
Speaker 1
I mean, he's he's 79 years old. He doesn't really exercise.
He likes to eat McDonald's. I mean, at some point,
Speaker 1 the speculation will, you know, will be accurate, but he's actually been pretty vigorous, considering all that. He does a lot.
Speaker 2
Yeah, he does a lot. He does way more than Biden.
People don't like to hear that, but it's just like objectively true. And he's out there.
Speaker 1
He doesn't sleep either. It's weird.
He doesn't sleep. I mean, you read the shit he does at you know, two o'clock in the morning when he's on true social.
Speaker 2
He seems a little addled. I guess, forget the mental decline part.
Just like reading the book, you're talking about how you do this call.
Speaker 2
You mentioned the one before the election, but then you call him again after. Yeah.
And it's hard to tell, like, is he fucking with you or is he actually mad?
Speaker 2 The morning after he won this just unbelievably improbable election, like, why is he browbeating you in a private phone call? Do you think he's like,
Speaker 2 because that speaks to what your motivations are if you're if you're mad the next morning?
Speaker 1 I think that it wasn't so much that he was angry i think that he wanted to rub my face in it because i just said you know mr president elect i just wanted to say congratulations and he said on what you tell me jonathan on what and he just wanted to hear me say it you know hear me say it i i compared it to that scene in breaking bad you know uh where walter white the brian cranston character says say my name say my name so i i think it was as simple as that and look it's like you've just won this massive victory against all the odds.
Speaker 1 You had left the White House in disgrace, canceled, a pariah to corporate America, a pariah to most of the leaders in your own party,
Speaker 1
impeached, indicted, all of that stuff. And you managed to win it all and come back.
You would think you could kind of bask in that. But it reminded me of 2016.
He wins.
Speaker 2 And then
Speaker 1 the Saturday after his inauguration, he's complaining about people not giving him enough credit for the crowd size at his freaking inauguration. And I remember going to Sean Spicer, you remember him?
Speaker 1 And I'm like,
Speaker 1 what is it? Why does he like, I mean, he's president of the United States.
Speaker 1 Why does he care what somebody said in a panel on MSNBC about how many people turned out for his inauguration?
Speaker 1 He's in the White House now.
Speaker 1 And Sean said something, but I don't remember it because it didn't really answer the question.
Speaker 2 Who cares? Because the question answers itself, right? It's like it's a sign of somebody that has.
Speaker 2 I was asking Tapper, obviously, about this question, about the mental decline versus, and his line was that like, like Trump's in a different ward of the hospital.
Speaker 2 Like, he's not necessarily in the memory ward, right?
Speaker 2 Like, we don't need to be George Conway and like identify the exact, you know, type of narcissistic personality disorder, but like it's his particular element of mental derangement that he cares about this stuff.
Speaker 1 You remember in in the first term when Mick Mulvaney became the acting chief of staff, he invited the White House staff to go to Camp David for a little retreat, and he gave them a reading assignment, which was a book called A First Rate Madness.
Speaker 1 And A First Rate Madness is actually an interesting book.
Speaker 1 It makes the case that the best leaders in history have had a touch of mental illness, and some of the worst leaders have been perfectly sane.
Speaker 1 For instance, you know, Abraham Lincoln, a little manic depressive, mostly depressive.
Speaker 1 Churchill, according to this guy who was a guy from Tufts University, you know, medical school, you know, had a touch of mania. I mean, and the sane, Neville Chamberlain was a perfectly sane man.
Speaker 1 And when you're dealing with madness in the world, a little touch of creative madness helps out. But I thought it was just interesting because he's basically giving this book out to say, yeah.
Speaker 1 Trump may be nuts, but that's a good thing. Yeah.
Speaker 2 The foreign policy, they say that it's like the crazy, the unpredictability, you know, know, that's like they pitched that, right? Like the madman theory.
Speaker 1 The madman theory, right?
Speaker 2
Yeah. Yeah.
I say that, I say that as self-criticism a lot. And people, it sounds like it, it sounds, now I'm going to sound like Trump.
Speaker 2 It sounds like an egomaniacal thing to say, but I'm always like, one of my big weaknesses like in campaigns and a bunch of different stuff was like, I was too rational.
Speaker 2 Like I would look at other people who were like, who are bosses, who would make totally irrational demands on their staff.
Speaker 2
That's not in my makeup. But like, and then I would watch and I'd be like, one out of 10 times it'd work.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 You know, like the totally irrational thing they would suggest would work and I'd be see I would have missed out I would have missed that one
Speaker 2
Y'all if you've been listening to me, you know, I just I hate fallback. I hate the shorter days.
I hate the darkness. I get sad both in the literal sense and in the seasonal affective disorder sense.
Speaker 2 So if that's you or if you've got a friend who's in that boat, it might be time to check in with them.
Speaker 2 And if necessary, think about ways which you can get a little extra professional help from our friends at BetterHelp.
Speaker 2 BetterHelp does the initial matching work for you so you can focus on your therapy goals. A short questionnaire helps identify your needs and preferences.
Speaker 2 And their 12-plus years of experience and industry-leading match fulfillment rate means they typically get it right the first time.
Speaker 2 But if you aren't happy with your match, switch to a different therapist at any time from their tailored recs. For me, luckily, I got it right the first time.
Speaker 2 Back when I was needing some therapy, needing some middle-aged man therapy.
Speaker 2 I landed on someone that had a lot of expertise and experience with folks that were dealing with the issues that I was dealing with. And that's great.
Speaker 2 Finding a therapist that's a good match for you is important. And if you're feeling a little extra blue during this time of year, turn to better help and give it a shot.
Speaker 2 This month, don't wait to reach out. Whether you're checking in on a friend or reaching out to a therapist yourself, BetterHelp makes it easier to take that first step.
Speaker 2 Our listeners get 10% off their first month at betterhelp.com slash the bulwark. That's betterh.com slash the bulwark.
Speaker 2 I want to do a couple more book things. I want to ask you just one more thing about present day.
Speaker 2 I felt like in the first term, you know, it wasn't like Reince was calling me all the time, but I was still much closer to Republican politics than I am now.
Speaker 2 You know, the only people that talk to me now are actually the insane ones. All of my old friends hate me.
Speaker 2 And so it's hard for me to tell, but like from the outside, like there are fewer leaks, you know, that we have this time.
Speaker 2 We're not, we don't have the Javanka, you know, Javanka tried to save us from that one leaks happening. But it also, like the actual, the output seems crazy.
Speaker 2 It's like even a bigger shit show, like a bigger mess. And I'm trying to like,
Speaker 2 is that, would you agree with that? Or I don't know. How would you assess like what's happening in there these days?
Speaker 1 On one hand, it is a much smoother running machine internally. That Susie Wiles has a kind of a handle on
Speaker 1 how the staff functions. But there is nobody on that staff that is trying to keep him within the bounds of anything.
Speaker 1
So you have an administration that is moving at the whims of the president without any sort of process. I mean, I think that a couple of symbols is this.
One is the White House Council.
Speaker 1
The White House Counsel was Don McGahn early on. I mean, it was Pat Cipollone.
And it repeatedly saw the job of the White House Counsel's office as to
Speaker 1 keep the actions of the executive within the bounds of the Constitution, within the bounds of the law.
Speaker 1 And I recount in the book a story of when, when they had that minerals agreement with Ukraine, this is a pretty major international agreement that was negotiated over time and, you know, involved the State Department, the Treasury Department, the National Security Council.
Speaker 1 And they're getting ready to,
Speaker 1 this is the day before Zelensky's to come. And somebody says, wait a minute, has White House Council looked over this thing?
Speaker 1 And the answer was no.
Speaker 1 Dave Warrington hadn't even seen the thing.
Speaker 1 So J.D. Vance, the vice president, says what we're doing.
Speaker 2 Just for people who don't know, just to emphasize your point, Dave Warrington is the White House counsel.
Speaker 2 This person barely exists.
Speaker 1 Yeah, I mean, I mean,
Speaker 1
would anybody know? Yeah, yeah. And J.D.
Vance says, well, why don't we have my wife have Usha take a look at it?
Speaker 1 So the second lady of the United States, who, by the way, is a distinguished lawyer, Yale law grad, all of that, but not
Speaker 1 involved in
Speaker 1 the National Security Council or the White House Council or anything, comes in to take a look at the agreement. They don't even say, wait a minute, we can call Dave in now.
Speaker 2 I take it Usha gave it the green light. Yeah, yeah, believe it or not,
Speaker 1 yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 That would have, I guess, we would have heard that story, I think, if the second lady of the United States had been like, sorry, sorry, Mr. President.
Speaker 2
It looks like what you're doing here is outside the bounds of the law. It's farcical kind of to ask her.
And that, in that way, not because she's not qualified.
Speaker 2 It's farcical to ask her because it's like,
Speaker 2 I mean, this is a rigged game that we're asking you to sign off on this. It's a good fact to know for future investigations.
Speaker 1 And you think about the so-called reciprocal tariffs and the shaky legal ground, and they may get knocked down by the Supreme Court.
Speaker 1 I mean, I imagine in a first term, that might have gone through a more rigorous legal review rather than the thing where they just came out one day with like a chat GPT list of percentages of countries and how much we're going to tax penguins and all this kind of stuff.
Speaker 1
So, yeah, there is... plenty of chaos.
It's just a different kind of chaos. And it's a more consequential chaos for the country than what you saw in the first term.
Speaker 2
You mentioned Susie Wiles, another former boss of mine. You've mentioned a couple of my former bosses in this podcast so far, Sean Spicer.
Susie Wiles. How is Sean doing these days?
Speaker 2 You ever talked to him?
Speaker 1 You know, you know, unfortunately, we've just kind of lost touch. I mean,
Speaker 1 I'm sure he's doing great stuff. I think last, he was doing like ads for what, what was that?
Speaker 1 Car Shield?
Speaker 2 Life Lock? I don't know. Who cares?
Speaker 2 That's interesting.
Speaker 2
You're thinking, I mean, Corey Lundowski, other people managed to stick around that didn't have the survivor's instinct, I guess. Susie did.
You have a thing in her book.
Speaker 2
Maybe this, had this been out there at all? No, no, no, this hadn't been out there at all because I had not seen this. It's pretty shocking.
It was related to the classified documents case.
Speaker 2 What do you want? Oh, you just tell us.
Speaker 1 So I did a lot of reporting in this book, worked with one of my colleagues, Catherine Falders, who has done just stellar work on the legal front. And we tried to...
Speaker 1
kind of figure out what would have been in Jack Smith's final report if he had been allowed to release it. Because the classified documents case report was never released.
It was buried.
Speaker 1
It's probably where the Ark of the Covenant is at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark. You know, it's in that.
We'll probably never see it.
Speaker 1 But we learned that Susie Wiles talked to investigators, and we learned of what she said.
Speaker 1 And she said that she should have been more active and more proactive in terms of getting Trump to return those documents that were requested back, and that she really didn't like the way it was handled.
Speaker 1 She basically blamed the lawyers, not Donald Trump, but she said that
Speaker 1 she was not proud of how she acted. And it would have been very different if she had been more involved.
Speaker 2 He showed her a battle plan?
Speaker 1 Yes. And if you looked at the indictment, the indictment does make reference to a PAC official, a political action committee official, being shown a battle plan.
Speaker 1 And the official, you know, Trump says, I really shouldn't be showing this to you.
Speaker 1
And what we learned is that that was Susie Wiles. That information is coming from Susie Wiles.
I mean, because Trump's not admitting that, right?
Speaker 1 So that information is coming from Susie Wiles.
Speaker 2 Gee, if a staff now, I mean, essentially admitting that he broke the law, or at least testifying that he was showing her this classified information that he shouldn't have had, or maybe she would think he should, you know, she would maybe come up with some rationale, but like, I just, on its face, I always thought it was, and no offense to Susie here, I always kind of assumed it was like a younger hot staffer that he was trying to show it up.
Speaker 2 Like, cause I remember that in the indictment practice. I kind of was like, to me, there's the more corrupt theory,
Speaker 2 which is that he was taking some documents that the South, you know, some MBS dealerships. Selling him to Russia or Home Office.
Speaker 2
Or there was, to me, I always like the Occam's Razor, which is like Trump likes trophies. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And Trump likes and whatever. And so he thought it was cool
Speaker 2
to show. And I assumed it was like, I don't know, you know, a junior press aide who's 24 or something.
It was interesting that he felt he wanted to show off to Susie.
Speaker 1
Another one of the details that we learned about the classified documents is that he was using some of them as scrap paper. So like in his in his office desk.
You know, how cool is that?
Speaker 1 You could write a note to somebody and like it's on the it's got that red class top secret, you know?
Speaker 2 I mean, you could just buy a stamp
Speaker 2 that says that.
Speaker 1
I guess, but I mean, this is real, man. This is real.
See,
Speaker 1 this is why you're, you know, you're a podcaster and he's president of the United States.
Speaker 2 This is why I'm limiting. Yeah.
Speaker 2 Well, also why he's been indicted four times. I have been been, I guess.
Speaker 2
Hey, y'all, we want to hear from you. What do you like of our offerings? I mean, besides me, of course.
How do you watch or listen? Where are you tuning in from?
Speaker 2 In the show notes, you'll find a link to an audience survey we're conducting to help us get a better sense of who you are and get your feedback on our shows.
Speaker 2
We're cooking up some great plans for 2026, and this feedback is going to be invaluable. So please grab the link in the show notes.
Thanks, Advance, for your feedback. And
Speaker 2 it's okay if you you like somebody better than me. You can tell us.
Speaker 2
The cold courtroom, you were talking about another thing in the book. Yeah.
And how at one of the hearings, the elevator was down at Trump Tower, but he didn't want people to know.
Speaker 2 And so it was the one time he showed exercise in the last decade.
Speaker 1 I mean, this was just the wackiest story that I came across in reporting on the book.
Speaker 1 They're meeting before they have to go down to the Center Street courthouse in Lower Manhattan in his apartment at the top floor front of Trump Tower. I think it's the 66th floor.
Speaker 1 And one of the two elevators goes out, and the Secret Service, for whatever reason, says that we cannot take the alone working elevator. We're going to have to walk down.
Speaker 1
And Trump walks the whole way without stopping. It's like some of his aides, like Boris Epstein's going down and sweating.
And like, you know, he goes all the way down. They get in the motorcade.
Speaker 1 And one of his aides says, God, that was incredible. You just motored down.
Speaker 1 Now, to be fair, it's on the 66th floor, but it's actually only 55 flights because, you know, he lies about the floors at Trump Tower. It goes from, I think it goes from five to 15.
Speaker 2 And you're going down.
Speaker 1
Yeah, and you're going, but actually, but if you ever tried to go down that many flights, it's arguably harder. I mean, it's tough on the knees.
It's like, I mean,
Speaker 1
it is a lot. So one of this says, dude, that was incredible because they're still running against Biden.
you know, Biden's still the presumptive opponent. And it's like,
Speaker 1
we should tell everybody about that. I mean, can you imagine Biden doing that? There's no way Biden could have ever done that.
And Trump swears them all to silence.
Speaker 1 Nobody may speak of this ever because he's embarrassed that
Speaker 1 one of the elevators was out at Trump Tower. But what's great about this, I didn't know that at the time, but I do know what Trump said that day.
Speaker 1
This is when he came before the cameras. It was towards the end of the trial.
And he said, We're going to be resting soon. And he said, By resting, I mean resting the case because I don't get to rest.
Speaker 2 Nobody
Speaker 2
pitching about the stairs. Yeah.
You mentioned Boris was walking down the stairs with him, Boris Epstein.
Speaker 2 For the people who don't know him, he's kind of like a just big
Speaker 2 Italian fella with like the droopy cheeks.
Speaker 2
Russian. Russian.
Thank you. Yeah, big run.
But he kind of gives off a mobster kind of vibe, which is why I had a tie in my mind with like the big jowls.
Speaker 2 There was a story that you were working on and others that he was shaking people down for cabinet positions, including Scott Besant.
Speaker 2 That he had, because Boris has been with him forever, you know, since the early days.
Speaker 2 I remember Boris first from being, you know, back in the green rooms where he was shilling for Trump and I was shilling against him back in the primary of 16.
Speaker 2 So Boris has been with him forever, been loyal, organized his legal team for all of his, you know, all the indictments against him.
Speaker 2 And so he's shaking people down once he wins for cabinet positions, 30, 40 grand a month. And at the time,
Speaker 2
it seemed like that Trump even swatted him down publicly, which is a very rare thing. It's interesting to read that that seems to have blown over.
Boris is still
Speaker 2 around.
Speaker 2 This sort of corruption not really bugging the administration.
Speaker 1 I happened to be down in Palm Beach. And
Speaker 1 when all of this was going down during the transition,
Speaker 1 Besson went on the record, as did others, saying that Boris had tried to shake them down to offer to represent him in the efforts to get into the cabinet.
Speaker 1 And Dave Warrington, who we just spoke about, is now the White House counsel, but back then was the campaign counsel and then counsel for the transition, actually wrote a memo detailing Boris's alleged transgressions and giving specific examples.
Speaker 1 The description of Besson is particularly vivid. And I actually learned that Besson basically tried to entrap Boris to get evidence of what he had done by staging a phone call and saying to him,
Speaker 1 so you said you could help me out.
Speaker 1
and Boris gets mad at him. And this is like, this is as, you know, he's just about to announce his Treasury Secretary anyway.
And Boris says, it's too fucking late.
Speaker 1 You know, I'm Boris fucking Epstein. And these quotes are in Warrington's memo.
Speaker 1 And the memo, which was described to me in detail, I quote the last three paragraphs of it, says that Trump should cease all contact with Boris Epstein.
Speaker 1 It says that he should be fired from his whatever position he has in the campaign, should not be brought in the administration, and that Trump should cease all contact.
Speaker 1
And if you don't do that, we risk a major scandal or worse, you know, legal problems. And for about 36, 48 hours, Boris is on the outs.
John Solomon is the one that breaks the story.
Speaker 1 You know, John Solomon, very much kind of a, you know, conservative writer.
Speaker 2 MAGA.
Speaker 1
Sorry, MAGA writer. And so, you know, it's clearly like a leak from people that want Boris pushed out.
And Trump actually,
Speaker 1
you know, gets on the phone with Solomon as quoted in his story, saying, you know, it's a real shame. Sometimes, you know, people get close to you and they take advantage of you.
It's a real shame.
Speaker 1
So Boris seems to be out. I happened to meet with Boris at this time.
I knew these reports. I was trying to chase down the story.
Speaker 1 And I describe this kind of crazy scene of me trying to get with Boris and he's running around and changing the times and canceling on me.
Speaker 1 And it's a, and then I finally meet with him down the hallway of a Four Seasons Hotel in Palm Beach.
Speaker 1 It's this crazy crazy effort to
Speaker 1 try to get to the bottom of this. But what I had not realized was this is when he was actually on the outs and when he was clawing desperately to get back in Trump.
Speaker 1
And amazingly, he gets right back in. And he doesn't come into the White House.
Is it amazing, though? No, it's not.
Speaker 1 But in any other context, it would be amazing.
Speaker 1 But Boris is a very important figure, even though he doesn't come into the White House.
Speaker 1 He's the one that orchestrated all the stuff with the law firms, know, executive orders, you know, targeting the law firms and then getting the law firms to basically offer, you know, payment.
Speaker 1 I mean, you talked about the, you know, the godfather type stuff. I mean, you know, offering hundreds of millions of dollars in pro bono.
Speaker 2 And so he's still talking to Trump all the time.
Speaker 1 All the time.
Speaker 1 He's often on Air Force One. The other day I saw him, he was on Marine One.
Speaker 1 Do you know how few people go on Marine One? I mean, you, I mean, it's like, that's like your body guy, the first lady, the chief of staff.
Speaker 1 I mean, it's like there aren't a lot of extra seats on Marine One.
Speaker 1 And, you know, Boris is there. So, you know, with some of these people, you don't come on the White House staff because you have one layer removed of any kind of possible oversight.
Speaker 1 But, you know, Trump doesn't, whether you're on staff or not.
Speaker 2 One observation about this is.
Speaker 2 And about something that feels different to me in the second term, I'm wondering what you think. And I think there will be a lot of reporting on this in the years to come.
Speaker 2 I think Trump genuinely didn't want people to make money off of him in the first term like i got trump never did like this was a thing from him back and all you know going back ages now it does it feels like there's a little bit of a gold rush i i like the the boris story is is is i think instructive in that sense in particular that like he's able to you know as long as you're loyal
Speaker 2 i don't know feels like there's a lot of dealings happening out there i mean the letnick kids are doing pretty well the witcop kids the trump kids you know jared and ivank are on the outside and it does seem like there's a lot more money sloshing around this time than last time.
Speaker 2 Do you think that's fair?
Speaker 1 There's definitely a lot more money sloshing around.
Speaker 1 I think that Trump still doesn't like the idea of people profiting off him if he's not, you know, doesn't get a cut in some way, but there's just so much.
Speaker 1 And I think that one of the real stories of this administration, probably that it's going to take years after it's over to really get to the bottom of, is just how much of it was going on.
Speaker 1 I mean, when you think about the firing of the Inspectors General, the Office of Government Ethics, which is responsible for, you know, kind of policing very basic ethics roles, was entirely gutted.
Speaker 1 Do you know who was the acting head until recently of the Office of Government Ethics?
Speaker 2 I think Markov probably.
Speaker 1 No, you're very close.
Speaker 1 It was Jamison Greer,
Speaker 1 the trade representative. So this is at a time when Trump was talking about 200 trade agreements he was working on.
Speaker 1 Didn't quite reach that number, but Jamison Greer, pretty busy guy on the trade front, also had the second brief of being the head of the Office of Government. Anyway, he recently stepped down.
Speaker 1 We have a new acting Office of Government Ethics. It's Eric Uland, who is the
Speaker 1 Russ Votes deputy.
Speaker 1 So, you know, usually this is a pretty independent operation.
Speaker 2
Yeah, right. So, you know.
Have they blown the whistle yet, the Office of Government Ethics? They have
Speaker 2 Greer.
Speaker 1 They're looking really hard.
Speaker 1 But when you have the President of the United States accepting a $400 million
Speaker 1 jet from the Qataris that is to be used as Air Force One, but then in January
Speaker 1 of 2029 to go to the Trump presidential library, when you have the crypto deals and everything else,
Speaker 1 you can imagine it sets an example for everybody else below.
Speaker 1 So it's not that Trump is okay with it necessarily or even knows all that's going on, but I think this is going to be a story that'll be covered for a long, long, long time.
Speaker 2 And the crypto, like the UAE, like these deals are crazy.
Speaker 2
And this guy gets a pardon. I mean, it's like you've been covering this stuff for decades.
The gap between, look, there have been corrupt pardons forever. Like, the gap between Mark Rich
Speaker 2 and
Speaker 2 Spiro Agnew getting a paper bag and like there being a deal between an under-investigation Chinese crypto magnet and the United Arab Emirates that yields billions.
Speaker 1 What did Blagojevich say when he was trying to sell Obama's Senate seat? You know, this thing's golden. You think I'm just going to give it away? Yeah.
Speaker 1 So I think the pardon power, I mean, the pardon power is the one power that is,
Speaker 1
you know, it's unchecked. I mean, he can do whatever he wants.
I mean, who the hell knows what's going on?
Speaker 1 Do you remember the guy who paid Matt Schlap $400,000 in pursuit of a pardon in the first term? And then the guy didn't get the pardon? I mean,
Speaker 1 did he get groped at least?
Speaker 2 I don't know.
Speaker 1 Not that I know.
Speaker 2
Didn't even give me a reach around after all that. All right.
I have so much to get to. We're running out of time.
Rapid fire, though.
Speaker 2 So after this is Trump wins, after JD had said, oh, we're not going to pardon the violent criminals from January 6th, gets backlash.
Speaker 2
Trump calls Julie Kelly, the blogger from American Greatness, to ask her what he should do. And she overrules the vice president, basically.
Is that the nuts of this?
Speaker 1 I mean, sort of. So the vice president was asked on a, I think on a Fox Sunday show, who would get pardoned? You know, the president's promised promised pardon for the J6 prisoners.
Speaker 1 And Vance says something that sounds entirely sensible and reasonable, which is, well, we're not going to pardon the people that beat up cops.
Speaker 1 You know, we're not going to pardon the ones that committed violence.
Speaker 1 And suddenly, Vance is hammered, the degree to which I didn't fully realize at the time because I wasn't paying attention to that part of
Speaker 1 the MAGA movement, but he was like,
Speaker 1
How could you say this? Everybody deserves a pardon. Everybody that was there.
And those that are accused of beating up cops, accused on the video, they were only defending themselves.
Speaker 1
They were provoked by the Capitol Police. And everybody deserves a pardon, especially those people.
You know, Trump knows about that backlash and he's getting ready to make his decision.
Speaker 1
He wants to do it on the first day. So this is in late January before the 20th, but not long before the 20th.
He gets this woman, Jillie Kelly, on the phone. Actually, Charlie Kirk is there.
Speaker 1 Charlie Kirk's the one that actually makes the call and puts Julie Kelly on speaker at Trump's in Mar-a-Lago and says, who do you think we should pardon? What should we do?
Speaker 1 And even Julie Kelly, Julie Kelly is the one that she wrote a book about January 6th. She is the leading advocate for the, you know, what she calls the J6 hostages.
Speaker 1
She's the one, by the way, is the first one to record the January 6th prisoner singing the national anthem. Oh, the choir.
Yeah, yeah, the choir, the J6 choir. She's the beginning of that.
Speaker 1 It later gets done, you know, an iTunes thing with somebody else. But she's like, she is.
Speaker 2 Somebody else? Somebody else. Do you remember who it was?
Speaker 1 Tell me.
Speaker 2
I do. I think it was Ed Henry.
I think it was Ed Henry that was was the producer of that.
Speaker 1
God, Ed went on to such great things. I remember him in his roll call days.
So anyway, even Julie Kelly doesn't think that he should pardon all of them.
Speaker 1 Now, she wants the violent ones pardoned, but she has like a couple, like people that were there who had violated parole or something.
Speaker 1 But Trump goes in the direction she wants, which is virtually everybody, and then just decides, fuck it, everybody.
Speaker 2 The only thing Corey Lewandowski asked Donald Trump for was for Christy Noam, his very close friend, to be the head of Homeland Security, and Trump gives it to him.
Speaker 1
Well, I mean, look, Corey was the very first campaign manager. Total loyalist.
He just wanted one thing. I mean, everybody has a request, right? I mean,
Speaker 1 some people might want passive
Speaker 2 leader of the white house. He's going to get the Secretary of Homeland Security pick.
Speaker 2 I mean,
Speaker 2 it's a big job, you know, especially when you're planning a mass deportation campaign.
Speaker 1
The Christy Noam pick was an outside-the-box pick. Favorite of Corey.
And she was not on Lutnick's list of possible Secretaries of Homeland Security.
Speaker 1 And there were a lot of discussion of various other people. And somebody was at Mar-a-Lago,
Speaker 1 like everybody else really surprised when it... By the way, the only reason why it wasn't more
Speaker 1 controversial, it wasn't more noticed to it, is that you had all this other stuff going on.
Speaker 2 The rest of the cabinet was so insane. Yeah, you got Gates as the Attorney General
Speaker 2 and all that. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 Did Trump ask Corey, do you think, about whether he had any personal engagements with the Department of the Secretary of Homeland Security? Is that vetting? Was that part of the vetting, do you think?
Speaker 1 I think he actually keeps track of that kind of stuff pretty closely. So
Speaker 1 I think he was probably fully aware with probably some details.
Speaker 1 But somebody sees Trump at Mar-a-Lago, one of his aides, and says, gosh, Christy No,
Speaker 1 how'd you decide on that one?
Speaker 2 It was pretty important for Corey to have her there because there was, I don't know if you remember the police report where he was at the Benny Hana, at the Addiction Awareness fundraiser, where he was flirting with the wife of a trump donor and talking about how he was how he'd killed people how he'd stabbed somebody back in the day so you don't want somebody to investigate you want to keep the keep department dhs close if that's your background yeah yeah
Speaker 4 there's nothing like sinking into luxury anibay sofas combine ultimate comfort and design at an affordable price
Speaker 4 Anibay has designed the only fully machine washable sofa from top to bottom. The stain-resistant performance fabric slip covers and cloud-like frame duvet can go straight into your wash.
Speaker 4 Perfect for anyone with kids, pets, or anyone who loves an easy-to-clean, spotless sofa. With a modular design and changeable slip covers, you can customize your sofa to fit any space and style.
Speaker 4 Whether you need a single chair, love seat, or a luxuriously large sectional, Anabay has you covered. Visit washable sofas.com to upgrade your home.
Speaker 4
Sofas start at just $699 and right now, get early access to Black Friday savings up to 60% off store-wide with a 30-day money-back guarantee. Shop now at washable sofas.com.
Add a little
Speaker 4 to your life. Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply.
Speaker 2 I'm going to skip over the Merritt Garland Apologia that you do.
Speaker 2
That's a hot tease. For any Merrick Garland fans out there, you're going to have to read Jonathan Carl's book.
You're going to have to buy retribution
Speaker 2
to read the Merritt Garland Apology. Gia.
This wasn't in the book, but I had to ask you about it. I saw you.
I forget what you were on, and I watched you talk about this.
Speaker 2 Obama, and there is also a lot of Biden stuff in there.
Speaker 2 We purposefully did not focus on this because
Speaker 2
breaking news for people listening. Tomorrow, we're going to have Kamala Harris on the podcast.
I'm interviewing her tonight.
Speaker 2
This is huge. This is huge.
Thank you. Actually, well, before I get to your thing, do you have a questioner? What would you ask the former vice president, if you were me, tonight?
Speaker 1 This immediately pops to mind, and it's trivial. It's not the most important thing by long shot.
Speaker 1 But why the the hell didn't she do stuff like this when she was actually vice president or when she was running for president?
Speaker 1 I mean, she was, I mean, I never got an interview with her, but I'm just me.
Speaker 1 But I mean, she didn't, she did precious few interviews until they realized that she was losing and suddenly she was like, you know, doing a bunch of interviews.
Speaker 1 But it was like, it was kind of a bubble-wrapped campaign, a bubble-wrapped vice presidency.
Speaker 1 And every interview she did was carefully, I mean, you're going to have, I assume, a fair amount of time with her.
Speaker 1
That one big first interview she did, which she waited weeks to do after Biden dropped out, was with Dana Bash. And they were like, it's going to be 20 minutes exactly.
Walls has got to be there.
Speaker 1 We're going to.
Speaker 2 Walls was sitting in the chair that made him look really small. It was a strange sound.
Speaker 1 And then she couldn't do another interview until quite a while after that.
Speaker 1 And anyway, it's not why she lost, but I found that very strange because, you know, I did spend some time with her when she was vice president.
Speaker 2 It was currently. And,
Speaker 1 you know, away from the cameras, away from it all, she can be very engaging, very
Speaker 2
spectator. This is very a jeb, a jeb trait as well.
Yeah. Awesome with the scotch and a table
Speaker 2
at the hotel bar after, like sometimes not, you know. Okay.
Well, if you have any other ideas, you're, you're, you're pretty good at this on the questioning side.
Speaker 2 If you have any other ideas between now and tonight, text me.
Speaker 1 I'll shoot you some. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 I did want to ask you about one thing. It wasn't in the book about, and you go deep into all the Biden stuff.
Speaker 2 You said that Bruce Reed, he had the small inner circle, and you had done and Mike Donnellin, Druschetti, and Bruce Reed, basically, and like one of the, and Hunter and Jill.
Speaker 2 And one of them said that they'd never even had a meeting about Biden not running. So that did jump to mind.
Speaker 2 The other thing that I noticed is just, you talk to Hunter a lot, and Hunter's pissed at the Obamas.
Speaker 2 And we've all seen now the Hunter interview with Channel 5, where he expresses all of it, all the people he's mad at.
Speaker 2 You were doing, I guess, an interview where you said that.
Speaker 2 that Joe Biden and Obama happened to be at Cafe Milano together in Washington, D.C., not together, at the same restaurant at the same time, the same day, and they did not greet each other. Yeah.
Speaker 1
So I got wind of this, that it was going to be happening. So I was a witness to this.
Go to Cafe Milano, and
Speaker 1 there are seats reserved at the bar, which is very unusual. It turns out they're reserved for Secret Service.
Speaker 1 And Biden was sitting out, Biden's table was ready for him, was in the, with the general population, out in the middle of the restaurant.
Speaker 1 And Obama was to be in a private room right to the left when you walk into the restaurant. Biden gets there first, sits down.
Speaker 1
He's with a former senator, Mark Pryor, and an aide of his, and they're, you know, having their thing. And I went over and said hello, of course.
He looked pretty good, actually.
Speaker 1
He had just rang the bell, just finished his cancer treatment. And then his armored SUV is out front.
And then I noticed that it has to move.
Speaker 1 And why does it have to have to move to make room for Obama's armored SUV?
Speaker 1 It's on a small street, this restaurant. Yeah,
Speaker 1 and Obama came in and went right into the room.
Speaker 1 And I don't know if either one of them even made, even saw each other because Biden would have had a point of view on the, on the door to that room, but I don't know if he noticed when he came in.
Speaker 1 But no, there was no come over and say, hey, how you been? Nothing. There's a lot of bitterness between those two camps.
Speaker 1
I mean, one thing I report in the book, and I don't know if that's why they didn't meet. I can just tell you the fact.
They were both there. They were in a restaurant.
Speaker 1 They weren't even that far apart at the restaurant, and their paths did not cross.
Speaker 2 I mean, that's crazy.
Speaker 2 That was intentional. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 I don't know. Like, I understand, like, I'm kind of mad at Joe Biden.
Speaker 2 I understand why Hunter's mad at Barack Obama, but like, he was his vice president for eight years.
Speaker 1 So, so let me just tell you something in the book related to this, which is
Speaker 1 after Biden drops out, calls Kamala, you know, and Kamala's off to the races, and she's famously making all her calls to solidify her getting the nomination.
Speaker 1 Biden makes a bunch of calls that day as well to thank all the people.
Speaker 1 I mean, he's now his political career is over, so he wants to like tell his strongest supporters and the people that made it possible for him to be president of the United States.
Speaker 1
He makes about 50 phone calls. Not one of them is to Obama.
And I learned that Obama
Speaker 2 called
Speaker 1
him and Biden didn't take the call. By the way, Obama had also tried to call him in the week before he dropped out.
And Biden didn't return that call either.
Speaker 1 So they eventually end up talking, but not until right before the convention. So weeks go by.
Speaker 1
Weeks go by, and he doesn't talk to Barack Obama. You know, I mean, look, you hear it in Hunter.
They think that Obama was effectively behind the George Clooney op-ed.
Speaker 1 They resent that viral moment where Obama is leading, you know, Biden off the stage at that fundraiser in California.
Speaker 1
They see all of those pod save America type guys are out there beating the drums that Biden has to get out. They think that Obama's coordinating all that.
Those are all former Obama aides.
Speaker 1 So there's a lot of resentment, but Joe Biden does not become president of the United States
Speaker 2 without Barack Obama. No.
Speaker 1 I mean, and obviously he doesn't become vice president, but I mean, it's.
Speaker 2 Yeah, again,
Speaker 2
look, be mad at me, be mad at pundits, whatever. You know what I mean? Like, be mad at whoever you want.
Be mad at David Axelrod. He's not mad at me.
I'm just saying, like, people in my business.
Speaker 2 That feels pretty... Pretty crazy, like, that the degree of animus would be at that, at that level.
Speaker 1 And by the way, it's also with Pelosi, of course.
Speaker 2
I think that Mike Pence would, we actually know this because we saw it at the funeral. Mike Pence would say hello to Donald Trump.
Donald Trump tried to kill him. Karen didn't.
Speaker 2
And that's, and we honor Karen for that reason here. We honor mother on this podcast, but like, like, Donald Trump tried to kill Mike Pence.
They say hello.
Speaker 1
So anyway. I mean, to be fair, it was Donald Trump's supporters who tried to kill Mike Pence.
I mean, Donald Trump himself. And Trump kind of cheered him on.
You know, he didn't condemn them.
Speaker 2 He rooted for it, I would say.
Speaker 2
Okay, well, sometimes it's painful to go through all this. It was painful at times to read the book, but there are good nuggets in there.
It was obviously put a ton of work in. It's wonderful.
Speaker 2
And we do all, you know, we live in the context of which we came before. You know, we didn't just fall out of a coconut tree.
And so it's important to kind of remember.
Speaker 1 And look, I wrote it because I see people rewriting this history as we speak. So I wanted to, you know, I had some extraordinary access
Speaker 1 and I witnessed a lot myself. And I thought it was important to, you know, write something, not just for today, but 50 years from now, if somebody wants to know what the hell happened,
Speaker 1 how did that happen? Hopefully, my book will be on a bookshelf somewhere, and they can. We'll still have books in 50 years, right?
Speaker 2
I don't think so, but it's a nice thought, Jonathan Carl. I appreciate you, buddy.
It's been too long. Good to see you.
Thank you, Tim.
Speaker 2
And everybody else will be back here tomorrow with Kamala Harris. See y'all then.
Peace.
Speaker 5
Now that you're focused, I'm glad that you noticed. The realest nigga here is kind of chilly.
Me and the coldest.
Speaker 5
me and Timbo in that two-door, making an Otis. Now, witness the chosen.
It's just different here.
Speaker 5 Monte Carlo nights, let her throw the dice, play in paradise.
Speaker 5
All I know is white, get the powder gone. Bitches love the shop, let her take them all.
Mattress full of money, let it break the fall.
Speaker 5 She used to fly on the buddy pass.
Speaker 5 They say when the money go, you hope that your honey lasts. I've been preaching since money cash.
Speaker 2 And I promise I hardly see ya.
Speaker 2 From where I am, it's so hard to see ya.
Speaker 2 Got money, I've been different ever since.
Speaker 2 Baby, it's me and my arrogance.
Speaker 2 Who are you? Who are you? Who are you anyway?
Speaker 2 Who are you? Who are you? Who are you anyway?
Speaker 2 Who are you? Who are you?
Speaker 2 We don't know you.
Speaker 2 The Board Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.