The Bulwark Podcast XX
[0] Hello and welcome to the Bull Work podcast.
[1] I'm your host Tim Miller.
[2] It's Monday, June 10th.
[3] It is, it's Portugal, and I'm coming at you live from Portugal.
[4] We have a lot of European news to discuss.
[5] So I'm glad to have Bill Crystal with me to do it.
[6] Hey, Bill, what's up?
[7] Everything's fine.
[8] Looking forward to your detailed analysis of the breakdown of the Portuguese vote, red Portugal, blue Portugal, this important EU elections.
[9] We can spend 20, 30 minutes on that, I think, did you think?
[10] About all I have for you is a billboard count.
[11] I can break down, you know, know, whether the far right party or the socialists or the main party is doing better on their billboards.
[12] But besides that, I don't have a lot of detailed analysis yet.
[13] Biden was over here as well.
[14] We talked about this a bunch last week.
[15] I have to mention, since you mentioned last week, that you wanted Biden to, you know, use the D -Day anniversary to contrast with Trump.
[16] He didn't really do it explicitly.
[17] And yet implicitly, everyone picked up on the fact that he was contrasting with Trump.
[18] And Eric Erickson still, like, threw himself on the ground and said, oh, this is norm breaking.
[19] So anyway, I'm wondering what you thought about the framing of Biden's events at D -Day, and then he went to Point to Hawk and elsewhere.
[20] Now, I thought it was a good trip, an appropriate trip for an American president.
[21] And he left it to others as I guess he had to make the contrast explicitly.
[22] I hope others have made and continue to make that contrast.
[23] It's always with the Biden campaign.
[24] There's a little bit of a sense that they do one pretty good ad and, you know, get a few people to say a couple of things on a Sunday show and then it goes away.
[25] And maybe that's just the way it is.
[26] It's one trip.
[27] The contrast of Trump is something he did, what, five, six years ago.
[28] And maybe people aren't going to dwell on it too long over the next few days.
[29] But I'd like it to have some lasting effect.
[30] And the most striking thing, as you say, was the react, all the Trump people, not even Trump people, Republicans, quote conservatives reacting.
[31] Biden says, we need to defend democracy.
[32] They died and fought and died for democracy and freedom.
[33] We need to live up to their standard and honor they're not just honor them, but we commit ourselves to their cause.
[34] And all the Trump people took that as an attack on Trump, which is very revealing, right?
[35] Yes.
[36] It's like anytime you dictate an ode to American values or to more human values or into morals, people are like, wait a minute, is that an attack on Trump?
[37] You remember the funeral?
[38] It was the John McCain funeral where it was like, only Megan actually talked about Trump.
[39] But everyone else was like talked about John McCain's heroism and his patriotism and the way he cared about democracy.
[40] and people are like, why is Trump getting attacked at a funeral?
[41] And it's like, what are you talking about?
[42] Let's actually listen to Biden when he's asked about Trump.
[43] He's over there.
[44] The idea that I come to Normandy and not make this short trip here to pay tribute.
[45] And it's the same story.
[46] Think about it.
[47] America showed up.
[48] America showed up to stop the Germans.
[49] America showed up to make sure that they did not prevail.
[50] And America shows up when we need it, just like our allies show for us.
[51] You've criticized President Trump for not coming here on his trip.
[52] What message is you hoping to send the voters by being here right now?
[53] Any other questions?
[54] Mr. President, what's been the most memorable part of?
[55] He's like, like, did you not get the message, Jack?
[56] It was like, well, that's what I was saying.
[57] But anyway, any additional thoughts on the Biden contrast there?
[58] If I were President Biden, I might have had one sentence there, about I think any American president should come pay respects here.
[59] And that incidentally was at Ayn Maher, he pronounced that near Bello Wood, which was the 1918 American cemetery, which Trump did not go to because it was too much trouble, even though many other world leaders went in 1918 to the World War I commemoration, the anniversary then.
[60] And even though, and that's the occasion also of his famous remarks to John Kelly reported.
[61] So again, I could the Biden campaign have persuaded John Kelly to give an interview to someone on over the weekend?
[62] Maybe not.
[63] Maybe he's just sitting it out.
[64] but I don't get the impression they tried.
[65] You know, I think there's just a little more they could do to bring home how bad Trump is on this as out of the things.
[66] Yeah, that was the one that was raining.
[67] He was worried about his hair.
[68] Yeah, yeah.
[69] Yeah, well, you know, only a sucker or a loser would, you know, go out in the rain to celebrate people that gave their lives for freedom.
[70] Lots of else happening over here in Europe.
[71] We'd the EU elections over the weekend.
[72] Far right did very well, particularly in France.
[73] As a result, Macron called for snap elections.
[74] I'm not a French political expert, but it seems like he wants to, you know, solidify the fact that his coalition has a majority in the French Assembly, these EU elections and, you know, rather than succumb to whatever this perceived momentum, real momentum really in some elections on the far right, kind of a risky decision based on some of the analysis, people smarter than me on this.
[75] We also have the UK elections coming up just about a week from that, those French elections.
[76] and we have the Trump -Biden debate a week prior to that.
[77] So a lively end of June, early July, not going to be the sleepy summer months here on politics.
[78] Any kind of grand thoughts on that run that we're going to have?
[79] I think it's going to be important in various ways.
[80] The U .K. elections, labor will crush the Tories.
[81] I wonder if they do it so badly that the conservatives almost fall into third place and you get a new party on the right from more right -wing Farage -type party.
[82] but anyway, that's a pretty astonishing lead they have after the Conservatives deserve it after more than a decade of terrible governance, though.
[83] Maybe that's a heartening thing.
[84] Macron's taking a gamble.
[85] I mean, he thinks that when people, I think, face up to the choice and they have that runoff situation, so it gets to be a Macron -type candidate versus a Le Pen -type candidate.
[86] He could end up with a very right -wing prime minister, that 28 -year -old for two or three years.
[87] Luckily, the president in France has most of the power, but I don't know if that'll be a bit of a war, you know, wake -up call or the opposite.
[88] Some friends of mine here think the elections weren't quite as bad as the media's making it.
[89] I mean, the actual movement of vote was a few percentage point in a lot of places, not massive.
[90] You know, there were, I think France and Germany were among the worst places.
[91] Yeah.
[92] But having said that, it was in that direction.
[93] And, you know, about a quarter of the vote, basically, in these EU parliamentary elections is to far -right parties, which is kind of not that different from the U .S. probably if we had a parliamentary system, right, is about a quarter of the country.
[94] So maybe a third.
[95] Quarter to third is a lot.
[96] It's too much, but it's manageable, but not so manageable in our political system.
[97] Yeah, I think maybe some of the media self -included here concern and dramatization of what happened in those elections is just the nature of the parties that are doing better, right?
[98] I mean, it's not as if, you know, it's not your daddy's center right parties.
[99] It's not Cameron and Merkel that are doing well here, you know, across the board in Europe.
[100] And, you know, Germany, you mentioned AFD improves.
[101] And then you've got Elon Musk who runs.
[102] biggest, maybe not the biggest, but one of the biggest media platforms in the world, you know, putting out as a result like, I don't see what's so bad about AFD.
[103] I look at their, look at their platform and it might be, you know, the inheritors of the far right Nazis, but I see them as kind of a centrist, reasonable common sense party.
[104] There's concerns just about this growing momentum, like globally on the populist right.
[105] I think another alternate way to look at this is inflation caused.
[106] Like we're kind of in an anti -incumbent moment, right?
[107] Like you see the liberals doing well in the UK.
[108] It's Olaf Schultz and Macron that are being pushed back against by the far right and Europe.
[109] Both of those things could be true, right?
[110] We're at an anti -incompanic moment and there's a worrying amount of power growing on the far right.
[111] One place where the incumbent did not struggle was Hungary, for example, Orban's party did well.
[112] So I don't know.
[113] How do you kind of assess all that?
[114] Yeah, I think both are true.
[115] It is amazing how many incumbent parties, some of them right wing have lost elections in the last three, four years.
[116] That's not maybe a great sign for Biden.
[117] But the degree to which the authoritarian right is an international movement with serious money behind it, serious institutions behind it, like, you know, Twitter or, I mean, you know, major media platforms behind it, business people either behind it or accommodating to it, I think this is a good reminder of that.
[118] There's just always that tendency to treat it as this fringe weirdo thing that popped up in the last few years and it's going to fade away.
[119] And the old establishment is going to hold on.
[120] As you pointed out, what's now what, three?
[121] years ago, that very important piece.
[122] There's a MAGA establishment.
[123] There's an international MAGA establishment, and it's big and strong.
[124] And it's not entirely stupid either, unfortunately.
[125] They have some pretty capable operatives exploiting issues and being demagogic and so forth.
[126] So in that respect, I think it is a, it continues the worrisome trend that we've seen.
[127] Yeah, we talked about last week about that new republic piece on the WhatsApp chain of the international MAGA establishment.
[128] And, you know, it's Eric Prince, and it's Tucker Carlson, and it's these, you know, operatives in Eastern Europe, and they're organizing.
[129] This is not just a bunch of clowns, all right?
[130] Like, this is, they're organizing, and they're trying to win, and they are winning in certain places.
[131] And, you know, they have won in Slovakia and Hungary, and, you know, now in Western countries are getting a foothold.
[132] Those are Western countries, too, but in Western Europe, they're getting a foothold.
[133] Elon Musk embracing, I have tried to pay that much attention to, is so revealing.
[134] I mean, there are no guardrails.
[135] There are no barriers on the right.
[136] There's no, I mean, Buckley and the Birch Society is maybe overdone and he wasn't maybe quite as good as people say, but whatever.
[137] There were actual guardrails.
[138] We all were against Buchanan and, you know, worked hard against him in the 90s, against Ron Paul in the 2000s, etc. AFT is a neo -Nazi party.
[139] I mean, let's, you know, let's kid ourselves.
[140] And that Elon Musk is okay with it and others are okay with him being okay with it.
[141] And then the regular business types are okay with Elon Musk, and they're all having fundraisers together.
[142] there is San Francisco, some of them.
[143] I mean, yeah, that part of it is, it's not just that everyone's moved to the right.
[144] Okay, that you could live with in Hawaii, but it might be unfortunate, but it's the utter failure to rule anything out of bounds.
[145] You know, there was an interesting insight.
[146] My man Pablo Torre, who I had on, when I was doing the next level Sunday interview, he's a sports kind of commentator, but sports and culture, and it's smart.
[147] Sometimes you need, like, it helps to have a little bit of distance.
[148] And he was on Stephanie Roles show last week talking about the Elon Musk thing and you know there's just this I think for a lot of us sometimes like this you know over need to overanalyze like what is the culture what is happening what's the young men and the cultural trends here and Pablo is just kind of like look these guys see that these far right guys are for sale I was like Trump is for sale like Trump is going to do business with them and just look at the way that he flipped on TikTok look at the way that he you know has been willing to, you know, flip on, you know, various international issues as well.
[149] Pablo mentioned Miriam Edelson.
[150] I mean, there's just over and over again, like his messaging is malleable if his big supporters are willing to make it so Saudi Arabia.
[151] It's another good example.
[152] Sometimes that does get lost.
[153] I felt a little chastened by Pablo's point as a professional analyst because I do think sometimes we're like, we go after the corrupt side of all of it and the very dangerous rhetorical side of it.
[154] But like there's an old school level of corruption with Trump that he does kind of get away with on this stuff.
[155] And I think that it's true about a lot of these guys.
[156] Yeah, that's interesting.
[157] And on TikTok, of course, he's paid no price that I don't know a single China hawk who said, gee, I may not be able to support Trump by maybe Biden's tough friend China, which shows that these movements do have a certain momentum of their own.
[158] Once the operatives, but also the think tank types and the others, the journalists and sort of semi -sign on, they sort of have signed on and they don't, some of them break at certain moments.
[159] and it obviously over the last two, three, four years.
[160] But generally, it's the opposite, right?
[161] They give up whatever reservations they once had and they whitewash whatever things they don't like about Trump's policies.
[162] Because they like the transactionalist nature of them.
[163] And also they think that they might get them back in the end.
[164] And I remember one time you were talking about this with, I think it was maybe it was Charlie back in the day.
[165] And it was like, Trump is malleable besides a couple of few core things.
[166] Right.
[167] So if you believe that you can work with him and you're like, okay, well, I care about the serious element.
[168] of the China hawkery, right?
[169] Like the behind -the -scenes stuff about IP reform and stuff.
[170] I'm like, I can win him over on IP reform because he doesn't give a fuck as long as I just look the other way when he says, oh, it's okay if the Chinese, you know, have concentration camps.
[171] I think that is part of their calculus.
[172] Like the way that Trump is malleable on this stuff based on influence, they see kind of as a good thing.
[173] In that respect, the fact that he's a demagogue and not really as much of an ideal I can't put it that way, helps him probably.
[174] Right.
[175] I mean, he's, that's why he's better.
[176] He's stronger than DeSantis and the true believers as an actual political leader in some ways.
[177] Yeah, Masteriano, and you go down the list, this North Carolina guy, Mark Robinson.
[178] There are some idiots, though, in the movement.
[179] I do think it's important to remember.
[180] We would be remiss if we didn't listen to Tommy Toberville analyze what is happening in Russia.
[181] How many TV clips have you seen of a battle in Ukraine?
[182] Zero.
[183] in the last six, seven, eight months.
[184] It's one -sided.
[185] Putin just kind of sitting back watching what's going on, wondering, hey, when y 'all going to come over and we'll draw a line here, he doesn't want Ukraine.
[186] He doesn't want Europe.
[187] He's got enough land of his own.
[188] He just wants to make sure that he does not have United States weapons in Ukraine pointing at Moscow.
[189] Yeah.
[190] I'm sorry, Alabama.
[191] This is why you're stereotyped, okay?
[192] I mean, this person, what does he talk about?
[193] He hasn't seen video of the war in Ukraine.
[194] I can maybe watch some news besides newsmax then, Senator, if you'd like to see some video of what's happening in Ukraine.
[195] I do think it's relevant here to what all the things that we've been discussing in Europe, because it's true about these European far -right parties, too.
[196] They are all ranging from Putin's sympathetic to Putin tools.
[197] And he's bought a lot of them, right?
[198] Just what you were saying earlier about the transactional.
[199] these authoritarian movements can combine fanaticism and transactional, you know, corruption, right?
[200] If that's the right term for it, you know what I mean by that, you know, buying people, but also and then having some true believers and at some points their tensions between them, I guess, and, you know, there are little fights within these authoritarian movements.
[201] But at the end of the day, especially if they're winning, that's that, I guess I'm struck by that recently thinking about it.
[202] You know, it just gives it a momentum.
[203] The thing holds together if it looks like a winning enterprise.
[204] is everyone, people sign out for different reasons, but then they stick with it.
[205] I think everyone listening to the podcast is aware about Putin's intentions, but would you like to just share what Putin's actual plans are, contra Falkhorn, Lycorn, there?
[206] You mean to conquer all of Ukraine and then to destroy NATO, but also to something close to genocide in terms of the Ukrainian people, the Ukrainian nation, and he's made it all clear.
[207] And he's, I mean, it's, Biden was good on this.
[208] I think he and others said this at D -Day, and not just on that, on the podcast.
[209] politics of that.
[210] I've always thought Ukraine is more of a vulnerability for Trump than people conventionally think here in the U .S. Foreign policy doesn't matter.
[211] It's the pocketbook.
[212] It's inflation fine.
[213] But at the end of the day, that's an issue that some Republicans still remember what they're supposed to be for.
[214] And as we saw in the vote in the House, even, you know, Speaker Johnson, you know, can't quite stomach giving over Ukraine to Putin aren't really where Tuberville is.
[215] He's where half the Republican Party on the Hill is, but not only half.
[216] That's an issue the splits to Republicans.
[217] I feel like politically that should be, people should make clear that putting Trump in there is the Tuberville policy.
[218] Let Trump distance of self and Tuver.
[219] Why, they should have ads up tomorrow saying, this is what Trump believes.
[220] This is the ludicrous, no nothing, appeasement of Putin.
[221] And let them spend a week arguing on themselves whether Trump believes this or whether he actually is more like what he does, but let him.
[222] Trump does believe him.
[223] But let Mike Johnson say, well, I don't quite believe this.
[224] And you've got to get these things into play to disrupt their coalition more.
[225] Yeah, I feel like little work could be done with that.
[226] McKay Commons last week was so good.
[227] If you've missed it, like just on the Estonia, the Estonia gambit and the worries there about, you know, what Putin's next move could be.
[228] You know, if they do listen to the tubervils of the world, if Trump does get in there, like there are just so many options for Putin to just cause a little bit of trouble, you know, going a short way into NATO territory and trying to cause a bluff.
[229] And with all of these things we've been discussing together, you have these parties rise in Europe and you have Trump and America.
[230] I mean, the potential for catastrophe is, I think, a lot higher than has really sunk in among average people.
[231] We have one more idiot, but dangerous idiot.
[232] Johnny McEntee, who we've been talking about.
[233] Bill, you know our new segment, The Right Stuff.
[234] I think it's important that people know about Johnny.
[235] We were discussing the green room, one of the past right stuff clips where he talked about how white people deserve their own state like the Palestinians.
[236] But on theme today, I wanted to play something about his thoughts about Ukraine.
[237] When you're doing your taxes this year, don't forget to list all of your dependents, your son, your daughter, Ukraine, Israel.
[238] Yeah, news over the weekend was confirmed what we've known here for a while, so Johnny is in a position to have a high -ranking personnel role in the next administration.
[239] So that's the types of people that we're going to have in there.
[240] Yeah, absolutely.
[241] And both true believers and demagogue doesn't even begin to describe it.
[242] Anyway, maybe some of my pro -Israel friends who've been meeting me up for some deficiencies, I would say, in the Biden administration's policies perhaps towards Israel, should explain to me how that's going to work out well when McEntee staffs the entire administration.
[243] The degree to which the Israel's Trump's pro -Israel policy depended entirely on Jared and David Friedman, his ambassador to Israel, and some personal relationships and sort of leftover views from 30 years ago.
[244] ago that he had from New York and the degree to which that could all go south, that's maybe a point people should start to make.
[245] This never gets mentioned that these people be in there.
[246] And this is happening all over the mega internet.
[247] It's not as in people's face, right, as the protest.
[248] And there's this disgusting protest outside the White House.
[249] Now, again, they're protesting Biden.
[250] So it's unclear why Biden has to be responsible for this.
[251] But you have these disgusting far left, you know, pro Hamas, literally, like there was a guy with a fags for Hamas sign.
[252] Literally pro Hamas.
[253] protesters outside the White House.
[254] That's concerning.
[255] I'd take fair concern that, you know, the Biden White House may be staffed by some people who are to his left on Israel.
[256] But that is also true of Trump, like, and to a greater degree.
[257] And there will be people that are to his isolationist right that are more explicitly anti -Semitic than he is that are all over his administration like this guy.
[258] And that's, that doesn't ever sink yet.
[259] That does never get talked about in these worlds.
[260] Can you send a mass email to your old friends about that?
[261] Can you just send a memo?
[262] I could.
[263] Are you not concerned about the white nationalist staffing the next administration, the Jew -hating white nationalists that are going to staff the next administration?
[264] Does anybody got concerned about that?
[265] I will send more memos to my friends, but they are very good at selective, I don't know what I'm even to call it, selective interpretation of reality, you know?
[266] Yeah.
[267] I forgot to put the Biden hostage thing on my outline this morning.
[268] As I said, I'm in Portugal.
[269] So, you know, I'm not, I'm not maybe a 100 % in my podcast hosting right now.
[270] But I do want to talk about this.
[271] It was great news for hostages or at least there's some very moving images.
[272] If we want to talk about the merits of that, I'm happy to hear your thoughts on it.
[273] But I think it was absolutely a positive and wonderful news.
[274] The problem is for Biden politically and just how much of a briar patch this is for him.
[275] The U .S. helped with the intelligence gathering on this.
[276] The pro -Israel side, absolutely no credit.
[277] all I saw on the internet this weekend from people on the pro -Israel side was that they were angry that Biden wasn't mad or about the people protesting him, I guess, outside the White House.
[278] And that they're mad, I guess, about one of the statements that we talked about now wanting a full ceasefire after this, that was put out by Jake Sullivan.
[279] So he gets no credit for the U .S. intelligence helping this, no credit for his Holocaust speech a couple weeks ago, Holocaust Remembrance Day speech from the pro -Israel crowd, from the anti -Israel crowd, you know, crushed.
[280] the media is like basically reading talking points put out by the Hamas PR team about the number of people that died in this effort to ex -fill the hostages, despite the fact that they're hiding among civilians, obviously.
[281] So is there anything that can be done about this?
[282] I don't know.
[283] How do you assess the whole situation?
[284] He's not going to get any credit so they need to go out and take credit.
[285] And I do think he needs at some point, it's better to lose a few voters, I would say on his left on the, let's say the pro -Palestinian side, and look strong than to look like.
[286] like, I mean, it's unfair maybe that they keep portraying him as zigging and zagging.
[287] And every time one of the, Jake Sullivan's obviously an important figure, but other spokespeople and Democratic Party spokespeople, not even Biden people and people at the state level say something like, gee, it's really unfortunate that they killed so many people getting those hostages out.
[288] And then that gets blamed on the Biden administration.
[289] They can't spend all their time, you know, distancing themselves from every comment by every liberal Democrat and so forth out there.
[290] I understand that, but again, I mean, he could personally have said something, for example, and not let Jake Sullivan go on a Sunday show.
[291] That, again, you've done this as a living, and I have a little bit.
[292] I mean, I don't know.
[293] You've got a very successful, pretty successful trip abroad.
[294] You can do a nice visit to the American Cemetery at Bellowood and contrasted with Trump.
[295] Jake Sullivan goes and does a Sunday show where he's going to get asked about this, and he's going to have to navigate between they want to cease fire, but, of course, they're glad the hostages are out, but that doesn't mean that we can just count on military action to get all the answers out.
[296] that becomes as big a story as Biden.
[297] I don't mean to be like one of these insiders is always quarreling with how could you put this guy in TV?
[298] Why did you make this decision and all this?
[299] At some point, that gets tedious and it's unfair.
[300] Also, having said that, I do feel like on a Sunday of a successful trip to France, the president should be the news, not his national security advisor, you know, answering questions, which aren't going to always be easy and which he tried to straddle.
[301] Do you see anything wrong?
[302] The national security advisor does have to be out there at times.
[303] We do want them to have more surrogates out there.
[304] I get it.
[305] I'm with you.
[306] More is more on Biden.
[307] He did do David Muir interview that nobody talks about because it was totally, it was perfectly fine and uneventful, which is kind of why you do David Muir interviews, just as a little tip from somebody who was in the game not so long ago, booking interviews like this.
[308] Mier are now exactly known for newsbreaking, penetrating questions.
[309] But anyway, he did it.
[310] So the national security advisors out there, other people are out there.
[311] The message is basically, yeah, we're happy these hostages are out.
[312] We're happy to be, you know, to play a, supportive role of this.
[313] We're also still actively trying to get a ceasefire to bring an end to this.
[314] And what else do you want these people to say?
[315] What do you want them to say?
[316] Yeah, fair enough.
[317] I had to come to their defense in this one because I'm about to criticize them on the next one.
[318] Our friend Jonathan Martin sent out a tweet about transcribing a message from Illinois governor, J .B. Pritzker.
[319] He was speaking at some Democratic confab over the weekend.
[320] His message about his opponent was this.
[321] Pritzker.
[322] Donald Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rape.
[323] and a congenital liar.
[324] He's a racist, sexist, misogynist who wants to use the levers of power to enrich himself and punish anyone who dares speak a word against him.
[325] He has stolen state secrets, compromise our national security, betrayed our constitution, and sacrificed the truth to further his own naked ambition.
[326] Bam.
[327] Okay.
[328] Yes.
[329] That's good.
[330] More of that.
[331] I don't know if we need to do the racist, sexist, misogynist thing.
[332] Sometimes I was giving specific examples of what he did is better than using the terms if I was just nitpicking the speech writer there.
[333] But otherwise, a minus, very strong, we need more of that.
[334] We're happy that he's out there.
[335] And yet, should Kamala be saying something to that, right?
[336] Should Biden be saying that?
[337] Maybe we're going to be getting that at the convention.
[338] But I think that is some of the, some of the antsiness in democratic circles.
[339] And I actually can't really adjudicate myself.
[340] I'm curious your view is, do we need to hear this for like emotional satisfaction?
[341] action?
[342] Like we just need to feel better that someone's out there saying it?
[343] Or would it be helpful to have more people delivering that message more loudly from Team Biden?
[344] I think more people more loudly, but also, as you said, more effectively if possible.
[345] I think Friscoll was very good.
[346] It was at Wisconsin Democratic Convention, I think, so it's an important state.
[347] I very much agree.
[348] This is a point.
[349] I think some of our friends miss on.
[350] We probably do.
[351] I do at least occasionally, which is the examples make a big difference.
[352] And Trump for all that he's a totally out of control demagogue and all this, is pretty, someone at this point, somewhere I read it, that Trump is pretty good at that.
[353] He actually does give you examples, half of them are false and made up.
[354] But he doesn't say this judge is a bias.
[355] He gives you like four instances of alleged bias by Judge Merchant in New York there.
[356] As I say, they're not true, but it makes it seem like, yeah, it really was a rigged trial, you know.
[357] He didn't let me introduce witnesses, and he didn't, and the jury instructions were bad, and whatever.
[358] And I do think we, some of our people, some of the people on the liberal side, forget that.
[359] The other thing I would say is the messenger matters.
[360] And here I do think there's been a wild underutilization of Democratic governors who won by big margins in states that Biden has to win only two years later.
[361] And they're pretty popular in those states.
[362] It looks to me from the polling, Shapiro, Whitmer, Evers in Wisconsin, for that matter, or governors in sort of adjacent states like Prescott Polis in Colorado could probably help in Arizona.
[363] and there's not much use of them really in a sustained way and in a way that's coordinated more with the messaging of the campaign.
[364] Maybe we'll see more of that.
[365] You and I were in Pennsylvania.
[366] You spoke with Shapiro on this podcast and he's obviously loyal soldier and I think he's doing his best, but I didn't get the impression that there's intimate coordination between Shapiro world and Biden world on how to win Pennsylvania.
[367] And if I were running the Biden campaign, I'd give $100 billion to Shapiro and say, go win Pennsylvania again.
[368] You went by 15 points last time, just went up by two.
[369] for me, you know, now.
[370] I'm with that.
[371] I'm with that.
[372] And J .B., this is useful.
[373] Maybe this can be a useful thing for him, kind of a base J .B. Pritzker.
[374] There's always, it seems like there's room in our politics for kind of a little bit overweight guy who says what he thinks, you know.
[375] Mitt put Chris Christie in that role in 2012.
[376] I guess that didn't yield success.
[377] But I don't know.
[378] Maybe Pritzker can, you know, get out there a little bit more and feels a little bit more free to let loose.
[379] I don't know.
[380] There's something about Pritzker, even though he's a rich guy that codes a little bit more regular person than Gavin for me. Totally.
[381] And incidentally, Chris Christie could get out there more, but maybe the Biden people should reach out to him, you know.
[382] Chris Christie should get out there more.
[383] More on that coming, I think, on this podcast over the next few weeks.
[384] What else do I have for you, Bill Crystal?
[385] Oh, yeah.
[386] You wrote in Morning Shots this week.
[387] You tried to get inside Donald Trump's head.
[388] It's a dark place to be.
[389] So I don't know why you do this exercise.
[390] I'm still recovering this, yeah.
[391] So talk to us about what you think the view is from Trump world at this point.
[392] It's the second of these, you know, reading Trump's mind things I've done at Bill Saffray used to do all the time.
[393] My implicit message, not that implicit, pretty obvious, is taking Trump a little more seriously and not just dismissing him as a buffoon, which a lot of our people still want to do, whether he personally thinks all these things or the team thinks these things for him.
[394] So my message is he thinks he's winning.
[395] He is winning by a little.
[396] He's running pretty far ahead of where he ran in 2020.
[397] The last few months were pretty risky for him, I think, in the sense that there was the State of the Union, which Biden did well at.
[398] There was the trial in New York, which, you know, may still pay a little more price for it, but he's through both of those things, and he's lost maybe a point, if that, in the national polls.
[399] Not even clearly he's lost that in the state -level polls.
[400] So he's still ahead.
[401] And what's coming up?
[402] I mean, it's hard to see that Biden has many cards to play over the next two, three months.
[403] The biggest thing coming up is the debate, which you mentioned earlier, scheduled for June 27th.
[404] So in my putting myself in Trump's mind, I think he skips that.
[405] I think he finds an excuse not to do the debate.
[406] He says, I'll take a drug test.
[407] Biden won't.
[408] That's a ridiculous thing.
[409] Of course, the media makes fun of it.
[410] Meanwhile, it sort of percolates out there that maybe Biden is taking some drugs to make himself more alert and why won't he do it?
[411] And Trump finds an excuse not to do it.
[412] He might do it because he thinks he can beat Biden.
[413] He might do it just because he thinks he'd pay a price for not doing it.
[414] But I got to think if he thinks he's ahead, you know, it's risky to debate.
[415] Let's just pause on this point for a second.
[416] Because I like it.
[417] I like contrarian Bill because you make me think sometimes.
[418] And I think, you know, everyone's, you know, maybe a little more than everyone's a while.
[419] From time to time, contrarian, Bill is wrong, you know, because it's a thought exercise.
[420] You're trying to get us to think, which is an important part of this process, an important part of gaming out our opponent.
[421] My instinct has been from the start that both of them have to do it.
[422] You could be.
[423] I've spent less mindshare on the possibility that they might not because I just feel like both of them have to divide because of age.
[424] and, you know, Trump, just to demonstrate some level of, like, seriousness to the double haters, the people in the middle, even the soft Haley people, but maybe not.
[425] I don't know.
[426] Is that right?
[427] Like, what makes you think that Trump might reconsider?
[428] Like, what would be the argument?
[429] If you are sitting around with Chris Lasavita, now I'm going to get you out of Trump's brain and into Chris Lasavita's brain, what is the argument for not doing it?
[430] And the argument that he might consider it is that he didn't do any of the debates against the Republicans, and he's not incapable of understanding that if it's in his interest, he should skip debates.
[431] Incidentally, one thing people haven't focused on, maybe you know the answer to this, it's a CNN debate, right, on June 27th.
[432] I take it that means it's only on CNN.
[433] It's not like the presidential debates we're used to, which are roadblocked across all the all the networks.
[434] Yeah, people's stories are going to be on, you know, whatever NCIS or, you know, CSI, Ashkosh, or whatever people are watching these days on network TV.
[435] That's just going to be on still.
[436] yeah so all of on now we all know and we've said this for years i suppose you know it's the clips that matter that go out and so maybe it still has a very big damage do you think that reduces the effect of it though that it's going to be watched by 10 million people on cnn not 15 million people on every network i think the ratings are still going to be very very high part of it is just like looking at a train wreck yeah you know i think the ratings would be very high if you said hey exclusive on cnn tonight we have video from a senior citizen's home and a food fight broke out in the cafeteria and these old geysers are just like you're just like like throwing pineapples at each other.
[437] Like, I bet that would do very well in the ratings.
[438] I think people are interested in just the freak show of this.
[439] I know that that's not great about the American democracy, but I do think there's a lot of interest in that.
[440] How crazy will Trump get?
[441] Can Biden withstand it?
[442] I think there are a lot of questions that make it more interesting than like a dull Clinton debate.
[443] That said, you do get more casuals, right?
[444] Like, if the key demographic here are the people that aren't paying as close of attention.
[445] We keep saying that over and over again, but it's true and it's important.
[446] You probably do lose some of those people.
[447] And a lot of those people will learn what they learn then from clips on social media.
[448] And I really don't know the answer to this question.
[449] Is the Biden campaign ready to be at a level of the Trump campaign, which is in its own insane way pretty aggressive and pretty good at this, I would say, getting the right things out very, very fast and suitably distorted and so forth.
[450] I mean, I'm worried about that.
[451] There's a clip of Biden sitting down and it kind of pauses because he wasn't sure.
[452] It was a lot of like me when I go back to Catholic Church now.
[453] I don't go to church as much.
[454] Sorry, Mom, as I used to.
[455] And so I kind of forget when you're supposed to kneel and sit.
[456] And so sometimes I'll start to sit and I'll be like, oh, wait, nope, this is the kneeling part.
[457] And so, like, he paused for like two seconds because he wasn't sure if it was time to sit yet.
[458] And then, and then he puts out a video that's a five -second video of him just sitting there.
[459] And then is like, is Biden shitting his pants during the D -Day thing, you know?
[460] And Andrew, your morning shots colleague, like literally was like, no, if it was a six -second video instead of, five, you would see that he sits down and it looks totally normal.
[461] And a lot of people sharing Andrews reply on social media.
[462] But I didn't see this everywhere.
[463] Like this was in like relatively mainstream outlets.
[464] Like the Biden didn't know whether to sit down.
[465] The right is sometimes the disinformation stuff gets a little overplayed.
[466] That is real.
[467] Like, and they know how to do that.
[468] And I think they probably can't do that on the actual like a debate thing.
[469] It's a little different than a random event they're taking.
[470] But, you know, we have 90 minutes of a debate on CNN, which is watched by, I don't know, 15, 20 million people, there'll still be tens of millions more who will watch clips.
[471] There will be some 40 seconds where Biden looks slightly incoherent, and there'll be some 40 seconds where Trump looks strong and decisive.
[472] And if the Trump world gets those clips out massively on social media and not just to their own base, but maybe the swing voters, I don't know how prepared.
[473] I hope the Biden campaign is spending the next two weeks with a very, very aggressive campaign on that.
[474] But anyway, if the debate happens June 27th is pretty important.
[475] I very much agree with you on that.
[476] Then there's a sentence.
[477] of Trump on July 11th in the public convention, which probably isn't that important, except his VP pick is kind of interesting.
[478] So to get back to your earlier point, the June 20th, when does 27th window, I guess, through the French elections, British elections, Trump VP debate, possibly, and then VP pick.
[479] Yeah, that's a pretty interesting three weeks of politics.
[480] Yeah, the 11th will be the sentencing.
[481] I didn't even mention that when I went through my period.
[482] I figure he gets sentenced.
[483] I say this in the morning.
[484] Should I maybe, Trump's my, should I get sentenced and then just go right to Trump Tower and ask my VP picked?
[485] Does that step on it?
[486] Or maybe I just, but I think the sentencing is also, I have wonderful lawyer friends who are all kind of, I think that sentencing could be a big moment.
[487] A, I'd sort of doubtful.
[488] B, in Trump's mind, I say, if I get a slap on there is anything short of prison sentence, it just shows everyone it was a trivial case.
[489] I get a prison sentence, outrage, unbelievable, you know, persecution by the deep state, and it gets another $40 million of contributions and goes into the Republican convention with huge momentum, at least among the base.
[490] well maybe doesn't go though the convention is only four days after right do you have time to appeal how does that he appeals right away and the sentences is is held off is postponed so he's free there can't be travel limits there could be but they won't stop them from going to the convention and i think normally someone like that white collar crime you know they let him travel around in the u .s fucking white collar criminals i just get away with everything it's unbelievable that would be something if they tried to stop him going to the convention i don't know that that would play that well politically, you know, people probably think you should be able to speak to the convention.
[491] I did an interview of Julie Brown a while back.
[492] It was the Epstein case, you know, who broke a lot of these stories.
[493] In Epstein's first prison sentence, they like let him do whatever he wanted.
[494] She was like walking around South Florida, like hanging.
[495] And like cops would seem like, wait, didn't I arrest that guy?
[496] Like, isn't that guy supposed to be in jail?
[497] It's really annoying.
[498] Another thing that wasn't on my outline, which I should mention that since Epstein came up, did you see this?
[499] So Trump goes on Fox and Friends.
[500] They ask him if he, will declassify the 9 -11 documents, the Epstein documents, and one other conspiracy theory.
[501] I don't know.
[502] Firstly, it's very strange that this is where Fox is right now, that Fox has gone, like, fully down the 9 -11 truth or is a rabbit hole.
[503] But Trump says he will.
[504] He will do that.
[505] He'll declassify.
[506] And that's the clip they put on the show.
[507] But a longer clip that then got put on radio was Trump actually backs off the Epstein one.
[508] And he said, actually, on the Epstein thing, I mean, I'll declassify with why he died.
[509] But, you know, we don't want to ruin everybody's life that was involved.
[510] Maybe there's some false accusations in that.
[511] We don't want to ruin everybody's life.
[512] And I'm like, where, again, this is where I don't want the whole show to be like, why aren't the lives doing things more?
[513] But like, if Joe Biden was like, or Bill Clinton said that, like, oh, yeah, I don't want to declassify the Epstein thing.
[514] I don't want to accidentally ruin anybody's life who might have been on the plane.
[515] It's like, wait a minute.
[516] Could we not maybe see some conspiracies of our own here or maybe some educated guesses about why Donald Trump wouldn't want to declassify the documents that maybe reveal him or his friends or his donors or hanging out with Epstein?
[517] Yeah, certainly isn't the center for his donors to give him even more money, right?
[518] So I think there's a kind of classic mob reason for holding back on that.
[519] But no, I agree.
[520] And essentially in the same week, I think, basically, Joe Biden has said nothing critical of what's happening of the Hunter Biden trial.
[521] And I said he would not pardon, Hunter Biden, which I actually think is almost like too far, but whatever.
[522] I mean, I'm glad he said it from a political point of view.
[523] Again, I mean, maybe someone should emphasize a little more.
[524] We're trying to actually here at the bulwark.
[525] We had several pieces on this.
[526] The rule of law side of things.
[527] I mean, Trump is a mob leader and Biden is a conventional politician with some flaws, but basically a rule of law guy.
[528] And maybe that's kind of important for the future of the country.
[529] I don't know.
[530] Yeah, a very important distinction.
[531] Yeah, once again, or out here just be like yeah maybe let's give joe bine some credit he's not even going to pardon his his son is on let's just be real like a pretty ridiculous charge like it's a pretty absurd trial that hunter bides in and this hunter's done plenty of things so he deserves that he got caught up in something he obviously is always getting it caught up in something but like the merits of this trial are pretty preposterous and you know CNN's covering it like it's the oj trial for some reason and some of our friends at national review and other places got mad at me because i was like several outlets were attacking Hunter's daughter for they fact -checked her testimony, where what she testified about what Hunter said to her at that time was different from what her text messages said from that time.
[532] It's all like, okay, that's, look, you should tell the truth if you're not understand, but is it really news?
[533] Like, is fact -checking the president's granddaughter's testimony in a trial that has nothing to do with the president that's about her father's drug use?
[534] Like, is that really, that the post was doing it, okay.
[535] But like, is that really news?
[536] Like, no, it's not.
[537] Okay.
[538] I'm sorry.
[539] That wasn't a question, Bill.
[540] I just, that just, you were the one that brought up the, but I was happy that you brought up Joe Bunn's right.
[541] You're going to need to chill out there in Portugal here for a few days for sure.
[542] I know, I have to have a cigarette after this.
[543] It just pisses me off so much.
[544] It's like, we're going after Naomi Biden.
[545] Like, what?
[546] What?
[547] How?
[548] Like, can you imagine just the way that these guys would flop on the ground?
[549] If you or I ever sent out one tweet criticizing, like, one of Jvononon, as kids.
[550] You know, anyway, this is just fucking, the whole thing is ridiculous.
[551] All right, I admire you for the effort that you put in to try to honor Bill Sapphire, to try to get inside Donald Trump's head.
[552] And there were some things that you write where I'm like, yeah, that sounds like Trump.
[553] Bill's on to something there.
[554] And then you hear what's inside real Donald Trump's head.
[555] And I wonder if it's possible to get inside a mind that deformed.
[556] Here's Donald Trump at a rally talking about sharks.
[557] So I said, let me ask you a question.
[558] And he said, nobody ever asked question and it must be because of MIT, my relationship to MIT, very smart.
[559] He goes, I say, what would happen if the boat sank from its weight and you're in the boat and you have this tremendously powerful battery and the battery is now underwater and there's a shark that's approximately 10 yards over there?
[560] By the way, a lot of shark attacks lately.
[561] Do you notice that?
[562] A lot of shark.
[563] I watched some guys justifying it today.
[564] Well, they weren't really that angry they bit off the young lady's leg because of the fact that they were they were not hungry but they misunderstood what who she was these people are great he said there's no problem with sharks they just didn't really understand a young woman swimming now really got decimated and other people to a lot of shark architects they said so there's a shark 10 yards away from the boat 10 yards or here do i get electrocuted if the boat is sinking water goes over the battery the boat is sinking do I stay on top of the boat and get electrocuted, or do I jump over by the shark and not get electrocuted?
[565] Because I will tell you, he didn't know the answer.
[566] He said, you know, nobody's ever asked me that question.
[567] I said, I think it's a good question.
[568] I think there's a lot of electric current coming through that water.
[569] But you know what I'd do if there was a shark or you get electrocuted?
[570] I'll take electrocution every single time.
[571] I'm not getting near the shark.
[572] Okay, Bill, did you consider any of that?
[573] Any like long asides in your article this morning about whether you'd rather be electrocuted or eaten by a shark.
[574] And, you know, when you talk to smart MIT people, do you ever ask them about that choice?
[575] Yeah, often I have a lot of interesting discussions with MIT types.
[576] I know.
[577] Well, I only give you part of Donald Trump's mind.
[578] I just think we're fair enough to look at the rest of it as well.
[579] It's a warped man. You also didn't talk about, you know, ogling young women either.
[580] This is just some brainstorming for the next time you do something about this.
[581] I can do more of these.
[582] That's good.
[583] Yeah, yeah.
[584] Mine's a family -friendly version of Donald Trump's my team.
[585] I wanted to close with a brief discussion.
[586] I wrote about it late Friday.
[587] Mutual friend, David Bose of the Cato Institute, died after a battle with cancer on Friday.
[588] I put it in the article.
[589] The other folks to listen to his comments in his final remarks, public remarks before he died.
[590] He was at a convention about liberalism.
[591] He was a libertarian and avowed prominent.
[592] lifelong libertarian, who thought deeply about libertarian philosophy and was extremely disenchanted by the libertarian movement towards MAGA and authoritarianism towards the end of his life.
[593] And here were his thoughts about that at an event in San Francisco a couple months ago.
[594] We, we libertarians, most of us Americans, are liberals.
[595] Liberalism is a universal creed.
[596] We believe that all people are endowed within a...
[597] animal rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, not just some people.
[598] And that idea is incompatible with political ideas based on blood and soil or treating people differently because of race or religion.
[599] And so when you see self -proclaimed freedom advocates talking about blood and soil or helping a would -be autocrat overturn an election, or talking about LGBT equality as degeneracy, or saying we shouldn't care about government racism against black people, or defending the Confederacy and the cause of the South, or joining right -wing culture wars and supporting politicians who want to use the state to fight their enemies, or posting Holocaust jokes and death threats on Twitter, recognize that for what it is.
[600] Speak up, fight back, tell people that's not.
[601] America and it's certainly not libertarianism.
[602] Man, Bill, really powerful stuff and just I'm glad that somebody was out there saying it and I was glad that he was able to have the opportunity to say it before he died.
[603] No, I was too and I didn't know David well, but I respected him.
[604] I was not a libertarian and if anything he disapproved of my hawkishness on foreign policy, I believe, and I don't think I ever debated him, but he was a formidable debater and really a principled person and And some of the tributes to him, including yours, but others Aaron Ross Powell have been really moving.
[605] And it's nice to see that someone who stood with principal and really was a slightly lonely figure on the libertarian side in the last few years and holding that principle.
[606] Some other friends of ours have, Shakeda Domini and others, but some haven't.
[607] It's nice to see the tributes that have been paid to him.
[608] Yeah, I remember he was on that National Review issue in 2016, right?
[609] With you.
[610] Yeah, so I was just pulling this up.
[611] Okay, so there's this National Review cover for people that remember we're going to navel gaze inside the conservative movement here for a minute.
[612] Against Trump was the cover.
[613] The editors were against Trump.
[614] So I guess we'd have to go look at who counted among the National Review editors.
[615] But as among the guests that they had, there were 22 guest writers who were against Trump at this time, including David Beck, or excuse me, including David Bowes, but also Glenn Beck, Thomas Sol, a lot of people, Ben Dominich, the Federalist, a lot of people who ended up being for Trump, not too long after that.
[616] I look at this list.
[617] David, Mona, you, Michael Medved, maybe gets some half credit, Russell Moore, a very small group of people that stayed stalwart throughout all of this.
[618] And so, you know, it's interesting that you guys do kind of come from the opposite ideological ends maybe of that spectrum, but definitely credit were due to the small but merry band of people that stayed stalwart against Donald Trump throughout this whole, this whole ordeal.
[619] despite all of the incentives, the other direction.
[620] Well, it's an honor to be with, honestly, really, to have been with David.
[621] So sorry that he died so much younger than he should have.
[622] But Russell Moore, really a principled person who's paid a huge prize in the evangelical world.
[623] Mona and I, we paid the price of being here at the bulwark with you.
[624] So that's no price at all.
[625] Yeah, it's kind of an award for you.
[626] That's been an up and up, that's been a, what I'm trying to say?
[627] Uptrade.
[628] Upgrade?
[629] Upgrade.
[630] Upgrade.
[631] Upgrade.
[632] I couldn't remember the word.
[633] We've upgraded you.
[634] as Beyonce would say, yeah, the Russell and David thing are interesting.
[635] And just as a final thought on it, like the libertarians, I wrote in the piece that he was an outcast among outcasts, right?
[636] It's kind of funny.
[637] It's kind of telling about human nature that even the fucking libertarians couldn't resist Trump, you know?
[638] I mean, you would have thought that these people that were always outcast, that never had political power that weren't motivated by access.
[639] They didn't have any influence in the Bush presidency.
[640] And yet something about that Trump.
[641] Trump, you know, just the appeal of being contrarian, being anti the left, attacking the progressives, attacking the enemies, getting access you didn't have before because Trump didn't have people around them.
[642] I think there are a lot of people in libertarian world who got access.
[643] And in a lot of ways, there's that parallel between David and Russell more.
[644] You know, like you would think that among Christians, that would be a place where somebody like Trump would not appeal.
[645] It's a lot easier to understand why our people, you know, the political hacks, why they succumb to Trump.
[646] Like, that logic makes sense to me. But in libertarian world, in evangelical world, I don't know, extra credit, I guess, is what I'm saying, is given to Russell Moore and David Bowes for being stalwart throughout all of this.
[647] And he will be missed.
[648] Russell's still with us.
[649] We've got to get him back on this podcast.
[650] So any other final thoughts from you, Bill?
[651] No, I just echo the phrase of Russell and David.
[652] And, yeah, it's human nature is a funny thing.
[653] People want to be on the winning side, too.
[654] I think the fact that Trump went in 2016 and his back.
[655] again.
[656] I don't know.
[657] People, but you're right.
[658] Libertarians of all people should have resisted that, but whatever.
[659] Fucking libertarians, man. Thank God for David Bowes.
[660] Thank you all for being with us here today on the Bullwark podcast.
[661] I will be back tomorrow.
[662] Then we'll have some guests in the host chair later this week.
[663] We'll see all then.
[664] Peace.
[665] The Bullock podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.