The Bulwark Podcast XX
[0] Hello, welcome to the Bullwark podcast.
[1] I'm your host Tim Miller.
[2] It's Monday, May 6th.
[3] Probably the most urgent Holocaust remembrance day we've had in a while.
[4] We've dueling protesters behaving badly on campus.
[5] Israel's ordering evacuations in Rafa.
[6] There were some GOP VIP auditions this weekend.
[7] A former president is on trial.
[8] People are scared that the bird flu is back.
[9] And I'm excited to have our dynamic morning shots duo with us to talk about all of that.
[10] We've got Bill Crystal.
[11] You know him.
[12] And also Andrew Eger.
[13] Andrew, have you been on this podcast?
[14] before were you here in the early days?
[15] Yeah, back in the very before times when frequently it was just the Jim Swift, Charlie Sykes, Andrew Eger, dudes chatting, Bullwork podcast, did that a number of times.
[16] But I guess you've sort of cleaned up your act around here since then.
[17] Dudes Chattin.
[18] I wouldn't know if we've cleaned it up.
[19] Dudes Chattin.
[20] Well, welcome.
[21] For people who don't know, you were an OG bulwarker.
[22] You abandoned us for the dispatch.
[23] It's okay.
[24] Nobody's feelings I heard about that at all.
[25] And now you're back.
[26] Do you have any personal anecdotes you want to share with people who are new to Andraeger experience?
[27] Oh, like anything interesting that's happened to me in the past five years or something like that?
[28] I don't know.
[29] Yeah, I don't know.
[30] I used to be the sort of bright -eyed, dewy child when I was here first at the age of 23 or so.
[31] And now I'm much older.
[32] I'm a little, you know, thicker around the middle.
[33] I have two kids now.
[34] Two children.
[35] I've become much wiser and more melted looking in appearance.
[36] So we'll be the judge of how much wiser you've gotten, though.
[37] I have been enjoying your morning shots dispatches.
[38] People should sign up for morning shots if they haven't at the Bork .com.
[39] Bill Crystal, before we get to all that news I referenced, I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you about kind of the big thing happening in the culture over the weekend.
[40] And the people want to know what your take is on the Kendrick versus Drake beef.
[41] This is what Tim always does to me. Now, he's annoyed because in the morning shots, which just went up about 20 minutes ago, I confess, not confess.
[42] I'm proudly say that I'm a important for my youth when they won in 70, especially with Willis Reed, and then in 73, they haven't won in five decades.
[43] This could be the year with older.
[44] But, because, Tim can't tolerate that very thought as a true Nuggets fanatic and a Yolkich guy and all that.
[45] We're happy for the NICs.
[46] The NICs are kind of cute.
[47] I mean, you actually followed this stuff so much more close than I did.
[48] Do you think it's even plausible that the NICs would have a shout out the finals or winning it all against?
[49] I mean, there would have to be some injuries in Boston, I think.
[50] But it's cute and fun.
[51] I think they can go to the Eastern Conference finals and get a win and get people excited.
[52] People in New York need joy.
[53] So that's fine.
[54] This is the kind of condescension we get these days from people who are rooting for a team that didn't exist.
[55] Didn't exist in 1970 or 73.
[56] You know, just kind of this latecomer fake team.
[57] We existed.
[58] We're just in the ABA.
[59] The red, white, and blue ball.
[60] The multi -colored basketball.
[61] Anyway, you need to do some research.
[62] I'm going to send you a document by next Monday.
[63] Well, next Monday you're on vacation.
[64] So you have three weeks, actually.
[65] Bill Crystal's going on vacation for a couple weeks.
[66] You have three weeks.
[67] At the end of May, I would like 100 words from you on the Kendrick versus Drake Beef and let me know which side you fall down on that one.
[68] By which point, they'll each have released 600 more songs.
[69] Attacking each other.
[70] All right.
[71] We had to start some levity because A .B., you know, as is her want, is a downer on the bulwark .com today.
[72] She has an article.
[73] It's pretty bracing headline Biden risks radicalizing the center, referencing border protests.
[74] I didn't really love the headline.
[75] No offense to whoever wrote it.
[76] But the underlying point, that there's a sense of chaos out there that is reflecting poorly on the president and the eyes of some people in the middle, I think is probably right.
[77] The question of whose fault is that I think is something we can hash out.
[78] But, Bill, what did you think?
[79] Why don't you give us your two sense on A .B.'s warning, what would you call it?
[80] Avery's Cassandra call to the Biden White House today?
[81] Right.
[82] Cassandra was right, I think, right.
[83] In great mythology.
[84] Yeah, no, I'm a big fan of A .B.'s piece and she's just looks at what's happening on campuses, ties it into the border where she points out, most of it's on campuses, but she points out on the border that Biden said when the border, he negotiated the border deal, or rather the Democrats in the Senate negotiated the border deal.
[85] Biden was for it.
[86] They got, what, 47 something like that, Democrats in the Senate to vote for it.
[87] They went all the way, even though they didn't like it much.
[88] Biden said when Trump blew it up, we're going to hold Trump accountable, we're going to hold the Republicans accountable.
[89] They're the ones who are preventing us from fixing the border.
[90] He hasn't really spoken about it much.
[91] and he certainly hasn't done anything.
[92] He hasn't urged Congress to pass it immediately, hasn't done much or anything really in the way of executive action.
[93] The combination of the inaction on the border and relative inaction, I would say, give a good speech Thursday, which Andrew wrote about in morning shots, but on the campuses and the sense of chaos that comes out of both of those is bad for the incumbent president, who is Joe Biden.
[94] I struggle with this a bit because I think objectively it is true that the perception right now, both globally and domestically is that things are in disorder and that, you know, that is going to fall on the president fairly or unfairly.
[95] I look at these issues and it's like, okay, so the Columbia commencement was canceled today.
[96] That's, that's terrible.
[97] I feel horrible for the Columbia kids, especially the ones I've worked really hard to get there and deserve to have their day.
[98] But does that affect anybody in suburban Atlanta?
[99] Like, not really.
[100] Like, the border thing is big on Fox.
[101] I get it, but Arizona, it's going to be big.
[102] We talked to Stephen Richard about that a couple weeks ago.
[103] Is anybody in the Rust Belt state, any of the normal people in Waukesha County that are going to decide this election impacted at all by what happens on Columbia's campus or in the hole in the border near San Diego?
[104] Yeah, I mean, you're right that to a large degree, it's an optics problem primarily, and it's fair for Biden's defenders to say, largely this is an optics problem, particularly the campus's thing.
[105] I mean, very easy to argue.
[106] The border stuff is is the opposite of an optics problem.
[107] But I think the political danger for Biden here is that so much of his brand in his last competition against Trump, which is the rematch that we're getting again this November, is that he was going to be, you know, the order president and not like kind of the hard -edged law and order president, like send in the troops and tamp things down that Trump made his brand, but just that we're going to lower the temperature, we're going to get things back to normal.
[108] And I think the biggest optics problem for Biden is that it's kind of, of a worst of both worlds situation here where he is kind of becoming seen as that law and order jackbooted cops guy among so many of these young progressives and with these campus protests continuing to spiral further and further out of control.
[109] I mean, they're sending in the cops at a lot of these campuses, but things are only getting worse.
[110] And Biden is kind of identified with that kind of establishment force for a lot of these young people.
[111] But on the flip side of the coin, you have, you know, more moderate centrist type people who don't identify.
[112] with the campus protests who don't pay that much attention to all these sorts of things at all, but do just sort of have this sense that there hasn't been the sort of return to stability and normality and order that was kind of the thing the president was hanging his hat on in his first election campaign against Trump.
[113] And one of the things that we've seen from this, and AB brought this up in her piece, is it is starting to make some of the harder -edged law and order stuff that Trump continues to promise taste more like realism to.
[114] to a lot of these kind of, you know, to the extent that we still have persuadable voters, to these persuadable voters.
[115] You have the border being the most salient issue that Pew has polled for three months in a row.
[116] You have, you know, a stronger embrace of even Trump's own promised tactics on the border.
[117] You have more and more people in the middle saying, well, okay, maybe before these were things that we thought seemed to be on the pale, but now, you know, maybe that's just what you need to do because obviously the status quo isn't working.
[118] So it's a really, I do think it's actually a really dangerous political situation.
[119] for the president to be in.
[120] Yeah, I agree it's dangerous.
[121] I struggle with this, though.
[122] It's like, okay, yeah.
[123] I mean, the world's complicated.
[124] Things happen, you know, terrorists attack countries.
[125] You know, you have insane strong men that want to bring back the, you know, old Soviet Union half the world away.
[126] There are some 18 -year -olds who are acting badly.
[127] It's like, like, what?
[128] So we want to change the head of government to a shit -throwing monkey.
[129] And like, that is going to be the thing that, that, fixes all this.
[130] It's a little hard to stomach.
[131] No, I mean, I actually sort of make that point this morning in the news.
[132] I was going to write about the protest this morning and maybe about the VP audition for Trump.
[133] And I felt I really couldn't just, you got Putin threatening the use of tactical nuclear weapons.
[134] I think it's a bluff.
[135] It's fluster, but whatever.
[136] It reminds us there's a massive largest land war in Europe in 80 years is going on.
[137] We have what's happening in Gaza, obviously.
[138] And then we have Trump, you know, that even in the polls for presidents running an explicitly authoritarian campaign.
[139] Those are the big things.
[140] I totally agree with that.
[141] And, you know, we've had campus photos before.
[142] These are, I don't like them and there's a lot to be said about them.
[143] Not good for our campus, not good for colleges, not good for our politics, I think.
[144] But yes, not in the same level of problem.
[145] The one thing I would say, though, is it's a little too easy to say, well, Columbia, no one in Middle America cares about that.
[146] I don't know.
[147] I think in suburban Atlanta, they care about Emory University.
[148] And Emory University has just moved its commencement for the first time ever, I think, off campus.
[149] They can't guarantee security to some other place.
[150] I'm not sure what it is a private venue of some kind.
[151] Michigan had disruptions.
[152] It is commencement last weekend, and I kind of think voters in Michigan probably noticed that.
[153] So I don't know about the politics of this.
[154] It may turn out to be utterly forgotten by October, and it's, you know, it's a blib.
[155] And maybe people don't blame Biden or they shouldn't blame Biden for it.
[156] But I kind of worry that it does spill over in the way Andrew was saying.
[157] Okay.
[158] Well, there are two related things I want to bring up.
[159] Jake Ockincloss, maybe quotes this in her piece as a Democrat out of Massachusetts makes the side of the argument that one political response to this for Biden should be to care less about the protesters' interests.
[160] I don't think the majority view in the Democratic Party, but I think it's worth at least listening to what Jake had to say.
[161] If these protesters' demands were met by the president, these hostages would be doomed to die in captivity because Israel would be seating its leverage.
[162] Now, I don't, these protests are not monolith, obviously, and different protesters have different points of view, but the overall character of these protests, Alex, is, in fact, anti -Semitic and pro -terrorist, and Democrats need to roundly condemn them.
[163] We cannot be worried about the electoral impact of so doing.
[164] We've got to do what's right, not what's politic, and frankly, the margin of victory for Joe Biden is not going to be college students in California anyway.
[165] It's going to be Nikki Haley voters in Michigan and Wisconsin and Pennsylvania who probably don't have a lot of sympathy for overprivileged, under -informed kids on Ivy League campuses.
[166] Whoa.
[167] He went for it there at the end.
[168] I think that's maybe right.
[169] But isn't it true that Joe Biden's going to need big turnout from kids at the University of Wisconsin and need to do well with Nikki Haley voters in the Milwaukee suburbs?
[170] Isn't that like the fundamental challenge here and why?
[171] I think isn't that why you have people on the left side of the Democratic Party that are like, why isn't he pandering more or why isn't he, you know, listening more?
[172] May pandering is not the word they do is listening more to the protesters and why people like Auchin -Klaas and Moskowitz and others saying, fuck these kids, basically.
[173] But isn't the reason why Biden's not doing either of those things because he needs both?
[174] I would just say, I want to hear Andrew on this since he's closer an age than we are to this, but most kids at the University of Wisconsin and the University of Michigan and Penn State are not on the side of the protesters.
[175] This is where I think the myth is.
[176] It's very, I mean, they're a little, the less pro -Israel than older Americans.
[177] They maybe were sympathetic to the plight of the Palestinians.
[178] A lot of people is sympathetic to that.
[179] But they are not in favor of these protests.
[180] Nowhere have they gotten, you know, massive support from the student body.
[181] I don't know of any place the student government does endorse them even or anything like that.
[182] And in Michigan, in fact, when they disrupted some, one of the commencements, like one of the schools, or they could dance in theater, the parents, so I agree that this might just be the students, but the students and the parents started to shout USA, USA.
[183] I don't think these protests are popular, even among the young voters Biden needs to get.
[184] Let me give you one anecdote to that effect, if I could, which is that a couple months ago, I attended a Biden campaign event.
[185] I can't remember now which college campus it was on.
[186] I think it was a satellite campus of the University of Virginia, but it was his big kind of restore row reproductive rights event that he did with Kamala Harris, the vice president.
[187] and that was the event, at least one of the events that the one that stands out in my mind where he was repeatedly heckled down by pro -Palestinian chants, you know, the genocide Joe stuff and all that, like throughout the entire remarks.
[188] One of the people that I happened to talk to when I was doing interviews before he got there was this young woman who turned out to be president of the UVA College Democrats.
[189] And her stance on it was remarkable because she was there to support Biden.
[190] And she was, you know, she was kind of of the opinion that the president kind of had his head in the right place by leaning into the reproductive rights stuff.
[191] And she was not among the people who were arrested at UVA this weekend as part of the encampment, but she was also kind of very sort of torn when I asked about the Gaza stuff.
[192] And this was before the event where, like I said, he was repeatedly shouted down.
[193] And she was very worried about it being a sore issue among many of her peers, just for the reasons you describe.
[194] I mean, it almost doesn't matter what he does.
[195] The structural problem is that this is a thing that is pitting different members of his coalition against one another very angrily and very aggressively.
[196] And it makes it that much more difficult, again, no matter what he does to put the big tent together in November.
[197] Yeah, I think that what Bill kind of alluded to what we both are getting at is right, is that if you just look at the data and there's now been a decent amount of polling among young voters, like, yeah, they are directionally sympathetic for good reason, I think, to the plight of the Palestinian people and the humanitarian concerns there.
[198] But that's different than going along with the only solution is antifada revolution or whatever.
[199] They're chanting at some of these things.
[200] I don't know that students are there at a median level.
[201] And I think that Joe Biden can turn out, as you see, the people that are most likely to turn out among young voters are already with Biden at pretty similar levels to 2020.
[202] One last thing, more of a comment than a question on these guys is there's a story over the weekend that the big donors, you know, Gates Foundation source, all the big donors that funded Biden campaign and Super PACs are also funding the protests.
[203] That seems unhelpful.
[204] You know, maybe they should have some cross -agency meetings at the nonprofit to say, like, let's make sure that all of our donations are aligned the same direction against Donald Trump.
[205] That might be just one suggestion for the donor class folks that listen to this podcast.
[206] I have committed the crime that I criticized other media outlets of already this morning because we're halfway through the podcast.
[207] There was a video over the weekend from Ole Miss, hottie -toddy.
[208] There were some protesters, you know, Palestinian protesters on the square there.
[209] And there were a much larger crowd of counter -protesters of, you know, American flag waving frat bros. And there's a black woman that was videoing the counter -protesters.
[210] One of these guys shouts back at her using monkey noises and like monkey arms, he's an orangutangang.
[211] Several Republican politicians tweeted that video approvingly, including Mike Collins of Georgia.
[212] The guys aren't even kicked out of his frat and, you know, Ole Miss kids are going to do it.
[213] Old Miss kids are going to do.
[214] Not that I'm making excuses for that, but like the thing to me that was the big takeaway is like, A, it tells us a lot about the state of the Republican Party that a congressman can approvingly tweet a video like that and not have any concern that he's going to face blowback from his peers or or like the media and that no one can hold them accountable anymore because none of the conservative media will give a fuck about this.
[215] And two, you don't hear commentators being like, well, this is really going to reflect poorly on Trump.
[216] Why is that?
[217] Tell me about, explain to me, Bill Crystal.
[218] Why is that?
[219] Oh, my God.
[220] No, but you're right to focus on the Republican members of Congress and the kids are the kids and it's bad and they should be, you know, reprimanded and disciplined if that's appropriate.
[221] But it is amazing that the Republican congressmen, they're the ones who are supposed to be adults.
[222] On the left, I would say I feel the same about the kids to some degree.
[223] I give them a bit of a pass.
[224] Their kids, it's the faculty who have been really appalling in some of these universities.
[225] So let's hold left -wing faculty accountable.
[226] Let's hold right -wing congressman accountable.
[227] Yeah.
[228] Andrew, Ole Miss, taking care of business.
[229] That was Mike Collins, Republican of Georgia, tweet.
[230] Yuck.
[231] I mean, there's basically two possibilities, right?
[232] One is that he's just kind of openly leaning into the, yeah, shout racist epitets at the protesters for the USA angle of it.
[233] And the other possibility is that it was kind of a thoughtless retweet.
[234] I mean, it's an interesting video because, like, it's the kid in question just kind of like comes into the side of the frame for a few seconds.
[235] It's not, it's not like the main point of the video.
[236] It's the most shocking thing from the video because otherwise it's kind of a boring video.
[237] So it's not implausible that he could have just been sort of like retweeting the protest.
[238] and then the bigger problem in the republic.
[239] Let me just say that you never apologize.
[240] I mean, like, in Republican politics, apologizing or backing off his weakness, you could never be seen to be like, oh, wow, sorry, didn't realize that there was horrible racism going on in that video I approvingly retweeted.
[241] It's a big mess.
[242] And I totally take the point that, like, yeah, I mean, how much of our collective media attention are we going to spend on kids behaving badly, whether it's this kid or, you know, the worst of the worst of the pro -Gaza protest?
[243] I mean, you can make the point that like just as that kid didn't necessarily speak for for everybody at that protest.
[244] I mean, the same thing that we've all been doing of like seeing the worst excesses from the, from these protests at Columbia or UCLA or wherever.
[245] And, you know, using those to characterize the whole gang, it's all very messy.
[246] And there's very little reason to think that it's going to hurt Trump at all.
[247] I'm happy to stipulate that Mike Collins did not intentionally tweet that to do monkey, making monkey sounds of black people and endorse that.
[248] But like if you accidentally tweet out a video that includes somebody making monkey sounds of black people, then the right thing to do is say, I'm sorry about that.
[249] That was not my intent.
[250] That was a mistake.
[251] I was focused on the USA chant part of the video and we'll correct that.
[252] That feels like the normal thing that good natured humans would do not that long ago, but that's not what we're doing anymore.
[253] I'll say one final thought on this.
[254] I do think we need to sometimes take people back from the brink.
[255] And like the number of smart people that I've heard make the claim that like, oh, you know, the behavior of this student or that student is going to make the difference.
[256] It's like, if you're making your decision on who should be the leader of the free world based on what offends you most by a 17 year old, like you are making a very smooth -brained decision for yourself.
[257] So I think everybody's just got to like step away from the brink and we can discuss on the merits what's happening on these campuses, concerns.
[258] Are we concerned about rising anti -Semitism?
[259] Yes, President Biden's going to give a speech about this tomorrow.
[260] This is all worth discussing.
[261] But like, I think we need to be able to grade Donald Trump versus Joe Biden on the merits, not based on what's happening on the quad at Ole Miss or Columbia.
[262] The VP auditions this weekend.
[263] Can we do VP auditions?
[264] I want to start with seriously alarming and end with comically absurd.
[265] If that's okay, we'll just kind of gradually go down the vice president apprentice that we had on the Sunday shows this weekend.
[266] Most alarming, I'd like to nominate Tim Scott.
[267] Let's listen to him.
[268] Senator, will you commit to accepting the election results of 2024?
[269] Bottom line.
[270] At the end of the day, the 47th president of the United States will be president Donald Trump, and I'm excited to get back to low inflation, low unemployment.
[271] Wait, wait, Senator, yes or no, yes or no, will you accept the election results of 2024 no matter who wins?
[272] That is my statement.
[273] But is just yes or no. Will you accept the election results of 2024?
[274] I look forward to President Trump being the 47th president.
[275] Kristen, you could ask him multiple times.
[276] Senator, just a yes or no answer.
[277] So the American people, the American people will make the decision.
[278] But I don't hear you committing.
[279] For President Trump, that's clear.
[280] I don't hear you committing to the election result.
[281] Here's the joke.
[282] Will you commit to accepting the election results?
[283] There's so many, this is why so many Americans believe that NBC is an extension of the Democrat Party.
[284] At the end of the day, I've said what I've said.
[285] I know that the American people, their voices will be heard, and I believe that President Trump will be our next president.
[286] It's that simple.
[287] I've said what I said, Bill Krestle.
[288] It's that simple.
[289] What did you think about that?
[290] I mean, it shows the unbelievable corruption of the Republican Party by Donald Trump.
[291] But the willing, that's where I'm looking for collaboration in that corruption by all.
[292] the people who want to suck up to Donald Trump, go along with Donald Trump, or in this case be selected as VP by Donald Trump.
[293] A United States senator cannot say he will accept the election results.
[294] I mean, what do we, that really is.
[295] That is way beyond one bad faculty member of Columbia or one, you know, racist kid even at Ole Miss, right?
[296] Yeah.
[297] And Andrew, it's like, to me, again, if we're living in a 2018 world and you're a Republican politician, you're going on TV, and you feel like you're getting railroaded and they're asking these absurd hypotheticals.
[298] Okay.
[299] You know what I mean?
[300] I can kind of understand how an opposition might not be prepared for something like that.
[301] Like the capital was stormed over this.
[302] Like we've all been over this and over this.
[303] And like the threat is actually real and tangible.
[304] And we saw it happen.
[305] And he still can't answer a basic question about it.
[306] And it's not that necessarily he wasn't prepared to answer it.
[307] But in his decision tree, there is no other answer than the one he gives because he's not going to come right out and say, well, of course, I'm not going to commit to accepting the results, because I'm only going to accept them if Trump wins.
[308] But that's what's demanded of him.
[309] I mean, that is the price of admission to be considered for this position is, I'm not going to do you like Mike Pence did you if it ever comes to that.
[310] I mean, Bill, you said it's really chilling to see this from a sitting senator, and not just any sitting senator, right?
[311] I mean, Tim Scott ran for president against Trump supposedly as kind of a friendlier, you know, more cheery, more positive, hopeful vision for America, supposedly much more as an institutionalist, had a lot of goodwill from his colleagues in the Senate, had a lot of goodwill from Republican donors.
[312] And I really do think, I mean, it just shows, you know, Trump has been successful for a lot of reasons, but one of the things that has allowed him to grow so unchecked for the last decade is just the total vacuousness, it turns out of that whole kind of establishment coalition of Republicans.
[313] I mean, it's really, it's really alarming to see that kind of thing.
[314] Especially alarming for me just in the nature of what happened.
[315] We already saw the damage that will be wrought by a lot as such as this.
[316] And you're continuing to do it, laughing, chuckling about it and like trying to be cute.
[317] It's like, be serious, Tim Scott.
[318] Like, you are, that's your point, Andrew.
[319] Like, you're supposed to be the serious one.
[320] They don't have any that they're offering a modicum of seriousness.
[321] There's more evidence by that.
[322] Let's listen to Doug Bergum do a slightly less humiliating version of the same dance.
[323] Do you believe Joe Biden won the 2020 election?
[324] I believe that Joe Biden won the 2020 election, but I also, based on the number of votes are in, but I think that because of COVID, there was a huge number of irregularities because we changed a bunch of rules in certain places, in certain precincts, in certain states, and the number of mail -out ballots, not mail -in.
[325] ballots in North Dakota, we do use, make sure we're verifying signatures.
[326] But when you're mailing out more ballots than there are people that are actually on the registers for the voting roles, that creates a massive moral hazard.
[327] And then when you've got unmonitored drop boxes and a bunch of single bullet votes that only vote for one candidate, I think all of us have to say, is that the way we want to have elections?
[328] I don't know what you're talking about.
[329] So I think that 2020 was a special case.
[330] I mean, you agree with a single bullet vote is a ballot that comes in we're no it's very unusual to get that many ballots where someone just votes for president and not for anybody else down ballot that's what i'm talking about attorney general bill that is a attorney general bill bar said that there was no a significant fraud that would have changed the results of the 2020 election do you disagree with that or do you agree with that well again we're talking about what are you talking about what happened before the ballots came in or after they came out and if you say hey we counted up all the ballots and this yeah and i'm saying i'm saying just said it.
[331] I think that there was a special set of circumstances around COVID where we had did things like we've never done before.
[332] The millions of mail -out ballots was a new thing for America.
[333] And when you mail out more ballots and they just go out to, I mean, I know people in states where they got three ballots mailed to them, you know, that's a problem.
[334] And we should all be concerned about that.
[335] Okay.
[336] Okay.
[337] I've had enough.
[338] I forget how long this goes on for.
[339] But that's like the Winnie the Pooh and the Tuxedo version of the Tim Scott thing.
[340] If only one ballot comes in and three go out to a house, it's still only one ballot counted.
[341] Like, it's just this smoke and mirrors bullshit to try to figure out a way to answer a question in a manner that he doesn't think will piss off Donald Trump, right?
[342] Isn't that all this is?
[343] Yes.
[344] The weird thing about this, I mean, like, it would be completely reasonable in a whole alternate universe where Donald Trump had not done what he did in 2020 to say, okay, what happened with the COVID kind of shuffling of policies on how we vote.
[345] We can't let that kind of thing happen again.
[346] We need to have measures in place for if it transpires that people can't get to polling places safely in a future election because the ad hoc thing we did was was not all that good.
[347] It didn't work out all that well.
[348] But he pairs that and they always do this.
[349] He pairs that with the slurry of kind of half -truths and outright fabrications.
[350] I mean, the multiple ballots thing, it's always impossible to tell exactly what they're referring to, but just to drill down on that one thing.
[351] Almost always, when that was a talking point in 2020, there was just a confusion going on between ballots being mailed out and ballot applications being mailed out.
[352] There were a lot of these people were like, hey, I got three ballots mailed to my doors and that possible fraud.
[353] And you'd see officials being like, actually, no, these are applications that you would now need to send in in order for us to send you your one official ballot.
[354] And there's a million things like this.
[355] And by the way, if you sent in two ballots, that would have been the fraud.
[356] If you would have sent in two ballots, that's the fraud.
[357] Getting to is not the fraud.
[358] Sending two back is the fraud.
[359] Anyway.
[360] Sorry, continue, Andrew.
[361] Well, just one other thing is that, like, there's a hundred million of these allegations that go around, and when it comes to politicians just sort of gesturing at them, it's just this abstract kind of force field of supposed fraud things.
[362] But, I mean, each of these individual things were drilled down on, were litigated in 2020.
[363] That was the whole point of all the court cases that we had, and nothing came of any of them.
[364] So, I mean, the idea that you could go beyond the, let's make sure we have policies in place that this doesn't happen again, two, therefore, it's impossible to say who won, just remains a complete fiction, whether the guy who said it has a good head of hair or not.
[365] State officials behave very well in devising policies that got the highest turnout we've ever had in a presidential election with the least actual credible charges of fraud, period, period.
[366] I mean, they went through this pretty carefully in states like Georgia, right?
[367] I mean, it's not like there were no recounts.
[368] It's not like there wasn't a hand recount in the close states in Arizona and Georgia.
[369] There was almost no fraud and not even any errors to speak of.
[370] So they did an admirable job, the election officials in 2020, the governors and the secretaries of state, and so forth.
[371] And the idea that this has been turned into an instance of fraud, I mean, Bergam has the much more complex and, you know, kind of semi -fake judicious version of it than Tim Scott.
[372] It's really bad for the country.
[373] I mean, I'm just repeating what we've all said a million times.
[374] Yeah, no, no, no, but it's important.
[375] I think this is important to say because we still have, I still get an email.
[376] We still have some listeners that say, but come on, you know, all of the drop boxes and, and, you know, this stuff.
[377] And it was different in different states.
[378] And certain states, they put more drop boxes in places where, that are better for demographics.
[379] Democrats and, you know, there's certain ways.
[380] And they'll say that to me. I always go back to that with, but wait a minute, were there any votes that were illegal?
[381] Right.
[382] Because that is, okay, if you want to say, oh, well, maybe we should have done it in a way that was more fair where every county got more drop boxes.
[383] Okay, okay, I guess.
[384] But in red states, they were doing the opposite where they were like taking voting locations away from people.
[385] Like, that seems to me to be a bigger problem than giving more voting locations to people.
[386] But like, as long as the vote count is right, As long as we were giving people more options to be able to vote, and they used that, those options, and they did so in a legal manner in order to cast about, isn't all that good?
[387] Isn't that good?
[388] Like, what is the problem with this?
[389] No one in Georgia to take the ones where this was most, you know, stressed with the drop boxes.
[390] No one told the red counties they couldn't have more drop boxes.
[391] They didn't like the fact that the guess which counties, the black counties, had drop boxes.
[392] Because you know what?
[393] A lot of those people work and it was very hard for them to get to vote.
[394] And in the old days, they could have, they might have had other ways to do it.
[395] And it seemed like a good idea to have job boxes where there was no evidence of any fraud.
[396] The bullet voting that he's talking about, incident, I believe in Georgia, I think I'm right about this.
[397] There was an undervote for president because there was some unhappiness with both of the candidates, right?
[398] So there was a higher vote, I think, in the Senate races.
[399] And that's true, actually in a few states.
[400] There's no evidence of systematic people, you know, that would be fraud, right?
[401] If someone came and just voted Biden, Biden, Biden, Biden, and didn't care about the rest of the ballot.
[402] It went to an old folks home and just, like, put Biden down for everybody.
[403] That's what he's implying.
[404] of that.
[405] I mean, the degree of the degree of just flat out lying and bullshit there is about this is really, well, and it was Republicans in charge of, at least Arizona and Georgia.
[406] It was Republicans in charge of both those states.
[407] And they let the counties decide how they wanted to do some of these things.
[408] One more thing on this, because we got way late.
[409] That's an important thing to get way light on, because I think it's so obvious that sometimes we don't actually talk about what the tuxedo Winnie the Pooh fraud accusations.
[410] We don't talk about the details of them.
[411] Just one more thing.
[412] either of you.
[413] It just also says something about the fundamental corruption of the party that there is now this like anti, even people that might fundamentally have done the right thing in a different circumstance, right?
[414] Like if their incentives were correct, this is not to defend Doug Bergham or Tim Scott, but in a different world, these are people like all of us that have angels and demons inside us.
[415] And like, if the incentives were correct, they would not be doing this.
[416] Doug Bergam would be glad to run for vice president on the back of, you know, his work as a businessman at his hair.
[417] Like the presidential campaign that he ran.
[418] Right.
[419] That would be what, but he cannot do that because now Donald Trump has made it so that the ante for being welcome in this party now is that you have to lie about what happened in 2020.
[420] And I think about how corrupting that is.
[421] And that goes to something else that you've written about, Andrew, the guy Charlie Spees, used to be my lawyer, normal Republican lawyer guy.
[422] He gets hired it to the RNC a couple months ago.
[423] They pair him with another lawyer who's a fucking lunatic who's like a O -A -N -TV star.
[424] And now two months later, he's out because there, I guess, was some rumblings about the fact that he wouldn't fully endorse the lie about 2020.
[425] Like, talk about just the level of how corrupting that is and just kind of how deep it's got.
[426] Yeah, I mean, so we wrote about this in Morningshots a few months ago when Spies was hired alongside the other lawyer, you mentioned Christina Bob.
[427] He was hired as the RNC's chief counsel, and she was hired as their head lawyer for election integrity.
[428] And they have utterly different resumes, right?
[429] Like Spies is a long, long, long time, extremely elite Republican election law lawyer.
[430] And they brought him on because they needed one of those in that position.
[431] I mean, they're facing all kinds of unprecedented questions.
[432] There's a lot of crimes happening.
[433] Yeah, like unprecedented questions about what they can legally do in terms of moving money around to pay for Trump's legal bills and, and merging the campaign and the RNC's operations and in kind of new and interesting ways and coordinating with outside groups.
[434] And kind of the pitch from Trump advisors to Trump was, yeah, this guy's not like your guy, but he is a crack shot at all this stuff.
[435] And he's going to be totally helpful.
[436] And so they install him in this top job.
[437] Meanwhile, they bring on this flaming lunatic, Christina Bob.
[438] She is an attorney, but she's better known as a former anchor for OAN during all of the Stop the Seal stuff we've been talking about.
[439] She was a big cheerleader for all that stuff on air.
[440] Behind the scenes, she was working to help a lot of these fake elector schemes in some of these states.
[441] She is now under criminal indictment in Arizona, as of a few weeks ago, for some of that work.
[442] And so they bring on these two lawyers.
[443] One of them gets charged with felonies, but it's the other one who Trump has his sights on running out of the room because he's a dissanist guy who doesn't think the 2020 election was stolen.
[444] I mean, at a certain point, there's just no way for a guy like that to continue on within the party, and you're left with a party of Christina Bob's.
[445] The one other thing, if I could just add, I mean, Andrew did excellent reporting on this, both at the time two months ago and then followed up some this morning.
[446] But the Charlie Spees, however, in his resignation statement, says he's sorry that he has to leave.
[447] But of course, he's committed to electing Republicans, including Donald J. Trump in November, which again is sort of the, you know, you're runoff by Trump.
[448] Trump puts out a truth social thing, you know, dumping all over Spees.
[449] He didn't have to say he's not going to vote for Trump.
[450] He didn't have to say he's going to vote for Joe Biden.
[451] He could have just kept quiet and just say, I look forward to helping, you know, continuing my work in November, right?
[452] But he has to explicitly mention that he's still on board with Trump because you never know what opening could come up in the next Trump administration, I suppose, and, you know, he doesn't want to be ruled out.
[453] Or he needs other clients.
[454] He doesn't want his other clients to dump him.
[455] He doesn't want his other fucking clients to dump him.
[456] I mean, this is just, this is a whole pathetic thing about it.
[457] Go ahead, Andrew.
[458] There is also this weird, like, perverse sense of honor among this, like, strain of really establishmentarian party guys, where it's like, Trump's going to run me out of town on a rail, but I'm going to take the high road by continuing to reassert my dedication to the cause, to the party, and even to him.
[459] And it's like a noble, I don't know, it's so weird and gross.
[460] You're too nice, Andrew.
[461] It's him is totally right.
[462] It's all about the clients.
[463] It's all about, Ben Ginsburg was the most, was the best established Republican, best established Republican election lawyer.
[464] He was anti -Trump.
[465] He thought Trump was bad for the country.
[466] He's given up as Republican clients.
[467] Charlie's not willing to do that.
[468] Ben Ginsburg was the name you said, by the other, I just want to get that right because I have two ex -lawyers from my time as a Republican, Ben Ginsburg and Charlie Spees.
[469] And one of them has acted much more honorably.
[470] And I think that's right.
[471] And just to Andrew's point, because I analyzed this in the book quite a bit.
[472] Yeah, clients and money is part of it.
[473] But there is, I think maybe honor might not be quite the right word, but there is this kind of clubbiness where they convince each other that they are important, right?
[474] That it's critical that they are there, that they are the essential men, right?
[475] That they They cannot let the party be taken over by these lunatics.
[476] We must stick around.
[477] And then they all hang out together and tell each other.
[478] So anytime they start to feel bad about themselves, you know, they have six guys they can call.
[479] You can rub their belly, you know, and be like, no, man, no, you're doing the right thing.
[480] We need Charlie Spees.
[481] If Charlie Spees wasn't in there, just think about how bad things could get.
[482] The Capitol might be stormed.
[483] There might be shit smeared on the Capitol.
[484] Cops might die.
[485] You never know what happened if Charlie Spees wasn't in there.
[486] Okay.
[487] I want to finish with some levity.
[488] The worst vice presidential audition so far has to be from the fair governor of South Dakota, Christy Knoem.
[489] Let's take a listen to her.
[490] Talk about her meeting with Kim Jong -un.
[491] Talk about meeting some world leaders and one specific one.
[492] Quote, I remember when I met with North Korean dictator Kim Jong -un, I'm sure he underestimated me having no clue about my experience staring down little tyrants.
[493] I've been a children's pastor after all.
[494] Did you meet Kim Jong -un?
[495] You know, as soon as this was brought to my attention, I certainly made some changes and looked at this passage.
[496] And I've met with many, many world leaders.
[497] I've traveled around the world.
[498] As soon as it was brought to my attention, we went forward and have made some edits.
[499] So I'm glad that this book is being released in a couple of days and that those edits will be in place and that people will have the updated version.
[500] So you did not meet with Kim Jong -un?
[501] That's what you're saying.
[502] No, I've met with many, many world leaders.
[503] Many world leaders that traveled around the world.
[504] I think I've talked extensively in this book about my time serving in Congress, my time as governor, before governor, some of the travels that I've had.
[505] I'm not going to talk about my specific meetings with world leaders.
[506] I'm just not going to do that.
[507] This anecdote shouldn't have been in the book.
[508] And as soon as it was brought to my attention, I made sure that that was adjusted.
[509] Such weird language as soon as it.
[510] This was brought to my attention, an anecdote.
[511] It wasn't an anecdote.
[512] It was fake.
[513] Andrew, what did you think about that?
[514] So, one, even over and beyond being like a bizarre dodge of the actual question, it's still a lie because, one, she's supposed to have written this book.
[515] So they already did the whole, oh, it was the ghostwriter thing.
[516] But she narrated the audiobook.
[517] She has read, I mean, she's run her eyes over the passage at least one time and spoken that fake anecdote into a microphone.
[518] And I don't know.
[519] There was a theory going around on Twitter.
[520] when the Cricket the Dog stuff first came out a couple of weeks ago, that maybe this was like some weird 3D chess bank shot way for Christy Noem to take herself out of the vice presidential runnings without having to actually tell Trump she didn't want to do it.
[521] I found that kind of compelling at the time.
[522] Increasingly, I just think that she is completely not ready for primetime politician who cannot walk three steps without stepping on a rake and just got a completely unearned boost in Republican politics by doing nothing during the early months of the COVID pandemic and has been kind of riding that ever since and is now just sort of being exposed as someone who cannot appear on television without putting her foot in her mouth, I guess.
[523] Yeah, let's just be blunt.
[524] She doesn't seem smart enough to be able to do a 4D chess strategy for getting not picked by Donald Trump.
[525] I think that Occam's Razor is at play here.
[526] Bill, I've got one more for you.
[527] She wants to murder commander.
[528] Yeah, let's take a listen.
[529] At the end of the book, you say the very first thing you would do, if you got to the White House that was different from Joe Biden is you'd make sure Joe Biden's dog was nowhere on the grounds.
[530] Commander say hello to cricket.
[531] Are you doing this to try to look tough?
[532] Do you still think that you have a shot at being a VP?
[533] Well, number one, Joe Biden's dog has attacked 24 Secret Service people.
[534] So how many people is enough people to be attacked and dangerously hurt before you make a decision on a dog?
[535] Well, he's not living at the White House.
[536] question that the president should be held accountable to you're saying you should be shot the president should be accountable to is what is what is the number and i would say about republicans criticizing me these are the same republicans that criticize me that's enough make a decision about the dog make a decision about the dog that's that's quite the euphemism for dog murder commander meet cricket bill what do you think do you have any dogs you want to take out you could call christie and corey up maybe they might take care of that for you I mean, I sort of was hopeful when it came out that she's such a liar that maybe she hadn't killed cricket.
[537] Maybe cricket was living a pleasant life of old, at Lisa Andrew's idea when we were chatting over the weekend that cricket was leaving a pleasant life of old age at someone else's house, you know, or the cricket never existed.
[538] What about that possibility?
[539] Her meeting with Kim Jong -on never existed.
[540] Maybe this is a way.
[541] I'm just rationalizing, but I don't like the idea of her shooting that nice 14 -month -old terrier.
[542] We can pray the cricket never existed.
[543] I do have to say, you know, other vice presidential gaffs in history, misspelling things, maybe.
[544] Oh, my God.
[545] It does seem kind of mild compared to dog assassination.
[546] This was a good week or two for my former boss, Stanley Coy, is that what you're saying?
[547] Yeah, I do.
[548] I think so.
[549] Anyway, man of indicted.
[550] Didn't Dick Cheney shoot a guy once?
[551] I was very young.
[552] Dick Cheney did shoot a guy.
[553] Speaking of you being, I do have one final thing.
[554] You know, spitball on potential subjects for the podcast today, and Andrew.
[555] I felt like the good way to introduce Andrew to the crowd that wasn't here for guys chatting in the early days would be to let him, you know, send us off with kind of a one minute Alex P. Keaton style spiel about a new little data point that came out today.
[556] The U .S. federal debt given interest rates, we're now going to pay $1 .7 trillion over the next 12 months.
[557] 1 .7 trillion.
[558] If you look at the chart of what our debt payment is, it has skyrocketed over the past.
[559] couple years because of interest rates going up.
[560] That's concerning to me. I assume that's concerning to our young Alex P. Keaton, Andrew Eager.
[561] And so, Andrew, tell us what you think about that and what you think about being compared to Alex P. Keaton.
[562] Yeah, well, I assumed when you texted this was some sort of like first time on my bulwark podcast hazing sort of ritual because I had to Google who Alex P. Keaton was.
[563] I'm the old one now.
[564] No. I will say that my dad would be very happy to hear us talking about this because that remains his kind of like old school Republican leading issue is like when the heck are we going to get serious about the debt.
[565] And I think probably the one of the lessons of politics in recent years, sort of across the board, you could make the point that people will start caring again about the debt when it actually collapses and you have to start doing more than just sort of like maintaining these payments under the table.
[566] But it's not great.
[567] It's not great, Bob.
[568] Not super happy that Republicans and Democrats are completely in unison that there's nothing to be done other than maybe cut spending on the poor.
[569] That's kind of the rest of out approach these days.
[570] I guess, well, Democrats don't want to do that.
[571] Republicans are into that.
[572] But mostly it's just more and more deficit spending as far as the I can see.
[573] Well, guess what, Libs, if you're going to be in a pro -democracy coalition with us, while we're paying $1 .7 trillion on the debt, we're going to be mentioning it for one minute at the end of the Bullwark podcast every once in a while.
[574] That's part of the deal.
[575] Bill Crystal, Thank you for being with me. Andrew Eger, welcome to this edition of the Bullwark podcast.
[576] We'll be seeing you again soon.
[577] Christy Nome, let me tell you.
[578] If you tell no lie about Kim Jong -un and Cricket, then I won't tell no truth about you.
[579] We'll see you all back here tomorrow, and in a few weeks with Bill Crystal's take on the Kendrick Lamar and Drake Beef.
[580] See you all then.
[581] Peace.
[582] Them superpowers get neutralized.
[583] I can only watch in silence.
[584] The famous actor we once knew us looking terrible.
[585] You're moving just like a degenerate.
[586] Heavy antique is feeling distasteful.
[587] I calculate you not as calculated.
[588] I can even predict your angle.
[589] Fabricate stories on the family front because you heard Mr. Moral.
[590] A pathetic master manipulator.
[591] I can smell the tails on you now.
[592] You're not a rap artist, you're a scam artist where the hopes of being accepted.
[593] Tommy Hill figure stood out, but Fulbo never had been your collection.
[594] I make music that electrify him.
[595] You make music that pacify him.
[596] I can double down on that line, but spare you this time.
[597] That's random acts of kindness.
[598] I know you're a master manipulator, and the bitch you will lie you too.
[599] But don't tell no lie about me, and I won't tell truths about you.
[600] The Borg podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.
[601] Shoo!
[602] Shoo!