1 00:00:01,000 --> 00:00:03,560 Speaker 1: Welcome to the Truth with Lisa Booth, where we cut. 2 00:00:03,360 --> 00:00:05,519 Speaker 2: Through the noise to get to the heart of what matters, 3 00:00:06,000 --> 00:00:08,680 Speaker 2: to get to the heart of what's shaping or nation today. 4 00:00:08,720 --> 00:00:12,520 Speaker 2: We have the great honor to have former Speaker new Gingridge, 5 00:00:12,960 --> 00:00:16,400 Speaker 2: a political titan and also the author of the new 6 00:00:16,440 --> 00:00:21,079 Speaker 2: book Trump's Triumph, America's Greatest Comeback, on the show. We're 7 00:00:21,079 --> 00:00:23,600 Speaker 2: going to get to a lot a lot to unpack 8 00:00:23,800 --> 00:00:28,440 Speaker 2: with Speaker new Gingridge, because basically he's brilliant well impact 9 00:00:28,480 --> 00:00:31,680 Speaker 2: why President Trump remains one of the most misunderstood figures 10 00:00:31,720 --> 00:00:35,440 Speaker 2: in modern politics. We'll also dive into the details of 11 00:00:35,479 --> 00:00:38,760 Speaker 2: the Big Beautiful Bill. We know it's big, but is 12 00:00:38,760 --> 00:00:39,480 Speaker 2: it beautiful? 13 00:00:40,560 --> 00:00:41,760 Speaker 1: Willso tackle some of. 14 00:00:41,800 --> 00:00:45,320 Speaker 2: The pressing issues like the challenges of cutting government spending 15 00:00:46,159 --> 00:00:49,000 Speaker 2: and whether Speaker Johnson a majority leader thoon or moving 16 00:00:49,040 --> 00:00:52,479 Speaker 2: fast enough to deliver results for you, the American people. 17 00:00:53,240 --> 00:00:56,360 Speaker 2: We also talk about Joe Biden's mental decline, How much 18 00:00:56,400 --> 00:00:59,279 Speaker 2: to Congress focus on that, what should they do about it? 19 00:00:59,360 --> 00:01:00,880 Speaker 1: Moving forward? We have hearings. 20 00:01:02,040 --> 00:01:06,039 Speaker 2: We'll also get into the rising political violence on the left. 21 00:01:06,840 --> 00:01:10,240 Speaker 2: Has he seen the political left be so dangerous before? 22 00:01:11,160 --> 00:01:14,280 Speaker 1: What's the impact of that? On the country. 23 00:01:14,480 --> 00:01:17,959 Speaker 2: We'll also dig into the Democrats' struggles and the future 24 00:01:17,959 --> 00:01:22,360 Speaker 2: of the Republican Party and lastly, and maybe most importantly, 25 00:01:22,640 --> 00:01:25,520 Speaker 2: how will history remember President Trump? 26 00:01:26,600 --> 00:01:27,839 Speaker 1: So stay tuned for. 27 00:01:27,800 --> 00:01:32,320 Speaker 2: This very thoughtful conversation with Speaker new Gingrich, who's been 28 00:01:32,440 --> 00:01:34,679 Speaker 2: very generous with his time. It's an honor to have 29 00:01:34,760 --> 00:01:37,480 Speaker 2: him on, and trust me, you're going to love this interview. 30 00:01:43,000 --> 00:01:44,200 Speaker 1: We'll speak her New Gingrich. 31 00:01:44,360 --> 00:01:46,560 Speaker 2: It's always such an honor to have you on the show. 32 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:50,000 Speaker 2: You know, I was telling you before we got started. Obviously, 33 00:01:50,040 --> 00:01:53,160 Speaker 2: there is an influx of information in today's world, and 34 00:01:53,360 --> 00:01:56,360 Speaker 2: most of it's not correct, and most people are letting 35 00:01:56,360 --> 00:01:59,120 Speaker 2: their hair on fire when they shouldn't be. So it's 36 00:01:59,160 --> 00:02:00,680 Speaker 2: always just great to to hear what you have to 37 00:02:00,760 --> 00:02:04,080 Speaker 2: say because obviously you're a student of history, but you've 38 00:02:04,120 --> 00:02:06,960 Speaker 2: also lived it in a very meaningful way, so you 39 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:08,519 Speaker 2: always just provide such great wisdom. 40 00:02:08,560 --> 00:02:10,200 Speaker 1: So I'm really looking forward to this conversation. 41 00:02:11,440 --> 00:02:13,000 Speaker 3: Well that's so I'm delighted to be with you and 42 00:02:14,360 --> 00:02:15,960 Speaker 3: to be with your podcast. I think you do a 43 00:02:15,960 --> 00:02:18,120 Speaker 3: great job and this is a terrific chance to have 44 00:02:18,120 --> 00:02:19,000 Speaker 3: a good conversation. 45 00:02:19,560 --> 00:02:22,360 Speaker 1: Thank you, sir. I really appreciate that, so I wanted 46 00:02:22,360 --> 00:02:22,800 Speaker 1: to ask you. 47 00:02:22,919 --> 00:02:25,120 Speaker 2: Obviously we'll get into your book later, but I also 48 00:02:25,160 --> 00:02:29,120 Speaker 2: wanted to start off with you know, after writing your 49 00:02:29,200 --> 00:02:32,920 Speaker 2: latest book, Trump's Triumph America's Greatest Comeback, why do you 50 00:02:32,960 --> 00:02:37,040 Speaker 2: think President Trump is still so misunderstood by so many? 51 00:02:38,639 --> 00:02:40,120 Speaker 4: I think for two reasons. 52 00:02:40,400 --> 00:02:44,880 Speaker 3: One, they get overwhelmed by the daily noise, including his noise, 53 00:02:45,480 --> 00:02:47,640 Speaker 3: and so it's very hard for normal for people to 54 00:02:47,639 --> 00:02:49,880 Speaker 3: put it all together, so they Part of the reason 55 00:02:49,919 --> 00:02:54,040 Speaker 3: I wrote Trump's Triumph was to give a historic framework 56 00:02:54,080 --> 00:02:55,280 Speaker 3: and wish to think about him. 57 00:02:55,800 --> 00:02:58,200 Speaker 4: And then two, for the people who. 58 00:02:58,000 --> 00:03:03,440 Speaker 3: Don't like him, is so great, they can't think and 59 00:03:03,440 --> 00:03:06,440 Speaker 3: they can't back off and in an objective way try 60 00:03:06,480 --> 00:03:09,960 Speaker 3: to understand why he's so effective despite how much they 61 00:03:10,080 --> 00:03:12,760 Speaker 3: dislike him. And I think that's a very big part 62 00:03:12,840 --> 00:03:15,720 Speaker 3: of what's going on here, that you just don't have 63 00:03:17,560 --> 00:03:21,639 Speaker 3: people who are willing to think beyond the immediate and 64 00:03:22,280 --> 00:03:25,520 Speaker 3: have some sense of what could be done and how 65 00:03:25,520 --> 00:03:28,600 Speaker 3: it could be done. And I find that that Trump. 66 00:03:29,160 --> 00:03:35,760 Speaker 3: If you view Trump strategically, he's pretty understandable. But if 67 00:03:35,760 --> 00:03:38,520 Speaker 3: you just try to follow the day after day tactical 68 00:03:38,560 --> 00:03:42,800 Speaker 3: maneuvering and the sheer noise. It's very hard to sort 69 00:03:42,800 --> 00:03:46,120 Speaker 3: it out. I spend probably three to five hours a 70 00:03:46,200 --> 00:03:49,680 Speaker 3: day trying to understand Trump and trying to understand what's 71 00:03:49,720 --> 00:03:52,400 Speaker 3: going on, not just Trump, but things like the Ukrainian 72 00:03:52,520 --> 00:03:56,800 Speaker 3: extraordinary achievement and taking out the Russian aircraft, or what's 73 00:03:56,800 --> 00:04:01,680 Speaker 3: happening in the markets, or what's happening with new breakthroughs 74 00:04:01,680 --> 00:04:02,920 Speaker 3: in robotics and what have you. 75 00:04:03,080 --> 00:04:04,840 Speaker 4: I mean, all that stuff is just amazing. 76 00:04:06,200 --> 00:04:08,000 Speaker 2: I wonder how much of it do you think is 77 00:04:08,200 --> 00:04:11,640 Speaker 2: because he just doesn't fit any mold, right, Like he 78 00:04:11,760 --> 00:04:13,560 Speaker 2: just creates his whole new paradigm. 79 00:04:13,760 --> 00:04:15,080 Speaker 1: So it's you know what I mean. 80 00:04:15,640 --> 00:04:17,480 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think that's a very big part of it. 81 00:04:18,640 --> 00:04:21,080 Speaker 3: And I find in my own case, because I've been 82 00:04:21,080 --> 00:04:25,880 Speaker 3: around long enough that I have a lot of legacy 83 00:04:25,920 --> 00:04:29,560 Speaker 3: thinking still in my head and I have to sometimes 84 00:04:29,600 --> 00:04:32,880 Speaker 3: back out and reassess things. And frankly, the reporting on 85 00:04:32,960 --> 00:04:36,320 Speaker 3: him is so biased, uh, and the people in the 86 00:04:36,320 --> 00:04:40,280 Speaker 3: print of the propaganda media are so hostile. I mean, 87 00:04:40,320 --> 00:04:47,080 Speaker 3: we went through this this the Taco attack on him 88 00:04:48,400 --> 00:04:51,839 Speaker 3: and the truth. I thought it was amazing because it 89 00:04:51,920 --> 00:04:55,800 Speaker 3: was implying that Trump always caves, but the fact is 90 00:04:55,839 --> 00:05:00,000 Speaker 3: this is a guy who you know, was lied up 91 00:05:00,080 --> 00:05:03,400 Speaker 3: out by the CIA and the FBI, had a serious 92 00:05:03,440 --> 00:05:07,120 Speaker 3: two year investigation by Mulla that proved nothing, was impeached 93 00:05:07,160 --> 00:05:09,520 Speaker 3: twice by the House, with the Senate refusing to take 94 00:05:09,560 --> 00:05:12,960 Speaker 3: it up, had four efforts to put him in jail, 95 00:05:13,400 --> 00:05:17,480 Speaker 3: two assassination attempts, And these guys write about him as 96 00:05:17,480 --> 00:05:22,200 Speaker 3: though he's shallow and soft and confused, when in fact, 97 00:05:22,400 --> 00:05:24,440 Speaker 3: everything we know about him in terms of his historic 98 00:05:24,520 --> 00:05:28,120 Speaker 3: record is that he's very determined, very courageous, has enormous 99 00:05:28,160 --> 00:05:31,240 Speaker 3: levels of energy, and is driving towards change on a 100 00:05:31,320 --> 00:05:37,480 Speaker 3: scale that no president since Franklin Roosevelt comes anywhere close 101 00:05:37,880 --> 00:05:40,560 Speaker 3: to the level of change that Trump is engaged in. 102 00:05:40,960 --> 00:05:43,560 Speaker 3: And if Trump can succeed in the twenty sixth election, 103 00:05:43,640 --> 00:05:46,720 Speaker 3: in the twenty eight election, he will be I think 104 00:05:46,839 --> 00:05:52,200 Speaker 3: the most consequential president since Washington and Lincoln. So he's 105 00:05:52,279 --> 00:05:54,680 Speaker 3: changing the culture, he's changing the government, he's changing the 106 00:05:54,680 --> 00:05:59,440 Speaker 3: politics and creating an entirely new coalition, and people who 107 00:06:00,080 --> 00:06:03,599 Speaker 3: on the left and old time Republicans both find it 108 00:06:03,640 --> 00:06:06,760 Speaker 3: impossible to think about him in a rational, reasonable way. 109 00:06:07,920 --> 00:06:10,440 Speaker 2: What is interesting is, as you're laying out everything that 110 00:06:10,480 --> 00:06:14,000 Speaker 2: he has survived and been able to triumph over per 111 00:06:14,040 --> 00:06:18,080 Speaker 2: your book, it is remark. I mean, is there anyone 112 00:06:18,120 --> 00:06:20,839 Speaker 2: else that could handle all that? I mean I would 113 00:06:20,839 --> 00:06:24,680 Speaker 2: be curled up in the corner crying, like even one 114 00:06:24,680 --> 00:06:26,799 Speaker 2: of those things would probably break me as a human. 115 00:06:27,560 --> 00:06:28,640 Speaker 4: Well, look, I. 116 00:06:28,600 --> 00:06:34,320 Speaker 3: Worked very closely with Reagan, and Reagan was an extraordinary 117 00:06:34,400 --> 00:06:38,240 Speaker 3: leader who ultimately defeated the Soviet Empire and relaunched our 118 00:06:38,240 --> 00:06:41,320 Speaker 3: economy with his three year tax cuts and rebuilt American 119 00:06:41,400 --> 00:06:46,120 Speaker 3: civic morale. But Reagan never had this kind of assault. 120 00:06:47,360 --> 00:06:50,280 Speaker 3: Nixon maybe the closest. And of course, in Nixon's case, 121 00:06:50,279 --> 00:06:53,640 Speaker 3: he tried to operate within the system as opposed to 122 00:06:53,680 --> 00:06:57,240 Speaker 3: fighting back. I mean, he had enough information that he 123 00:06:57,279 --> 00:06:59,320 Speaker 3: could have survived if he was willing to take on 124 00:07:00,040 --> 00:07:02,760 Speaker 3: and fight the entire establishment, but he wasn't because it 125 00:07:02,800 --> 00:07:06,279 Speaker 3: was inconceivable in his generation. So Trump's had a unique 126 00:07:06,360 --> 00:07:09,279 Speaker 3: moment in American history where a movement that began with 127 00:07:09,360 --> 00:07:12,040 Speaker 3: Goldwater and sixty four. And I always tell people you 128 00:07:12,080 --> 00:07:15,160 Speaker 3: can go on YouTube and you can find Ronald Reagan's 129 00:07:15,360 --> 00:07:18,440 Speaker 3: a time for choosing a speech he made on behalf 130 00:07:18,440 --> 00:07:20,640 Speaker 3: of Goldwater in October of sixty four. It's called a 131 00:07:20,680 --> 00:07:25,360 Speaker 3: time for choosing. It is still totally relevant today. And 132 00:07:25,800 --> 00:07:29,200 Speaker 3: this movement began growing and growing and growing. It was 133 00:07:29,240 --> 00:07:32,000 Speaker 3: the key reason we were able to succeed with the 134 00:07:32,040 --> 00:07:35,400 Speaker 3: Contract of America, which was pure Reaganism, in winning the 135 00:07:35,400 --> 00:07:38,520 Speaker 3: first majority for the House Republicans in forty years and 136 00:07:38,600 --> 00:07:42,680 Speaker 3: the first re elected majority since nineteen twenty eight, and 137 00:07:42,800 --> 00:07:45,960 Speaker 3: changed the whole balance of power in Washington. Before we 138 00:07:46,000 --> 00:07:48,720 Speaker 3: took over, there had been sixty years of Democrats and 139 00:07:48,800 --> 00:07:51,600 Speaker 3: four years of Republicans in charge of the House. After 140 00:07:51,640 --> 00:07:54,520 Speaker 3: we won, it's been twenty two years of Republicans in 141 00:07:54,560 --> 00:07:58,040 Speaker 3: eight years of Democrats, a huge decisive change that was 142 00:07:58,800 --> 00:08:01,720 Speaker 3: coming from the grassroots, and the grassroots came back with 143 00:08:01,760 --> 00:08:05,280 Speaker 3: the Tea Party movement, and then Trump really is And 144 00:08:05,400 --> 00:08:07,679 Speaker 3: this is why the title of my book is Trump's 145 00:08:07,680 --> 00:08:12,160 Speaker 3: Triumph and America's Greatest Comeback, because it's the combination of 146 00:08:12,200 --> 00:08:16,120 Speaker 3: the movement and the man that made this this experience possible. 147 00:08:16,440 --> 00:08:18,600 Speaker 3: And it's the combination of the energy of the movement 148 00:08:18,640 --> 00:08:21,480 Speaker 3: and the man. And I know of no political leader 149 00:08:21,720 --> 00:08:24,880 Speaker 3: who has the sheer energy that Donald Trump has and 150 00:08:24,920 --> 00:08:27,960 Speaker 3: the willingness to get up every day works seven days 151 00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:32,079 Speaker 3: a week and consistently move both the United States and 152 00:08:32,120 --> 00:08:34,920 Speaker 3: the world in a direction very different from where it 153 00:08:34,960 --> 00:08:37,680 Speaker 3: was going under the Obama Biden system. 154 00:08:38,559 --> 00:08:40,640 Speaker 1: What do you think makes him so tough? 155 00:08:41,640 --> 00:08:44,480 Speaker 2: You know, the man you've also you know, lived through 156 00:08:44,960 --> 00:08:47,280 Speaker 2: just you know, monumental and key moments in history. 157 00:08:48,559 --> 00:08:50,120 Speaker 1: What makes him so tough. 158 00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:53,800 Speaker 4: Moving moving from Queens to Manhattan. 159 00:08:54,240 --> 00:08:58,280 Speaker 3: Yeah, because when he got to Manhattan, he was never 160 00:08:58,400 --> 00:09:02,640 Speaker 3: accepted because he was clearly a Queen's kind of middle class, 161 00:09:03,040 --> 00:09:06,439 Speaker 3: you know, wealthy but not us, and the elites never 162 00:09:07,080 --> 00:09:10,080 Speaker 3: let him in. And I think he decided at some point. 163 00:09:10,200 --> 00:09:13,800 Speaker 3: I mean I've never actually talked about it in fascinating conversation, 164 00:09:14,280 --> 00:09:16,560 Speaker 3: but there was some point I think in his twenties 165 00:09:17,360 --> 00:09:19,640 Speaker 3: when he decided, look, you know, if you guys aren't 166 00:09:19,640 --> 00:09:21,560 Speaker 3: going to let me in your club, I'm just going 167 00:09:21,640 --> 00:09:25,080 Speaker 3: to build my own club. And he just took him along. 168 00:09:25,640 --> 00:09:28,920 Speaker 3: He took him on when one of the reasons he 169 00:09:29,000 --> 00:09:32,800 Speaker 3: counterpunches so aggressively is he learned from page six that 170 00:09:32,880 --> 00:09:34,960 Speaker 3: when they attacked him, he had to attack back within 171 00:09:35,000 --> 00:09:38,640 Speaker 3: twelve hours. And so all of a sudden, here you 172 00:09:38,679 --> 00:09:45,520 Speaker 3: have this guy who is totally outside the cultural elite system, growing, 173 00:09:45,720 --> 00:09:49,720 Speaker 3: getting wealthy, becoming famous, and in a sense, creating his 174 00:09:49,800 --> 00:09:56,080 Speaker 3: own support system. And you know, I mean people tend 175 00:09:56,080 --> 00:09:59,160 Speaker 3: to forget. He did thirteen years of The Apprentice, so 176 00:09:59,200 --> 00:10:02,520 Speaker 3: here he is on on national television for thirteenth straight years. 177 00:10:03,200 --> 00:10:07,400 Speaker 3: He ran the Miss Universe contest, and he did things 178 00:10:07,480 --> 00:10:11,719 Speaker 3: like one of the great events, which was saving the 179 00:10:12,080 --> 00:10:15,720 Speaker 3: woman's skating rink. The New York City had spent six 180 00:10:15,800 --> 00:10:19,920 Speaker 3: years and thirteen million dollars and could not get the 181 00:10:20,000 --> 00:10:23,840 Speaker 3: rink to make ice. And Trump's apartment looked out over 182 00:10:23,880 --> 00:10:27,520 Speaker 3: the rink, and he finally got so terrible watching them 183 00:10:27,600 --> 00:10:30,840 Speaker 3: fail that he publicly said, you give me the project, 184 00:10:30,840 --> 00:10:33,199 Speaker 3: give me three million dollars, and in six months, I'll 185 00:10:33,240 --> 00:10:36,400 Speaker 3: fix it. Well, when the politicians did not want him 186 00:10:36,400 --> 00:10:39,800 Speaker 3: to prove how incompetent the bureaucracy was, but public pressure 187 00:10:40,280 --> 00:10:41,240 Speaker 3: forced them to turn. 188 00:10:41,120 --> 00:10:41,720 Speaker 4: It over to him. 189 00:10:42,000 --> 00:10:45,120 Speaker 3: He solved it in four months, came in twenty five 190 00:10:45,160 --> 00:10:49,760 Speaker 3: percent under budget. So he's spending, you know, about two 191 00:10:49,760 --> 00:10:52,160 Speaker 3: and a half million on a project that for six 192 00:10:52,200 --> 00:10:53,920 Speaker 3: million the city couldn't solve. 193 00:10:54,880 --> 00:10:57,680 Speaker 4: And his book, The. 194 00:10:57,960 --> 00:10:59,640 Speaker 3: Art of the Deal, he has this great line where 195 00:10:59,640 --> 00:11:03,560 Speaker 3: he says, you know, I looked at making ice. They'd 196 00:11:03,640 --> 00:11:06,640 Speaker 3: hired a firm from Florida to try to make ice, 197 00:11:07,559 --> 00:11:09,640 Speaker 3: and I thought, and they said. I thought to myself, 198 00:11:10,000 --> 00:11:12,920 Speaker 3: who's really good at making ice? And I thought hockey. 199 00:11:13,120 --> 00:11:16,040 Speaker 3: And he went to the National Hockey League and he said, 200 00:11:16,280 --> 00:11:19,280 Speaker 3: who's the best ice making company? And they said, this 201 00:11:19,440 --> 00:11:22,400 Speaker 3: is firm in Montreal. So he calls them and they 202 00:11:22,400 --> 00:11:24,240 Speaker 3: come down and they look at the project and they say, 203 00:11:24,520 --> 00:11:25,760 Speaker 3: this is really embarrassing. 204 00:11:26,200 --> 00:11:27,640 Speaker 4: This is so easy to solve. 205 00:11:28,440 --> 00:11:31,000 Speaker 3: And so he said later on, he said it was 206 00:11:31,080 --> 00:11:33,600 Speaker 3: just common sense and good management. He said, it wasn't 207 00:11:33,640 --> 00:11:38,119 Speaker 3: a miracle. But he's doing all this as an outsider. 208 00:11:38,200 --> 00:11:39,960 Speaker 3: So if you're you know, if you're part of the 209 00:11:40,400 --> 00:11:44,199 Speaker 3: investment class and City Bank, and you know the Metropolitan 210 00:11:44,920 --> 00:11:50,200 Speaker 3: Museum and the the the Opera, you know, and you're 211 00:11:50,320 --> 00:11:54,959 Speaker 3: you're in the elites, who is this outsider doing all 212 00:11:55,040 --> 00:11:59,719 Speaker 3: this stuff? And The New York Times consistently disliked him 213 00:12:00,720 --> 00:12:04,800 Speaker 3: when he readid Trump Tower. He originally wanted to keep 214 00:12:04,840 --> 00:12:07,360 Speaker 3: the art deco front, and then the Times loved it 215 00:12:07,440 --> 00:12:10,800 Speaker 3: and praised him. And then his engineer said it's going 216 00:12:10,840 --> 00:12:13,080 Speaker 3: to cost three million dollars, and he said he didn't 217 00:12:13,080 --> 00:12:16,040 Speaker 3: want to keep it that butt, so they decided they 218 00:12:16,080 --> 00:12:18,800 Speaker 3: weren't going to keep the Art deco front. And for 219 00:12:18,880 --> 00:12:21,839 Speaker 3: three days, the New York Times attacked him. And what 220 00:12:21,960 --> 00:12:26,200 Speaker 3: he said he learned from that was that being attacked 221 00:12:26,720 --> 00:12:29,720 Speaker 3: actually sent a signal that he was building condos, and 222 00:12:29,840 --> 00:12:32,679 Speaker 3: he had dozens and dozens of people calling to say 223 00:12:32,679 --> 00:12:35,560 Speaker 3: if they could buy a condo, and he decided, you know, 224 00:12:35,640 --> 00:12:38,640 Speaker 3: any news helps, just doesn't matter, good or bad. Any 225 00:12:38,679 --> 00:12:42,160 Speaker 3: news helps, And that's the base of the rise of 226 00:12:42,200 --> 00:12:42,840 Speaker 3: Donald Trump. 227 00:12:43,679 --> 00:12:46,920 Speaker 2: You know, it's interesting because especially the ice skating, how 228 00:12:46,920 --> 00:12:48,920 Speaker 2: you laid the rank, how you lay that out, because 229 00:12:49,800 --> 00:12:51,880 Speaker 2: he is so different, right, Like, he just comes up 230 00:12:51,920 --> 00:12:54,880 Speaker 2: with these ideas and then oftentimes they're criticized, but then 231 00:12:54,880 --> 00:12:56,400 Speaker 2: when you really think about it, you're like, actually, it's 232 00:12:56,440 --> 00:12:56,960 Speaker 2: really smart. 233 00:12:57,000 --> 00:12:58,080 Speaker 1: Right, He's a problem solver. 234 00:12:58,200 --> 00:13:01,560 Speaker 2: He's taking a totally different lens to government, which is 235 00:13:01,600 --> 00:13:05,080 Speaker 2: healthy because clearly things aren't working out so great, and 236 00:13:05,400 --> 00:13:08,680 Speaker 2: even on tariffs. Right, it's something that we haven't done 237 00:13:09,040 --> 00:13:12,160 Speaker 2: in modern history as much, and it is sort of 238 00:13:12,160 --> 00:13:15,760 Speaker 2: an outside the box idea. Do you think are these 239 00:13:15,800 --> 00:13:18,360 Speaker 2: turffs a good idea or are we just kind of 240 00:13:18,400 --> 00:13:20,600 Speaker 2: like not catching up with where he is on it, 241 00:13:20,880 --> 00:13:23,719 Speaker 2: and the media is just not understanding or I guess, 242 00:13:23,760 --> 00:13:25,400 Speaker 2: how do you assess all of that well? 243 00:13:25,480 --> 00:13:28,679 Speaker 3: And to take the example of tariffs, he talked about 244 00:13:28,679 --> 00:13:30,000 Speaker 3: tariffs in the nineteen eighties. 245 00:13:30,600 --> 00:13:31,520 Speaker 4: He said America is. 246 00:13:31,480 --> 00:13:33,880 Speaker 3: Getting ripped off the way of these really bad deals 247 00:13:34,240 --> 00:13:36,840 Speaker 3: and that other countries were exploiting us and taking advantage 248 00:13:36,880 --> 00:13:37,160 Speaker 3: of us. 249 00:13:37,360 --> 00:13:39,199 Speaker 4: So it's not like it's new. 250 00:13:39,800 --> 00:13:43,319 Speaker 3: And I think he began to look at the work 251 00:13:43,360 --> 00:13:47,640 Speaker 3: of William McKinley, who had passed the Great terr Effact 252 00:13:48,080 --> 00:13:52,880 Speaker 3: and who ran for President I and McKinley's approach. 253 00:13:54,040 --> 00:13:57,040 Speaker 4: Was to have high barriers. 254 00:13:56,520 --> 00:14:02,000 Speaker 3: To importing, create the biggest possible American manufacturing base, have 255 00:14:02,280 --> 00:14:06,000 Speaker 3: very high labor payments. We had the best paid workers 256 00:14:06,000 --> 00:14:08,120 Speaker 3: in the world. And that was a mind It was 257 00:14:08,120 --> 00:14:10,679 Speaker 3: a clear model of how to do things. And so 258 00:14:10,760 --> 00:14:13,719 Speaker 3: Trump has been enamored. I think of two things. One 259 00:14:13,880 --> 00:14:15,920 Speaker 3: is that he can get foreigners to pay for the 260 00:14:16,000 --> 00:14:18,520 Speaker 3: right to come and sell in America, and the other 261 00:14:18,679 --> 00:14:21,400 Speaker 3: is that is the largest market in the world. He 262 00:14:21,480 --> 00:14:25,480 Speaker 3: has enormous leverage in negotiating, and he likes making deals, 263 00:14:25,880 --> 00:14:29,360 Speaker 3: and the terrified allows him to go country by country, 264 00:14:29,360 --> 00:14:33,520 Speaker 3: making deals that at the margin improve the American economy. 265 00:14:33,560 --> 00:14:35,440 Speaker 3: And I think you're going to see that by the 266 00:14:35,480 --> 00:14:38,360 Speaker 3: time he's done, he will have had a very substantial 267 00:14:38,400 --> 00:14:42,000 Speaker 3: increase in revenue paid for by foreigners, and he will 268 00:14:42,040 --> 00:14:46,000 Speaker 3: have rebuilt an American industrial base on a scale that 269 00:14:46,160 --> 00:14:49,240 Speaker 3: people would have thought was impossible. And you saw some 270 00:14:49,320 --> 00:14:52,520 Speaker 3: of this when he went to Saudi Arabia and gut 271 00:14:52,560 --> 00:14:55,160 Speaker 3: her in the Loe and four days he comes back 272 00:14:55,200 --> 00:14:59,200 Speaker 3: with literally a trillion dollars, not a billion, a trillion 273 00:14:59,280 --> 00:15:04,280 Speaker 3: dollars sales and a trillion dollars in investment commitments. While 274 00:15:04,320 --> 00:15:06,440 Speaker 3: you do that, and you're going to really have I 275 00:15:06,480 --> 00:15:08,480 Speaker 3: think by next summer you're going to have a Trump 276 00:15:08,560 --> 00:15:10,600 Speaker 3: economic boom that people will be amazed by. 277 00:15:11,440 --> 00:15:14,240 Speaker 2: And I liked the line in his speech in Saudi 278 00:15:14,280 --> 00:15:16,920 Speaker 2: Arabia about how the future of the region was commerce, 279 00:15:17,000 --> 00:15:17,640 Speaker 2: not chaos. 280 00:15:18,560 --> 00:15:20,600 Speaker 4: Well exactly, I mean, and he has a vision. 281 00:15:21,680 --> 00:15:26,320 Speaker 3: And it occurred to me, actually, and I have not 282 00:15:26,360 --> 00:15:28,720 Speaker 3: ever talked him about it, but instead of talking about 283 00:15:28,720 --> 00:15:32,560 Speaker 3: turning Gaza into a riviera, he should have talked about 284 00:15:32,560 --> 00:15:36,800 Speaker 3: turning Gaza into Dubai. I mean, here's this extraordinary city 285 00:15:36,880 --> 00:15:38,960 Speaker 3: in the middle of the of the Persian Gulf with 286 00:15:39,080 --> 00:15:43,440 Speaker 3: the highest hotel willing in the world and proof that 287 00:15:43,520 --> 00:15:46,160 Speaker 3: you can be an Arab and have a very modern, 288 00:15:46,280 --> 00:15:49,120 Speaker 3: very commercial society. Killis and I were there a few 289 00:15:49,200 --> 00:15:52,080 Speaker 3: years ago. We went to mass with about eight hundred people, 290 00:15:52,440 --> 00:15:56,360 Speaker 3: most of them from India and from the Philippines, and 291 00:15:56,400 --> 00:15:59,320 Speaker 3: they were practicing Catholicism right in the middle of a 292 00:15:59,400 --> 00:16:02,640 Speaker 3: Muslim country. Because it's a it's a very modern, very open, 293 00:16:02,760 --> 00:16:04,320 Speaker 3: very commercially oriented country. 294 00:16:04,480 --> 00:16:06,400 Speaker 2: We've got to take a quick commercial break more with 295 00:16:06,480 --> 00:16:11,640 Speaker 2: speaker new Gingrich. On the other side, you know, the 296 00:16:11,680 --> 00:16:13,640 Speaker 2: Democrat Party has been struggling. 297 00:16:14,400 --> 00:16:16,560 Speaker 1: You know, they've experienced low approval ratings. 298 00:16:16,600 --> 00:16:18,680 Speaker 2: They're spending all this money trying to figure out men, 299 00:16:18,760 --> 00:16:21,200 Speaker 2: which is like, if you're working that hard, then clearly 300 00:16:21,240 --> 00:16:23,280 Speaker 2: you don't get you know, they try to figure out 301 00:16:23,960 --> 00:16:24,960 Speaker 2: a group of voters. 302 00:16:26,400 --> 00:16:28,040 Speaker 1: Do you think the reason they're struggling so. 303 00:16:28,120 --> 00:16:30,880 Speaker 2: Much is the basis of the conversation we're having so 304 00:16:31,000 --> 00:16:34,040 Speaker 2: much or we've had so far that he's just so different, 305 00:16:34,280 --> 00:16:36,440 Speaker 2: you know, and so they don't know how to respond 306 00:16:37,080 --> 00:16:37,760 Speaker 2: to that. 307 00:16:38,800 --> 00:16:39,840 Speaker 1: Why do you think they're struggling? 308 00:16:40,200 --> 00:16:43,880 Speaker 3: Look, I think the core problem of the Democratic party 309 00:16:44,880 --> 00:16:48,880 Speaker 3: is that they have been taken over by a left wing, 310 00:16:49,000 --> 00:16:56,880 Speaker 3: anti American, anti male, anti white, anti business ideology captured 311 00:16:56,880 --> 00:17:00,480 Speaker 3: by somebody like AOC. And if you look at their 312 00:17:00,480 --> 00:17:06,920 Speaker 3: more radical members, their views are frankly nuts and they 313 00:17:06,920 --> 00:17:08,680 Speaker 3: believe them. I mean they get in rooms and talk 314 00:17:08,720 --> 00:17:12,080 Speaker 3: to each other and they believe all this stuff. So 315 00:17:12,680 --> 00:17:15,199 Speaker 3: it's not actually Trump. The rise of Trump is in 316 00:17:15,240 --> 00:17:18,840 Speaker 3: part being fueled by people who are so turned off. Mean, 317 00:17:18,880 --> 00:17:22,480 Speaker 3: Trump had the highest vote among Hispanics of any Republican 318 00:17:22,480 --> 00:17:25,720 Speaker 3: in history. He had the highest vote among African American 319 00:17:25,760 --> 00:17:29,600 Speaker 3: males of any Republican since Dwight Eisenhower in the nineteen fifties. 320 00:17:30,160 --> 00:17:33,040 Speaker 3: And it's partly because they're being driven away by a 321 00:17:33,080 --> 00:17:36,800 Speaker 3: Democratic party which is dedicated to crazy values. I mean, 322 00:17:37,000 --> 00:17:39,800 Speaker 3: if you look around the country, for example, the number 323 00:17:39,800 --> 00:17:43,720 Speaker 3: of Democratic cities and state governments that are sanctuary cities 324 00:17:44,000 --> 00:17:46,720 Speaker 3: for illegal criminals. I mean, it's one thing to say 325 00:17:46,920 --> 00:17:49,000 Speaker 3: they want to be sanctuaries for people who are here 326 00:17:49,040 --> 00:17:53,000 Speaker 3: illegally but have not committed crimes, but they're sanctuary cities 327 00:17:53,200 --> 00:17:57,720 Speaker 3: for murderers and rapists and armed robbers. That's a pretty 328 00:17:57,720 --> 00:17:58,879 Speaker 3: crazy value system. 329 00:18:00,840 --> 00:18:03,000 Speaker 1: So looking at the midterms. 330 00:18:03,359 --> 00:18:05,439 Speaker 2: I guess one thing I am a little bit concerned 331 00:18:05,440 --> 00:18:08,320 Speaker 2: about is, you know, President Trump's so unique and he's 332 00:18:08,320 --> 00:18:11,440 Speaker 2: been able to build this coalition that's so different transform 333 00:18:11,520 --> 00:18:15,879 Speaker 2: the Republican Party. But I wonder if Republicans can carry 334 00:18:15,880 --> 00:18:17,560 Speaker 2: it on. And I just I wonder how they'll do 335 00:18:17,800 --> 00:18:20,040 Speaker 2: in the midterms without I mean, even though President Trump's 336 00:18:20,040 --> 00:18:21,439 Speaker 2: in office, he's not on the ballot. 337 00:18:23,480 --> 00:18:25,280 Speaker 4: He had look, the. 338 00:18:25,160 --> 00:18:29,280 Speaker 3: Only person who can maximize the Republican chance of winning 339 00:18:29,280 --> 00:18:31,439 Speaker 3: the midterms is Donald J. 340 00:18:31,520 --> 00:18:31,840 Speaker 4: Trump. 341 00:18:32,640 --> 00:18:36,679 Speaker 3: He has to make the midterms a vote in favor 342 00:18:36,720 --> 00:18:40,560 Speaker 3: of trump Ism and a vote for President Trump. And 343 00:18:40,600 --> 00:18:43,280 Speaker 3: the marginal House members are going to be re elected 344 00:18:43,359 --> 00:18:44,720 Speaker 3: if President. 345 00:18:44,400 --> 00:18:45,719 Speaker 4: Trump can turn out the vote. 346 00:18:46,560 --> 00:18:51,359 Speaker 3: But we've got I think thirteen Democrat Democrats in the 347 00:18:51,440 --> 00:18:54,520 Speaker 3: seats that Trump carried and another twenty one Democrats and 348 00:18:54,560 --> 00:18:59,159 Speaker 3: seats that Trump got within twenty within five percent, And 349 00:18:59,200 --> 00:19:01,959 Speaker 3: if he can turn out the vote, We've had this unique, 350 00:19:02,119 --> 00:19:05,520 Speaker 3: extraordinary transition. Where in the old days, it was the 351 00:19:05,560 --> 00:19:08,520 Speaker 3: Democrats who had trouble in off years because their voter 352 00:19:08,600 --> 00:19:10,560 Speaker 3: base included a lot of people who would only vote 353 00:19:10,560 --> 00:19:11,000 Speaker 3: for president. 354 00:19:11,600 --> 00:19:12,920 Speaker 4: Now we've switched. 355 00:19:13,200 --> 00:19:16,040 Speaker 3: We're the Party of working Americans, and we're the party 356 00:19:16,080 --> 00:19:19,560 Speaker 3: of young people in a way that was unthinkable ten 357 00:19:19,640 --> 00:19:22,000 Speaker 3: years ago, and so we now have to worry about 358 00:19:22,160 --> 00:19:24,520 Speaker 3: turning out the vote among people who aren't in the 359 00:19:24,560 --> 00:19:26,960 Speaker 3: habit of voting in off yr elections. And I think 360 00:19:26,960 --> 00:19:30,000 Speaker 3: the only way to do that is to an affect psychologically. 361 00:19:30,359 --> 00:19:34,080 Speaker 3: Put Trump on the ballot in every single campaign and 362 00:19:34,200 --> 00:19:37,160 Speaker 3: have the Trump voters decide that they have to vote 363 00:19:37,200 --> 00:19:40,720 Speaker 3: because it's about whether or not the Trump mega revolution 364 00:19:40,880 --> 00:19:44,520 Speaker 3: continues or whether the Democrats take control and do everything 365 00:19:44,600 --> 00:19:46,719 Speaker 3: they can to block it for two years. If that 366 00:19:46,760 --> 00:19:49,960 Speaker 3: gets driven through and that's the choice in election day, 367 00:19:50,240 --> 00:19:52,760 Speaker 3: then I think, in fact, we'll have a big enough 368 00:19:52,760 --> 00:19:53,840 Speaker 3: turnout to win the election. 369 00:19:54,560 --> 00:19:57,040 Speaker 2: What it's sort of ironic, because the media and the 370 00:19:57,080 --> 00:19:59,359 Speaker 2: Democrats have tried to lead throughout the year, is that 371 00:19:59,400 --> 00:20:03,040 Speaker 2: Trump's talk, but in fact, like he's the reason people 372 00:20:03,119 --> 00:20:05,399 Speaker 2: are turning out in support of the Republican Party, Like 373 00:20:05,440 --> 00:20:07,240 Speaker 2: he's the reason why we have the House, He's the 374 00:20:07,280 --> 00:20:09,960 Speaker 2: reason we have the Senate. You know, no one else 375 00:20:09,960 --> 00:20:11,600 Speaker 2: would have been able to win the popular vote, but 376 00:20:12,040 --> 00:20:16,800 Speaker 2: President Trump heading into twenty twenty eight, do you see 377 00:20:16,800 --> 00:20:20,640 Speaker 2: anyone who is able to keep that America first coalition 378 00:20:20,760 --> 00:20:23,560 Speaker 2: together and to carry on the mantle or I guess 379 00:20:23,600 --> 00:20:28,080 Speaker 2: what happens to the Republican Party beyond this term and 380 00:20:28,119 --> 00:20:29,199 Speaker 2: beyond President Trump. 381 00:20:29,400 --> 00:20:33,840 Speaker 3: Well, I think President Trump picked JD. Fans, who was 382 00:20:33,880 --> 00:20:37,600 Speaker 3: actually a year younger than Richard Nixon when Dwight Eisenewer 383 00:20:37,600 --> 00:20:40,240 Speaker 3: picked him in nineteen fifty two. So Vance is now 384 00:20:40,240 --> 00:20:43,160 Speaker 3: the youngest vice president of American history. And I think 385 00:20:43,200 --> 00:20:45,399 Speaker 3: Trump picked him because he thought he was the most 386 00:20:45,480 --> 00:20:50,080 Speaker 3: likely person to carry on the Maga tradition. And I think, frankly, 387 00:20:50,080 --> 00:20:53,840 Speaker 3: if Trump is successful, it will be almost inevitable that 388 00:20:53,960 --> 00:20:57,760 Speaker 3: JD will become the nominee because he will have stood 389 00:20:57,800 --> 00:21:00,280 Speaker 3: next to Trump for four years. I watched them one 390 00:21:00,359 --> 00:21:04,359 Speaker 3: Memorial Day at Arlington National Cemetery as a team, and 391 00:21:04,400 --> 00:21:08,479 Speaker 3: you could just sense that the JD was the logical, younger, 392 00:21:08,600 --> 00:21:13,040 Speaker 3: next generation version of Trump, and that he and his 393 00:21:13,080 --> 00:21:16,000 Speaker 3: wife are going to be very attractive people who I 394 00:21:16,000 --> 00:21:19,960 Speaker 3: think will have probably a ninety percent likelihood of being 395 00:21:19,960 --> 00:21:24,040 Speaker 3: the Republican nominee and probably a much better than even 396 00:21:24,119 --> 00:21:25,200 Speaker 3: chance of being the president. 397 00:21:26,000 --> 00:21:29,000 Speaker 2: He does seem to really respect him, even just you 398 00:21:29,040 --> 00:21:31,560 Speaker 2: know the way in which he talks about him. He 399 00:21:31,600 --> 00:21:33,440 Speaker 2: does seem to have President Trump does seem to have 400 00:21:33,480 --> 00:21:34,800 Speaker 2: a lot of respect for. 401 00:21:36,080 --> 00:21:37,040 Speaker 1: The vice president. 402 00:21:38,600 --> 00:21:40,680 Speaker 2: Obviously, there's a lot of conversation right now about the big, 403 00:21:40,720 --> 00:21:44,919 Speaker 2: beautiful bill. Obviously everyone's in agreement that it's big, but 404 00:21:45,280 --> 00:21:45,960 Speaker 2: is it beautiful? 405 00:21:47,400 --> 00:21:53,040 Speaker 3: Well, given the nature of the American Constitution and the 406 00:21:53,119 --> 00:21:56,160 Speaker 3: legislative process, it's very hard to be beautiful while they're 407 00:21:56,200 --> 00:21:59,200 Speaker 3: going through the process. Somebody once said that you don't 408 00:21:59,200 --> 00:22:03,200 Speaker 3: want to watch making either sausage or laws, because both 409 00:22:03,200 --> 00:22:06,399 Speaker 3: of them are pretty hard difficult. I think in the 410 00:22:06,560 --> 00:22:09,399 Speaker 3: end we will get a bill because the President will 411 00:22:10,480 --> 00:22:12,560 Speaker 3: intervene and listen to people and find a way to 412 00:22:12,600 --> 00:22:15,520 Speaker 3: bring people together. We will only get the bill because 413 00:22:15,560 --> 00:22:19,639 Speaker 3: of Trump. And it's tricky because there are things the 414 00:22:19,720 --> 00:22:22,399 Speaker 3: Senators want that can will not pass the House, and 415 00:22:22,440 --> 00:22:24,240 Speaker 3: there are things that House members want that will not 416 00:22:24,320 --> 00:22:27,240 Speaker 3: pass the Senate. And getting everybody in the same room 417 00:22:27,280 --> 00:22:30,520 Speaker 3: to understand this is the most you can get, but 418 00:22:30,640 --> 00:22:33,640 Speaker 3: it beats not getting anything is going to take time, 419 00:22:33,680 --> 00:22:36,359 Speaker 3: and people have to frankly get worn down by the 420 00:22:36,359 --> 00:22:39,800 Speaker 3: process and finally come to a decision. Yeah, I've gotten 421 00:22:39,840 --> 00:22:43,000 Speaker 3: all I can get, and I'm gonna vote yes. Because 422 00:22:43,960 --> 00:22:46,919 Speaker 3: for this bill to fail would be unthinkable, and therefore 423 00:22:46,920 --> 00:22:48,960 Speaker 3: they've got to find you know, it's not there yet, 424 00:22:49,119 --> 00:22:50,600 Speaker 3: but they've got to find a way to get to 425 00:22:50,640 --> 00:22:53,359 Speaker 3: a yes that will pass both the House and the Senate. 426 00:22:53,720 --> 00:22:56,399 Speaker 3: I think Senator Thune is doing a very good job 427 00:22:56,760 --> 00:22:59,120 Speaker 3: as the majority leader in the Senate, and I think 428 00:22:59,160 --> 00:23:03,760 Speaker 3: that Mike Johnson's doing an astonishing job as the Speaker 429 00:23:03,760 --> 00:23:07,600 Speaker 3: of the House. And with Trump's leadership, the three of them, 430 00:23:07,920 --> 00:23:10,440 Speaker 3: I think will eventually get to a bill that will pass. 431 00:23:11,040 --> 00:23:13,359 Speaker 2: You know, any spearhead of this process before, when you 432 00:23:13,400 --> 00:23:17,239 Speaker 2: were speaker. Why is it so hard for Congress to 433 00:23:17,240 --> 00:23:18,040 Speaker 2: cut spending? 434 00:23:19,160 --> 00:23:22,320 Speaker 3: Well, because everybody who wants the money is excited and 435 00:23:22,359 --> 00:23:25,280 Speaker 3: aroused and angry, and everybody who would like to balance 436 00:23:25,280 --> 00:23:29,159 Speaker 3: the budget is soft and passive and not going to 437 00:23:29,160 --> 00:23:32,000 Speaker 3: get in a fight. And I found that this is 438 00:23:32,040 --> 00:23:35,320 Speaker 3: part of my advice to fiscal conservatives. There are two 439 00:23:35,359 --> 00:23:38,760 Speaker 3: big things I would advise them to do. First, resurrect 440 00:23:38,760 --> 00:23:41,760 Speaker 3: the balance budget as the goal, because if the goal 441 00:23:41,840 --> 00:23:46,119 Speaker 3: is balancing the budget, people will tolerate spending cuts dramatically better. 442 00:23:46,840 --> 00:23:49,960 Speaker 3: After if you're just running a smaller deficit, Why can't 443 00:23:49,960 --> 00:23:53,080 Speaker 3: I have mine because it's going to be a deficit anyway. 444 00:23:53,520 --> 00:23:55,960 Speaker 3: But if the goal is a balance budget, then people 445 00:23:55,960 --> 00:24:00,320 Speaker 3: will tolerate cuts that they will not tolerate in a 446 00:24:00,320 --> 00:24:04,400 Speaker 3: period of deficits. Second, I think you have to make 447 00:24:04,440 --> 00:24:08,280 Speaker 3: America healthy again as a core goal, because if people 448 00:24:08,359 --> 00:24:11,680 Speaker 3: are healthy and don't need health care, then the cost 449 00:24:11,720 --> 00:24:14,919 Speaker 3: of health care will drop dramatically, not because you're cutting it, 450 00:24:15,200 --> 00:24:17,960 Speaker 3: but because people are healthier. And I think you can 451 00:24:18,000 --> 00:24:21,879 Speaker 3: get probably four percent of the gross domestic product just 452 00:24:21,960 --> 00:24:26,760 Speaker 3: by implementing making Americans healthy again, and that four percent 453 00:24:26,800 --> 00:24:28,919 Speaker 3: is enough basically to get you to a balanced budget. 454 00:24:30,119 --> 00:24:34,239 Speaker 2: How would you assess President Trump's job so far? How 455 00:24:34,280 --> 00:24:36,520 Speaker 2: do you think he's doing in this term and how 456 00:24:36,560 --> 00:24:38,919 Speaker 2: would you sort of compare that to his first term. 457 00:24:39,720 --> 00:24:42,480 Speaker 3: Well, I think in scale of achievement, it's an a plus. 458 00:24:43,600 --> 00:24:45,720 Speaker 3: As I've said earlier, he currently is on a path 459 00:24:46,400 --> 00:24:49,200 Speaker 3: to be far and away the biggest change agent since FDR, 460 00:24:49,600 --> 00:24:51,720 Speaker 3: and if he can win in twenty six and twenty eight, 461 00:24:51,760 --> 00:24:54,600 Speaker 3: he will have been an even bigger change agent I 462 00:24:54,600 --> 00:25:01,359 Speaker 3: think than FDR. But I would also say that i'd 463 00:25:01,359 --> 00:25:03,600 Speaker 3: probably give him an a minus for style. I mean, 464 00:25:03,800 --> 00:25:06,199 Speaker 3: he gets involved in fights, he doesn't need, and he 465 00:25:06,240 --> 00:25:07,400 Speaker 3: gets involved. 466 00:25:06,960 --> 00:25:09,520 Speaker 1: In it is entertaining, though, I mean, I. 467 00:25:09,480 --> 00:25:13,480 Speaker 4: Mean it's entertaining, but it's not necessarily helpful. Yeah. 468 00:25:13,680 --> 00:25:18,199 Speaker 3: So, but he's still you know, he's he's simply an 469 00:25:18,200 --> 00:25:21,560 Speaker 3: extraordinary person. And that's why when I wrote Trump's Tiumph 470 00:25:21,560 --> 00:25:23,480 Speaker 3: and we began in October because I was sure. 471 00:25:23,280 --> 00:25:23,879 Speaker 4: He was going to win. 472 00:25:25,920 --> 00:25:30,040 Speaker 3: It's it's hard to imagine anybody else having the endurance 473 00:25:30,080 --> 00:25:33,399 Speaker 3: and the courage and the energy and frankly the intelligence. 474 00:25:33,400 --> 00:25:36,240 Speaker 3: I mean, this is a very very smart guy. And 475 00:25:37,400 --> 00:25:40,439 Speaker 3: Left made a huge mistake by rigging the election in 476 00:25:40,520 --> 00:25:43,359 Speaker 3: twenty and giving him four years in the wilderness to 477 00:25:43,400 --> 00:25:45,840 Speaker 3: think about things and to put together what he really 478 00:25:45,920 --> 00:25:47,840 Speaker 3: wants to accomplish. And I think he's going to be 479 00:25:48,200 --> 00:25:49,440 Speaker 3: extraordinarily effective. 480 00:25:50,119 --> 00:25:50,600 Speaker 1: What's the thing? 481 00:25:50,680 --> 00:25:52,639 Speaker 2: People never give him credit for how smart he is. 482 00:25:52,680 --> 00:25:54,480 Speaker 2: And I think one thing that really stood out to 483 00:25:54,520 --> 00:25:59,480 Speaker 2: me this in the past election cycle, particularly and particularly 484 00:25:59,560 --> 00:26:01,960 Speaker 2: in these line, longer form interviews that he did with 485 00:26:02,080 --> 00:26:03,960 Speaker 2: you know, his sit down interview with Joe Rogan or 486 00:26:04,000 --> 00:26:06,000 Speaker 2: the interview he did with Elon on X. 487 00:26:06,520 --> 00:26:07,680 Speaker 1: I mean, the guy is brilliant. 488 00:26:07,680 --> 00:26:11,280 Speaker 2: Like name one Democrat who could sit down with anyone 489 00:26:11,800 --> 00:26:14,760 Speaker 2: and have a two to three hour conversation in depth 490 00:26:14,800 --> 00:26:16,960 Speaker 2: and be able to really understand the issues, dive into 491 00:26:17,000 --> 00:26:20,160 Speaker 2: the issues, and then also present ways to solve them. 492 00:26:20,680 --> 00:26:23,720 Speaker 1: Yeah, Bill Clinton, Yeah, well, yeah, actually that's a good point. 493 00:26:23,560 --> 00:26:24,160 Speaker 4: Well, Bill Clinton. 494 00:26:24,160 --> 00:26:28,400 Speaker 3: Bill Clinton is the one modern Democrat who could who 495 00:26:28,440 --> 00:26:32,120 Speaker 3: could do Joe Rogan and be fine. Nobody else could. 496 00:26:32,119 --> 00:26:36,760 Speaker 3: Obama couldn't. Obviously, Biden would be silly. And and I 497 00:26:36,760 --> 00:26:40,160 Speaker 3: don't know of any Democratic governor or senator who could 498 00:26:40,200 --> 00:26:42,679 Speaker 3: go through three or four hours like that and have 499 00:26:42,760 --> 00:26:45,160 Speaker 3: the range of knowledge and the range of common sense. 500 00:26:45,400 --> 00:26:49,280 Speaker 3: And they're they're prohibited by their ideology from having solutions. 501 00:26:49,800 --> 00:26:51,960 Speaker 3: They can't take on the teachers' union, they can't take 502 00:26:52,000 --> 00:26:54,880 Speaker 3: on the government bureaucracy, they can't take on their left 503 00:26:54,920 --> 00:26:58,640 Speaker 3: wing allies, so they can't solve things. I mean, it's 504 00:26:58,680 --> 00:27:02,320 Speaker 3: a huge problem for the Democrat Party right now. It's 505 00:27:02,359 --> 00:27:03,359 Speaker 3: become the party of. 506 00:27:03,280 --> 00:27:07,400 Speaker 2: No well and yeah, the party of twenty percent issues. 507 00:27:07,720 --> 00:27:10,440 Speaker 2: You know, it's like it's sort of baffling, Like even 508 00:27:10,480 --> 00:27:13,280 Speaker 2: on the men and women's sports, it's like, you know, 509 00:27:13,359 --> 00:27:15,640 Speaker 2: eighty percent of the country disagrees with you, yet they're 510 00:27:15,680 --> 00:27:18,919 Speaker 2: digging in in states like California or Maine. 511 00:27:18,920 --> 00:27:21,560 Speaker 3: You know, or favoring the return of people who are 512 00:27:21,560 --> 00:27:25,679 Speaker 3: deported for being criminals, or being offended that we're locking 513 00:27:25,800 --> 00:27:27,840 Speaker 3: up people who are criminals, you know. I mean, you 514 00:27:27,880 --> 00:27:30,800 Speaker 3: go through item after item. We do a project. We 515 00:27:30,840 --> 00:27:33,480 Speaker 3: run a project called the America's New Majority Project, which 516 00:27:33,480 --> 00:27:36,240 Speaker 3: people can see if they go to America's New Majority 517 00:27:36,280 --> 00:27:40,560 Speaker 3: Project dot com. And it is astonishing to me that 518 00:27:40,640 --> 00:27:43,679 Speaker 3: the Democrats are consistently on the fifteen to twenty percent 519 00:27:43,800 --> 00:27:46,400 Speaker 3: range and it's gradually wearing their party down. 520 00:27:46,760 --> 00:27:48,520 Speaker 2: We've got to take a quick commercial break, but if 521 00:27:48,520 --> 00:27:51,679 Speaker 2: you're enjoying this episode so far, please post on social 522 00:27:51,720 --> 00:27:57,639 Speaker 2: media or share with your friends. What's interesting is I mean, 523 00:27:57,680 --> 00:28:01,679 Speaker 2: if you think about at least the immigration issue, like 524 00:28:02,119 --> 00:28:05,320 Speaker 2: I wonder if this was thought out or because if 525 00:28:05,320 --> 00:28:07,840 Speaker 2: you think about it's kind of genius. Because Joe Biden 526 00:28:08,160 --> 00:28:10,000 Speaker 2: earned the Democrat party they led in like millions of 527 00:28:10,000 --> 00:28:13,040 Speaker 2: illegal aliens to the country. Obviously they want some sort 528 00:28:13,080 --> 00:28:15,960 Speaker 2: of pathway to citizenship and pathway to vote for them, 529 00:28:16,359 --> 00:28:18,920 Speaker 2: so import like this new voter base, and then it's 530 00:28:19,680 --> 00:28:23,000 Speaker 2: virtually impossible to deport all of them because judges keep 531 00:28:23,040 --> 00:28:25,520 Speaker 2: trying to block President Trump's attempts, and he's trying to 532 00:28:25,520 --> 00:28:29,239 Speaker 2: be creative and finding ways to deport them so they 533 00:28:29,320 --> 00:28:32,760 Speaker 2: might be stuck here, and so like, that's kind of brilliant. 534 00:28:32,880 --> 00:28:35,639 Speaker 2: And what's the long term impact of that on the country? 535 00:28:35,760 --> 00:28:38,480 Speaker 2: And do you think that that was some thought out 536 00:28:38,720 --> 00:28:41,520 Speaker 2: master plan of theirs or it just sort of happened. 537 00:28:42,040 --> 00:28:46,120 Speaker 3: No. I think what's happened is that the district level judges, 538 00:28:46,560 --> 00:28:49,640 Speaker 3: the left wing, once appointed by Obama and by Biden, 539 00:28:50,040 --> 00:28:53,360 Speaker 3: have become the last stand trying to stop trump Ism, 540 00:28:54,040 --> 00:28:58,760 Speaker 3: and so they made decisions which are clearly unconstitutional. I 541 00:28:58,800 --> 00:29:01,840 Speaker 3: do not believe the dish judges have the ability to 542 00:29:02,080 --> 00:29:05,959 Speaker 3: issue a nationwide injunction usurping the President United States. I mean, 543 00:29:05,960 --> 00:29:08,920 Speaker 3: the idea that some local district judge who's never been 544 00:29:08,960 --> 00:29:12,920 Speaker 3: elected and is not particularly an expert on the subject 545 00:29:12,920 --> 00:29:16,560 Speaker 3: matter can overrule the incumbent chief of staff, a chief 546 00:29:16,600 --> 00:29:21,000 Speaker 3: executive in president United States is crazy. And Jefferson said 547 00:29:21,400 --> 00:29:25,480 Speaker 3: rule by judges would be an oligarchy. Lincoln made the 548 00:29:25,520 --> 00:29:29,000 Speaker 3: eighteen fifty eight Senate race around the Supreme Court being 549 00:29:29,040 --> 00:29:31,760 Speaker 3: wrong on the dred Scott decision that extended slavery to 550 00:29:31,760 --> 00:29:35,480 Speaker 3: the whole country. In fact, Lincoln lectured the Chief Justice 551 00:29:35,480 --> 00:29:37,760 Speaker 3: of the Supreme Court who was sitting in front of 552 00:29:37,840 --> 00:29:41,720 Speaker 3: him when he gave his inaugural address in eighteen sixty one. 553 00:29:42,600 --> 00:29:45,800 Speaker 3: And I'm convinced that Lincoln in part said government of 554 00:29:45,840 --> 00:29:48,520 Speaker 3: the people, by the people, and for the people as 555 00:29:48,560 --> 00:29:52,920 Speaker 3: a rebuke to the judges. And so I think that 556 00:29:53,640 --> 00:29:56,600 Speaker 3: we are right at the edge of a genuine constitutional 557 00:29:56,680 --> 00:30:02,320 Speaker 3: crisis in which judges are grotesque overreaching and doing things 558 00:30:02,360 --> 00:30:04,640 Speaker 3: that they don't have the power to do in areas 559 00:30:04,640 --> 00:30:06,800 Speaker 3: that they don't have the knowledge of, and they are 560 00:30:06,840 --> 00:30:09,600 Speaker 3: trying to usurp somebody who got seventy seven million votes, 561 00:30:09,600 --> 00:30:10,440 Speaker 3: Well they got zero. 562 00:30:11,400 --> 00:30:14,280 Speaker 1: Well what's the path forward on that? Like, what do 563 00:30:14,320 --> 00:30:15,040 Speaker 1: we do about it? 564 00:30:15,280 --> 00:30:16,200 Speaker 4: Well? 565 00:30:16,440 --> 00:30:19,680 Speaker 3: I testified in the House Judiciary Committee a couple of 566 00:30:19,680 --> 00:30:23,200 Speaker 3: months ago, and I started my testimony by reading the 567 00:30:23,280 --> 00:30:25,920 Speaker 3: names of fourteen people who turned out to be the 568 00:30:25,960 --> 00:30:30,760 Speaker 3: fourteen judges who were abolished by Jefferson in the Judicial 569 00:30:30,800 --> 00:30:33,200 Speaker 3: Act of eighteen o two. He didn't impeach him, he 570 00:30:33,760 --> 00:30:37,200 Speaker 3: just eliminated the courts. So one step would be for 571 00:30:37,280 --> 00:30:41,800 Speaker 3: the appropriations committees to simply abolish the payment for the 572 00:30:41,880 --> 00:30:45,600 Speaker 3: judges who are nuts. Another step would be to pass 573 00:30:45,960 --> 00:30:50,880 Speaker 3: finish passing the bill which Daryl Aia passed in the 574 00:30:50,920 --> 00:30:55,680 Speaker 3: House which blocks district judges from issuing nationwide injunctions. There's 575 00:30:55,720 --> 00:30:58,840 Speaker 3: a parallel bill by Senator Grassley and the Senate. If that, 576 00:30:59,080 --> 00:31:02,840 Speaker 3: if those two bills could be passed, then that would 577 00:31:02,840 --> 00:31:06,760 Speaker 3: frankly eliminate the district judge level problem. But there are 578 00:31:06,760 --> 00:31:09,480 Speaker 3: steps that can be taken and should be taken. The 579 00:31:10,000 --> 00:31:13,600 Speaker 3: founding fathers were very clear if you read the Federalist papers, 580 00:31:14,080 --> 00:31:18,160 Speaker 3: that the Court was to be the weakest of the three, 581 00:31:18,560 --> 00:31:21,800 Speaker 3: not the strongest, and that the Supreme Court was supreme 582 00:31:21,920 --> 00:31:25,280 Speaker 3: only among courts. It's not supreme over the House and Senate. 583 00:31:26,080 --> 00:31:28,600 Speaker 3: And the founding fathers would have thought it was absurd 584 00:31:29,080 --> 00:31:31,480 Speaker 3: to have some of the kind of power invested in 585 00:31:32,040 --> 00:31:34,400 Speaker 3: the judiciary that has currently invested in them. 586 00:31:34,440 --> 00:31:35,520 Speaker 4: And they would have said that it's. 587 00:31:35,360 --> 00:31:38,480 Speaker 3: An infringement on the right of a people to govern 588 00:31:38,520 --> 00:31:41,920 Speaker 3: themselves to have a small bunch of judges who think that, 589 00:31:42,240 --> 00:31:46,800 Speaker 3: you know, they can be a floating constitutional convention by 590 00:31:46,920 --> 00:31:50,040 Speaker 3: four to three or five to four majorities in which 591 00:31:50,080 --> 00:31:53,479 Speaker 3: on one swing judge suddenly becomes the equivalent of an 592 00:31:53,600 --> 00:31:55,000 Speaker 3: entire constitutional convention. 593 00:31:56,960 --> 00:32:01,480 Speaker 2: In the past few weeks, we have seen someone torch 594 00:32:02,080 --> 00:32:07,120 Speaker 2: the Pennsylvania Governor's mansion Josh Shapiro because he's Jewish, two 595 00:32:07,200 --> 00:32:10,479 Speaker 2: Jews executed at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, DC, and 596 00:32:10,520 --> 00:32:14,640 Speaker 2: then over last weekend we saw utterly Jewish people set 597 00:32:14,640 --> 00:32:20,120 Speaker 2: on fire and boulder at Colorado. How dangerous is the 598 00:32:20,160 --> 00:32:23,400 Speaker 2: political left And have they gotten more dangerous since your 599 00:32:23,400 --> 00:32:24,320 Speaker 2: time in office. 600 00:32:24,920 --> 00:32:27,600 Speaker 3: Well, they've become much more extreme and much more violent, 601 00:32:28,840 --> 00:32:33,080 Speaker 3: much more self righteous, convinced that their moral purity allows 602 00:32:33,120 --> 00:32:35,280 Speaker 3: them to do whatever they want to, and I think 603 00:32:35,320 --> 00:32:38,200 Speaker 3: more desperate. I think we have to clamp down on 604 00:32:38,240 --> 00:32:42,320 Speaker 3: anti Semitism. Anti Semitism should be the equivalent of the 605 00:32:42,360 --> 00:32:46,200 Speaker 3: ku Klux Klan. I mean, people would not tolerate the 606 00:32:46,240 --> 00:32:50,640 Speaker 3: ku Klux Klan demonstrating at Columbia University or Harvard. They 607 00:32:50,680 --> 00:32:54,360 Speaker 3: wouldn't tolerate the ku Klux Klan trying to kill people 608 00:32:54,400 --> 00:32:57,360 Speaker 3: to a Black church. And I think that we have 609 00:32:57,440 --> 00:33:01,040 Speaker 3: to have the same decision that being anti Submitica simply 610 00:33:01,120 --> 00:33:05,120 Speaker 3: unacceptable in American society, that if you are here on 611 00:33:05,480 --> 00:33:08,280 Speaker 3: a visa, we should expel you. If you're here as 612 00:33:08,280 --> 00:33:12,720 Speaker 3: an American. We should have very strict penalties and we 613 00:33:12,760 --> 00:33:16,560 Speaker 3: should make it very very expensive to be openly anti submitted. 614 00:33:18,200 --> 00:33:21,320 Speaker 2: You know, we saw with a suspect in Boulder, Colorado. 615 00:33:21,840 --> 00:33:23,640 Speaker 2: He was denied a visa in two thousand and five, 616 00:33:24,240 --> 00:33:28,440 Speaker 2: granted one under the Biden administration, and then he overstayed, 617 00:33:28,880 --> 00:33:31,680 Speaker 2: and that was also granted a work permit after overstaying. 618 00:33:33,040 --> 00:33:35,360 Speaker 2: And then yet the Trump administration has been condemned for 619 00:33:35,560 --> 00:33:38,840 Speaker 2: trying to revoke visas. Do we I mean, I feel 620 00:33:38,840 --> 00:33:40,680 Speaker 2: like we should just do a complete overhaul in the 621 00:33:40,760 --> 00:33:42,800 Speaker 2: visa process, Like why are we letting these people in 622 00:33:42,880 --> 00:33:45,000 Speaker 2: the United States? Like what does that vetting look like? 623 00:33:45,040 --> 00:33:48,000 Speaker 2: Who are we letting into the United States? You know, 624 00:33:48,160 --> 00:33:50,120 Speaker 2: what are your thoughts on that and which I've done 625 00:33:50,160 --> 00:33:50,560 Speaker 2: about it? 626 00:33:50,640 --> 00:33:54,040 Speaker 3: Look, I think that's why they've for example, suspended student visas, 627 00:33:54,080 --> 00:33:56,600 Speaker 3: because we we have to build a very different system. 628 00:33:57,400 --> 00:34:01,960 Speaker 3: I would say that unless you are prepared to accept 629 00:34:02,040 --> 00:34:05,720 Speaker 3: that the US Constitution is the law of the land, 630 00:34:05,960 --> 00:34:09,719 Speaker 3: and that, for example, you couldn't have sharia in the 631 00:34:09,760 --> 00:34:11,320 Speaker 3: context of the US Constitution. 632 00:34:12,440 --> 00:34:14,080 Speaker 4: I think anybody who is. 633 00:34:15,560 --> 00:34:18,160 Speaker 3: Either a member of the Chinese Communist Party or whose 634 00:34:18,200 --> 00:34:21,879 Speaker 3: family can be blackmailed by the Chinese Communist Party. It's 635 00:34:22,000 --> 00:34:25,640 Speaker 3: very dubious to me why you would give them the 636 00:34:26,480 --> 00:34:29,839 Speaker 3: student visa, because you know that they're going to become 637 00:34:30,080 --> 00:34:33,160 Speaker 3: they have a very high possibility becoming spies. And we 638 00:34:33,239 --> 00:34:35,319 Speaker 3: now know that that's a real problem or and a 639 00:34:35,360 --> 00:34:40,160 Speaker 3: real challenge. And we've we've had some very sobering reports 640 00:34:40,200 --> 00:34:42,799 Speaker 3: such as the couple, for example, who had brought in 641 00:34:42,840 --> 00:34:46,759 Speaker 3: a fungus which could have been devastating as an epidemic, 642 00:34:47,600 --> 00:34:50,520 Speaker 3: and there's no good reason for them to have brought 643 00:34:50,520 --> 00:34:52,680 Speaker 3: it in, and they brought it in secretly and in 644 00:34:52,760 --> 00:34:56,440 Speaker 3: violation of our national security laws. And so I think 645 00:34:56,480 --> 00:35:00,279 Speaker 3: we've got to become much tougher and much clearer our 646 00:35:00,360 --> 00:35:04,759 Speaker 3: unwillingness to accept foreign threats being injected into our society. 647 00:35:05,640 --> 00:35:09,440 Speaker 2: Yeah, one thing, you know, I'd love your perspective on 648 00:35:09,960 --> 00:35:11,040 Speaker 2: this historically. 649 00:35:11,120 --> 00:35:12,640 Speaker 1: But what's interesting to. 650 00:35:12,560 --> 00:35:15,000 Speaker 2: Me is we are in a time right now where 651 00:35:15,160 --> 00:35:17,440 Speaker 2: you know, fifty percent of the country like they believe, 652 00:35:17,920 --> 00:35:20,200 Speaker 2: or probably less than that, but they believe President Trump 653 00:35:20,280 --> 00:35:22,640 Speaker 2: is a threat to democracy, like they basically view him 654 00:35:22,719 --> 00:35:26,120 Speaker 2: as Hitler, as they have pointed out previously and then 655 00:35:26,120 --> 00:35:27,840 Speaker 2: on the right over the past four years in the 656 00:35:27,840 --> 00:35:30,440 Speaker 2: Bio administration, We're like, this guy is a threat to democracy. 657 00:35:30,960 --> 00:35:31,840 Speaker 1: So you have half of. 658 00:35:31,840 --> 00:35:34,560 Speaker 2: The country believing the other part. You know that there 659 00:35:34,600 --> 00:35:37,840 Speaker 2: were threat to democracy and vice versa, So how do 660 00:35:37,880 --> 00:35:40,960 Speaker 2: we navigate that moving forward? Have you have you ever 661 00:35:41,000 --> 00:35:45,040 Speaker 2: seen the country this divided from a historical perspective, and like, 662 00:35:45,080 --> 00:35:46,560 Speaker 2: what do we do about it moving forward? 663 00:35:47,160 --> 00:35:51,160 Speaker 3: Well, when it was this divided in the eighteen fifties, right, yeah, 664 00:35:51,320 --> 00:35:52,400 Speaker 3: you know, I mean, but we. 665 00:35:52,360 --> 00:35:56,279 Speaker 4: Shouldn't kill ourselves. I had a very famous Lincoln scholar. 666 00:35:56,200 --> 00:35:58,319 Speaker 1: I guess more in modern history it probably should have. 667 00:35:58,239 --> 00:36:03,240 Speaker 3: Asked, there have been periods when we've had some limited threats, 668 00:36:03,239 --> 00:36:07,000 Speaker 3: but nothing on this scale. And I had a Lincoln 669 00:36:07,080 --> 00:36:11,000 Speaker 3: scholar tell me in October that the hostility to Trump 670 00:36:11,719 --> 00:36:15,080 Speaker 3: very much represented the hostility of the slave states to Lincoln. 671 00:36:15,760 --> 00:36:18,200 Speaker 3: And it was for the same reason because Trump represented 672 00:36:18,719 --> 00:36:22,239 Speaker 3: the end of the left wing elites worldview, just as 673 00:36:22,280 --> 00:36:26,719 Speaker 3: Lincoln had ultimately meant the end of slaveholding in the 674 00:36:26,800 --> 00:36:30,840 Speaker 3: Southern culture. And I think that we have to understand 675 00:36:30,840 --> 00:36:34,200 Speaker 3: this is a real cultural civil war. This is the 676 00:36:34,239 --> 00:36:38,279 Speaker 3: people sincerely, deeply believe things on the left which you 677 00:36:38,320 --> 00:36:40,879 Speaker 3: and I would think are crazy, but they believe them, 678 00:36:41,040 --> 00:36:43,319 Speaker 3: and they operate on those beliefs, and they're not going 679 00:36:43,360 --> 00:36:47,120 Speaker 3: to give them up easily. And they feel extraordinarily threatened 680 00:36:48,040 --> 00:36:52,719 Speaker 3: by the MAGA movement and by Trump, and by the 681 00:36:52,719 --> 00:36:55,120 Speaker 3: whole notion that we are not going to tolerate you with, 682 00:36:55,320 --> 00:36:57,760 Speaker 3: for example, that we're going to insist that boys should 683 00:36:57,760 --> 00:37:01,239 Speaker 3: not be competing in girls' sports. Well, if you are 684 00:37:01,360 --> 00:37:04,560 Speaker 3: truly on the left, that that's a horrifying idea, and 685 00:37:04,600 --> 00:37:06,520 Speaker 3: there's a sign that we're totally insensitive. 686 00:37:07,360 --> 00:37:08,719 Speaker 4: Or if we insist. 687 00:37:08,520 --> 00:37:11,640 Speaker 3: That, uh, you know, the only flag you should fly 688 00:37:11,719 --> 00:37:14,600 Speaker 3: in front of a US embassy is the American flag, well, 689 00:37:14,640 --> 00:37:17,439 Speaker 3: from the standpoint of the gay pride movement, that's that's 690 00:37:17,440 --> 00:37:20,799 Speaker 3: a horrifying idea. Or if we insist that parents have 691 00:37:20,840 --> 00:37:24,360 Speaker 3: a right to know what's being told there are children 692 00:37:24,360 --> 00:37:26,239 Speaker 3: in class, then you have a large part of the 693 00:37:26,239 --> 00:37:30,279 Speaker 3: teachers union that feels that we have now usurped their 694 00:37:30,400 --> 00:37:34,440 Speaker 3: role as the ultimate controller of children. Uh And and 695 00:37:34,560 --> 00:37:38,080 Speaker 3: many elements the teachers union are anti parent and don't 696 00:37:38,080 --> 00:37:41,799 Speaker 3: want parents in the classroom, don't want parents involved. So 697 00:37:42,160 --> 00:37:45,520 Speaker 3: I mean, I think these are these are real, fundamental, 698 00:37:45,640 --> 00:37:49,000 Speaker 3: profound differences and they're not going to go away easily. 699 00:37:50,360 --> 00:37:52,640 Speaker 2: We're finding out a lot about Joe Biden's mental a 700 00:37:52,719 --> 00:37:55,239 Speaker 2: client well and office. Obviously we all knew it at 701 00:37:55,239 --> 00:37:57,520 Speaker 2: the time, but we're finding out just you know, how 702 00:37:57,560 --> 00:37:58,840 Speaker 2: deep it went and how. 703 00:37:58,719 --> 00:37:59,279 Speaker 1: Bad it was. 704 00:38:01,480 --> 00:38:06,279 Speaker 2: How much should Republicans focus on it? Should Republicans have hearings? 705 00:38:06,400 --> 00:38:08,600 Speaker 2: You know, what do you like? Is that looking back? 706 00:38:08,640 --> 00:38:10,880 Speaker 2: Should we be looking forward? Or you know, if you 707 00:38:10,920 --> 00:38:15,120 Speaker 2: were Speaker Johnson or Majority Leader Thoon, how. 708 00:38:14,960 --> 00:38:17,360 Speaker 1: Would you handle this issue in Congress? 709 00:38:17,640 --> 00:38:21,000 Speaker 3: Well, look, I think it's probably going to turn out 710 00:38:21,040 --> 00:38:26,360 Speaker 3: to be the biggest scandal in American history. You had 711 00:38:27,120 --> 00:38:31,840 Speaker 3: you clearly sometime I think in twenty twenty three Biden 712 00:38:32,000 --> 00:38:37,040 Speaker 3: lost the ability to be president. And for example, after 713 00:38:37,080 --> 00:38:42,440 Speaker 3: the election, on one day, they commuted twenty four hundred sentences. 714 00:38:43,040 --> 00:38:46,440 Speaker 3: Now it was then with an auto pen Who picked 715 00:38:46,440 --> 00:38:52,040 Speaker 3: the twenty four hundred? Why were they included? Why was 716 00:38:52,040 --> 00:38:56,600 Speaker 3: that particular action undertaken? Who decided it? Because clearly Biden didn't, 717 00:38:57,040 --> 00:38:59,600 Speaker 3: So there was somebody basically playing the role of president. 718 00:39:00,480 --> 00:39:04,080 Speaker 3: Because it's clearly a presidential prerogative in the Constitution, and 719 00:39:04,120 --> 00:39:06,200 Speaker 3: you can just go through item after item like that 720 00:39:06,239 --> 00:39:09,560 Speaker 3: I mean Secretary of Energy right coming to the other 721 00:39:09,640 --> 00:39:13,800 Speaker 3: day that they had shoveled his award, was shoveled seventy 722 00:39:13,840 --> 00:39:16,640 Speaker 3: three billion dollars in grants out of the Energy Department 723 00:39:17,760 --> 00:39:20,919 Speaker 3: in a very short period of time, trying to get 724 00:39:20,960 --> 00:39:24,400 Speaker 3: the money out before Trump could come in and block it. Well, again, 725 00:39:24,640 --> 00:39:29,080 Speaker 3: who's making those kind of decisions? Because I think you're 726 00:39:29,080 --> 00:39:33,400 Speaker 3: going to find that there's almost no presidential control and 727 00:39:33,440 --> 00:39:37,840 Speaker 3: no presidential influence except in the very broadest sense of things, 728 00:39:38,120 --> 00:39:41,680 Speaker 3: but that overall, at some point, as I said, I 729 00:39:41,680 --> 00:39:45,160 Speaker 3: think it's in twenty three, Biden simply ceased to be 730 00:39:45,920 --> 00:39:50,200 Speaker 3: capable of following the information and following the ideas and 731 00:39:50,239 --> 00:39:51,320 Speaker 3: making big decisions. 732 00:39:51,360 --> 00:39:54,200 Speaker 4: So somebody was, and if not him, who. 733 00:39:55,120 --> 00:39:58,600 Speaker 2: I also find it interesting because even going back to 734 00:39:58,600 --> 00:40:03,000 Speaker 2: twenty nineteen, you know, we had that basement campaign during 735 00:40:03,040 --> 00:40:06,360 Speaker 2: the twenty twenty presidential election, and they blamed COVID, But 736 00:40:06,440 --> 00:40:09,240 Speaker 2: now increasingly it's looking like no, he was just already 737 00:40:09,440 --> 00:40:12,839 Speaker 2: experiencing mental decline and that was an excuse to hide 738 00:40:12,920 --> 00:40:14,520 Speaker 2: him in the basement. And even they were saying in 739 00:40:14,520 --> 00:40:17,680 Speaker 2: twenty nineteen in this book that he forgot the name 740 00:40:17,719 --> 00:40:19,239 Speaker 2: of an AID who had been with him since I 741 00:40:19,239 --> 00:40:22,240 Speaker 2: think nineteen eighty one, so it's basically a family member 742 00:40:22,239 --> 00:40:26,560 Speaker 2: at this point. You know, So this wasn't even just 743 00:40:26,600 --> 00:40:28,760 Speaker 2: a you know, a twenty twenty four issue. It seems 744 00:40:28,800 --> 00:40:30,960 Speaker 2: like this was a twenty twenty issue. 745 00:40:32,160 --> 00:40:34,239 Speaker 3: I think it could have been, except that you had 746 00:40:34,239 --> 00:40:38,520 Speaker 3: the propaganda media so deeply committed to propping him up. 747 00:40:39,440 --> 00:40:41,840 Speaker 3: Which is why I think having somebody like Jake Tapper 748 00:40:41,880 --> 00:40:44,640 Speaker 3: write a book is hysterical, because so Taper was one 749 00:40:44,680 --> 00:40:47,560 Speaker 3: of the chief defenders of Biden, and now he's writing 750 00:40:47,600 --> 00:40:49,680 Speaker 3: a book saying that the media failed to cover this 751 00:40:50,040 --> 00:40:51,960 Speaker 3: when he was part of the people who failed to 752 00:40:51,960 --> 00:40:52,359 Speaker 3: cover it. 753 00:40:53,600 --> 00:40:55,279 Speaker 1: Well, speaker, I'm sure you saw did he just did it? 754 00:40:55,400 --> 00:40:59,040 Speaker 2: Creane gene Pierre, of all people, I mean, that's like 755 00:40:59,160 --> 00:41:01,640 Speaker 2: you were the mouthpiece, yes for all questions. 756 00:41:01,920 --> 00:41:03,520 Speaker 4: I think she's setting up to sell books. 757 00:41:03,800 --> 00:41:06,960 Speaker 3: So she's now left the Democratic Party, creating news by 758 00:41:07,000 --> 00:41:11,440 Speaker 3: becoming an independent. Frankly, I suspect a number of Democrats 759 00:41:11,440 --> 00:41:14,480 Speaker 3: are glad she's left. I always thought that she was 760 00:41:15,040 --> 00:41:19,880 Speaker 3: a peculiarly bad press person for the president, and she 761 00:41:19,920 --> 00:41:23,440 Speaker 3: didn't help him at all. I didn't think and that's 762 00:41:23,480 --> 00:41:26,040 Speaker 3: a very hard job anyway, But if you look at 763 00:41:26,040 --> 00:41:30,000 Speaker 3: the contrast with how Caroline Lovet's doing it, it's astonishingly 764 00:41:30,320 --> 00:41:32,120 Speaker 3: how difference the impact is. 765 00:41:33,520 --> 00:41:34,719 Speaker 1: One thing I think we found. 766 00:41:35,200 --> 00:41:37,840 Speaker 2: You know, it's been interesting with all the DOGE information 767 00:41:38,000 --> 00:41:42,480 Speaker 2: that has surfaced, is you look, I mean you look 768 00:41:42,480 --> 00:41:46,320 Speaker 2: at all this money, like even the Stacy Abrams. I 769 00:41:46,360 --> 00:41:48,600 Speaker 2: think it was like two billion dollar grant that she received, 770 00:41:48,760 --> 00:41:51,440 Speaker 2: if memory serves me correct. I mean, how much of 771 00:41:51,520 --> 00:41:55,440 Speaker 2: government spending is just like a money laundering scheme for politicians. 772 00:41:55,880 --> 00:41:58,440 Speaker 3: Well, I mean, I think that's a good example where 773 00:41:58,800 --> 00:42:00,399 Speaker 3: we have to get to the bottom of it. I mean, 774 00:42:00,400 --> 00:42:02,440 Speaker 3: what was she doing for the money? Did she actually 775 00:42:02,480 --> 00:42:08,880 Speaker 3: do it? The amount was astonishing. But look, one of 776 00:42:08,920 --> 00:42:11,560 Speaker 3: the key parts of the Democratic Party is that it's 777 00:42:11,600 --> 00:42:15,000 Speaker 3: a machine that's held together by money. And this is 778 00:42:15,040 --> 00:42:17,720 Speaker 3: why they're they're in for a very difficult challenge because 779 00:42:18,160 --> 00:42:22,040 Speaker 3: if the Republicans and Trump can cut off the flow 780 00:42:22,080 --> 00:42:25,560 Speaker 3: of government money and taxpayer money to these machines, they're 781 00:42:25,600 --> 00:42:29,160 Speaker 3: going to start collapsing because they're not held together by affection. 782 00:42:29,200 --> 00:42:32,160 Speaker 3: They're held together by cash. And that's why if you 783 00:42:32,239 --> 00:42:38,040 Speaker 3: watch both Obama and Biden, they were very very big 784 00:42:38,160 --> 00:42:42,800 Speaker 3: on giving out money. The various green issues was probably 785 00:42:42,840 --> 00:42:46,040 Speaker 3: their best cover for doing it. But they were paying 786 00:42:46,080 --> 00:42:48,080 Speaker 3: off a lot of people with a lot of money. 787 00:42:48,440 --> 00:42:52,000 Speaker 4: And the number of corporations that failed. 788 00:42:51,600 --> 00:42:55,920 Speaker 3: Once they could no longer access you know that kind 789 00:42:55,960 --> 00:42:59,160 Speaker 3: of money is just astonishing me. You go back to 790 00:42:59,239 --> 00:43:02,359 Speaker 3: go look at the various green firms that would get two, three, 791 00:43:02,440 --> 00:43:07,279 Speaker 3: four hundred million dollars and then fail deliver nothing. And 792 00:43:07,360 --> 00:43:08,640 Speaker 3: it was all basically a way. 793 00:43:08,480 --> 00:43:10,640 Speaker 1: Of paying people off, like Clendra. 794 00:43:12,760 --> 00:43:16,520 Speaker 3: That's the classic example. And it came under Obama, which 795 00:43:16,560 --> 00:43:18,920 Speaker 3: is a key part of this. And I keep talking 796 00:43:19,000 --> 00:43:22,040 Speaker 3: about the Obama Biden connection because I think we're I 797 00:43:22,040 --> 00:43:24,240 Speaker 3: think we're missing it if we if we just focus 798 00:43:24,320 --> 00:43:27,200 Speaker 3: on Biden. Was this was a twelve year I think 799 00:43:27,200 --> 00:43:30,120 Speaker 3: of Biden as the Obama's third term. This was a 800 00:43:30,160 --> 00:43:33,040 Speaker 3: twelve year project of trying to move America to the 801 00:43:33,120 --> 00:43:36,160 Speaker 3: left and trying to build a machine with taxpayer money. 802 00:43:36,080 --> 00:43:37,719 Speaker 1: Quick break stay with Us. 803 00:43:40,400 --> 00:43:42,920 Speaker 2: Has any other Democrat president done as much harm to 804 00:43:42,920 --> 00:43:44,759 Speaker 2: the country than Obama? 805 00:43:45,120 --> 00:43:46,240 Speaker 4: Well, I mean, you can. 806 00:43:46,120 --> 00:43:49,520 Speaker 3: Make an argument for a Buchanan and just before the 807 00:43:49,520 --> 00:43:52,880 Speaker 3: Civil War, but if you look at the last century, 808 00:43:52,880 --> 00:43:56,040 Speaker 3: I would say no that. But again, I think what 809 00:43:56,120 --> 00:43:58,920 Speaker 3: you had was the Obama team came back in the 810 00:43:58,920 --> 00:44:02,520 Speaker 3: White House with Biden, and everything which Obama had started 811 00:44:02,880 --> 00:44:05,839 Speaker 3: just got a lot sicker and a lot worse over 812 00:44:05,880 --> 00:44:10,680 Speaker 3: the overtime. And in a sense, if Trump had had 813 00:44:11,080 --> 00:44:14,239 Speaker 3: accepted defeat and gone away, he would have been sort 814 00:44:14,280 --> 00:44:17,759 Speaker 3: of a brief interruption in the gradual decay of America. 815 00:44:18,320 --> 00:44:18,480 Speaker 2: Uh. 816 00:44:18,520 --> 00:44:20,080 Speaker 4: And it was. It was part of the reason I 817 00:44:20,120 --> 00:44:24,280 Speaker 4: wrote Trump's Triumph. It is just the sheer courage of saying. 818 00:44:24,080 --> 00:44:26,480 Speaker 3: No, I'm not leaving, I'm going to stay here, I'm 819 00:44:26,480 --> 00:44:28,359 Speaker 3: going to fight it out, and I'm going to get 820 00:44:28,360 --> 00:44:31,160 Speaker 3: this country back on track. And then I think he 821 00:44:31,239 --> 00:44:36,520 Speaker 3: interpreted the providential moment of turning his head at the 822 00:44:36,760 --> 00:44:39,359 Speaker 3: exact second necessary. 823 00:44:38,800 --> 00:44:40,360 Speaker 4: To avoid getting killed at Butler. 824 00:44:42,480 --> 00:44:45,080 Speaker 3: I think that gave him a real sense that God 825 00:44:45,160 --> 00:44:47,800 Speaker 3: had saved his life for the purpose of making America 826 00:44:47,880 --> 00:44:51,120 Speaker 3: great again. And it's made him a much more i think, 827 00:44:51,239 --> 00:44:55,440 Speaker 3: focused and a much more reverential person than he was 828 00:44:55,440 --> 00:44:56,280 Speaker 3: in the first term. 829 00:44:57,800 --> 00:45:00,359 Speaker 2: Probably the moment that won him the election, because you know, 830 00:45:00,400 --> 00:45:02,440 Speaker 2: America is really in need of a fighter, and we 831 00:45:02,440 --> 00:45:05,200 Speaker 2: had an incredibly weak president and here's this guy that like, 832 00:45:05,280 --> 00:45:08,120 Speaker 2: survives a bullet and his immediate instinct is to stand 833 00:45:08,200 --> 00:45:10,319 Speaker 2: up and say a fight, fight, fight, Like who is. 834 00:45:10,280 --> 00:45:13,440 Speaker 1: Made of that? You know? It's like, yeah, it was remarkable. 835 00:45:14,320 --> 00:45:17,160 Speaker 3: It was really one of the iconic moments in defining him, 836 00:45:17,760 --> 00:45:20,239 Speaker 3: as was I think the picture they took in the 837 00:45:20,880 --> 00:45:24,760 Speaker 3: Fulton County Sheriff's office, the mugshot where Trump looks very angry, 838 00:45:24,800 --> 00:45:27,200 Speaker 3: And I think I was told that in a number 839 00:45:27,360 --> 00:45:30,560 Speaker 3: of black barbershops they were putting that picture up because 840 00:45:30,560 --> 00:45:32,640 Speaker 3: it showed that the man was after him, just like 841 00:45:32,680 --> 00:45:35,000 Speaker 3: they were after in their mind, their community. 842 00:45:35,080 --> 00:45:37,160 Speaker 4: So it actually created a common identity. 843 00:45:38,239 --> 00:45:41,799 Speaker 2: As somebody who's written multiple books about Trump, what new 844 00:45:41,840 --> 00:45:46,040 Speaker 2: insights or perspectives did you cover in writing this book, 845 00:45:46,040 --> 00:45:48,400 Speaker 2: Trump's Triumph. 846 00:45:48,600 --> 00:45:53,440 Speaker 3: Well, I think that there's a continuity to Trump, So 847 00:45:53,480 --> 00:45:56,880 Speaker 3: in that sense, I don't think there's a giant changes, 848 00:45:57,320 --> 00:46:01,279 Speaker 3: but I think his ability as a communicator. I mean, 849 00:46:01,560 --> 00:46:06,360 Speaker 3: you can't imagine anybody else passing out French fries at 850 00:46:06,400 --> 00:46:09,319 Speaker 3: McDonald's and then riding in a garbage truck and going 851 00:46:09,320 --> 00:46:12,720 Speaker 3: into a fifty thousand person rally wearing a garbage collector's 852 00:46:12,800 --> 00:46:15,959 Speaker 3: vest and saying they say this makes me look thinner. 853 00:46:16,000 --> 00:46:17,720 Speaker 3: Maybe I should wear it for the rest of the campaign. 854 00:46:17,719 --> 00:46:18,520 Speaker 4: I mean that. 855 00:46:18,560 --> 00:46:22,360 Speaker 3: Ability to connect with Americans, remembering that eighty seven percent 856 00:46:22,400 --> 00:46:25,160 Speaker 3: of the country goes to McDonald's at least once a year, 857 00:46:25,560 --> 00:46:29,879 Speaker 3: and forty million Americans, including Jeff Beza's work at McDonald's. 858 00:46:30,480 --> 00:46:34,440 Speaker 3: He has a sense of where the average American is 859 00:46:34,840 --> 00:46:38,239 Speaker 3: better than any politician I've ever seen. And at the 860 00:46:38,280 --> 00:46:41,680 Speaker 3: same time, I think you see this growth in my 861 00:46:41,719 --> 00:46:45,399 Speaker 3: book on Trump's triumph. He really did become a more 862 00:46:45,480 --> 00:46:49,840 Speaker 3: serious person and a more reverential person, particularly after the 863 00:46:49,880 --> 00:46:54,120 Speaker 3: second assassination attempt. I was talking with speaker Mike Johnson 864 00:46:54,120 --> 00:46:56,239 Speaker 3: at one point and he said he happened to be 865 00:46:56,280 --> 00:46:58,880 Speaker 3: at more on logo when the FBI or when the 866 00:46:58,880 --> 00:47:02,600 Speaker 3: Secret Service came in to brief Trump on this second 867 00:47:02,600 --> 00:47:05,080 Speaker 3: effort to kill him, which was the guy that they 868 00:47:05,560 --> 00:47:09,640 Speaker 3: caught in the golf course. And he said that really 869 00:47:09,640 --> 00:47:12,120 Speaker 3: shook Trump and made it different from there was this 870 00:47:12,200 --> 00:47:15,320 Speaker 3: nut in Butler too, there really is a serious desire 871 00:47:15,320 --> 00:47:18,920 Speaker 3: to kill me. And Johnson went off with Trump to 872 00:47:18,960 --> 00:47:22,600 Speaker 3: a private room and they prayed for two hours, and 873 00:47:22,760 --> 00:47:26,800 Speaker 3: I think that that was the moment where Trump really 874 00:47:26,840 --> 00:47:31,799 Speaker 3: believed that he had a moral duty to implement what 875 00:47:31,880 --> 00:47:35,160 Speaker 3: he saw is God's desire to make America great again. 876 00:47:35,200 --> 00:47:38,040 Speaker 3: And it reminded me Callissa and I had done two movies, 877 00:47:38,880 --> 00:47:41,440 Speaker 3: Nine Days to Change the World about John Paul the 878 00:47:41,520 --> 00:47:45,319 Speaker 3: second and then Run The Destiny about Reagan, And when 879 00:47:45,320 --> 00:47:48,520 Speaker 3: the two of them got together for the very first time, 880 00:47:48,960 --> 00:47:50,000 Speaker 3: they were comparing notes. 881 00:47:50,040 --> 00:47:51,040 Speaker 4: They'd both been actors. 882 00:47:51,239 --> 00:47:53,160 Speaker 3: John Paul was an actor before he became a priest, 883 00:47:53,160 --> 00:47:55,920 Speaker 3: and of course Reagan had been very successful as an actor, 884 00:47:56,680 --> 00:47:57,160 Speaker 3: and they'd. 885 00:47:57,000 --> 00:48:00,040 Speaker 4: Both been shot and survived, and they talked about but 886 00:48:00,200 --> 00:48:00,640 Speaker 4: what does. 887 00:48:00,480 --> 00:48:04,120 Speaker 3: It mean that God has spared us? And their mutual 888 00:48:04,160 --> 00:48:07,760 Speaker 3: conclusion was that they'd been spared in order to defeat 889 00:48:07,800 --> 00:48:10,520 Speaker 3: the Soviet Empire, and so they agreed that they'd have 890 00:48:10,520 --> 00:48:12,920 Speaker 3: an alliance to do just that, and of course, a 891 00:48:12,920 --> 00:48:16,040 Speaker 3: few years later, the Soviet Empire disappeared. I think in 892 00:48:16,120 --> 00:48:19,439 Speaker 3: Trump's case was a similar moment where it hits him 893 00:48:19,520 --> 00:48:23,359 Speaker 3: that if God had not intervened, he would be dead, 894 00:48:24,000 --> 00:48:26,080 Speaker 3: and so he actually owed the rest of his life 895 00:48:26,640 --> 00:48:29,920 Speaker 3: to try to implement what God's will was. And I 896 00:48:29,960 --> 00:48:35,000 Speaker 3: think that that made him a significantly different, more mature 897 00:48:35,080 --> 00:48:39,280 Speaker 3: person from the guy who ran in twenty sixty. 898 00:48:39,400 --> 00:48:43,359 Speaker 2: You know, your wife was the previously served as the 899 00:48:43,400 --> 00:48:45,920 Speaker 2: ambassador to the Holy See. We have an American pope. 900 00:48:47,360 --> 00:48:49,759 Speaker 2: What are your thoughts on him and what does that 901 00:48:49,800 --> 00:48:50,719 Speaker 2: mean for our country? 902 00:48:50,880 --> 00:48:55,400 Speaker 3: Well, Calicia, who knew Pope Francis pretty well and liked him. 903 00:48:55,440 --> 00:49:00,719 Speaker 3: They were actually friends. She went to the funeral. We 904 00:49:00,719 --> 00:49:04,200 Speaker 3: were surprised when the white smoke went up and out 905 00:49:04,239 --> 00:49:07,120 Speaker 3: came an American. I don't think any of us expected that. 906 00:49:09,320 --> 00:49:11,960 Speaker 3: Her line was that he's good for the church and 907 00:49:12,000 --> 00:49:14,359 Speaker 3: he's good for America, and I think that's probably right. 908 00:49:14,440 --> 00:49:18,400 Speaker 3: I mean, he's a genuine American, but he also served 909 00:49:19,040 --> 00:49:21,640 Speaker 3: in Peru for a very long time, so he has 910 00:49:21,680 --> 00:49:25,600 Speaker 3: a real feel for third world countries and for the 911 00:49:25,719 --> 00:49:31,080 Speaker 3: nature of poverty in these rural communities. And I think 912 00:49:31,120 --> 00:49:35,440 Speaker 3: he's going to be a very successful pope at a 913 00:49:35,560 --> 00:49:38,919 Speaker 3: sort of stabilizing and growing the church. I think you'll 914 00:49:38,920 --> 00:49:41,960 Speaker 3: have a real effect on young people and a real 915 00:49:42,000 --> 00:49:46,799 Speaker 3: focus on bringing the new generation into the church, on 916 00:49:46,960 --> 00:49:51,759 Speaker 3: values and on attitudes that are very very central to 917 00:49:51,880 --> 00:49:54,560 Speaker 3: being a Catholic and being a Christian. And in that sense, 918 00:49:54,600 --> 00:49:56,640 Speaker 3: I think he's going to be a very significant force 919 00:49:57,440 --> 00:50:00,319 Speaker 3: moving in the right direction. He's very committed to trying 920 00:50:00,400 --> 00:50:03,359 Speaker 3: to help mediate things. I think I noticed that he 921 00:50:03,440 --> 00:50:06,680 Speaker 3: was calling Putin, tried to to talk some things, and 922 00:50:07,160 --> 00:50:10,759 Speaker 3: he President Trump has already invited him to come to 923 00:50:10,800 --> 00:50:15,399 Speaker 3: the US, and I think that there's a real possibility 924 00:50:15,520 --> 00:50:21,280 Speaker 3: that will happen. Apparently JD Vance met with him. Jadevance 925 00:50:21,360 --> 00:50:23,640 Speaker 3: was the last major figure to meet with Pope Francis 926 00:50:23,640 --> 00:50:30,719 Speaker 3: before almost literally as soon as he was inaugurated, and 927 00:50:31,160 --> 00:50:33,720 Speaker 3: I think they had a sense that this is somebody 928 00:50:33,760 --> 00:50:35,640 Speaker 3: that can really work with and I think that will 929 00:50:35,680 --> 00:50:37,839 Speaker 3: be You know, there are a billions, three hundred many 930 00:50:37,880 --> 00:50:42,239 Speaker 3: Catholics around the world, and working together you can accomplish 931 00:50:42,320 --> 00:50:47,280 Speaker 3: big things. Cloister had done that with working on everything 932 00:50:47,360 --> 00:50:53,840 Speaker 3: from immigrants to humans who had been sold into slavery, 933 00:50:54,640 --> 00:50:57,279 Speaker 3: to problems of poverty, and so she had a real 934 00:50:57,320 --> 00:51:00,480 Speaker 3: sense of the complexity of the church. And I think 935 00:51:00,520 --> 00:51:04,600 Speaker 3: that the church can be an enormous force for good. 936 00:51:04,640 --> 00:51:07,360 Speaker 3: And I think that this Pope is going to be 937 00:51:07,480 --> 00:51:10,040 Speaker 3: very open to working with the American government. 938 00:51:10,640 --> 00:51:13,800 Speaker 1: Before we go through what else about Trump's triumph? 939 00:51:13,960 --> 00:51:15,840 Speaker 2: Would you like to convey to the audience that we 940 00:51:15,880 --> 00:51:17,799 Speaker 2: haven't addressed yet well. 941 00:51:17,800 --> 00:51:19,439 Speaker 4: I think two things. One that it is. 942 00:51:21,040 --> 00:51:25,640 Speaker 3: Truly a miraculous story of a comeback that probably no 943 00:51:25,680 --> 00:51:28,200 Speaker 3: one else could have pulled off. And the second is 944 00:51:28,239 --> 00:51:29,640 Speaker 3: that you have to think ahead. You have to look 945 00:51:29,640 --> 00:51:32,239 Speaker 3: at the future. When he talks about America entering a 946 00:51:32,280 --> 00:51:35,080 Speaker 3: golden age, he means it. And I think with the 947 00:51:35,080 --> 00:51:37,879 Speaker 3: two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of our founding next year, 948 00:51:38,320 --> 00:51:40,480 Speaker 3: if we spend half of our time looking back at 949 00:51:40,480 --> 00:51:42,320 Speaker 3: how we got here and half of our time looking 950 00:51:42,360 --> 00:51:44,480 Speaker 3: forward to the next two hundred and fifty years, we'll 951 00:51:44,520 --> 00:51:47,440 Speaker 3: have some sense of what an extraordinary thing it is 952 00:51:47,480 --> 00:51:50,560 Speaker 3: to be an American and what a remarkable opportunity we 953 00:51:50,680 --> 00:51:53,280 Speaker 3: have to create a better future, not just for ourselves, 954 00:51:53,320 --> 00:51:54,200 Speaker 3: but for the whole world. 955 00:51:54,600 --> 00:51:56,200 Speaker 4: And I think we owe a great deal of that 956 00:51:56,239 --> 00:51:57,200 Speaker 4: to Donald J. Trump. 957 00:51:58,239 --> 00:52:00,799 Speaker 2: Speaker New Gingridge, it's always such an honor to have 958 00:52:00,840 --> 00:52:02,520 Speaker 2: you on the show. You just have such a depth 959 00:52:02,520 --> 00:52:04,719 Speaker 2: of knowledge that no one else has. I could ask 960 00:52:04,760 --> 00:52:06,640 Speaker 2: you a billion questions because I feel like I learned 961 00:52:06,640 --> 00:52:09,120 Speaker 2: so much from you, and it's truly an honor. 962 00:52:09,200 --> 00:52:12,200 Speaker 3: Lisa, Lisa, You're so flattering. I've always glad to come 963 00:52:12,200 --> 00:52:13,840 Speaker 3: back in the show because you make me feel. 964 00:52:13,600 --> 00:52:17,439 Speaker 1: Good perfect, then I'll keep having you back. 965 00:52:17,960 --> 00:52:20,000 Speaker 2: But I truly always learn so much from you, so 966 00:52:20,160 --> 00:52:21,920 Speaker 2: it really is an honest sir, And thank you for 967 00:52:21,920 --> 00:52:23,719 Speaker 2: being so being so generous with your time. We really 968 00:52:23,719 --> 00:52:26,880 Speaker 2: appreciate it. Glad to do it though a speaker New Gingrich. 969 00:52:27,160 --> 00:52:29,680 Speaker 2: We appreciate him for taking the time to come on 970 00:52:29,719 --> 00:52:32,520 Speaker 2: the show and being so generous with his time. Appreciate 971 00:52:32,560 --> 00:52:34,840 Speaker 2: you guys at home for listening every Tuesday and Thursday, 972 00:52:34,880 --> 00:52:36,920 Speaker 2: but of course you can listen throughout the week until 973 00:52:36,920 --> 00:52:37,359 Speaker 2: next time.