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Trump's YOLO Cabinet

2024/11/15
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Key Insights

Why did Trump pick unqualified political boosters for his Cabinet?

Trump selected unqualified individuals like Matt Gaetz, RFK Jr., Tulsi Gabbard, Pete Hegseth, Elon Musk, and Vivek Ramaswamy for their loyalty and willingness to carry out his political agenda, even if it meant ignoring legal and constitutional norms.

What are the potential consequences of RFK Jr. as HHS Secretary?

RFK Jr.'s appointment could lead to increased misinformation about vaccines and public health, potentially causing outbreaks of preventable diseases due to his history of spreading false information about vaccine safety.

How might Democrats effectively respond to Trump's controversial Cabinet picks?

Democrats should focus on the tangible negative impacts these appointments could have on people's lives, such as public health risks from RFK Jr. or the potential for political weaponization of the Justice Department under Matt Gaetz, rather than just defending institutions.

What concerns do experts have about Tulsi Gabbard as Director of National Intelligence?

Experts are worried that Gabbard's lack of experience and her sympathetic views towards dictators like Bashar al-Assad and Vladimir Putin could undermine U.S. intelligence operations and damage relationships with allies who share intelligence.

How might the Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, impact federal spending?

The Department could propose significant cuts to federal programs, including Medicare, Social Security, and education, which could negatively affect millions of Americans who rely on these programs for essential services.

What lessons did Senator-elect Andy Kim learn from his conversations with voters who supported both him and Trump?

Kim learned that many voters are deeply distrustful of both major political parties and the political system as a whole, and that Democrats need to engage with these voters in meaningful, non-political ways to rebuild trust and address their concerns.

What is Andy Kim's approach to having uncomfortable political conversations?

Kim emphasizes humility, showing up in communities, and having conversations that are not overtly political to build trust and understanding with voters who may not agree with him.

What are Andy Kim's priorities for his term in the U.S. Senate?

Kim's priorities include addressing high costs and economic anxiety, improving mental health services, promoting innovation and competitiveness, and shoring up supply chains to make the economy more resilient.

Chapters

The discussion delves into the controversial nomination of Matt Gaetz as Attorney General, examining his background, potential conflicts of interest, and the implications of his appointment on the Department of Justice.
  • Matt Gaetz's loyalty to Trump over the Constitution.
  • Potential for weaponizing the Department of Justice.
  • Concerns about the politicization of the Justice Department.

Shownotes Transcript

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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. On today's show, Donald Trump's cabinet picks go from mildly amusing to terrifying in the span of a day. Tulsi Gabbard is Director of National Intelligence. Fox News host Pete Hegseth is Defense Secretary. Matt Gaetz is Attorney General. And the one that broke just before we started recording...

RFK Jr. as the Secretary of Health and Human Services. What a lineup! Man, we are back into it, aren't we? We are back.

Fuck. If for a change you want to hear the most hopeful conversation I've had about politics since the election, stick around later for my conversation with New Jersey's new senator-elect, Andy Kim. Love Andy Kim. Love Andy Kim. More Andy Kims. Fewer all these other people we're going to talk about. That's your take today is more Andy Kims, fewer Matt Gaetzis. Yeah, right. That's why people tune in. Going out on a ledge. All right.

We're going to have a decidedly less hopeful conversation about these Trump cabinet picks and their confirmation prospects. Who knew our favorite nominees would be Marco Rubio and Elise Stefanik?

Matt Gaetz knew. That's who. On Monday, he wasn't even on Trump's shortlist for the position. Two days later, the two men were on a flight to D.C. together, and apparently that's all it took to get the job. A Trump advisor told the Bulwark's Mark Caputo that the president-elect didn't like the other attorney general contenders because, quote, they talked about their vaunted legal theories and constitutional bullshit.

Gates was the only one who said, yeah, I'll go over there and start cutting fucking heads. Sounds like he nailed the interview. I'm laughing because I'm crying. Don't give me your legal theories and your bullshit about the Constitution. I want you to cut some fucking heads.

Gates would go from being investigated by the Justice Department for sex trafficking to leading the Justice Department. And while that two year investigation into Gates for sex trafficking didn't lead to any charges, the House Ethics Committee was just about to release a damning report about allegations that Gates had sex with a minor.

ABC News just broke that the woman in question testified before Congress that she was 17 when she had sex with Matt Gaetz. But anyway, that reports it's no longer happening because Gaetz conveniently resigned his seat

Now that he's been nominated for attorney general, the Florida congressman is one of Trump's most loyal supporters, but he hasn't won any popularity contests in Congress. Dan, here's some of what other Republicans and even Trump supporters have said about Matt Gaetz.

I served with some real scumbags. Look, Matt Gaetz, he paid minors to have sex with him at drug parties. We had all seen the videos he was showing on the house floor that all of us had walked away of the girls that he had slept with. He'd brag about how he would crush ED medicine and chase it with

with an energy drink so he could go all night. I would compare him to that toddler that we've all seen at the family barbecue eating toilet paper, shoving Cheerios up his nose to get attention. What a mix of comments. Have you seen a toddler eat toilet paper? No. Have any of your kids ever put Cheerios up their nose? They have put other food up their nose.

I have a friend whose kid put a nut so far up his nose he had to go to the hospital, so anything is possible. But you do know plenty of people who have crushed boner pills and Red Bulls to, uh... Right?

I don't, John. I don't know what crowd you're hanging out with there in L.A., but no, I don't. Just checking. Anyway, that was Republican Congressman Tony Gonzalez, Republican Senator Mark Wayne Mullen, and Fox commentator Dagan McDowell. That's where those came from, not Democrats. After the announcement, former Trump National Security Advisor John Bolton said that he thought that Tulsi Gabbard was the worst cabinet pick in history until he heard about Matt Gaetz. Yeah.

Ben Dominick, the very conservative writer who founded The Federalist, wrote, quote, Let me be clear. Matt Gaetz is a sex trafficking, drug addicted piece of shit. He is abhorrent. There are pools of vomit with more to offer the earth than this STD riddled testament to the failure of fallen masculinity.

That's beautiful. Another fan, another fan, a lot of fan mail for Matt Gates. Let's start with what Trump is trying to achieve with this pick. Please do. Please do.

So, you know, one theory is that Gates is just a wrecking ball and will go after, you know, all of Trump's enemies, people who prosecuted Trump, people who investigated Trump, other people who displeased Trump. One theory is that this is just a loyalty test and that Trump wants to see

Just how high members of Congress will jump for him. A third theory that I find less persuasive is that this is somehow a bait and switch and that he's going to backtrack on Gates and then put forward someone nearly as radical but less controversial. And that person will sail through because they're not Matt Gates. What do you think here? I've seen all three of these theories circulating on the Internet. I've seen well-credentialed smart people offering up number three.

And my question for all of those people are, were you in a fucking coma from 2017 to 2021? I think we can stipulate that Donald Trump is probably smarter than most liberals think he is, but he's not any more strategic. He wants Matt Gaetz there for a couple of reasons. One, picking Matt Gaetz as AG angers all the people Trump wants to anger. And he gets off on that. That's his kink. Mission accomplished. Yes. Congrats. Check that box.

But most importantly and most alarmingly, Matt Gaetz will investigate anyone Trump wants investigated and almost as importantly, will not investigate anyone Trump doesn't want investigated. Matt Gaetz is the person on this planet probably most likely to turn the Department of Justice into an arm of the Trump political operation. And that is incredibly scary. And that's why Trump wants him. And that's why people in both parties are concerned about this.

Yeah, we should talk about, look, the focus on Gates's potential sex crimes has really overshadowed all the other issues with making this guy attorney general. What are some of your biggest concerns? I mean, that's my biggest one is that he is not a serious individual. He is...

probably one of the most craven people in all of American politics. He has basically admitted that he made himself into a pro-Trump person because that was a better way to get attention, get on TV, and gain power within the Republican Party. This is someone who was being investigated for sex trafficking six months ago and now could be leading the department

That is investigating him. And so he will not, he's not going to be any sort of break on Trump's worst impulses. He'll be an accelerator. And that's incredibly concerning for all the reasons that people talk about. If you had said before the election, if you tweeted, Trump's going to win and Matt Gaetz is going to be the AG, people would have called you out for being a hysterical liberal.

Right. Just because it seems so ridiculous. And this is what Trump wants to do. And it is quite concerning. There are a lot of checks and balances within the Justice Department. You have a ton of career officials there. Matt Gaetz is someone who is not even Bill Barr for as bad as he was or Jeff Sessions for as bad as he was, was unwilling to override all of those things for Donald Trump. Matt Gaetz would certainly do that.

Yeah, I mean, look, I talk about this with Andy Kim later, but there's this Washington Post story today about how officials, former government officials, military officials, Trump administration officials who've spoken out against Trump are like literally packing their bags and figuring out how to like leave the country, at least until they know what happens with the Trump Justice Department, parking assets overseas. They're getting advice from lawyers on all this. We talked about this a little on Tuesday. I mean, it's just it's

It's stunning. It's shocking that this is happening in the United States of America. And of course, we don't know how a Gates-run Justice Department would go. We don't even know if Gates will actually get confirmed or get the job. But...

The potential for abuse is vast. And there's a New York Times piece that said, since the election, one law firm got three dozen job applications from the Justice Department, from career officials. Because what's going to happen is a lot of people at the Justice Department, a lot of career officials, not Democrats, not political appointees, not liberals, just good lawyers who've been there for a long, being there under Democratic and Republican presidents, are

like don't want to stick around to see what Donald Trump and potentially Matt Gaetz force them to do or not to, or go after them for doing their jobs. So look, maybe you're listening to this and you're not an enemy of Donald Trump and you're not worried that he's going to go after you. Just the sheer chaos that could take place at the Justice Department, which is responsible for a lot of work that keeps all of us safe,

And going after a lot of crime, you know, that could be jeopardized by just having a fucking wrecking ball there. Every minute that a Matt Gaetz, Donald Trump-led Justice Department is doing political work to investigate or persecute or prosecute Donald Trump's enemies is a moment that is not being used to stop violent crime, to investigate money laundering, to prevent terrorism or all the other things that happen in the Department of Justice.

So it matters for everyone, whether you were an MSNBC talking head from 2017 to now, or you're just an average American person who depends in some way, shape, or form on the government to keep you safe. Yeah.

Let's talk prospects for confirmation. Senator John Cornyn, who lost the Senate leadership election but will be the number two Republican on the Judiciary Committee, said he and his colleagues will, quote, absolutely want to see the text of this House ethics report about Gates. A few other Republican senators have made comments that suggest they might oppose Gates's nomination.

Can you see a scenario where this thing goes down? I can. I absolutely can see a scenario where it goes down. This is, he can only lose, we assume, four votes, presuming what happens in Pennsylvania. And he probably has already lost two in Collins and Murkowski. Is Mitch McConnell going to vote for Matt Gaetz?

Now, you're looking at like a Tom Tillis, Todd Young, like some of these more like older establishment, you know, they're all MAGA establishment now, but still sort of more establishment type Republicans. Yeah, who knows? I mean, the senators have an ability if they want, if they want to buck Trump in ways that the House does not, because some of these folks like Senator John Thune are not up for reelection until after Donald Trump's out of the White House.

Someone is going to deliver a report to a group of senators that every – all 100 senators will be able to read that is going to be an eyewitness account and firsthand testimony of a 17-year-old girl who claims she had sex with Matt Gaetz.

And then you're going to ask these people to vote for him to be the chief law enforcement officer of the United States of America a week later. So I think there's a real chance. Now, we can get into it. On the other hand, they just supported Donald Trump for president. Yes, yes. So they're, I mean, yes. They were all in for the guy who's a convicted felon. Look, you would lose a lot of money betting on the moral courage and patriotism of Senate Republicans. But there is a possibility this goes down because there is always a bridge too far.

far. There is always a cabinet choice or two that fails for various reasons. As we look at it here, and it is a vicious competition, I will tell you that. But as we currently look at it, this is the most likely of Donald Trump's cabinet nominations to go down.

Well, next up. Yeah, let's go through them all. RFK Jr., you might remember a few days before the election, CNN's Caitlin Collins asked Trump transition co-chair Howard Lutnick if Kennedy would be in charge of health and human services. His answer, of course not. What he actually meant by that is, of course, no.

It's easy to misspeak on live television. Yeah, no, I was just missing a word there. Kennedy falsely believes that childhood vaccines cause autism, has spread misinformation about COVID and COVID vaccines, and has already pledged to remove fluoride from drinking water. Former acting director of the CDC, Dr. Richard Besser, told NBC that RFK Jr. as HHS secretary would, quote, imperil the health of people across the country. Though Kennedy does have one unlikely supporter, Jared Polis,

The Democratic governor of Colorado, who said he's excited by the news and thinks Kennedy will help make America healthy again by shaking up HHS and FDA. OK, first general reaction to RFK Jr. as our next health and human services secretary. Do I think there is a problem and a potential danger with the.

top healthcare official in the federal government being someone who sows conspiracy theories about vaccines? Yes, I think that is deeply dangerous. And if RFK Jr. is confirmed or ends up in that position in one way or another, I think that will lead to more measles, more smallpox, more whooping cough, and all the other things that vaccines have been keeping Americans safer. Because now you have a very famous, very prominent former Democrat who

Trump administration official spreading those lies from a petition of great power and authority. So I think that's deeply, deeply dangerous. I think I – Polis' statement is very interesting to me. People are very, very mad about it. And he did a follow-up tweet where he made the point that what RFK Jr. says about vaccines is scientifically – has been proven false scientifically. It is absolutely not true and is deeply dangerous. Right.

But if we as Democrats say we follow the science, then some of the other things that he is talking about, like the dangers from factory farming of pesticides and chemicals, if you follow the science, there's also ways in which we should reform our government there. And this is a big thing, and I'm sure it's big in Colorado. It is big where we live here in California. There is a lot of skepticism about big pharma, big food companies, but huge –

greedy corporations are feeding our children. And RFK has been sitting in this wellness space for a very long time talking about these things. I've said this on this podcast before. This is something my wife brings up all the time. She follows a lot of influencers on Instagram. She is constantly fed

people in the wellness space who are RFK adjacent and have become MAGA adjacent because of RFK's association with Trump. And so the thing I think about this is it's very dangerous. We should do everything we possibly can to stop them. We have to be careful about talking specifically at the vaccine stuff and not making ourselves the defenders of big pharma, big food, factory farms, and all of those other things. I think that's what Polis was trying to get at. And he has a bit of a point there.

I fucking love Big Pharma. What are you talking about? I'm going to get to this at the end, but this is that giant pit we're about to jump right back into. That's where we're headed. I think the reason that this is particularly combustible is, to your point, one result, unfortunate result of the pandemic, one of fucking many, is that trust in public health institutions has fallen by a lot, not just among Republicans.

And we don't have to go into why that is now because you could spend a whole episode on it. But we had a fast moving, mutating, changing virus. And the CDC and our public health agencies weren't always as nimble as they could have been. And also maybe even the best staffed agencies that made no mistakes still would have appeared to be changing their minds all the time because the virus kept changing. Right.

And, you know, you had vaccine mandates and not vaccine mandates and masks and this and then there's this variant and this variant. Right. Like so trust in public health institutions has gone down. Right. So into that steps RFK Jr., who has been peddling unfounded conspiracies and misinformation about public health for a long time.

And some of the things he said about big pharma, absolutely true. Some of the things he said about, you know, environmental pollution and big corporations polluting the environment, absolutely true. The problem with him is like he doesn't necessarily follow the science at all. And when the science tells him something that he doesn't want to hear that flies against his own preconceived notions, his own beliefs, his own theories, he just ignores it. Right. He is, you know, he has embraced raw milk.

FDA is saying that drinking it is risky, particularly amid a current bird flu epidemic among dairy cows. But, you know, he says, go for it. He's also said like he's going to go say to the National Institute of Health scientists, the scientists at the NIH are the best in the world. They have discovered some of the best cures to disease and scientific and medical innovations in the world. And he's going to say he said he's going to say to them, this was just

Recently, thank you for your public service. We're going to give infectious disease a break for about eight years. It's like, yeah, like, wouldn't we all love to give infectious disease a break? But it's not going to give us a break. So we might as well keep studying it and not lay off a bunch of scientists at the NIH in his book.

His book that he wrote in 2021, he claimed in the book that Dr. Fauci and Bill Gates are members of a vaccine cartel trying to kill patients by denying them hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin. He also argued that this cartel secretly funded doctors to produce fraudulent studies showing that the drugs were ineffective against COVID and that they did so in order to orchestrate global lockdowns and accelerate the construction of 5G cellular networks,

which of course are bad. That was from The Atlantic. Someone had read his book, thankfully, so we didn't have to. I mean, I just, you know, it's like... But I take your point in that I think that the...

What we can't do is just like wave him away as a nut because for a lot of people, they're just hearing about him for the first time or they don't know all of his theories. And so I think when you're talking about RFK Jr. to your friends, you kind of have to go into what he's done. We talked about this when Lutnik first said, you know, he might or might not run HHS. And I was telling about the measles outbreak he helped cause. In Samoa, yes. In Samoa? He personally caused a measles outbreak that cost more than 80 lives.

Yeah. And everyone can go read it and see for yourself. You know, it's like, you know, if he wasn't singularly responsible, he certainly helped. I already lifted up some of the people, the anti-vaxxers in Samoa who were trying to stop these kids from getting vaccinated and a bunch of died. So like, look, the facts are all out there. Just, you know, go do your own research as RFK Jr. might say. I mean, he is just, I think when you, the part you just read from his book is that he is, he really is sort of a maestro at spitting a conspiracy theory.

Taking legitimate concerns that people have and real questions that are worth asking and then taking that one step further into a very dangerous, very incorrect, and very unscientific set of solutions that – like that is where he has taken us. But what we can't – we have to be able to address –

why his solutions are wrong without seeming like we don't share some of the same concerns about pollution and food quality and pesticides and chemicals in this country. Big day for the brain worm, huh?

Yeah, this is one. Yes, that's exactly right. Big day for the. I also really enjoyed in the New York Times story about Trump announcing him. It just there's just like casually a sentence there. In addition to his outside the mainstream views about medicine and health, he has been associated with a number of peculiar activities like dumping a dead bear in Central Park and supposedly decapitating a whale. Yeah.

What are we doing? Big day for roadkill here in America. What are we doing? All right. Moving on to two people who Trump wants to put in charge of the U.S. military and the nation's secrets and spy agencies, Pete Hegseth and Tulsi Gabbard. Hegseth is a co-host of Fox and Friends Weekend and an Army vet who loves to criticize today's allegedly woke military. He also said as recently as last week, quote, I'm straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles because

A reminder that Trump's team is also reportedly drawing up an executive order so that Trump can purge the military of generals he doesn't like or that he thinks are too woke. I don't know. Call me crazy. I feel like a weekend cable TV host might not be qualified to run a department of two million people. But what do I know? I'm just a defender of institutions. He was a weekday podcast host. What do you think about Pete Hegseth?

For years now, going back to 2016, I've been making a pretty unfunny joke about how Trump's cabinet picks, staff picks would be just dregs of the Fox News green room. Well, joke's on me, people, because now he's in charge of the military. Now he's in charge of the military. You can imagine that Defense Department officials, not just Biden appointees, but people who've worked at the Pentagon for years and years and career officials are sort of terrified by this.

And again, this is, all these nominees fit into different categories. Some of them are crazy. Some of them are just, you know, they're sort of,

They're going to carry out Trump's, you know, revenge wishes. And then some of them are just like have no most of them actually have no experience or qualifications for the job that they're being nominated for. I think this is where Pete Hegseth comes to play. Like the Defense Department is a that's a big department. That's a that's that's one of the biggest, if not the biggest. It is the biggest. Right. And it is a massive management challenge. Put aside Trump.

He obviously served in the military. He's a very decorated veteran. But running the department is very different. And up until this point, his main role in life is to be Steve Doocy's understudy. So it's...

If that doesn't prepare you to run DOD, I don't know what does. The fact that he's the Fox & Friends weekend anchor is just so fucking funny. Like Fox & Friends anchor would be funny, but Fox & Friends weekend is just so much funnier. It's not funny per se because that guy might be in charge of our military and his confirmation prospects went through the roof with RFK Jr. and Matt Gates. The reporters will be lighting up to vote for Pete Hegseth now because if they have to vote against one of these other two people.

So then there's Tulsi Gabbard. So she started off as a Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii before going full MAGA, particularly during this campaign. During her long political journey over the last decade, she developed sort of strange sympathetic views towards Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad and Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, both of whom have committed crimes against humanity by slaughtering thousands of their own people. She met with Assad.

Secretly? Secret trip to Syria during the Obama administration while Assad was again slaughtering his own people and she just decided to have a meeting with him. Didn't tell anyone, just, you know, just a meeting. Then she said he's not our enemy. She defended Putin's invasion of Ukraine. She even opposed U.S. sanctions on Putin. Putin again killed thousands of Ukrainians, abducted 20,000 Ukrainian children in this war. The war is still going. Didn't want sanctions on Putin.

How on earth does this person get a job as the director of national intelligence? She ran for the Democratic presidential nomination four years ago. I know. I know. And now she never, she never served on the intelligence committee and is now Donald Trump's nominee to be director of national intelligence. What a journey, what a fast and tumultuous journey to where she is.

I mean, I'm sure Ben and Tommy will talk, go get into detail about all of this and why it's dangerous on Pod Save the World. But, you know, I was just reading the Politico story about it. There's like Western intel officials from other countries telling Politico, like, you know what? Other countries, including our allies, like may not want to share politics.

intelligence with us anymore. And we need that intelligence to like prevent terrorist attacks and other things. And, you know, if they can't trust that, like, who the fuck is Tulsi Gabbard just like freelancing on her own meeting with dictators. And now she's Trump's pal, who's going to be the director of national intelligence, despite not having any experience. But what, what, what, I mean, just to put in perspective, the importance of this position,

The director of national intelligence was a position created after 9-11 when all of our separate intelligence agencies and intelligence that we were getting from the CIA, from defense department, from the FBI were not brought together, which allowed 9-11 to happen. So we created this position. There's a serious position that is supposed to manage all these various intelligence agencies, bring them together and make sure that we are getting the best information to protect the United States homeland, uh,

from terrorism and to understand what's happening abroad. And we've handed that someone with no experience who was seemingly just a pick to troll the people that Donald Trump hates the most in the intelligence agencies. Like it is like, that is the theme through all of these, right? Like he picked Marco Rubio for whatever reason to be at state. And he picked the random New York Congressman leads at former Congressman Lee Zeldin at EPA. But these are

Little MAGA hand grenades to roll into the parts of the deep state, the quote-unquote deep state that he hates the most, to piss people off the most, to render these agencies unfunctionable. Well, I was going to say, in the first term, you could look at some of his appointments and think –

That person's a real Yahoo, but there's an entire agency, a lot of career officials, and maybe that person doesn't know what the hell they're doing. Then, you know, there's an agency full of people who do know what they're doing, and they will try to work with this person and, you know, and maybe help them succeed because we all want the government to succeed, right? Like, we want all these agencies to do the jobs that they're supposed to do. This time around, it's different because...

Trump and his team have been making plans to try to fire not only the political appointees, get rid of the political appointees at all these agencies, but the career officials. And

Either they fire some of these career officials or some of these career officials might leave because they don't want to stick around for this. And then you're right. Then you just have chaos and you have a bunch of agencies that don't have the people they need to actually just do perform their basic functions. And that to me is a real concern aside from just the character and qualifications of the people who will lead them. I wrote about the Gates and Tulsi Gabbard appointments and message box this morning.

And which caused me to go back and look at all of Trump's first set of cabinet appointees and realize,

It was a very – like his approach was very different. He was clearly trying back in 2017, trying to send a signal to the Republican establishment that he was a serious person, right? Like Rex Tillerson was the CEO of Exxon. Like obviously he was not a foreign diplomat, but he was a serious person, right? Jim Mattis at defense. Till he was fired on the toilet. Yeah, exactly. I mean it did not end well for most of these people. John Kelly, former general at Holman. Like these were –

they weren't like, they were not good at their jobs. Most of them didn't last very long, but they were at least people who were on paper for the most part were qualified for this job. This is, you were swinging in the exact opposite direction here. He's specifically picking people who are not qualified for the jobs who will likely go in there and really fuck shit up, right? That seems to be his plan. Pod Save America is brought to you by ZipRecruiter. Look, there's different kinds of offices. You got your home office, you got your, your work office, your,

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This would require either House Speaker Mike Johnson or new Senate Majority Leader John Thune to adjourn Congress, which they can try to do with a simple majority vote.

If either the House or Senate refuses to adjourn, so let's say Mike Johnson says, yeah, we're going to adjourn. But John Thune says, no, that's sort of crazy. I don't want to do it. The Constitution says Trump president can break the tie and adjourn Congress himself. And then once that happens, could just appoint his entire cabinet. No confirmation hearings, no nothing.

On the other hand, he may not have to do this. He may be able to just confirm his nominees through the regular Senate confirmation process, since a lot of Republicans seem like they want to give Trump whatever he wants. Here's how a House Republican, Troy Nels of Texas, and a Senate Republican, Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, see it.

There was a mandate last week, Liz, that said, hey, we want President Trump to have his team. We want to take back our country. Republicans, if you're not on the team, get out of the way. There's no question he's the leader of our party. So now he's got a mission statement, his mission and his goals and objectives, whatever that is, we need to embrace it.

All of it. Every single word. Again, President Trump and J.D. Vance are going to be running the Senate. If Donald Trump says jump three feet high and scratch your head, we all jump three feet high and scratch our heads. That's it. That's actually, John, that three feet high thing you meant. It's a quote from the Federalist Papers. Yes.

You know, even I thought when when Harris Wallace campaign and Democrats and the Biden Harris campaign before that made a lot out of dictator on day one, it's like, you know, is that really believable? And Trump was kind of joking when he said it. He's I'm only going to be a dictator on the first day. And then you hear these Republicans be like, yeah, no, no, he can do whatever he wants. Forget Congress. Congress. What are we what are they even doing there?

Yeah, it's not like you think. Do you think we're headed? I feel like there is a very good chance that we are headed for this recess appointment gambit. And the reason is because, first of all, it is shock and awe. It is just like you said with some of these appointments. It's Trump basically saying, fuck everyone. I'm I'm in charge. I'm the king here. I don't need Congress. I'm going to put whoever I want in my cabinet and you people try to stop me.

Or maybe he doesn't have to do it because even the threat of it happening just makes them all say, sure, we'll, you know, maybe he loses Murkowski and Collins, but maybe he doesn't lose the rest. And then that's that because they just don't. I mean, some people I saw Robert Costa, CBS reporting this, that some Republicans in the Senate are privately telling him, I don't know if we really have the appetite to stand up to him right now.

I think he is going to get the overall majority of his cabinet picks one way or the other. Like most of them are just going to pass through the Senate with 51 or 52 votes, right? He's going to, or JD Vance will finally find a useful function in life and he will head down there and start breaking ties. I think the recess appointment is a very real live option. There, there are, and we should talk to legal experts here. There are some real questions about whether those appointments can stand. And it is, and we looked at this, we did recess appointments in the Obama administration and,

They got struck down. And because we did it over a short period, which the Supreme Court in its very partisan judgment decided did not count for that, did not count as recess for Barack Obama. A Democrat must need an extended recess. We'll see what they think about the Trump. But as Tommy pointed out on your Tuesday pod, there are some reasons to believe that the Supreme Court may not take the recess appointment thing super seriously because it's an outdated concept.

Right. Which I believe Scalia, before he died, in the opinion about the Obama thing, said that recess appointments, as they were conceived of in the Constitution, it's just not what happens anymore. Yes. It was when people had to ride their horses back from one of the 13 original states to get back in time to make an appointment, as opposed to getting on a plane the next day.

There are some consequences going the recess appointment route. One, if you have to recess appoint your own appointees when you control the Senate, it is just a massive blaring billboard sign of weakness and incompetence.

So that's one, two. Or strength in that you don't need the Senate and you're like, I don't give a shit what these Republicans think. In past, it could be that way. It could be that way. It's generally, that may seem strong in some circles with your base. I'm not sure that's going to be as popular as you think it is with the broader electorate, which generally thinks that people should work together. Yeah.

and often votes for bipartisan government and will be one of the many things we'll see in the many ads in 2026 about taking back the House and the Senate. Two is, at least in the old days, you'd pay a price because senators cared about their authority, right? And so if you don't allow me, the chair of the Judiciary Committee, to

offer my advice and consent on the attorney general that I'm going to make you pay for it through the funding process, the oversight process, all that. I'm not really counting on that happening this time. But the other thing is, is that these appointments expire at the end of this Congress. So you can appoint Matt Gaetz for two years. But in two years, you might have a Democratic Senate. And so now what are you going to do? You're not getting someone like Matt Gaetz through the next time.

Right. And so this is where that fake third strategy sort of comes in. This is not Trump's plan, but let's say we go through this whole Gates thing. The ethics report comes out. Senators get queasy. They didn't vet it. This is an important point. They clearly vetted none of these people. Gates wasn't on the short list.

Yeah, that's what I say. Vetting? Yeah. He wasn't – So we are – It happened in a plane flight. This is a months-long process where every reporter in America is going to be digging into everything Gates has said and done. He's going to have to turn over all of his financial records. Like it's going to be drip, drip, drip, drip, drip for a very long time. Trump hates bad press. So he pulls the plug and then he puts – I don't know, Judge Jean Pirro up. She flies right through. Yeah.

I don't know what is going to happen here, but a recess appointment process is not risk-free or penalty-free for Trump. So here's a question for you about the political implications of this. Because one lesson, unfortunately, I feel like I have learned from this last campaign, is that for voters who decided the election, who do not pay close attention, who are not high-information voters—

Norms, institutions, process fights, bad press about a crazy person that Donald Trump may or may not be associated with or have hired don't fucking matter.

And what people really care about is something that might affect them personally. And so I wonder if, you know, there's this moment where Donald Trump does a recess appointment thing like that. And everyone, you know, you can imagine, you can imagine the banners on MSNBC. We'll be talking about it here, right? Oh my gosh, the constitution, what's he doing? He's a dictator. And then,

voters are just like, I don't know, maybe he should, I don't know what's going on, maybe he should just have his cabinet. Maybe he should, let's just let him do some stuff first and see what he does. So I got a lot of thoughts here, so buckle up. Okay, first. That's what I asked you the question. That argument works much better when it's the other party.

If it's Democrats blocking his cabinet, when it's his own party, that's a different story. Obama was able to go out and say, they are preventing me from getting my secretary of labor, so I'm going to use a recess appointment. They've been blocking him for months and months and months. Mitch McConnell, those people are saying he shouldn't even get a cabinet. So he went out and made a recess appointment. Different story if it is your own party, you can't get on board.

But I think the broader point here, and this goes for how we talk about all of these nominees, it goes for how we talk about the Doge Commission and all these other things, is the lesson here is, and this is the lesson we have to learn from the first Trump presidency, is when Trump does bad things and he attacks people and institutions and science and the FBI and the CIA, our natural reaction cannot be to become the defender of the status quo.

This is partly what Jared Polis was trying to get at, perhaps maybe not as articulately as possible with the RFK thing. We cannot end this by being that we're going to defend all the institutions in this country, all the processes, the political system, all of those things.

We have to like you might have tried to you might you might try to upend the FBI, but we have 35 former FBI officials who have signed a letter and now it's fucking checkmate. Oh, you you think your egg prices are too high? Wait till you see my letter from 35 Ivy League Nobel Prize winning economists. Yes, this is. Yeah.

I'm with you. I feel in just – I haven't seen a lot from elected Democrats yet. They've been sort of holding their powder dry here to their credit. But when you sort of see the cable conversation, the Twitter conversations, we're right back into it. We are – this is how we got ourselves in this mess. We are becoming the elite –

defenders of the status quo at a time of historic cynicism about politics and distrust in institutions. The way in which we navigate that, and this is a much broader, longer conversation is, we have to become the party of reform. We have to be the party who wants to reform the system. We want to take the money out of politics. We want to stop the corporate influence. And we're going to have a huge opportunity to do that because, oh, I don't know, the world's richest man is pulling the strings on the president right now while he's waiting for billions of dollars in defense department contracts for his personal companies.

I mean, I saved that for last. The best for last. Because I do think of all the shit that we've talked about, the Doge Commission might present the...

the best opportunity for Democrats here because... So, Doge, Department of Government Efficiency, also the name of a fucking Bitcoin that Elon Musk has or whatever started. I don't know what the fuck you do. I don't know how to talk about that. Anyway, so...

So Vivek Ramaswamy, Elon Musk running the Department of Government Efficiency, not really a government department, but something they're providing outside advice for. I thought originally it was just like this blue ribbon commission and they could go like, I made this joke. It's like the MAGA Simpson Bowles Commission. So I made this joke to Max on offline. So people will hear it on Sunday too. And I said, the only people who will be laughing at this

Are Dan Pfeiffer and Ben Rhodes? Maybe Tommy? I'm laughing on the outside. I'm crying on the inside out of some PTSD from being in the White House with the Simpson Bulls and sadness for you personally for having me at that joke.

Yeah, no, I yourself aware about it. So I appreciate that. It's very pathetic of me. Anyway, so, yeah, so some had some blue. They keep them busy. They identify all these cuts. And then, of course, you have to, you know, bring it to Congress. And Congress is like, OK, fuck off, whatever. But The Washington Post had a story about how the White House is preparing to try a novel strategy for adopting the Doge's recommendations, even if Congress does not.

There's some 1974 act and Poundman Act or whatever, where they can, the Trump people think that the president is able to say, oh, Congress decided that we have to spend this money, but we don't actually have to spend the money that Congress appropriates. Screw them. And basically, you know, the power of the purse is not with Congress, but with Donald Trump and Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy. And here's Vivek Ramaswamy previewing its mandate.

Oh, I forgot that his voice is going to be back. Oof.

So Elon Musk had said, like, you know, I think we can cut two trillion dollars from the federal government. Six and a half trillion dollar budget. Can't cut two trillion dollars from the federal budget without cutting Medicare, Social Security, health programs, retirement programs, education programs, programs that people rely on.

So I don't know. It seems like if they try to do that, it feels like that's something that could be unpopular. Yeah, I think the way we have to approach this very strategically, like you and I look at this and a lot of people have since looked at this and it's like, here are two fucking MAGA clowns with a fake job just running through the government trying to make some proposals.

And the way a lot of the country will approach this is here are two pretty successful business people looking at a ineffectual and waste ridden government. And by the way, a lot of waste to get rid of in the government. That's like we, we, that's the point we have been. Oh, Barack Obama was obsessed with this and did not get as far as he wanted. No, we, he wanted to, there were multiple proposals to combine a couple departments. I think we were going to like combine commerce and something else. I don't know. You're losing your cabinet seat, small business administration. Yes. And like, and here's the point. Do your salmon joke here.

No. We did enough of that during the State of the Union. Elon Musk and Donald Trump, they have this point, which is you go into government and we try to do this. You try to combine agencies and suddenly everyone at the agencies and the secretaries, the cabinet officials in those agencies are like, absolutely not. Why can't we combine them? Why can't we get rid of all this? Because they give you a blizzard of words that don't really...

They're not a compelling argument, but it's just like the bureaucracy just really does make it hard to reform government. So that is true. This idea is going to be pretty popular. It is like the scene from Dave when he brings his accountant in to work on the federal budget. It makes sense people intuitively. So the way we should approach it as Democrats is we should...

We agree that there is too much waste in government. We should look for places to make it more efficient and work better and make us better stewards of tax credit. We should absolutely do that. And then we should – and if – we should say, if these guys come up with good ideas, we're open to listen to them because we agree government should be more efficient and we should save money.

Let's see their proposals. Let's make them put their cards on the table. What is the $2 trillion? Elon Musk told Tucker Carlson he wanted to eliminate like 300 federal agencies. What are those agencies? Are they going to help people like flood victims? Are they protecting our air and water? Are they preventing diseases? FEMA, what are those? Put them on the table. Where are you going to get your $2 trillion? Are you going to get it from Social Security, Medicare? Are you going to get it from education? Are you going to get it from

Disease prevention, where is that coming from? Put it on the table and let's have a big, giant debate about it because they're doing this thing at the exact same moment that Donald Trump and the Republicans are trying to pass a multi-trillion dollar unpaid for tax cut for billionaires and corporations.

Yeah. I think that, that is the sort of general advice on all of these things, which is think about how an action, not just words, not like Donald Trump said something crazy or Elon Musk said something crazy or the cabinet, you know, secretaries who are all fucking nuts said something crazy, but like we should focus on how these policies and actions and legislation actually affect real people. Because I think that is, we sometimes just get caught up in the offensive comments. Um,

and the craziness and the chaos, which there's plenty of, but voters care about what actually affects them. And they could do a lot of damage, all these people. So we'll see. As people who work in government and believe as part of our political philosophy that government can and should help people, we understand the value of experts and experienced people doing these jobs because we've seen it. When there are good people in those jobs and bad people in those jobs, it makes a huge difference. That is not how most of the public sees this. They don't necessarily think that some of these people that Trump has appointed are

that should be disqualified simply because they don't have quote unquote government experience, right? They just elected Donald Trump twice. So they've been pretty- Not putting a premium on government experience. They've been pretty clear on what they think about traditional political experience. And so the arguments we make about these people, as I think we did around RFK Jr., is, as you pointed out, how what they will actually do will hurt people. And I think an important meta argument, because we want to tie all these people together, is not that it's a bunch of inexperienced clowns

is that Donald Trump is picking a bunch of people who are loyal to him above anything else, who will put Donald Trump's interests first, not your interests. And that is the thread that combines them all. And I think that's how to talk about this. Yeah, I very much agree. Okay, when we come back from the break, you'll hear my conversation with Congressman and Senator-elect Andy Kim. Two quick things before we do that. On this week's episode of Polar Coaster...

Dan, you, looks at what the polls got right, where they fell short, and what we still don't know. Then Caroline Reston joins to tackle listeners' burning questions. Anything you want to say about this episode? Yeah, I would say that the polar coaster questions submitted from the Friends of the Pod Discord are always incredibly smart and nerdy, as they were this time as well, which you and I would appreciate. Love that. But we made a specific call out for some more fun questions. So we got into some more fun stuff, including...

Which members of the Bravoverse would make the best presidential candidates? So I'll just tease you with that. Wow. All right, I'm in. I'm in. You got me. To catch this exclusive subscriber series, sign up at crooked.com slash friends. Also this week on Hysteria, Aaron and Alyssa bring together journalist Aaron Haynes, activist Julissa Arce, and comedian Megan Gailey to talk about the election. Hear their takes on everything from what it really takes for a woman to become president to why people voted for abortion rights while supporting anti-abortion candidates and whether it's time to cut off your Trumpy friends.

You can subscribe to Hysteria wherever you get your podcasts and you can catch full episodes on their YouTube channel. When we come back, Andy Kemp.

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Joining us today, a Democratic member of Congress who was just elected to be the brand new senator from the state of New Jersey, Andy Kim. Welcome and congrats. Yeah, thanks, John, for having me on. I'm excited. So you just won in a state that swung...

10 points to the right between 2020 and 2024. And one reason I wanted to talk to you is because a few days after the election, you posted what I thought was a really thoughtful thread about the conversations you had when you won your House seat back in 2020 with people who voted for you and voted for Donald Trump. Can you talk about why it was important to you to have those conversations and what you learned from them?

Yeah, happy to talk about that. I mean, to set the stage, you know, I flipped a Republican district in 2018, a district that Trump won in 2016. And then in 2020, Trump was on the ballot and he won my congressional district. But so did I. I outperformed Biden by eight points in 2020 to win. And I was one of only seven Democrats in the country to

to win a district that Trump won. And, you know, given that our House majority was only five votes that time, you know, we saw that, you know, if me and four other Dems in these tough districts lost, you know, we wouldn't have the inflation reduction act, the infrastructure law. So I was really trying to just kind of hone in and understand, what is it? You know, why is it that 20 to 25,000 people in my congressional district voted for Trump and voted for me? Right.

And so I wanted to do that kind of research afterwards. I found that very few campaigns, if any, were doing that kind of operation. And so we just took it upon ourselves to do a series of conversations. And it was really powerful. I mean, I think the overarching lesson that I learned then that I still think is valid is,

is just that just understanding and feeling the visceral, not just distrust, but frankly, disgust that so many people have in politics, in the status quo, in what's happening right now. Oftentimes in these districts, they're called battleground, frontline districts, things like, it makes it sound like there's like a blue army and a red army, like duking it out every single day. And whoever survives wins the election.

But what I really saw was just like, honestly, like the vast, vast, vast majority of people in my congressional district honestly couldn't stand either party. And, you know, the biggest divide wasn't just red and blues, like between those who were engaged and those who are not, those who are just so distrusting or frankly apathetic to what is happening. So that was a really big eye opener and one that, you know, gave me a sense of what needs to happen next.

What do you think needs to happen next? And, you know, the question I always ask is because I agree that I think that the maybe the most salient divide in politics right now is between people who pay a lot of attention to politics and consume a lot of political news junkies like me, whether you're a Democrat or Republican.

And then the vast majority of people in this country who don't follow politics that closely, but still, you know, they probably still turn out to vote maybe just in a presidential and not a midterm. And I wonder if, you know, we're having a lot of discussions now about like what's next for the Democratic Party? Where do we go wrong? What can we fix?

But sometimes I think to myself, there's just a whole bunch of people who aren't hearing any of this. And if we don't get them involved and engaged in politics, then, you know, we're not going to hold power again.

Yeah, you know, it's just like so much of what I felt like the conversation was in the final couple weeks of this campaign. It was like this sense of who's got the energy on their side, right? And like, you know, getting the sense of the rallies and the Chicago convention or small dollar donors. And we realized that none of that really gave any sense of what actually was going to unfold. And I think there needs to be a clear understanding of what I call, you know, I try to practice what I call politics of humility.

You know, it starts by saying, we don't have the answers. Nobody right now, you know, I know a lot of people are pontificating right now, and that's fine. But we have to come at it from a sense of humility of just,

sense that like, we don't know, nobody knows fully what went wrong, then we need to take on the process of actually listening to people. And I think that was a really important step that, you know, I took on in 2020, I strongly recommend it. But it was just one of those situations, you know, back in 2020, I told you, there was only seven of us that won a district that Trump won.

Really, at no point after that election did anyone from leadership or the White House or others come to the seven of us and say, how'd you do it? What do you need to do it again? How do we replicate or scale some of this? And I think there was just too much of a sense of just like, we know the answers, we need to move forward. So I really hope that there is a deep and meaningful process that unfolds, that is coordinated, that is thoughtful and engaged.

And try to listen. And the way I sort of say it is like, if you're only having comfortable conversations in politics, it means you're not talking to all the people you need to be talking to. You know, politics should inherently be uncomfortable. Yeah. You know, it should inherently be difficult.

But, you know, it's so easy to make us want to just be able to be in the room with people that agree with us and throw these nice rallies and everyone's happy. But, you know, we need to find ourselves in a place that's more difficult. But you got to show up.

You know, in my old congressional district that voted for Trump, you know, there was no, you know, democratic operation on the ground outside of my campaign and, you know, the other efforts that are there. You know, in New Jersey, so much of the resources for the party is in deep blue areas. You know, like if we want to go out there and engage people, you got to show up. You know, I've now done 80 town halls as a member of Congress. I've learned a lot from just meeting people where they're at.

and trying to operate. The second thing I'll just say, beyond just the showing up part, because it's important, but as I said earlier, there is a visceral, visceral distrust in the status quo. I think it's going to be something that we have to unpack when we run on a message about protecting democracy, protecting governance.

We also have to show that that does not mean that we are protecting a broken status quo that has created the largest amount of inequality in American history, that has led for so many people to feel alienated, so many people to feel like the politics doesn't work for them.

So how do we show like, yes, we should be protecting our democracy. We should be trying to prevent so much of this fragility to be decimated and broken by those who are putting themselves ahead of what's right for this country.

but we cannot be seen as a party that is just thinking everything's fine otherwise. And I think that that sense of how do we show what we are trying to do different from the status quo, how we're trying to take it in a different direction, I think that'll be key to unlocking how we try to do this, not just from a talking point communication approach, but from an actual vision and a strategy for what comes next in our country.

You mentioned the importance of having uncomfortable conversations. I know you've offered some advice on how to have effective, uncomfortable conversations with people who may not agree with you. What are some of the most important tips you'd like to offer people? Yeah, well, look, I mean, I think this is something that I'll just kind of sum up in this way is like,

So often in the political sphere, especially down in D.C. at the Capitol, you know, like there's this overarching question of like, what's the right message? Do we have the right message? And that is obviously a very important question. But there are two other important questions. One is,

who is the right messenger? And then third, does the message you're actually trying to convey actually get to the people you're trying to talk to? And that is so often, like the people in my congressional district or my state who are distrusting of politics, they're not like, they're not following like the DSCC or Hakeem Jeffries or Chuck Schumer on social media, you know, like how do you actually get to them? So, you know, first and foremost, you know, showing up is important.

having that sense of humility. The way I sort of describe it is like when you are filled with hubris in politics,

People can tell. They can tell when you're talking to them and you feel like you have all the right answers. Because if you feel like you have all the right answers, what's the point in talking to somebody? You're not actually going to learn something from them. So what ends up happening is that conversation is more about trying to convert that person to your position rather than having a meaningful dialogue. And people can see through that. And honestly, they find it insulting. And so it's important that we understand how to be able to engage people

how to be able to listen, have those types of opportunities on that front. Oftentimes, I try to do it in ways that are not overtly political, like try to, you know, do town halls, do other things where I can try to bring people in the fold. Because honestly, a lot of people that voted for Trump, they're not going to show up to something that's branded as a Democratic Party

meeting or, you know, a listening session in that kind of vein. So, you know, we need to be thoughtful about how it is we actually make sure we have the right people in the room that are willing to talk. Not everyone's going to be willing to talk. And not everyone is the right messenger, the right communicator. And I think that that's going to be important going forward.

But look, I mean, there were a lot of people that, you know, some of my Senate class, you know, they outperformed the party. They've shown that they are able to bring on board other voters. You know, there are things here that we can learn from. Now the question is, how do we scale it and how do we try to replicate it? So, you know, it's going to be challenging, but that's where we start. So now you're going to be a senator and boy, what a wonderful time to be in the U.S. Senate. Yeah.

I saw you came out in opposition to Matt Gaetz's nomination to be attorney general. Just, you know, in terms of the conversation we were just having, what would you say to a constituent who doesn't know much about Matt Gaetz and can't quite understand why he's not fit to be attorney general? Yeah, well, look, I think the first and foremost, what I try to do is lay out

That this isn't about just one person. This isn't just about all of these folks. I don't want to play whack-a-mole here. I want to lay out that as someone who's worked in public service, I want to lay out that, look, we should be having people who understand that we're part of something bigger than all of us, that the oath that they swear is to a constitution, not to an individual, not to the president. Right?

And right now, like, I do think that people want to try to move forward in a way that isn't going to just be the same old, same old. And so, you know, I think what we what I hope people see is, you know, just concern about the weaponization of these of these roles, these incredibly powerful positions that can be weaponized, and just make things even worse, more divided as a country and, you

For me, I'm trying to think that through thoughtfully. I'm, for the first time in my life, going to have a chance to vote on these nominations in the US Senate. I get to do a job that only 2,000 people in the history of America have ever done. So I do want to be thoughtful about it. I am trying to gather it up and not shoot from the hip. I want to be careful with how I make my case to the people of New Jersey and this country about how I feel about these different people that come before us.

But, you know, I think first and foremost, though, anyone that is going to try to earn my vote and hopefully the votes of other senators, you know, they do need to come with that sense of public service, that sense that, you know, they will try to use this position as a means to try to move our country forward. And if they don't, I will stand up against them. I will vote against them. I will do everything I can to be able to stop them from doing the damage that I think that they could do to our country.

The Washington Post ran a story today with the headline,

Go bags, passports, foreign assets, preparing to be a target of Trump's revenge. And it's basically a story about a lot of former government officials, some are military, some law enforcement, Democrats, Republicans, even former Trump officials who've just spoken out against the president. And now they are actually thinking about leaving the country for some period of time because they're worried about political retribution. What's your reaction to that?

Well, first of all, my reaction is, I mean, I haven't seen that article, but I've heard some of these types of stories. The first thing I guess I'll say is it's just really sad. You know, it's sad that we've gotten to this place, that the greatest, most powerful country in the world is being brought to its knees in terms of, you know, just how fragile our democracy is.

You know, I'm a father of a seven-year-old and a nine-year-old. I'm two little boys. I'm like, I'm just really terrified. I'm really sad by this question of what kind of America they're going to grow up in.

The fact that I know people, yeah, people who are saying they might have to go into hiding. They might have to leave the country, whether that's because of any number of different reasons. But that's sad. And look, for me, I got my start as a civilian working in government. I worked under the Bush administration when I was brand new, right out of college. I

Worked my way up from the photocopy room at the State Department, you know. And like, I believe in a America where like public service is an honorable thing.

where it's something that we should aspire to. My parents were so proud to come to America and raise their family here. They came here 50 years ago. And the idea now that so much of public service is being denigrated, so many people are worried that there's just this purge that's going to happen. They're going to dig through people and try to...

do a loyalty test and things like that. You know, it's sad that it's happening. And I would certainly do my best as someone who's, you know, worked in that kind of capacity to see what kind of protections we can have. But, you know, it's sad. And honestly, I saw some of this with people I worked with before in government. I saw some of this during the first term of the Trump administration. They were not as effective at doing it at that time. And I worry that they're going to come back this time around with much more velocity and much more

uh, than they did the first time around. So that, that's even more worrisome, honestly. You, um, you mentioned you have a background in national security and foreign policy and both the, uh,

Bush administrations, the Obama administration. Trump also announced Tulsi Gabbard as director of national intelligence and Fox News host Pete Hegseth as defense secretary. Early thoughts on those picks and just beyond those picks, Trump's foreign policy in a second term, things you're watching for, things you're concerned about.

Yeah, I mean, just overarching again, I mean, this is something that it doesn't necessarily surprise me to see some of these names. I mean, we knew it would be loyalists. You know, we knew it would be people that, you know, that that was one of the main things. Trump said it himself, like, you know, how he, you know, compared to the first term, he felt like, you know, he didn't have people that would just do whatever he wanted them to do. And, you know, that's really, that's so alarming. As I said, you know, this idea that we,

should be serving the Constitution, you know, not an individual. But that is something that we're not going to have if these people are confirmed. And it's not just that they're going to be loyal in just a potentially, you know, blinded way. But, you know, it's just like, I guess the way I was just sort of say it is like,

this is such a moment, not just domestically, but like we're entering this new era globally right now that is so dangerous, so worrisome. And, you know, I, I,

I just the idea that like, I really do believe that the next four to five years are going to shape the next four to five decades. And the idea that these are the people that are going to be at the helm, you know, haven't worked at the Pentagon before to have somebody who just so blatantly says that women should not be in combat roles, you know, other things like that, that are just, you know, so clearly out of touch with where I think our country should be moving towards, right?

So it's, again, I don't want to say I'm like shocked or surprised because unfortunately this is what we knew would happen if he won a second term. And now we just need to really think through what do we do to really show the American people why these are people that are

you know, that are going to be damaging to our country. And I hope to, as someone in national security that has that experience before, be able to show, you know, this is what we get. This is what happens when you politicize national security. You know, I used to try to believe in this line that, you know, like that, you know, the last, you know, the last place that partisan politics should belong is in the situation room, you know, and I worked in that situation room for a lot of different meetings of intensity and

And I'm just trying to right now imagine that room. I know exactly where the DNI sits. I know exactly where SecDef normally sits. And like, I'm so worried because I know what kind of power that they have and trying to think about, you know, what is it that's going to be able to withstand some of this danger going forward?

You know, I hope to play my role from the Senate side. But, you know, unfortunately, so much of what we learned a couple years ago is that what we thought were checks and balances of our democracy ended up just being norms, that if people ignored those norms, and that normative behavior, you know, you didn't have the teeth that was necessary to change that. So, you know, that's something I'm hoping we can really confront.

What are some of your priorities and hopes for this term in Congress, your first term here as a senator? I mean, obviously, it's very difficult. There's a Republican trifecta, Trump in the White House, Republicans control the Senate and the House. And, you know, I can tell from talking to you and what you've said, like you're

You didn't run so you can just be someone who opposes everything and says no. But at the same time, I'm sure you have things that you really want to get done. How are you thinking about what you can get done, what your priorities are, what you want to fight for in these next couple of years? Well, I'll be honest. I think my priorities in terms of a lot of issues are frankly the same as they would have been, you know, regardless of the outcome of November 5th.

you know we have to address the high costs the the challenges that people are facing you know like i can't express enough just how how much anxiety people have like when i talk to people you know they they speak as if it's like this heaviness that's like sitting upon their chest like it you can tell just how worried people are and it's not just about the high cause

It's one thing if you have a high cost, but you have a path forward that you feel confident is going to address that economic challenge. But right now, the deep unpredictability that is out there in the world right now is what is really adding to it. People don't know what's going to happen six months from now, next year, let alone next week.

And, you know, just like how can we live with this much anxiety and unpredictability in our lives? So, you know, that's something that at a fundamental level I'm trying to tackle. So, yes, we want to make sure that we're taking meaningful steps on trying to address high costs.

I am trying to think through, like, look, I'm a young dad. I think it's important to have the voices of young parents in the U.S. Senate and Congress and government. So, you know, talking about the mental health crisis right now in this country, especially when it comes to youth, you know, I do think that there's space there to be able to have a major bipartisan push on addressing mental health.

I'm hopeful that right now the innovation curve is so important. We're entering this era of such velocity and acceleration when it comes to innovation. We were able to pass the Chips and Science Act in a bipartisan way. Is there a 2.0 that we can work on to address this question about American global competitiveness?

Is there someone there that will work with me to address how to shore up and secure our supply chain, which was one of the biggest reasons that we experienced high prices and global shocks was because we did not insulate and protect our economy to be resilient to these global shocks to supply chains. So yes, I hope that we can engage in that kind of approach.

But, you know, we'll see. We'll see. And I'm going to try to, you know, try to engage and show people that like, look, there's a path of less resistance if you choose some of these types of issues that I think we can try to find some meaningful engagement on. But I'm not going to be naive. You know, I worked in Congress for two years under the previous Trump administration. I understand the challenges that are there.

And, you know, and, you know, we just need to figure out, you know, how best to try to navigate that. Last question. In 2021, in the wake of January 6th, a photo of you cleaning up the Capitol Rotunda went viral. Have you had a chance to reflect on that now that...

Donald Trump is heading back to the White House and seemingly there will be no accountability for him in his role on January 6th and his attempt to overturn the election and, you know, potentially pardons for the rioters. Yeah, I mean, I reflect on it a lot. I...

and not a day that goes by that I'm at the Capitol where I don't stop in the rotunda for at least a couple minutes. I try to just sit there. I mean, I think it's such, I think it's the most beautiful room in America. And I just, I love seeing the expressions of tourists as they come through and they crane their necks to be able to look up, you know, and that is something that, you know, tries to continue to remind me why I do this work. But I

In terms of what comes next and how I try to use those reflections, what January 6 taught me and what that experience, especially about that photograph of me cleaning the floor of the Capitol taught me is there was a moment there where I was cleaning the Capitol and I went to a side hallway, was cleaning up there and I saw this plaque on the wall and I looked at the plaque and it said, "Below this lays a cornerstone laid by first president George Washington."

And it was just like a very powerful moment. You know, I'm standing there, you know, my pants covered in soot and dirt and carrying a bag of broken glass and broken flags and debris. And I'm seeing that, yes, like George Washington laid the cornerstone of this building. And the way I sort of said it to myself that day is that I've realized that my job is to be a caretaker.

to be a caretaker for this democracy. And I believe that the Capitol building is a physical manifestation of the Constitution. So on that day, it was also meant to take care of the Capitol. But I think that that sense of caretaker helps me try to understand what comes next, to try to understand the challenges that we're going to face. But the role that I'm going to play, I've been saying this line a lot lately where I say, I believe that the opposite of democracy is apathy.

And I really believe that so deeply right now. It's so easy to look at the next four years and feel like, wow, how did we find ourselves back here after everything that we've tried to do, all the mobilization that we've done? So I can understand how a lot of people are feeling that. I'm sure right now a lot of your listeners are feeling that right now.

But I hope that they recognize that this isn't going to fix itself. It's absolutely worth fighting for. And the worst thing we can do is to disengage, take our foot off the gas in that kind of vein. So yes, I had somebody ask me this the day after Election Day. She said, I'm so happy for you, but I'm sure this isn't what you signed up for.

And I looked at her, I said, actually, it's exactly what I signed up for. Like, I'm not doing this job because I thought it was easy. You know, this is something that's taking me away from my seven year old and a nine year old for so much of the year, like I'm missing so much of their life, I would not miss their life for anything other than something that is of the utmost importance. If I didn't believe that me doing this job is my best way of trying to be a good dad to my kids, then I would not be doing this.

So for us, always remember why we fight, why we do this. I call it our North Star. Remember our North Star, what brought us into this. It isn't about tribal battles and which party has more power. It's about the change that we're trying to see. And I feel like I learned those lessons on January 6th and the days after of what my role is. And I've now decided to dedicate the rest of my life

to trying to address one singular question, which is how do we heal this country? Not if we can heal it, but how do we heal? I still believe it's possible.

So that's what I learned on January 6th. And that's certainly pointed me in the direction of what I'm going to do now for the rest of my life. Well, Senator-elect Andy Kim, this was the most hopeful conversation I've had since the election. And yours was a rare bright spot in this election. And I'm really, really glad that you're going to be in the U.S. Senate. So thank you for joining the pod. And please come back again soon. Great. Thanks so much, John. Take care.

That's our show for today. Love it. Tommy and I will be back with a new show on Tuesday. Have a great weekend, everyone. Bye, everyone.

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