Summary
Pod Save America hosts analyze Trump's record-low approval ratings (37%), Democratic leads in midterm polling, and a series of concerning developments including a $1.776 billion taxpayer-funded slush fund for Trump allies, 3,700 stock trades in one quarter, and escalating threats toward Iran, Cuba, and Greenland.
Insights
- Trump's approval has reached historic lows (37%) not seen in 17 years, with 76% concerned about personal finances and 44% saying Trump personally worsened their economic circumstances—a metric rising 8 points
- Democrats face a credibility problem: only 5% are 'very satisfied' with the party despite leading Republicans 50-39 on generic ballot, suggesting enthusiasm gap despite electoral advantage
- The administration is using technically legal but ethically corrupt mechanisms (unlimited restitution funds, shell companies, insider trading) to enrich allies and avoid direct accountability
- Trump's foreign policy appears driven by personal legacy-building and revenge rather than strategic interests, with simultaneous threats to Iran, Cuba, and Greenland creating unpredictable escalation risks
- Republican primary voters show complete loyalty to Trump over party interests—Bill Cassidy lost despite being an incumbent senator, demonstrating MAGA's dominance over traditional GOP structures
Trends
Normalization of brazen corruption: taxpayer funds being funneled through shell mechanisms rather than direct theft, suggesting sophistication in legal workaroundsInsider trading as governance: high-volume stock trading coordinated with policy announcements and diplomatic visits indicates systemic market manipulation at executive levelCult of personality over party: Republican primary voters prioritize Trump loyalty over party viability, suggesting structural weakness in GOP institutional powerForeign policy as personal vendetta: simultaneous escalation threats (Iran, Cuba, Greenland) suggest decision-making based on legacy-building rather than strategic doctrineVoter dissatisfaction with both parties: 70% dissatisfied with Democrats despite Republican unpopularity indicates broader institutional trust crisisAge as secondary political issue: debate over Trump's fitness reveals Democrats' credibility problem after defending Biden, limiting effectiveness of age-based attacksWeaponization of commutations: using executive power to reward political allies and punish enemies, with pressure campaigns replacing judicial processDrone proliferation as pretext: intelligence leaks about Cuban drones appear designed to justify regime change, following familiar pattern from Iraq/Venezuela
Topics
Trump Approval Ratings and Polling DataTaxpayer-Funded Slush Fund for Trump AlliesInsider Trading and Stock Market ManipulationIran Military Escalation and War Powers ActCuba Regime Change PreparationsGreenland Sovereignty NegotiationsRepublican Primary Loyalty to TrumpDemocratic Party Satisfaction and Enthusiasm GapCost of Living and Economic AnxietyIsrael Military Aid Support DeclineTrump's Age and Fitness for OfficeCommutation of Election Denier Tina PetersThomas Massey vs Trump Primary ChallengeBill Cassidy Primary LossAI Public Perception and Concerns
Companies
New York Times
Released major poll showing Democrats +11 on generic ballot, Trump approval at 37%, lowest in 17 years
Bloomberg
Reported on Trump's 3,700 stock trades in Q1, including suspicious timing around policy announcements
Nvidia
Trump took $2-5M position week before Meta partnership announcement; also traded before commerce dept determinations
Boeing
Trump made 7 transactions totaling $1-5M; major deliverable of China trip was securing Chinese plane purchases
Eli Lilly
Trump held $680K position as administration prepared GLP-1 drug policies benefiting the company
Meta
Trump bought Nvidia stock week before Meta partnership announcement, suggesting possible insider information
Microsoft
Included in Trump's portfolio of companies with business before his administration
Oracle
Trump bought $1M+ position in company with business before his administration
Palantir
Trump bought position then praised company on Truth Social including ticker symbol, raising insider trading concerns
Tesla
Included in Trump's high-volume trading activity in Q1 2026
Apple
Part of Trump's portfolio of major tech companies traded in Q1
Visa
Included in Trump's trading activity; executives visited Beijing with Trump
Citigroup
Included in Trump's trading activity; executives visited Beijing with Trump
Qualcomm
Included in Trump's trading activity; executives visited Beijing with Trump
General Electric
Included in Trump's trading activity; executives visited Beijing with Trump
Intel
Trump bought/sold Intel stock while US government took 10% stake in company
Amazon
Mentioned as having drug discount program competing with Trump's TrumpRx platform
The Guardian
Launching new show 'State Side' with Kai Wright and Carter Sherman covering politics and culture
People
Donald Trump
Central focus of episode; approval at 37%, engaged in stock trading, threatening military action against Iran/Cuba/Gr...
Nate Cohn
Released major poll showing Trump's record-low approval and Democratic +11 lead on generic ballot
Bill Cassidy
Lost Louisiana primary to Trump-backed Julia Letlow; first incumbent senator to finish below second since 1944
Thomas Massey
Kentucky primary target of Trump; voted against Iran war, Epstein files release, and major spending bills
Julia Letlow
Trump-backed primary challenger who defeated Senator Bill Cassidy in Louisiana
Tina Peters
Election denier whose 9-year sentence was commuted to 4.5 years by Gov. Polis after Trump pressure
Jared Polis
Commuted Tina Peters' sentence after Trump pressure; also commuted 35-50 other sentences same day
Marco Rubio
Reported Cuba regime change plans; wore Maduro's outfit in photo op to signal toughness on Venezuela
John Ratcliffe
Visited Cuba with message from Trump; part of apparent regime change preparation
Miguel Díaz-Canel
Responded to invasion threats on social media, warning US attack would trigger bloodbath
Raul Castro
Trump administration reportedly considering indicting him despite no longer being in power
Benjamin Netanyahu
Blamed for shift in US public opinion against Israel military aid support (down from 54% to 37%)
Joe Biden
Blamed for shift in US public opinion against Israel military aid; comparison point for Trump age debate
Mark Cuban
Attended Trump's TrumpRx event; runs competing drug discount platform with federal government partnerships
Eric Dytton
Wall Street veteran quoted as 'baffled' by Trump's 3,700 stock trades in one quarter
Tim Griffin
Settled identical IRS lawsuit for $0 with public apology; contrast to Trump's $1.776B settlement
Todd Blanche
Will appoint board members to $1.776B slush fund for Trump allies and January 6 participants
John Favreau
Co-host of episode discussing Trump's polling, corruption, and foreign policy threats
Dan Pfeiffer
Co-host and founder of MessageBox Pro; moderates debate on Trump's age and fitness
Tommy Vietor
Co-host arguing against making Trump's age central campaign issue; focuses on corruption instead
Quotes
"Donald Trump and the Republican Party have been shitting the bed in nearly every poll for the last few months. But now Nate Cohn and the New York Times have come down from the mountaintop with a stone tablet that confirms how screwed they are."
Host•Early segment
"It's the fact that this is worse than January 6th now for him. Well, the economic indicators are just so bad. I mean, 76% say they're concerned about their personal finances."
Host•Polling discussion
"This is fucking, yeah, well, they're not gonna, I mean, Trump points the board, it's five people, he gets to hire and fire the board. It's just gonna be five cronies dishing out money."
Host•Slush fund discussion
"I just couldn't give less of a shit. I know people are like outraged about this. I read JVL's long piece on this. I don't give a shit. I don't care."
Host•Tina Peters commutation debate
"We are in a moment where like Donald Trump is threatening elections again. Like this is a grave threat to the Republic. Why does our generosity, our sense of justice, our empathy turned for Tina Peters is when there are so many others who deserve it."
Host•Commutation debate
Full Transcript
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And by the end, actually feel like you understand what's going on. They're digging into everything from authoritarianism to the rise of people dating AI chatbots to what's really behind the latest mission to the moon. No fluff, no pretending everything is fine, just smart conversations and sharp reporting. The show pulls from The Guardian's global newsroom, so you're getting coverage across politics, culture, climate and more, plus conversations with big thinkers and newsmakers. Join Kai Wright and Carter Sherman three times a week as they try to make sense of all this. New episodes drop every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, starting May 13th. You can watch on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts. You can also watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube. You can watch on YouTube or listen to YouTube.ruktruktruktruktruktruktruktrukt Welcome to Potsrukt America. I'm John Fabrukt. I'm John Lubbitt. Tommy D'Torn. On today's show, we're going to break down the new gold standard New York Times poll that shows Democrats opening an 11 point lead in the midterms. Let's have that election today, huh? Please hurry it up. We'll also talk about how Trump's revenge tour came for Louisiana's Senator Bill Cassidy and is coming for Congressman Thomas Massey in Tuesday's Kentucky primary. There's also some fresh new corruption to discuss. Trump's new taxpayer funded $2 billion slush fund he'll use to reward his favorite criminals and revelations that he's basically been day trading in his spare time 3,700 stock trades in just three months. That's so many trades. So many trades. Just bad advice. Just put it in an index fund. Yeah, just kidding. We also got a new Iran taco brewing and renewed interest in Cuba and Greenland, which is just one of the reasons we'll also dive into the latest debate over how much Democrats and commentators should be talking about old man Trump losing his marbles. Speaking old man, check out for us over here. You're just gonna sit here with this guy's got his fucking, this fucking nerd's got his glasses on. Sorry, I scratched my eye. That's don't don't don't get used to it everyone. Hopefully. But first, before we start, tickets for Cricutcon 2026 are on sale now for everyone. Come hang with us November 5th through 7th in Washington DC for live shows, panels and a big fun party to celebrate and or mourn the 2026 midterms. See, I added more because Dan, Dan so superstitious, you know, Cricut's friends of the pod get a subscriber only price. So if you want a subscription loaded with exclusives and a discounted Cricutcon ticket, be sure to join friends of the pod. There's all kinds of benefits that come with that. No more ads when you're listening to any of these, any of your favorite Cricut pods. Plus you get exclusive subscriber only shows like Polar Coaster with Dan Pfeiffer, only friends, which is our extra episode of such like our secret extra episode of Pod Save America that we do and a whole bunch of other stuff. Substack newsletters, everything. Get the tickets for Cricutcon and all the info you need at Cricutcon.com. Go to Cricut.com.com slash friends to subscribe to friends of the pod. And we can't wait to see you at Cricutcon. All right, Donald Trump and the Republican Party have been shitting the bed in nearly every poll for the last few months. But now Nate Cohn and the New York Times have come down from the mountaintop with a stone tablet that confirms how screwed they are. Trump's approval is at 37% in their new poll. That is a record low for him and for both terms in all New York Times, the Senate polls and the midterm voters also favored Democrats by 11 points, 50 to 39% over Republicans. President's biggest liability in the poll remains his handling of the cost of living, which his political strategists keep hoping he'll pretend to care about as evidenced by Monday's White House event on his discount drug website, TrumpRx. Let's see how it went. I think outside of maybe a cure itself, it's the biggest thing to happen to healthcare and everything having to do with medical in any way, shape, or form. There's never been anything like this. Really sold it, huh? What? Why did that even mean? Really sold it. TrumpRx is the biggest thing in medical. Biggest thing in medical. Biggest thing in medical. You can tell because there's a doctor here. You can tell he didn't like the event because he cut it really short. Because it kind of looked like we're worth it. It looked like Ted X Toledo or something. It was just like Joe Gebbia in front of a giant screen. The whole thing was embarrassing. Mark Cuban was there. TrumpRx, by the way, it's not a platform for buying medications. You know that? It's just a facilitator. You go to the website, it directs you to the other websites to buy the drugs. And sometimes it gives you coupons. Just redirects you? Yeah, basically. And then Amazon and Cubans thing, what's his thing called? Cosplus drugs. Cosplus drugs. You know, they work with the federal government to have some discounts on some extra drugs. But also if you have insurance, it doesn't help you. Meaning it's cheaper to buy the drugs if you have insurance because the insurance covers the drugs. So really it's for people who don't have insurance, sometimes get some discounts on some drugs. So it's not a bad thing, but it's not a weird. It's certainly not the biggest thing since medical. No. What stood out to you guys in the New York Times poll? So whenever we're talking about a poll that looks good for Democrats, you got to go down and find the part where it's terrible for Democrats. And there's a, this was a new one, I think they said, are you satisfied or dissatisfied with the Democratic Party? And I'm used to seeing that voters may be really unhappy with Republicans in planning to vote for Democrats, but then are ultimately not super satisfied with Democrats either. I was surprised to see that 70% of people say they are dissatisfied with the Democratic Party and only 5% are very satisfied, which is a third of the number of people that are very satisfied with Trump. And I, I get being, look, Republicans are in power. This is representing people that hate Democrats. It's represented by people that wish Democrats would fight more. It's represented by Democrat. Everyone who has a criticism of the Democrats is represented in that number. But the fact that, where would you be in that? When someone asks you, I would be, I would be, I would be unsatisfied. I'm unsatisfied, baby. I'm unsatisfied. But then, but then when they gave me the generic ballot thing, I'd be right there. But just the fact that like right now, if this whole big, beautiful country of ours, there's only 5% of people that just love the Democratic Party. Like we talk a lot about the base. It's like, we don't really have, you know, the Trump has a base that is, who are those people? Right. Who are those 5%? I love everything they're doing. Can't wait to see them on tour. Like some of the, some of the staffers, maybe. I don't know. Some staffs relatives. A couple of folks on Blue Sky. I don't know. Um, so anyway, that was, that's what stood out to you. That stood out to me. And then there was, uh, uh, there was a number on AI that I thought was just interesting that only 16% of people think AI is more good than bad. The vast majority are either undecided or think it's more bad than good. Uh, so it comes in a weekend where there's all these commencement addresses where students are booing the mere mention of AI. Yeah, which I love. You can tell there's a, something afoot there. Yes, there is. Yes, there is. Tommy, what'd you think? Um, I liked that. I didn't, I liked that. I noticed that 64% in the Times poll said they think that going to war with Iran was the wrong decision, including 73% of independence. Uh, that is pretty clear cut and it's not going to get better as this thing kind of drags out and the straight up her moves remains closed and the price of gas goes up 76% rate economic conditions today is only fair or poor. Uh, that is quite bad. And then, you know, the glass half full thing of the Democratic party was 50% say they will vote Democrat, 39% say they will vote Republican in the midterm. So it's one of the better numbers of that nature. I think we've seen in a while. We've been saying, uh, Trump bad for so long now that, uh, when there's a poll, this bad, it's sort of hard. It's almost like there's a, there's a crying wolf thing. Yeah. Yeah. Um, or like, you know, not Trump's, I mean, Trump's always been bad, but like, this is it for Trump, things that the walls are closing in, but Nate Cohn points out in his right up at the poll, no president's approval rating has been under 38% for more than a few days in the last 17 years, according to our average. Now we got Donald Trump and then he realized 17 years is George W. Bush, which just makes us really old. Um, but that is the last president to be this unpopular for this long. Like it is the fact that this is, this is worse than January 6th now for him. Well, the economic indicators are just so bad. I mean, 76% say they're concerned about their personal finances. The CBS poll, 67% say they're stressed. Like both of those have been ticked up at the last year, only 29% in the CBS, the recent CBS poll, so the economy is good. 77% say their income is not keeping up with inflation. So like gas prices are just killing everybody. Yeah. To me, like you look at it too, what's hidden is just how many people have just, they're done, right? You get, look at this poll and it's basically almost half, not quite half the country, they don't approve on Iran. They don't approve on the economy. They don't approve on cost of living. They don't approve on immigration. They are done. And the number of people who now say Trump has personally made their economic circumstances worse, 44%, which has gone up by like eight points since the last time, like, so it's gone up from about the third of the country. It's rising up to nearly half or no longer saying just, I don't just disapprove, like I'm feeling personally that he's not doing what he said he was going to do. So that to me was, uh, uh, stood out. One other thing that stood out just about, about what's happening with Iran, that, you know, we got a lot of internet debates about, you know, the anti semitism and anti Zionism and the Democrats position on Israel. Meanwhile, opposition to economic military support to Israel has gone from 38% to 57% over the last two and a half to three years. Support has gone from 54% to 37%. And so a lot of numbers, Trump's approval. And so a lot of hand-raining support, support for Israel, financial aid support for Israel is the, is just about as popular as Donald Trump in this country. And so look, this is not a, an argument that's being lost on the margins and it's not an argument that's being lost based on who gets platformed and who doesn't. There's a huge shift that has happened. I think you can, uh, lay that at the feet of Benjamin Netanyahu and Joe Biden and Donald Trump, uh, but the sooner people make this less about the specific individuals they dislike, often with good reason and more about the deeper shift that is happening, I think the sooner people can actually reckon with what is a real and lasting damage, uh, that has happened to America's relationship with Israel. Yeah. I mean, actually, I was reading a story this morning about some of this, the horrific, uh, anti semitism being directed towards, uh, members of Congress and voice mails and threats and all that. And it's, it's, it's horrible. And I would just say that like, I do think it's important to separate, like, like virulent anti semitism from people who are pro Israel and making the case for supporting Israel. Like we, I think we talked about this last week, but like Josh Godheimer's op ed about anti semitism and my party has a problem too. Like it starts with talking about actual anti semitism and then halfway through it suddenly veers into, oh, and also Democrats are voting against funding, uh, you know, military aid to Israel, which is a majority position. That's, that should not be in the same op ed. Well, Netanyahu says that he wants to wean off military support for Israel. So yeah, right. I wish I would say the, uh, the only other thing that stood out to me is on the generic ballot, there's real movement just within the times poll, right? Because every poll is it's a single poll snapshot in time, but you take a poll over time and it was D plus two to D plus five for the beginning part of Trump's, uh, term, second term in the time, Seattle polls. And now it's D plus 11. Like it's a big shift. And then when they take it to only almost certain or very likely voters, it's D plus 14. So even that D plus 11 is like may not be what we ultimately see because, you know, the most, uh, motivated voters end up turning out in a midterm more so than in a general election. So, um, that's, it's pretty big and it's late May. You know, not a lot, not a ton of time left. Knock on wood. Yeah. Well, I mean, look, Trump's still out of time to become a different person. Uh, the bigger news from the White House on Monday was the announcement that President Trump's Justice Department is settling Donald Trump's lawsuit against the IRS for $1.776 billion. Get it? Get it. Get it. Uh, that is money that will be taken directly from taxpayers and funneled into a slush fund that apparently exists to pay Trump supporters who were investigated or indicted or convicted during the Biden administration. Or I guess none of those things because there's really no guardrails whatsoever. Um, it seems like they did this so Trump wouldn't be attacked for directly pocketing taxpayer dollars, but I'm not sure this move is as, uh, as clever as they think. What about you guys? Particularly like this is a Trump's second term is a political smash and grab job where he and his family and the people around him and people do is bidding. Just take what they want. Get rewarded. They take it from taxpayers. They trade on poly market. They front run the stock market. And I think the fact that Trump is doing this before the midterms just shows that he doesn't give a shit about politics anymore. It's all about money. It's all about building monuments to himself and ingratiating, you know, enriching himself. And they made an end run around the judge in this case and they just cut a deal with another political appointee that he had named to create the slush fund. And do you think they thought it was cute saying it was 1.776? Doesn't that just make the whole thing feel like made up in arbitrary more than anything else? They think it's like, oh, we've got patriotism in America's 250 is coming up. And so if we call it a patriotic fund for patriots, then no one will get mad at us. Shouldn't a fund to pay out restitution to people harmed be based on like metrics and not like the amount of money? Where's the number coming? Right, but do you think someone would, they, how many, how much earnings did you lose when you were at the Capitol on January 6th? Right. You know, I will say. Congress passed a law to give the Department of Justice basically on unlimited fun for restitution for anyone who sues the federal government. And so that's how they ended up doing this. So it's like, it is a one of those technically legal, but extremely corrupt things that we have because of a stupid law that was passed that no one, no one thought to themselves, maybe there'll be an administration that just has the fund being unlimited because the president will sue himself. We'll sue its own government. In fairness to people that wrote that law, you would also assume that if it were to be so completely and obviously embracing the abused by a president who's basically just going into the treasury and stuffing his pockets and leaving that there might be a Congress that would care about that, which we, we don't have. Just like to Tommy's point, the judge was like, Hey, before this lawsuit by Trump against his own administration, which is unprecedented, that's being administered by his personal attorney, former personal attorney at the Department of Justice, I want you to come in and explain to me how you're actually parties in opposition, how you're not on the same side of this thing. And they're like, she was like, and the deadlines May 20th. That's when now it's May 18th. And so basically proving the point that the judge was worried about, they have decided to reach a, reach a deal beforehand. Now, the Justice Department, if it was actually advocating on behalf of taxpayers, the American people, which is what it's supposed to do, it would fight this thing to the bitter end or at the very least settle for $0, which has happened in not exactly similar, but cases that are akin to this in the past. But instead they're doing this. It's Tim Griffin. Yeah, doing this exactly. He settled the same case. His taxpayer info was leaked and he settled it for $0. For $0. He just got a public apology from the IRS. Because he didn't pay, and you know, that is something that could have come of this. But it said, no, they are proving that they are in cahoots here by doing this kind of a settlement. We have, they're using a ridiculous justification based on something that happened in the Obama administration, which even conservative legal scholars have batted down because that had actual specific people who were harmed by an actual specific policy on like this. My pitch is James Comey, Tish James, LaMonica MacGyver, Lisa Cook, Jerome Powell. They should all be submitting when this thing comes out. They should put their names in to get money from this fund. And if they do not receive a fair hearing, they should sue the federal government. Like there are people that are being politically prosecuted by the government. As far as we know publicly, nobody on that list would not be kind of at least potentially included in the people hurt that could receive from this 1776. My pitch is no one gets it. Give us the fucking money back. That's our money. Oh yeah, to be clear, I don't think James Comey should get money from the federal government, but I think we should take this, put this thing through its pace. This is fucking, yeah, well, they're not gonna, I mean, Trump points the board, it's five people, he gets to hire and fire the board. It's just gonna be five cronies dishing out money. They don't, like this thing doesn't even have to be like, oh, and here was my case and it was tried incorrectly. Like someone's just can go to fucking whoever Todd Blanche puts on the commission and be like, hey, I want $10,000 because I donated to the president and I'm mad that Joe Biden sent the FBI after me. Oh, do you have proof of that? No, but I just know they were watching me. It's crazy. It's just that. I mean, like this is, it's just, they're at the point where they're just saying, we're going to take money from the treasury. Give it to whoever we want. Give it to our friends. Particularly people who are maybe criminals. To let everyone else know that if you commit a crime on Trump's behalf, not only do you not go to jail, but perhaps you might get some compensation for it. Yeah, he was asked at the press commerce today. What could this potentially go to people who committed violence in January six? He said, oh, it's going to be up to the committee. Absolutely. Those people would be eligible could totally receive money from this fund. He pretends he doesn't know about it. Okay. Also, it's a it's a it's a danger going forward too, as we're heading into 2028 and Donald Trump and JD Vance or whoever the fuck it is, tries to stay in the White House after they lose an election and a bunch of people do their bidding for them to help them out. What do you think they're going to think? They're going to be like, well, if he stays in there and I help him out, I'm going to be okay. I'm going to get a pardon. I get paid. Great. You guys don't like my idea that James Comey tries to get into that fund? Come on. Yeah. I mean, I see you're saying he's like test the process. He should write out the amount he wants. Yeah, in shells. Shells. Yeah. And he's shell based crime should apply. Pod Save America is brought to you by Smalls. Smalls makes fresh human grade food for cats. It's made from the same stuff you or I would eat, but formulated specifically to help cats thrive. Cats are obligate carnivores who need lots of real meat to stay healthy. But most cat foods out there use meat byproducts and cut their food with cheap grains, fillers and artificial ingredients. Boy, you don't want that. You don't want that. You don't want cheap grains or fillers. Not for your little, not for your feline friends. Basically stuff that isn't great for your cat. Big pet food. 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Four out of five employers who post on Zip Recruiter get a quality candidate within the first day. Try it for free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Cricut. That's ZipRecruiter.com slash Cricut. Meet your match on Zip Recruiter. Speaking of Trump allies getting away with crimes, what do you guys make of Jared Polis, Governor of Colorado, Democrat, commuting the prison sentence of election denier, Tina Peters. She is the former county clerk from Mesa County, Colorado. She was in jail for orchestrating a security breach of her county's voting system. Trump has been publicly and privately pressuring Polis to pardon her completely. They also tried to like transfer her from state prison to federal prison so that Trump could pardon her. Didn't do that. But now Polis has commuted her sentence. She was sentenced to nine years. He cut it to four and a half years with parole next month. I have to be honest, I know this is not a great answer for the purposes of a talk show. I just couldn't give less of a shit. I know people are like outraged about this. I read JVL's long piece on this. I don't give a shit. I don't care. I have so much to be outraged or to worry about. I just can't even get myself to engage with this person. I may even go a step further. I think Polis might have done the right thing. Like cut her sentence down. Wow. Excuse me, boys, if you need me, I'll be at the fucking bulwark. Where the real libs are now. Go on. I'm not. I don't feel strongly. I'm more in time. I'm closer to Tommy's camp, but like, here's the thing. She was sentenced to nine years. Right. She's a nonviolent first time offender. And three appellate judges who were appointed by a Democrat, they're Democratic judges. They all just ruled that they threw out the sentence, the nine year sentence. So that was never going to happen. And the reason they threw it out is because they thought that the judge basically in giving her a nine year sentence as opposed to a smaller sentence violated her free speech rights because the judge basically said, the reason I'm making your sentence longer is because you spouted election conspiracy theories, which is a horrible thing to do. I'm spouting election conspiracy theories, but that is protected First Amendment speech. I think we have to be consistent. Well, that, yeah. Free speech. But anyway. But that's, but hold on, hold on. I appreciate that, but we understand that if someone were to say, hit somebody with their car, and then publicly say, that bitch deserved it, that that is free speech of the right to say that, but it does potentially inform the sentence. Sorry. Does it? Of course it does. Of course we allow remorse in people's motivations and feelings about the crimes they committed, what they've learned from it. That's the. Well, she was, I mean, but the no remorse thing was already factored in because she didn't, she was not remorseful. Right. When she was sentenced, but that's what he didn't say. You didn't show remorse. He said, it's because you have these, these theories. I just say, I'm just saying that. Not just for some, that there are, we take people's motivations and, and, and expressions. I agree that people are the right to believe elections are stolen. I'm just saying it's a little bit more than just the first continue. Sorry. I guess I'm saying. If we believe that, that there is an incarceration problem in this country and that people are incarcerated for too long and that prison is, it is a deterrent. And yes, people should be jailed and they should be kept from society, but that unusually long sentences are bad, especially for first time nonviolent offenders. Like, don't we have to extend that belief to people whose political beliefs we detest? So I would say the answer is we should allow a process to play out that she would have been re-sentenced. Why is, why did this become a big public controversy? It is because the president of the United States is publicly pressuring the governor of Colorado to commute Tina Peterson's. Now look, I am sure Jared Poles would say that the pressure had nothing to do with it. Obviously, the fact that Donald Trump was threatening Colorado unless he did something, right? Donald Trump was saying this woman should be pardoned. He is saying it's some kind of pushback against Trump that it's only a commutation. I like she has kind of done the bare minimum of acknowledging that what she did was wrong. But if you go to her Twitter feed, her allies were saying, it's recently as I believe last week, I have to go look at the exact timing that if Trump, that if Tina Peters isn't released, Trump should invade the state of Colorado. It is a nonviolent offense. I mean, I don't think that should happen. Well, right. But it just, it goes to like the, the, the reason somebody who even commits a nut, like there are a lot of first time offenders who do something that are part of a, that are part of something so dangerous that you have to say, wait a second, yes, this is a nonviolent offense, but it goes to the core of what we are as a society or the safety of our democracy. And so he has given into that pressure from Trump rather than let the process play out. So that I think is like a huge problem. Like it just, I don't know that we'd be having this conversation if Donald Trump hadn't personally intervened to try to get the governor to do something. And then it seems as though he did it. After listening to this thoughtful debate, I still don't give a shit. You know, I might care less actually than one of these things. It is interesting. I would say that it's, yeah, it's more interesting to me and that like, I think that I think he might have learned that I do think I would like to hear Jared Paul's answer to the question, why don't you just wait for the resentencing of the three appellate judges? Like what made you not want to just wait for their decision if they were going to throw the sentence anyway? I would like to know that. I'd also say too that the Republican prosecutor was against this and said that you should talk to the people that were impacted by Tina Peter's schemes before you'd make this decision. The prosecutor or just prosecutors are but community, but the, there's also a defendant who pled guilty to almost the same charges in the Georgia RICO case and was sentenced no time and probation. Yeah. I mean, look, there's all kinds of unfairnesses and unequal application of sentences all across the country, all the time. Like, yeah, that if that were the case, you'd go and say, Oh, well, there's somebody else who was given less. You can commute most, most sentences that way. But, but I think, look, in this one, it wasn't just her. He commuted like, you know, it's like 35 or. 50 commutations or something like that. On the same day. I think he has to answer for whether or not he gave in Trump's political pressure. And we are in a moment where like Donald Trump is threatening elections again. Like this is a grave threat to the Republic. Why does our generosity, our sense of justice, our, our empathy turned for Tina Peter is when there are so many others who have, who deserve it. That's all. Yeah. I don't, and I don't think it should, I don't think it should. I don't think we should be generous or empathetic at all. I think we should just be like, what is the, what is the standard? Like, is there a process to reach the decision and it didn't meet a standard? I do think that like criticizing polls for it is completely fine. Like you can criticize them for it. You can say it's fine. Some people are, and people who I, I, I like in politics too, and support are like calling for his impeachment over this. And I'm like, I don't, I just, I do not think it rises to the level of it. Everybody's at nine all the time these days. I do, I can't get there. I can get there. I can get, I can get to like your criticism for sure. I can't get to, we, he shouldn't be impeached over this. I don't know if you guys saw that Trump's latest financial disclosures show that he and or his financial advisors made more than 3,700 stock trades in the first quarter of this year, bought $1 million each in companies with business before his administration, like Nvidia, Oracle, Microsoft, Boeing, and Palantir, which he bought right before he praised the company on Truth Social in a post that if you recall, even included the company's ticker symbol. Um, now I know this may look suspicious, but the White House did say that Trump's assets are in a blind trust managed by his children. So there are quote, no conflicts of interest. Seems fine, right? This is, did they really, I thought there was no blind trust. I thought they'd already previously said there wasn't a blind trust. Either way, managed by your children. There's a blind trust managed by everybody. That doesn't, yeah, that's not how blind trust works. That's right. They're like, again, this is part of the political smash and grab job. I mean, they're making money everywhere. It's, this is crazy. Like, so Bloomberg reported, um, Trump had trades that involved Tesla, Nvidia, Apple, Meta, Visa, Citi, Boeing, Qualcomm and GE. Top executives from all of those companies were on his trip to Beijing to meet with Chinese president Xi Jinping. So you don't think he's getting insider information? Having that access, talking to them, cutting deals with them. Uh, he, what the, some of the stock trades included up to 680 grand worth of Eli Lilly, right as the administration was preparing policies that would benefit their GLP one business. He took a huge position, a couple of huge positions in Nvidia, right before they announced major news. There was one to $5 million position a week before they announced a partnership with Meta. Then there was a half a million to a million dollar position a week before the commerce department announced some, you know, determinations to do with Nvidia, they're buying and selling Intel stock, which the US government took a 10% stake in the company. This is insanity. This is such a coincidence. Paul Pelosi somewhere is like, what the fuck, man? Yeah, I could have been doing this so much better. I like, we're sort of pat, everything. Well, Jesus, I'm like Jim Kramer now. Do you see the clip of Jim? Yeah. He just glitched out for six weeks. Can we drop it in here? Let's drop it in the clip. The president's been trading some Intel in the quarter. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Got nothing to say about it. Yeah. But. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. All right, don't worry. We're not having technical difficulties here, everybody. What's funny about the Jim Kramer clip is that it's like people are like, oh, wow, he's so, he's stammering because he can't figure out what to say about this. But when I was watching, it was like, is he stammering because he can't figure out what to say about this? Or is he making a joke about how it's so beyond the pale, but he doesn't want to be critical of Trump in this moment? Like I didn't know what, what are we, what are we, what are, why is he stammering? He knows what's going on. But. Can't get in Jim Kramer's head. But we're, no. Don't be there. Live and run free inside of Jim Kramer's head. And we're at a new level of brazen corruption because every step along the way, nobody has stopped him to get to this point, right? Like he can't, the thing that I find stunning about all this is that there's no, like the level of brazenness is going up, but the dollar amount isn't always. It's like, why are we doing 500 grand stock trades, billion dollar crypto theft and the watches? Like why, like why, you know what I mean? Like. That bothers me too. It just, it just all. Some of it's like leftover from the old world. Right. Like the new corruption. Well, remember the hotel rooms? We're getting near the Trump phones, but they're not coming. Yeah, that part doesn't make sense. But the aggregate stock trades was arranged between 211 and $687 million. So that's a pretty good quarter. It's also like the, just the volume of trading. Bloomberg interviewed this guy, Eric Dytton, who's the president manager director at the wealth alliance. And he said, I'm baffled in the 40 plus years of my time on Wall Street. This is an unusual amount of trading by any standards. We need to see the actual trades to try and understand why anyone would want to do that much trading. So it is just like the practical way in which this is being done. Like is there a team that is doing this? Is it suns through their, like it feels like they've got like, um, uh, like, uh, Christopher Maltesante trying to like push whippetakes. Like he's got like some fucking back office in New Jersey somewhere with computers. No, it's just barren Trump in the outer oval with a shitload of Adderall. Yeah, just like minority reporting it. Like I can see the future. I know what's going to happen at the commerce meeting next week. I know the new, I have the BLS. That's just because he's got the briefing book. Yeah. But again, they took like, uh, seven transactions related to Boeing. One was between one to $5 million. Like the biggest deliverable of the China trip was to get the Chinese to buy a bunch of Boeing planes. And by the way, the announcement was so underwhelming that the stock went down because they did a shitty job. We're still uses proof that C we see. It wasn't a good announcement. It's like, yeah, you, you thought it was tried to trade on inside information. It just turns out you suck at diplomacy. That was the problem. You're, you're good at the crimes. You're bad at diplomacy. Got to deliver on that shit. All right. So Trump's also doing his best to, uh, drag the Republican party down with him. On Saturday, he sent yet another message that dissent will not be tolerated when his chosen primary challenger, Congresswoman Julia Letlow took out Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, whose sin was voting to convict Trump in the January 6th impeachment trial. Cassidy went down in flames. He got third in Louisiana's primary. The first time an incumbent senator has come in lower than second place since 1944, Trump's next target is Thomas Massey, who's trying to unseat in Tuesday's Kentucky primary. Massey has been the, uh, the strongest and kind of the only Republican in the house breaking with Trump on Epstein, Iran, and the big beautiful bill. Uh, Trump has been posting about Massey nonstop. I think right before he recorded, he did like a video from the oval, which is very legal and normal, uh, to just, to just tell people to vote against Thomas Massey. We're going to run the midterms on the hatch act. Yeah, that's, yeah, he says, he's, he's, he's grabbing the $2 billion for his slush fund and then trading on invidian, Boeing. Yeah. Pete Hegsath was doing an event in Kentucky today. His personal capacity. His personal capacity. And then Trump announces that he's delayed an imminent military assault on Iran that was supposed to happen tomorrow. Yeah. What was Pika going to do? This seems like bad timing. It feels like you need him for that. Yeah. Maybe you don't. Maybe it doesn't. Maybe it doesn't. Who's going to drink the booze? To early to say what will happen in the, in the Massey race, but it certainly seems like Massey himself is staying loose. Here he is on Sunday doing his best Trump impression. Whenever I call him, I got to schedule a minute for the first thing he tells me every time I call him, Massey, you're sharp cookie. You went to MIT. You know, my professor was, uh, my uncle was professor John G. Trump. He was at MIT 41 years. It's a record. And, you know, I went to Wharton, which is basically the hardest school in the world to get into. Terrible. So I've got even better genetics than you. I didn't know how long they were. I kind of want him to lose now. That was brutal. I was rooting for him until just then. I'm doing this. And he's going for it, you know, put that, that accent work on the phone. Be wary of the Trump impression, you know, don't, don't do it unless you really feel good about it. You got to nail it. There's just too many people doing it and it's too, it's too big a target. Anyway, anyone have thoughts on the primary? Yeah. Oh, look, I mean, how big of a deal this is on Bill Cassidy. Like, fuck that guy. I, you know, like he thought he could like appease MAGA by voting for a Robert of Kennedy Jr. And end up kind of like selling his soul and his credentials as a doctor and it being worst of all worlds. And he knew better. And we know it because he told us as much before he flip flopped. And so what I rather have him in the Senate than his replacement. Yes, I would. But ultimately, I don't think it'll make a big difference. Thomas Massie is a different story. Like he's the reason we have the Epstein files because he worked with the Rokama to get him released. He's a principal vote against wars and militarism and lots of other things. I don't agree with him on everything. And, you know, like you don't share the same worldview. I don't send out, you know, Christmas cards with me and my kids with machine guns. Like I think he did one time, but, um, yeah, you know, it would be a big loss. And I think it tells you everything he needs to know about Donald Trump's political worldview that he will not lift the finger to help his party build, but he will take down anyone who criticizes him. It was all about punishing his own critics and the cult of personality and protecting his personal power and not about the party or doing anything. Right. I think he's far more passionate about defeating his enemies than he is about helping his friends. Yeah, with Cassidy, you go back to that, to him, uh, uh, approving RFK junior and accepting his fake assurances and his private meetings, pretending that RFK didn't believe what he obviously believed in. Like, no, you can't, you can't sell half your soul. He doesn't work like that. They're not divided. They're not divisible in that way. And so these guys that end up being reluctantly for Trump, they don't, they're not better politicians. They're just worse whores, you know? Yep. Uh, so, uh, are, you know, good riddance, I suppose. I will say this is, there's a lot being made because we had Indiana and then Cassidy and then, and then Massey, but this is sort of the last gasp of this. I mean, it's a little bit like Indiana too. Like, what do you expect is going to happen? This is Trump's last midterms. Right. And do we think he's going to spend, he's going to be spending time in 28, going around doing primary challenges? They may be, but like, also does it lose its force at some point? Right. Like the Trump's like a, he's already a lame duck. Like he clearly has the juice to do it now. But as we get to 28 and then beyond that, like what is this is, it's what did we learn from that? Yeah. Yeah. That he's an addictive prick who only cares about himself and, you know, and I think we also learned that, like, you know, the, nothing's breaking the fever in the Republican party. The party's broken. And you've got to massively, you've just got to defeat them at every level because all the ones who are left are completely loyal to dear leader. And that's about that. And I do think also he might have, he might have fucked himself a little because now you got angry Cassidy, who's still got votes left to take between now and the end of the year. Massey, Massey loses. Tillis has already been doing it. And so they can make his life more difficult. And I do wonder now between now and November, if this makes it like harder for Republicans to break away from Trump, even though primaries are over, because they're worried that they're going to get punished. I don't know. It's just, look, it remains sort of extraordinary, right? Bill Cassidy, like, could not persuade his own voters, people that have voted for him multiple times in the past to stick with him once Trump turned, right? Like it just tells you something about the voters showing up in these Republican primaries and what they want. And there was no, the fact that Cassidy was a vote for impeachment and that Trump had fully turned against him, there was nothing he could do to convince them that he was worth saving, nothing. Yeah. Pate of America is brought to you by Hymns. ED is way more common than most guys think. Millions of guys deal with it at some point. That's exactly why Hymns offers a straightforward way to handle it. Hymns connects you with licensed health care providers online, giving you simple access to legitimate ED treatments from home. I want some illegitimate ED treatments. I got right in my office the other day, I saw John Googling, real Chinese rhino horn. I was like, Jesus, that's terrible. Yeah, that's what. Shame on you. 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That's why I recently launched MessageBox Pro, a subscription consulting product for people working at every level of politics. Subscribers get weekly strategy memos, data-driven messaging insights, and polling analysis. Plus, you get access to an incredible community of smart, committed political pros. Whether you're running for office, staffing a politician, organizing your community, or working in communications at any level, MessageBox Pro is built for you. To learn more or sign up, go to MessageBoxPro.com. It's been a bit since we talked about the stalemate and around. Trump posted on Sunday that, quote, the clock is ticking for Iran to make a deal, but by Monday, the clock apparently restarted. Trump posted that the U.S., quote, will not be doing the scheduled attack of Iran tomorrow, a.k.a. Tuesday, the day you're listening to this, because the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE asked him to hold off due to serious negotiations that are now taking place. Trump did add that the U.S. is prepared to attack Iran, quote, on a moment's notice in the event that an acceptable deal is not reached. On Monday, it was also reported that Iran sent its latest peace proposal through Pakistan to the U.S., which the White House seems likely to reject, even as the Pentagon and Israel are, quote, engaged in intense preparations, the largest since the ceasefire took effect for the possible resumption of attacks against Iran, according to The New York Times. What do you make of the back-and-forth here, Tommy? Any chance that Trump's latest threat to destroy Iran got them closer to a deal? I don't think so. But can we just talk about these statements where he name checks a bunch of autocrats? They're so weird. You don't have to do that. But he's always like, on behalf of the great and highly respected field marshal, Asim Muneer, I've decided not to exterminate Iran. The delivery date for that plane is supposed to be the fourth, but he once moved up for his birthday. For the Qatar plane. So he wants the Qataris to get that plane there fast. It's the same way that he does the personality stuff with G. He enjoys the idea that governing doesn't involve anyone except the people in the room. Right. There's no people deciding. They're just great men making big decisions together at a collaboration and friendship. And so he's not doing it for the good of the country. He's doing it because he has this great rapport with these leaders. The Pakistanis in particular, they cut a big crypto deal with the World Liberty Financials, so that's why he likes them. But you do five seconds of research into the great and respected field marshal, and you find that UK authorities have charged him with torture and crimes against humanity. That's a guy he's like name checking. But regardless. Sounds like a guy you'd like. Of course. I don't think they're any closer to a deal. I don't know. I assume we're in the same place. Iran thinks they have a lot of leverage because they can close straight or a moose. They know Trump is weak and politically. They know that he wants out of this. He doesn't want to go back to war. And so they're going to wait for the United States to walk back some of the more maximalist positions or just get sick of the shit and move on. Just imagine some Iranian underling going down the stairs into the bunker where the recuperating Ayatollah is pointing at the Sienna numbers and saying, look, look, we got him. We got him right where we want him. We got Nick Kuhn. Yeah. Diving in across tabs. Iran, apparently, there's all these leaks still. Like, Iran reportedly has up to 75% of its missile stockpile. But all of its, basically almost all of its infrastructure along the street or from mooses is operational for them to shut it down. They could always make things worse. Straight or for moose also now has its own Twitter account. Does it? See that? Yeah. Like Carl the Fog in San Francisco. No, they're calling it something more official, but it's like the Iranian government. Oh, is the Iranian government doing it? Yeah. Yeah. No, they've been doing it in Lego. They've made, no, they just made an official Twitter account so we can get updates from the straight. Just personifying the straightings. Yeah. Yeah. I think that's kind of cool. Like sort of red, green, yellow. Lot of red. Like sort of when you get the like single alerts in like California traffic, it's like, oh my God, the straight or moose is red today. Fuck. I'm going to be late. Honey, I'm going to be late. I'm going to have traffic helicopters over it. Reporting on the 905s. NBC reported last week that the administration is considering changing the name of the war from Operation Epic Fury to Operation Sledgehammer. We have to get a little more phallic again or something else entirely in order to quote, effectively restart the clock with Congress. Is that how it works? New operation name. Now they can't get you. No. Now you can do whatever wars you want. I love this idea that the War Powers Act is such a weak piece of legislation that you can just do like a bureaucratic tweak and get around it. I mean, it's just crazy. It's obviously the same conflict. Like changing the name doesn't matter. Every president since Nixon has claimed the War Powers Act is unconstitutional. They all hate it. But it was enacted over Nixon's veto in 1973. And so Congress has leveraged here if they want to use it. Republicans refuse to use it. Maybe they'll man up now, but we'll see. Trump also wants us to know that he's not just focused on wars far away from home. He's focused on wars right in our own backyard still. There have been a bunch of rumblings about the long-rumored regime change move in Cuba. Sources told the AP last week that the administration is looking to indict former Cuban president Raul Castro, brother of Fidel, even though he's no longer in power. Then over the weekend, Marco Pudo reported that according to classified US intel, Cuba has over 300 drones and has recently considered launching them against US military targets and even Key West, Florida, which could serve as a handy pretext for an invasion. Cuba's current president, Miguel Diaz-Canal, responded on social media on Monday, writing the quote, Cuba poses no threat, nor does it have aggressive plans or intentions against any country, including the US, and that a US attack would quote trigger a bloodbath. What did you make of the Cuba stuff? It seems like he's gearing up. You want to kick us off on Cuba? I don't think we should go to war with Cuba right now. In the Times poll, there was a question that was something like, when do you believe the US should launch a war against countries that have not attacked us? It was like 70% or like, don't do that. Never. Don't do that unless someone has attacked us, we shouldn't go to war. I don't think it's a good idea. Whatever Trump had come to believe about killing Soleimani, the getting Maduro out of Venezuela, and how fun that was, he sees the polls showing how unpopular the war in Iran is. I hope that that has at the very least chastened them from there, kind of idea that they can be regime toplers without it consuming their politics. But it's terrifying. It's terrifying to imagine that they're going to see what they're doing in the Middle East and decide that it needs to be brought closer down. Yeah, I mean, look, I read the story. It was such an obvious pretext to me. But I mean, look, I don't doubt the intel, like, is Cuba acquiring drones? Well, it's 2026 in every military has or is acquiring drones. That would be like not getting rifles or machine guns in World War I. So it also says like the intelligence suggests the Cubans would respond to a U.S. attack with drones, which again, I was going to say this axiostory, you have to get way down to reality check, which is three paragraphs, four paragraphs from the bottom till you find out that by the way, that the intel is that it's retaliatory. This is not a preemptive strike on Miami. This is what they would do if we attacked them because we all know if they did a preemptive strike on Miami, that would be suicidal because you would fucking flatten the country. So I also just would like to think that if we are on the verge of going to war with another country that the evidence would not be laundered through anonymous sources into a daily tip sheet that perhaps they're going to be more information. Well, well, I'm not going to use for you. Judy Miller would like to board with you, pal. But that was in your time. Sorry, you're right. I do think though every indicator light is flashing when it comes to possible regime change operations because there's this leak, which creates the pretext of this being an imminent threat. There was CI director John Ratcliffe just went to Cuba and had this message from Trump. There is the indictment, the rumored indictment of Raul Castro, which was a very important part of the case for why they had to do what they did against Maduro, which was extract him from Venezuela and bring him to New York for prosecution. There's been all these reports of a huge increase of intelligence overflights by the U.S. So I would be very worried if I were Cuban official. And meanwhile, if you're a Cuban human being or citizen, like the United States has a blockade on that's allowed no oil and gas into your country and people are starving to death. They have one to two hours of electricity a day. Hospitals can't operate. What we are doing is criminal. It is absolutely evil. You're starving a population of people to death. And the most likely outcome is that the government collapses and there's a mass exodus and migration crisis to the United States, which MAGA has told us they do not want to happen. I don't understand what these lunatics are fucking doing here, but it is just utterly immoral, just a horrific, horrific policy right now. I think that the insane thought running through Donald Trump's head is his response to launching a disastrous war in Iran that is unpopular, that has cost us billions of dollars, that has spiked gas prices everywhere is I got to launch a war that's more popular and easy. I got to go back to the Venezuela model because they all think that Venezuela was some big fucking success, right? And so it's like, that was an easy one. So I got to get my mojo back by going to invade Cuba now that Iran's a big fucking mess, which is the same. Did you see Rubio in his Maduro tracks? Yes. Like this is all just a game. It's all just trolling. It's all content. I don't think it was that flattering. No, I think it was. I talked to us and love to leave it, but I do think Maduro wore it better. But I'm not even joking. Like, it just looked more comfortable. Like Rubio looked like the suit was wearing him. But I was looking at that. I was like, why are you doing this? I forget. He was a little posed too. It wasn't like something. There was a long pose. A long pose. But I was looking at it. I was like, what are we supposed to? Okay, what is this meant to? Boy, you're tough. You're wearing the same clothes. Like, what was the message? And I now I'm like, oh, it was just about how like what happened will do this again. Like, we're going to do this. Is it a Cuba thing? Like, what the fuck was the outfit? What are my meant to take from this photo, Steven Chung? Yeah, that's a good question. I agree with you. I do think Trump wants to change the channel and kind of get us onto a new topic that isn't Iran that makes him sound tough again. I do think, though, that Cuba falls in the Venezuela, Iran, Cuba, access of evil bucket of like Neocons telling him, sir, you'll be a historic figure, sir, if you make big changes here. And he's down. Will it will gargle your balls? Well, I mean, you don't need to do something else to get that that that's already happening. That's priced in. But, you know, he's also in Florida surrounded by a bunch of very like rich, hard line, you know, Miami Cubans who, you know, have been waiting for this for a long time and, you know, want their real estate assets back on the island. So I don't I hope I'm wrong. Maybe a whole fucking Cubano or, you know, like whatever, Wall Street will make up a new term for it. It's stupid, but I like it does seem like it's nerve wracking. Well, if we if he doesn't do Cuba, then there's always Greenland. Remember the critical national security issue of Greenland? A quick refresh of the back in January after threatening to invade Trump did a did a taco and announced the quote framework of a future deal with respect to Greenland. And in fact, the entire Arctic region, well, the New York Times is now reporting that the negotiations around that framework have Greenland officials quote worried as US proposals quote amount to a major imposition on Greenland sovereignty. Yeah, I bet Greenland specifically concerned about Trump's June 14 birthday, and July 4th, his upcoming dates where Trump's attention could swing back around to them as he starts thinking about his legacy on fucking real. What do you think? Are those concerns well founded? What do you believe about the Greenlandic concerns expressed in the New York Times piece? Let's just pause and sit in the idea that the Danes are concerned that that Trump will get more bellicose around his birthday. That's where we're at. That's what we do. He's turning 80. He's turning 80. America's turning 250. Yeah. They're not going to be content with just the fireworks. No, no, you're going to want to get some. No, they want Greenland. Somebody's got to give him a little he wants to look he wants to the great at the end of his name. He knows that that when the when the when the Russians got more territory, they got to be the great. So we just got to find some fucking chunk of land somewhere. Get me Cuba, get me Greenland, just somewhere. Make Venezuela the 51st state. He's just something we got to expand the map. Can't believe we're talking about this again. This sucks. So crazy. It's like, do you guys see the Tim Dillon bit? We said we're not the high school bully anymore. We're the weird kid who may or may not have a gun. Not the quarterback. We're not the jock. We're the college kid who keeps going to high school parties might be a pet of a freak out by it has a gun. That is us as a country. Good work, everybody. That is it. That is it. I think we made a mistake. I think this guy. Yeah, well. This podcast is sponsored by Squarespace. Squarespace is the all in one website platform designed to elevate your online presence and drive your success. Squarespace provides all the tools you need to remote and get paid for your services in one platform. Whether you offer consultations, events or other experiences, Squarespace can help you grow your business. Squarespace offers a complete library of professionally designed and award winning website templates with options for ever use and category. No matter where you start, your website is flexible with intuitive drag and drop editing, beautiful styling options, unrivaled visual design effects and more ways to list what you offer. No experience required. Every dream needs a domain. Squarespace domains makes it easy to find the best name for your business at one fair, all inclusive price, no hidden fees or add-ons required. Every Squarespace domain comes with advanced privacy and security tools included to ensure your domain remains online and protected. Make smarter business decisions with Squarespace's intuitive built-in analytics tools. Review your website traffic. Learn where to focus engagement, track revenue from bookings, invoices or product sales all from one place. Head to squarespace.com for a free trial. When you're ready to launch, go to squarespace.com slash crooked to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain at squarespace.com slash crooked. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. For years, I've heard from candidates, activists and political staffers who turn to PodSafe America for political strategy and messaging advice because they don't have access to a political consultant or a pollster. That's flattering to hear, but it's a huge problem. We're going to defeat MAGA and protect democracy. We need everyone to have access to the best information and advice possible. That's why I recently launched MessageBox Pro, a subscription consulting product for people working at every level of politics. Subscribers get weekly strategy memos, data-driven messaging insights and polling analysis. Plus, you get access to an incredible community of smart, committed, political pros. Whether you're running for office, staffing a politician, organizing your community or working in communications at any level, MessageBox Pro is built for you. So learn more or sign up. Go to MessageBoxPro.com. Now that we just talked about Trump potentially trying to conquer several additional nations, possibly because it would look cool on a map, it's probably a good time to mention that there's been a revival of the debate about Trump's age and fitness for the job and whether Democrats should be making a bigger deal about it. Lauren Egan at the Bull Work and Jonathan Lamire at the Atlantic are both out with big pieces arguing that it's time for Democrats to make it a bigger issue. We get subscriber questions about this a lot. We also see a lot of folks on social media making the argument that if you're not making as big of a deal about Trump's age as you were about Biden's, you're being hypocritical. So in the spirit of open dialogue, I guess we're going to debate it. Let's debate it. Austin's bringing out a Vote Save America mug with three positions in it. So I'm not going to look till we all, let's all open at the same time. Pro meaning it's something we should talk about more. Anti, you can guess what that means, and moderator. Okay, great. I am the moderator. I am anti. Wow. I'm pro. Let's go, bitch. You about to get fucking owned. Can I get a little... Tonight. All right. I'll be moderating this debate. John, you will be arguing that Democrats must make a greater issue out of Donald Trump's age. Tommy will take the con. You have the opening statement. You have 30 seconds. Joe Biden lose the last election or have to drop out of the last election because he was too old. Yes. Yes. Was it the biggest concern of every voter everywhere because everyone made a big issue and Republicans made a big issue of his age? Yes. Yep. So Donald Trump's hands are falling off right now. He looks like there's like a fucking bad morgue job on his hands before he got in the casket. Sure. He's basically melting before our eyes. He's got all kinds of bruises all over the place. Aaron Rupar's feeds full of it. All, it's just purple. Okay. And yet Democrats are out there just talking about affordability and not talking about the fact that the president of the United States is decomposing before our eyes and Democrats won't talk about it even though these were the same Democrats that tried to push Joe Biden out of the race. Wow. A powerful argument. Tommy, your counter. John, you ignorant slut. I don't want to get in between you and Aaron Rupar's feed and your little handjob issue there with the Trump. But Trump is not running again. So none of this matters. Democrats have zero credibility on this issue after spending years pretending that they couldn't see Joe Biden's physical decline as he was shuffling around in sneakers and falling over sandbags. Every minute we spend talking about makeup on this decrepit old man's hands is a minute we are not spending talking about stock trades, the ballroom, Medicare cuts, things that actually matter to people. And yeah, the napping is weird, admittedly. It's also very funny when the White House says that he blinked for 10 seconds. Yeah, long blanks. These are long blanks. Admittedly, that's weird. But he still does a lot of events. He's out there all the time. He's doing rallies. He looks vibrant. He's a big. Looks vibrant. What are you talking about? He can't even stand up and do events anymore. You can't make him a martyr. All right. So let me just throw some questions in any tribute direction. Let's start with you, Tommy. You do notice that there's a significant decline in how he communicates from today to how he communicated even four or eight years ago, that his cadence has changed, that he's not as clear. He is more meandering. He's posting all hours of the night. These are things that should be a liability. I think he's always done these things. I think he's always been kind of incoherent. I think he's always posted. He's never slept. But I'm curious how you would explain the difference. Yes, you're right. He has always been this way, but I think it's indisputable that it is all worse. He is rambling more. It's the weave. It's the weave. But the weave is getting worse. Do you think it's getting like he is changing? Depending on your perspective. I think, like jokes aside, I think I don't know that I notice him that much more rambly than he used to be because I think he's always been rambly. He does look tired. He's legitimately falling asleep in events. It's noticeable. The hand stuff is weird. And by the way, they're clearly lying about the hand stuff because they initially said it was his handshaking hand. And then the other hand had the bruising too. So he also keeps going to the dentist and no one has had a long one. Dude, how many annual dentist trips do you have? He's doing a lot of dentist trips. He's doing a lot of physicals and things that no one's telling us why his health is the way it is. No one's asking questions about health. And there's a doctor's office in the West Wing. So you would only go to Walter Reed or Bethesda or wherever he's going now to get specialized equipment. There's also the dentist office in the White House. He's got to go to a special dentist. So John, question to you. How would a Democrat who was somebody who defended Joe Biden's ability to run again make this argument without seeming like they're foolish? I was wrong about Joe Biden. And I should have said something earlier. And that's what I'm doing this time around, because Donald Trump is in bad shape and he should not be leading the country. And any Republican that still supports him and that doesn't want to pressure the cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment, then they are just feeding into this cover up for Donald Trump's age in his dementia. And he is just putting us all at risk and Republicans won't do anything about it. And so even though he's not running again, when we go into the midterms, we know that Donald Trump's approval rating is highly correlated with how Republicans are going to do in the midterms. And by talking more about how he has dementia and he is losing his marbles, then we could get his approval even lower and that Democrats can then do better in the midterms. Last question for you, Tommy. Joe Biden's age and Joe Biden's disapproval on the economy became linked. The fact that the economy was bad was a sign he wasn't up for the job. The fact that he was up for the job made people doubt that he could fix the economy. We are trying to make an argument that Republicans, we have to win the House in the Senate and that Republicans refuse to tell the truth about Donald Trump. Shouldn't the fact that Donald Trump is decomposing for our eyes, rambling at all hours, falling asleep in meetings, shouldn't we be saying these Republicans won't be honest about that? That who, why are they not telling the truth about this? What are we not knowing about this? Shouldn't we be making this one of the lines of argument that we use when we try to accuse Republicans of not holding Trump accountable? Yeah, so it'll allow me to flip flop on the issue to respond to your leading question. Clearly, they're covering up something. The guys, the multiple annual doctor visits, like this is crazy. It's all pretext. We should push for more information. There is muscle memory here. I think if we get people to a critical massive concern about this, they will care. I think Trump will hate it. If we call him a sad sick old man, he would hate that. So just working that in there could be fun. Now you argue the other side. Yeah, no, I'll argue the other side because I think Tommy's best point was he's not running again. And so what difference, as Hillary Clinton once said, what difference does it make? If he is decrepit, if they are covering something up, he's like, the reason this was a potent argument against Joe Biden is because Joe Biden was asking voters for four more years in office. Donald Trump will never ask voters for four more years in office. No, he won't. He might try to stay in office, but he's not going to ask voters for four more years. I mean, he might run for a third term. That's not going to happen. He's going to try to just sit there and be like, I got the military. Just park? Yeah, no one's going to let him run. So what is the purpose of Trump? If we're trying to win a midterm, what is the story we're trying to tell about Donald Trump that is most true? And the story that is most true is what you said at the beginning of this episode, which is this whole term is a smash and grab. He wants to make as much money as he can. He's a megalomaniac who thinks that now he needs this legacy in history where he conquers half the globe and he doesn't give a shit about people. He doesn't give a shit about people and he's never given a shit about people. And that's a consistent story through time. And whether he has dementia now or he's losing his marbles or not, doesn't really matter. So I think the way that I would square this is, I think that's right. Democrats... Yeah, I'm more passionate about the inside. Democrats paid a political price for defending Joe Biden when people had concerns about his age, even after he dropped out, because it came to be evidence that Democrats couldn't be trusted more broadly. And my argument would only be, no, age should not be the central argument we make against Donald Trump. But if we can make the fact that Republicans refuse to be honest about not just Trump's corruption and unaccountability and brazen theft, but also just his rambling and crazy nonsense, and you make every time he does that part of a story about how he's unfit, including because he's getting old, then that's part of why these Republicans can't be trusted. That's the best I can do for it. But even that, as you say that, you kind of just threw in corruption there. But it's like, so he doesn't know what he's doing. He's crazy, but he's also smart enough to be out there stealing all the money he possibly can. I just think the incoherence is priced in. Like the weave is a thing that's like a joke, but it's also not a joke. You know what I mean? People know he's a goofball. He's all over the place. He says weird shit. But also, he's funny. He's big and imposing. He seems sharp at events a lot of times. And the handshit is very odd, but it's also weird to make an argument that he used to be sharp when we were all saying he's been fucking crazy since he came on the scene in 2016. It's weird for Democrats to be in the position to be like, you know what, he's just not up for the job. He used to be, but now he's not up for the job. I don't think anyone should make that argument. I think if you go back and look at the debates with Jeb Bush versus the debate with Kamala Harris, there's been a crazy decline. But even putting that aside, here's the thing that I find very annoying about all this. It's the same kind of practiced obtuseness that some people on our side love to do. Like how could you say this? If you won't say the same exact thing about Trump that you said about Joe Biden, then you're being a hypocrite. As if we can't see the difference between the way Joe Biden looked and the way Donald Trump looked. The fact that Joe Biden was disappearing from the public. Look, if you think Donald Trump is too old for the job, I'm sure he's too crazy. He's too old. He's too selfish. He's too much of a fucking dictator for the job. He's also the most accessible president we have ever had. He is on camera every fucking day. He's answering questions every day. And like he seems vital. Yeah, nuts loses the thread all the ways in which he's terrible and shouldn't be in office. He should be impeached and removed immediately. I'm not in charge of this. But like to act as if there isn't a big difference between the way Donald Trump is aging and the way Joe Biden is aging is to once again deny what we can see with our own fucking eyes. To me, that is like all beside the point. Even if you can argue that back and forth, whoever thinks Joe Biden was worse or Trump was worse, whatever. But it's again, the question is to what end? To what end? He is a second term president. If Donald Trump was sitting here saying I'm going to want four more years and we were trying to figure out how to defeat Donald Trump. The two one answer is you try to drive down his negatism or you make it an issue that other Republicans need to speak to and like suddenly they're vouching for him not being senile or old or whatever. I think we're a long way from here to there. Yeah. And because we would if you had if you had a choice between what Republicans need to answer for, would you rather it be they're covering up for Donald Trump being too old or they're saying nothing about the fact that he's literally stealing from taxpayers out of their pocket and launched a war that's shot up gas prices? Hand to make up or theft? I think you'd rather do that one. And if he really did. Why not both? Okay. Well, you only have so many things that you can say out of your mouth. And if it was so clear, right? Like if he was like, look, I agree he's in decline. There's not some magic words that Democrats can use to make something more, they can make it more of an issue, but they can't make it the issue. If Donald Trump was as having the kind of muttering debate that Joe Biden had, I guarantee you it would be a big political issue and it wouldn't be because Chuck Schumer decided it was on some given day. That's a, coma sad sick old man. Yeah. Let's go to town. Let's go to town. Get a man. Figure out if you got the right words. I won. Okay. Congrats. Good for you. Congrats to our winner. John Love it. That's our show for today. Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday. Potsdam, America is a cricket media production. Our show was produced by Austin Fisher, Saul Rubin, McKenna Roberts and Ferris Safari with Reed, Shirlen, Elijah Cone and Adrian Hill. Our team includes Matt DeGroote, Ben Hefko, Jordan Cantor, Charlotte Landis, Carol Pelleve, David Tolles, Mia Kellman, Ryan Young and Naomi Sengel. Our staff is probably unionized with the Writers Guild of America East. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. For years, I've heard from candidates, activists and political staffers who turn to PodSafe America for political strategy and messaging advice because they don't have access to a political consultant or a pollster. That's flattering to hear, but it's a huge problem. We're going to defeat MAGA and protect democracy. We need everyone to have access to the best information and advice possible. That's why I recently launched MessageBox Pro, a subscription consulting product for people working at every level of politics. Subscribers get weekly strategy memos, data driven messaging insights and polling analysis. Plus you get access to an incredible community of smart, committed political pros. Whether you're running for office, staffing a politician, organizing your community or working in communications at any level, MessageBox Pro is built for you. To learn more or sign up, go to MessageBoxPro.com.