The Megyn Kelly Show

DOJ Charges Castro, House Hearing Targets SPLC, Bezos Slams Mamdani & Praises Trump: AM Update 5/21

24 min
May 21, 202610 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

This AM Update covers the DOJ's indictment of former Cuban President Raul Castro amid signs of potential U.S. military escalation, a House hearing scrutinizing the Southern Poverty Law Center's alleged fraud scheme, and billionaire Jeff Bezos arguing for tax relief on lower earners while defending his business practices and AI optimism.

Insights
  • The Trump administration's Cuba policy appears strategically timed to shore up Hispanic voter support, particularly among Cuban Americans in South Florida, ahead of midterm elections where Latino support has declined.
  • The SPLC indictment represents a significant shift in DOJ priorities, with prosecutors alleging the civil rights organization profited from manufacturing extremism threats rather than combating them.
  • Bezos's tax commentary reflects a broader business leader narrative that government spending inefficiency, not revenue shortfalls, is the core economic problem facing working Americans.
  • James Murdoch's acquisition of New York Magazine and Vox represents a deliberate ideological split from his father's conservative media empire, signaling a major realignment in media ownership.
  • AI adoption is being framed by tech leaders as a productivity multiplier that will lower costs and create new opportunities, countering growing public anxiety about job displacement.
Trends
Geopolitical escalation: Trump administration laying groundwork for potential military confrontation with Cuba through sanctions, intelligence leaks, and symbolic prosecutionsGovernment accountability: DOJ prosecuting nonprofit organizations for alleged fraud and misuse of donor funds, signaling stricter oversight of tax-exempt entitiesTax policy debate: Billionaire business leaders publicly advocating for tax relief on lower-income earners, shifting focus to government spending efficiencyMedia consolidation: Liberal-leaning tech entrepreneurs acquiring legacy media brands to build alternative media empires independent of traditional ownership structuresAI narrative control: Tech leaders proactively addressing AI job displacement fears with productivity and economic growth arguments to shape public perceptionElectoral strategy: Foreign policy decisions being explicitly linked to domestic electoral outcomes and demographic coalition-buildingInformant program scrutiny: Federal prosecution of civil rights organizations' use of undercover informants raising questions about DOJ priorities and political motivations
Companies
Amazon
Jeff Bezos cited Amazon's $23/hour entry-level wages and operational efficiency as counterarguments to tax-the-rich p...
Fox Corporation
Lachlan Murdoch serves as executive chairman and CEO; James Murdoch split from the family empire over ideological dif...
Vox Media
James Murdoch's Lupus Systems acquired New York Magazine, Vox.com, and the Vox Media Podcast Network for estimated $3...
New York Magazine
Acquired by James Murdoch's Lupus Systems; previously owned by Rupert Murdoch from 1977-1991.
Southern Poverty Law Center
Indicted on 11 criminal counts including wire fraud and money laundering for allegedly paying extremist informants an...
Turning Point USA
Listed on SPLC's hate map alongside KKK; Charlie Kirk's organization cited as example of SPLC's expanded hate definit...
Moms for Liberty
Conservative group branded as anti-government by SPLC and placed on its hate map, central to House hearing testimony.
Amazon Studios
Produced Melania Trump documentary; Bezos defended the project as non-partisan business engagement with current admin...
PragerU
Conservative media organization listed on SPLC's hate map as example of alleged bias in extremism designations.
Focus on the Family
Christian organization included on SPLC's hate map, cited as example of mainstream group labeled as extremist.
People
Jeff Bezos
Argued lower-income Americans shouldn't pay federal taxes and criticized government spending inefficiency in CNBC int...
Raul Castro
Indicted by DOJ on conspiracy to kill U.S. nationals related to 1996 civilian plane shootdown incident.
Todd Blanche
Announced indictment of Raul Castro and five Cuban fighter pilots in Miami on charges of conspiracy and murder.
Marco Rubio
Released Spanish-language video targeting Cubans, criticizing regime for economic failures during Cuba escalation.
James Murdoch
Acquired New York Magazine and Vox Media for $300M+; split from Fox empire over ideological differences in 2020.
Rupert Murdoch
Conservative media mogul and father of James Murdoch; previously owned New York Magazine from 1977-1991.
Lachlan Murdoch
James Murdoch's brother; now runs Fox empire after family settlement and ideological split with James.
Zoran Mamdani
Criticized by Bezos for standing outside billionaire Ken Griffin's home to promote second-home tax policy.
Juan Rojas
South Florida-based journalist analyzed Trump administration's Cuba policy as electoral strategy targeting Cuban Amer...
Jim Jordan
Led hearing on SPLC, arguing the organization profited from manufacturing hate and paid informants at Charlottesville...
Jamie Raskin
Democrat from Maryland who defended SPLC's informant program as lawful practice approved by FBI.
Tyler O'Neill
Testified at House hearing that SPLC's fundraising model required expanding hate definitions to maintain donor revenue.
Emily Jashinsky
Host of this AM Update episode on SiriusXM Channel 111.
Ken Griffin
Criticized by NYC Mayor Mamdani in second-home tax proposal video; defended by Bezos as non-villain.
Nicolas Maduro
Captured by U.S. military earlier this year; his removal cut off oil supplies to Cuba, worsening fuel crisis.
Kara Swisher
Co-hosts Pivot podcast, acquired by James Murdoch's Lupus Systems as part of Vox Media deal.
Scott Galloway
Co-hosts Pivot podcast, acquired by James Murdoch's Lupus Systems as part of Vox Media deal.
Quotes
"The bottom half of income earners in this country pay only 3% of the taxes. It's only 3%. We can find 3%. You know, we shouldn't be asking this nurse in Queens to send money to Washington."
Jeff BezosCNBC Interview
"Turned out for them, creating hate was more profitable than fighting it. That's exactly what they did. They ran a scam."
Jim JordanHouse Judiciary Hearing
"Ken Griffin isn't a villain. He hasn't hurt anybody. He's not hurting New York, in fact, quite the opposite."
Jeff BezosCNBC Interview
"What they're down to give you is you've been digging out a basement for your house with a shovel and somebody is about to hand you a bulldozer."
Jeff BezosCNBC Interview on AI
"I'm just trying to build a great business."
James MurdochNew York Times Interview
Full Transcript
Grab the unrivalled Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra with an incredible privacy display on EE, the UK's best network. You can save £20 per month, plus claim a Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Lite. Now we're talking. So get yours today. Offer ends 28th May. Good morning, everyone. I'm Emily Jashinsky, host of After Party and the Megyn Kelly wrap up show on SiriusXM Channel 111. It's Thursday, May 21, 2026. And this is your AM update. Today, we are announcing an indictment charging Raoul Castro and several others with conspiracy to kill U.S. nationals. The DOJ indicts former Cuban leader Raoul Castro as questions emerge over whether the Trump administration is preparing for a broader confrontation with Cuba. A House judiciary hearing puts the Southern Poverty Law Center under the microscope as Republicans accuse the indicted group of manufacturing hate for profit. Billionaire Jeff Bezos weighs in on President Trump and the First Lady, New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani and more. And James Murdoch, the liberal son of the Fox Titan, making a major media play of his own. All that and more coming up in just a moment on your AM update. When there are supply constraints on commodities, prices surge. You see it with fuel prices, with everything happening in the Strait of Hormuz. And you know what else is a limited commodity? Gold. They mine it out of the ground and when it's gone, it's gone. Governments cannot just print more of it and that's why everyone from central banks to savvy savers consider diversifying with gold. If you've been thinking about it for years but have still never moved some of your savings into physical gold, consider Birch Gold Group. Now through May 29, Birch Gold is giving first-time gold buyers a rebate of up to $10,000 on qualifying purchases. For details and a free information kit on diversifying into gold, text MK to the number 989898. Birch Gold can help you convert an existing IRA or 401K into a tax-sheltered IRA in physical gold. Text MK to the number 989898 to see if you qualify for a first-time gold buyer rebate of up to $10,000. The DOJ announcing the indictment of 94-year-old former Cuban President Raul Castro, nearly 30 years after the Cuban military shot down two civilian planes operated by humanitarian group Brothers to the Rescue. Five Cuban fighter pilots involved in the shooting also indicted. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche unveiling the charges yesterday in Miami, where Cuban Americans make up about 30% of the population. Today, we are announcing an indictment charging Raul Castro and several others with consistent conspiracy to kill U.S. nationals. Mr. Castro and the others are charged with additional crimes as well, including destruction of aircraft and four individual counts of murder. The indictment was returned by a grand jury sitting in this district in Miami on April 23, 2026 and was unsealed today for nearly 30 years. The families of four murdered Americans have waited for justice. The DOJ saying the planes were civilian aircraft flying over international waters as part of a humanitarian mission focused on Cuban refugees fleeing the island by sea. Well, Cuba claims the planes were violating its airspace. The announcement timed with Cuban Independence Day. Secretary of State Marco Rubio releasing a Spanish language video directly targeting Cubans saying, quote, the real reason you don't have electricity, fuel or food is because those who control your country have plundered billions of dollars, but nothing has been used to help the people. These latest actions coming amid a series of recent moves raising questions about whether the Trump administration is laying the groundwork for a more aggressive military confrontation with Cuba. In March, President Trump openly floating the idea of, quote, taking Cuba in some form, calling the island a failed nation and saying he believed he could, quote, do anything he wanted with it. Earlier this year, the US military captured former Venezuelan leader, Nicolas Maduro, a longtime Cuban ally who had already been indicted by the DOJ. Venezuela now run by Maduro's former deputy, Delcey Rodriguez, who has been allowed to remain in power as long as she cooperates with the administration. Maduro's removal has had direct consequences for Havana. For years, Venezuela was one of Cuba's most important oil lifelines. Since Maduro's ouster, the administration blocking oil shipments to Cuba, worsening an already severe fuel crisis, prolonging blackouts and stirring up the civilian population. And earlier this week, Axios reporting, based on alleged classified intelligence, that Cuba, in its weakened state, has obtained more than 300 military drones from US adversaries and discussed possible attacks on American targets, including Guantanamo Bay, US military vessels, and possibly Key West, Florida. Cuban's foreign minister calling the allegation a fraudulent case designed to justify possible military action. We spoke to South Florida-based freelance journalist Juan Rojas, who sees the Trump administration's push against Cuba as part of a broader electoral strategy. It looks like they're moving forward with some sort of Maduro-esque playbook. Hard to say if they'll actually go through with trying to arrest him or maybe some sort of negotiation with the regime to hand him over. Other than that, maybe nothing comes of it at all. That's just purely symbolic, but that symbolism is clearly just meant for South Florida and Cuban Americans more broadly. With recent polling showing President Trump hemorrhaging Hispanic support, Rojas says the push to topple Cuba's communist regime could help the administration shore up a key part of its Latino coalition. The administration has really alienated a lot of Latinos, including Cuban Americans, who still generally support President Trump. But a lot of them in Udu Field, a lot in South Florida have been upset by what they view as excesses with the deportation policy, deporting people to third countries that they're not originally from, excessive force used to arrest people. But on the other hand, they really love the Cuba policy and the prospect of regime change on the island. As a result, I at least see a lot of Cuban Americans, especially, giving the administration a pass and possibly even this could motivate turnout during the midterms, which was really crucial among Latino voters where support has dropped off a lot. Rojas says DC is making a dangerous bet that making conditions even worse will force Cubans into revolt. If they don't get oil, they just can't turn the lights on. And so as a result, that's got a lot of Cuban Americans here have called on boycotting third countries, Mexico and Russia from Venezuela shipping oil to the island. Under the theory that if we make conditions so bad on the island, people will rise up and overthrow the regime. I think that's tortured logic. But you want to make people suffer to stimulate them in order to overthrow regime. But there's a lot of it's kind of a double sided sword. I mean, besides like the humanitarian aspect to it, you usually like create a rally around the flag effect around whatever government is in power. And you also give them an excuse to crack down and also just scapegoat, which is what the Cuban regime has done for decades. Rojas warns Cuba is not Venezuela and that any hopes of copying the Maduro playbook may be underestimating the island. It's really hard to say because it's such a closed off system. I mean, you know, like in Venezuela, for instance, there is like a formal opposition. There is like civil society and like whatever Cuba, it's a it's a one party state. And the Communist Party literally controls everything. So what comes after? I'm not really sure. I mean, you know, some people say that, oh, if we invade, you know, the Cuban people will rise up and defend the revolution. I have my doubts. But yeah, sure, I'm sure there's some die hards that would be willing to, you know, fight an invasion to the death. But then there are old people there that could be people that go into the mountains and mountain insurgency. The House Judiciary Committee holding a hearing yesterday on the Southern Poverty Law Center, or SPLC, amid mounting scrutiny of the once prominent civil rights organization now under federal indictment. The hearing examining what House Republicans describe as the SPLC's role in artificially elevating the threat of domestic extremism. Founded in Montgomery, Alabama in 1971, the SPLC began as a nonprofit civil rights law firm known for bringing cases against the KKK and other white supremacist organizations. But in more recent years, the group branding conservative and libertarian groups like Moms for Liberty as anti-government and placing Charlie Kirk's Turning Point USA on its hate map alongside the KKK and other extremist groups. The hearing coming after a federal grand jury in Alabama indicted the SPLC last month on 11 criminal counts, including wire fraud, false statements to a federally insured bank and conspiracy to commit concealment money laundering. According to the DOJ, the SPLC allegedly used more than $3 million in donated funds between 2014 and 2023 to pay individuals associated with violent extremist groups, including the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations and neo-Nazi organizations, to allegedly act as informants. Prosecutors alleging the group concealed those payments through fake entities and misled donors about how their money was being used. One of the central examples raised in the hearing was Charlottesville, where prosecutors say an SPLC paid field source was involved in helping plan and promote the 2017 Unite the Right rally that led to one death and ignited years of national debate over extremism and political violence. In yesterday's House judiciary hearing, Chairman Jim Jordan arguing Charlottesville was not an isolated example, but part of a broader SPLC model, paying sources inside extremist movements, amplifying the threat those movements posed and then converting the fear into donations. Field source 37. Again, he was the first one I mentioned. He was part of the planning group for the Charlottesville rally. He was paid to coordinate transportation. He was paid to attend. After the event, again, after the event where a young lady is killed, the Southern Poverty Law Center almost tripled their income. It all worked. They went from 51 million annual income to $133 million. Turned out for them, creating hate was more profitable than fighting it. That's exactly what they did. They ran a scam. They became the standard. They didn't get prosecuted and they made a ton of money. Made a ton of money. They're sitting on 800 million in assets, $700 million endowment fund. Such a deal. Such a deal. But here's the good news, because there is some good news. Here's the good news. President Trump got elected. Todd Blanche is Attorney General, Casper Tells, FBI Director. And guess what? They're prosecuting these guys. Ranking member Jamie Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland, accusing the Trump DOJ of criminalizing what he says was a lawful, informant program. The DOJ says that the SPLC defrauded its donors by paying undercover informants to infiltrate and collect intelligence on these racist groups. But where are all the donors complaining about having been defrauded? Where is the evidence of the fraud? Where are the civil lawsuits that always follow in the wake of a fraud, a scam, or ripoff? DOJs offer no evidence that anyone was actually deceived or defrauded by this perfectly lawful, well-known and accepted practice that the FBI itself approved for many years using informants and undercover agents was indeed the basis for the FBI's own efforts to investigate racist extremist groups when that was a priority before the targets of the FBI became instead the perceived political foes of Donald Trump. Witness and senior editor at the Daily Signal, Tyler O'Neill, testifying the SPLC was built on a fundraising model that once targeted the KKK, but later required the group to keep expanding its definition of hate to keep donor money flowing. How did the SPLC become so wealthy? Co-founder Morris D. is set up a lucrative fundraising engine by suing the Ku Klux Klan into bankruptcy. When the SPLC ran out of grand dragons to slay, the center needed to find more hate to justify the fundraising. It has a financial incentive to juice the numbers. The SPLC began to publish a hate map that plots mainstream conservative and Christian groups alongside Klan chapters. The map includes Moms for Liberty, PragerU, Turning Point USA, and even Focus on the Family. The SPLC says the map reveals the infrastructure upholding white supremacy. This hate map kills two birds with one stone. It silences conservative descent from the left and the SPLC's agenda, and it exaggerates hate to keep the money flowing. The SPLC denies any wrongdoing, pleading not guilty earlier this month to the DOJ charges, with the case now set to go to trial in October. Coming up, billionaire Jeff Bezos taking on the tax the rich movement, AI fears President Trump and New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani in a wide-ranging CNBC interview, and James Murdoch once heir to the Fox News empire, now buying up major liberal media brands. Time for some life talk. 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Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, sitting for a wide-ranging CNBC interview, weighing in on everything from President Trump, Zoran Mamdani, and AI. One of the most striking moments coming when Bezos, one of the richest men in the world, argued the bottom half of American earners should stop paying federal taxes altogether. Bezos rejecting the idea that simply taxing billionaires more will solve the economic woes working Americans face, arguing the country is not struggling with a revenue problem, but a spending problem. So there's this tale of two economies and they're using this age old technique of, you know, picking a villain and pointing fingers. But the problem is that doesn't solve anything. Why is a nurse in Queens who makes $75,000 a year paying more than $1,000 a month in taxes? The bottom half of income earners in this country pay only 3% of the taxes. It's only 3%. We can find 3%. You know, we shouldn't be asking this nurse in Queens to send money to Washington. They should be sending her an apology. To illustrate the point, Bezos pointed to New York City schools, arguing the government is already spending massive amounts of money, but not managing it well. The New York City school system, they spend $44,000 per student, $44,000. That's 30% more per student than other big cities like Chicago, LA and Boston. New York City doesn't get better outcomes. If we ran Amazon, the way New York City runs their school system, right, your packages would take six weeks to arrive, we'd have to charge you $100 delivery fee. Bezos also applying the same argument to Amazon workers, pushing back on the idea that the problem is simply low corporate pay. Amazon, we have our entry level wage for in Queens is $23 an hour. And that's that works up to be like $52,000 a year. And guess what? They're still charging that person more than $10,000 in taxes. And you know, that's absurd. Right. Why would you charge somebody making $52,000 a year, $10,000 a year in taxes? Bezos also asked about a video posted last month by New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani, the far left progressive who has made taxing the wealthy central to his agenda. In the video, Mamdani stands outside billionaire Ken Griffin's home, announcing a proposed new tax on second homes in the city worth more than $5 million. I think there are two different things about that video. On the one hand, it's perfectly fine to have a policy debate about whether you want to have a peer to tear tax. The second piece, which is not so good, is to go stand in front of Ken Griffin's house and act like he is some kind of villain. Ken Griffin isn't a villain. He hasn't hurt anybody. He's not hurting New York, in fact, quite the opposite. A peer to tear tax is a, you know, taxes on out of towners are very popular taxes. That's why there are hotel taxes. But I think that the peer to tear tax is a fine thing for New York to do. Unfortunately, it's a, it is an effective political technique. It's as old as the hills. So when you don't know how to solve a problem, create a villain, blame them, but it won't solve the problem. The only thing that will solve the problem is skill. Bezos also pushing back on the suggestion that Amazon Studios' Melania Trump documentary was part of a broader effort to curry favor with the Trump administration, adding he has worked with presidents of both parties. We need our business leaders to provide input into the administration, regardless of who the president is. I'm not on the side. You know what? This is, I'm on the side of America. And I, and that is so important. Like, and that's where business leaders should be. It's just, I think, no, I think we are, but we get perceived as being like, you know, partisan or whatever. Like, I was helping Obama every chance I could. I was helping Biden every chance I could. I still call Obama for advice. He's a very smart guy. And, you know, and by the way, people that are, Trump has lots of good ideas and he's done a lot of, he's been right about a lot of things. You have to give him credit where credit is due. And as AI becomes an increasingly divisive topic with some college graduation crowds booing speakers who praise the technology, Bezos making the case for optimism. And they are saying, oh my God, you know, there's going to be no more radiologists because, you know, AI can read x-rays better than a radiologist can. And they're going to be no more software engineers because AI can program better than a software engineer can. These people are wrong. Let's say you're a software engineer. Right. What they're down to give you is you've been digging out a basement for your house with a shovel and somebody is about to hand you a bulldozer. What's really going to happen is we're going to have so much productivity in our economy that, for example, the food will get cheaper and housing construction will get cheaper and so on and so on. It's a real world succession as James Murdock, the liberal son of Fox News founder, Rupert Murdock, now building out a media empire of his own. Lupus Systems, Murdock's media and tech holding company, announced a major deal to acquire New York Magazine, Vox.com, and the Vox Media Podcast Network. The acquisition includes podcasts such as Pivot with Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway. The deal does not include all Vox media brands like Eater, PopSugar, SB Nation, the Dodo and the Verge. The press release not indicating the sale price, though CNN reporting an estimated value of $300 million or more. Murdock describing the deal as focused on ideas and in-depth journalism, telling the New York Times he was not looking to acquire a quote, daily news business, but instead wanted longer form, thoughtful journalism that can really speak to the culture. The deal also carrying a bit of family history. Rupert Murdock, the conservative media mogul who built the Fox News empire, once owned New York Magazine, buying its parent company in 1977 before selling it in 1991 for $650 million, according to Forbes. James, splitting from the family in 2020, reportedly over ideological differences, he and two other siblings last year reaching an evenly divided $3.3 billion settlement after a bitter legal fight. His brother, Lachlan Murdock, now serving as executive chairman and CEO of Fox Corporation, effectively running the day-to-day business of the Fox empire. James, telling the New York Times, his father's past ownership does not hold special meaning for him. Asked whether he is trying to do something deliberately different from his father, Murdock replied, quote, no, I'm just trying to build a great business. That'll do it for your AM update. I'm Emily Droshinski, host of After Party. Catch the Megyn Kelly Show live on Series XM's The Megyn Kelly Channel 111 at noon east on youtube.com slash Megyn Kelly and all podcast platforms. And we all trust pilots with their smooth, captainly voices that make you feel like you'd let them land anywhere they like. Sorry, where was I? Right, A.J. Bell, rated excellent by sexy pilots. I mean trust pilot. I'm a flight risk. A.J. Bell, feel good investing. The value of your investments can go up or down.