Pod Save America is brought to you by Helix. We love Helix mattresses. Love it. Swears by his Helix mattress. So comfortable. My son Charlie has a Helix mattress for kids. We have one in our guest bedroom as well. They are super comfortable. Everyone loves them. My in-laws have it. They love it too. Everybody's unique. Everyone sleeps differently. That's why Helix has several different mattress models to choose from, each designed for specific sleep positions and feel preferences. Take the Helix Sleep Quiz and find your perfect mattress in under two minutes.
I believe you got a Don Lux because you are a stomach sleeper. Yeah, and I am. Are you?
There you go. And it's very comfortable, and I highly recommend it. They have 20 unique mattresses, including models with memory foam layers to provide optimal pressure relief if you sleep on your side, models with a more responsive foam to cradle your body for essential support in stomach and back sleeping positions. Helix knows there's no better way to test out a new mattress than by sleeping on it in your own home. That's why they offer a 100-night trial and 10- to 15-year warranty to try out your new Helix mattress. Plus, your personalized mattress is shipped straight to your door free of charge.
Go to helixsleep.com slash crooked for 27% off site-wide and free bedding bundle, including a sheet set and mattress protector with any Lux or Elite mattress order. This offer is exclusive for Pod Save America listeners. That's helixsleep.com slash crooked for 27% off site-wide plus free bedding bundle with any Lux or Elite mattress order. helixsleep.com slash crooked.
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's show, we got lots to talk about, Dan. So much news today. It won't stop.
Trump's trade deal with the UK, the Republican plan to cut Medicaid, the government trying to disappear people to Libya, a January 6th activist losing his confirmation fight to be D.C.'s top federal prosecutor, a new Maha Surgeon General nominee, and Joe and Jill Biden's appearance on The View. You'll also hear my interview with our pal Leah Lippman, strict scrutiny co-host and new author of the book Lawless, which comes out next week.
We'll talk about that and all the latest legal news. But let's start with the big news of the day. We got a woke pope from the south side of Chicago. The warm Barack Obama's heart. Look at that. On Thursday, it's Reverend Wright. Who's the one person in the studio laughing at that joke? Reid. Obviously. Obama bro. You have to be a 40 plus Obama bro to get that joke.
On Thursday, Cardinal Robert Prevost became Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, also a citizen of Peru where he served for two decades, first as a missionary and ultimately a bishop. Most importantly, he seems to be a poster. A poster who has retweeted criticism about J.D. Vance, Trump's immigration policy, and Republican inaction on gun violence, among other things.
Dan, what do you think of our new pontiff? I think if we're going to get a pope, we should have an American woke pope from Chicago. That seems great, especially one who hates J.D. Vance. I say woke pope because it sounds good, but it is more of a never-Trump bulwark pope. Yes, I just saw that was Tommy and Lovett's joke earlier. He's a bulwark pope. Yeah, a lot of people posted that. It's so weird. They claimed that they... I saw Lovett do the T for trademark. Yeah.
I mean, like judging wokeness on a Pope scale, right? Like the Pope is going to have a series of views that we do not love on abortion, LGBTQ rights, all of those things. But the fact that he has leaned so hard in, and very recently into, uh,
A humane view of immigration, how we treat migrants that is in direct opposition to how Trump is doing it seems very positive for what is true, like obviously a major political issue in this country, but a global issue for the next generation.
And also just enjoyable that the MAGA right is going bananas about this. They're so upset. They're so angry. Like you, because we talked this morning when we first, before we saw the tweets, we were like, when is Trump going to take credit for an American Pope? And now his base is freaking out about the woke Pope. It's so funny. Yeah. I mean, I'll just, I'll speak as the resident Catholic here. Uh,
You know, I grew up in the Catholic Church as like pretty conservative, right? Just on a lot of issues that we probably care about. Though, you know, on immigration, on poverty, on war and peace and the death penalty, it's always been more progressive than not.
And I do think that in the Francis era, and especially since Francis appointed like I think 80% of the cardinals that voted, the leaders of the Catholic Church are now leaning into sort of the more progressive positions on issues that they've always had or at least the church has mostly always had, but on issues of sexual orientation, gender identity, abortion, etc.
Church is still pretty conservative, though even Francis, you know, he made some little headway on that. But it is a generally traditionalist conservative institution. So I think this is very good news as someone who really wants to see the church continue in the direction that Francis was pushing the church. And as someone who likes to pick a Twitter fight with J.D. Vance, you probably feel some affinity with this pope. The piece that the pope, the now pope, shared, it was about –
So you know J.D. Vance's, what was it called? Ordo, Adoramus, whatever that thing. Basically it's this theory that he fucking made up that he didn't make it up. But it's not really the theory. It's not really official policy of the Catholic Church that you're supposed to love the people around you. And then as you go out in concentric circles, you don't have to care that much about other people.
So it's sort of, that's the gist. Yes. Seems everyone contrary to some parts of the golden rule, just as you. Yeah. So the piece that the Pope shared says, it ought to be clear that Catholics cannot support a rhetoric that demonizes immigrants as dangerously criminal simply because they have crossed the border in search of a better life. It ought to be clear that Catholics cannot celebrate aggressive deportation enforcement, a spectacle. It ought to be clear that Catholics cannot accept a theory of love that pats itself on the back for putting some of the poorest among us farthest from our concern and charity.
Love that. Seems great. Love that. His last tweet, his last retweet was after the Trump Bukele meeting. And it said, do you not see the suffering? Is your conscious not disturbed? How can you stay quiet? I mean, you know, we love our American Pope, our Chicago Pope.
And Steve Bannon apparently called this like last week. He was like, I'm worried that they're going to go with that. They could go with Cardinal Prevost because he would be the most progressive pick. Huh? Interesting. Yeah. Now he's not the most progressive pick, but that's what that's what Bannon said. Yeah. And Laura Loomer is just yelling about a woke Marxist pope. I mean, if if Laura Loomer Loomer is the pope, then she is all powerful.
Her woke Marxist Pope thing, of course, has gone viral. And I just retweeted this, but someone posted, sung to the tune of Pink Pony Club. And now I can't get it out of my head.
That's so good. Is Pink Pope Club an episode title? Woke Marxist Pope. All right. Even though America has given the world a new pope, we must get back to talking about our worst export, Donald Trump and his global trade war. Fed Chair Jerome Powell announced this week that the central bank won't be cutting interest rates just yet and said that Trump's tariffs will likely lead to higher prices and unemployment rates.
potentially the stagflation scenario that's basically the worst case for the economy right now. But clearly, Powell hasn't read the art of the deal lately because on Thursday morning, Trump announced a trade deal of sorts with the UK. There will still be a 10% tax on everything we buy that's made in the UK, except for cars like Rolls Royces and Bentleys. And I guess they're going to drop tariffs on some US exports. So just amazing work, Mr. Trump. You've done it again.
Trump announced the deal in the Oval, followed by the ritual fluffing from his staff. Let's listen. This was the president's deal and people think, oh, that's not the way it works. If you got to sit next to him, I have the best dealmaker to my left. He's the closer, he gets deals done that we could never get done because he understands business, he understands deals. We started at 10% and we ended at 10% and the market for America is better. And this is a perfect example
of why Donald Trump produced the Liberation Day. This would have taken Jameson and I three years, maybe. And instead, we got it done in 45 days, certainly, because we worked for Donald Trump. Howard Lutnick never fails to deliver. Let me tell you, what a Commerce Secretary. What do you make of the big deal, Dan? Well, I hate to disagree with Mr. Lutnick here, but...
They did not get this done in three weeks. This deal has been under some form of discussion since Trump was president the first time. It's not particularly related to Liberation Day. It's not a deal. It's at best a framework of a deal. It's maybe a, to borrow a phrase from Trump, a concept of a deal. Like we have some outlines. We don't know when it's going into effect. Nothing's been signed. But the things to know here are
So Trump's completely ass-backward, asinine understanding of global trade suggests that if you have a trade – the United States has a trade deficit with that country, then we are losing somehow. We have a trade surplus with the UK.
We are winning in this scenario. So it's like what – this is not – like if theoretically there's more we can open up – like one of the things in here is they're raising the quota on U.S. beef going to the U.K. That's fine. That's like a totally fine normal thing. This is not going to change very much at all. The fact that it's the U.K. is very telling because as I mentioned, it's a deal that's been worked on for years. It's also our closest ally with a special relationship with a very meager trading relationship. So it's a pretty easy deal to get done if you're looking to show –
some victory. And Letnick is celebrating that the 10% tariffs are on there. What he's doing, he's celebrating the continued 10% tax that American people will pay on goods coming from the UK, unless you buy Rolls-Royce. If you buy one of the 100,000... No, it's just we took it from 25 to... Yeah, we took it from 25 to 10 on Rolls-Royce, but you're right, the first 100,000 that come into the United States... Yeah, the first 100,000 Rolls-Royces and other British manufactured cars will not face that tariff.
Range Rovers, Minis. I think that's everyone. Aston Martin? Aston Martin. Aston Martin, you're right. All things I learned from James Bond. U.S. tariff rates because of this quote-unquote deal fell 0.06%. Yeah. So it's not much of a deal. But NBC's, the NBC headline on this is amazing. Trump gives break to Rolls-Royce cars but threatens more tariffs on Mattel toys. Yeah.
And honestly, the piece is even worse than the headline because there's a quote from Trump about the Rolls, Rolls Royce. He goes, we took it from 25 to 10 on Rolls Royce because Rolls Royce is not going to be built here. I wouldn't even ask them to do that. It's a very special car. And then...
The CEO of Mattel had said that he's going to move some production out of China into other countries, but not the U.S. And Trump said, that's okay, let him go. We'll put 100% tariff on his toys and he won't sell one toy in the United States. Cool.
I would never ask Rolls Royce to build their cars anywhere but the UK. And please, please sell as many as you want. But fucking Mattel toys? No more. We're done. Trade embargo on Mattel toys. I mean, this also fits in with the news that Trump proposed to Mike Johnson a loan program for newborn babies to offset the cost of tariffs because 99% of strollers, car seats, baby toys, everything come from China.
So we're going to put babies in debt to cover the tariffs? Like, what are we doing? You have to give the baby back? How does this work? I'm not sure. The baby themselves might be the collateral here. I don't know.
It feels, I mean, obviously they're doing this because they want to show momentum. Big deal. You know, Tommy was pointing out that like Fox News all day, even though the biggest story is the Pope, all day it was talking about the UK trade deal because you can tell like they want to make this a big deal. And, you know, the markets reacted positively as they have been the last week or so because I think markets are hoping that we're sort of inching towards some kind of resolution here. I don't know if that really works here.
As a political strategy or really a trade strategy. No, I don't think it works. It doesn't work as a trade strategy. It doesn't work as a market strategy. The markets went up this morning, but it's not because of this deal. It's because the prospect that we're going to have negotiations with China next week. That's what people care about.
Our relationship, our political relationship with the UK is quote unquote special and important and historic. Our trade relationship with the UK is fairly minimal compared to some of the other like Canada, Mexico, China, the places that are most affected by this. And people, it's all reality. Like reality sits in when it comes to the economy. You can't,
You can't fake it. People are going to see prices go up. They're going to see empty shelves. The markets could make- Just ask Joe Biden. That's right. Exactly. The markets could possibly go up on a deal here or there, but what they're really supposed to do is project the medium and long-term state of the economy. And if the economy performs as Jerome Powell thinks it might, then that's going to affect the market too, no matter how many deals Trump announces between now and then.
Let's talk about China. The first cargo ships with goods subject to Trump's 145% tariffs are now arriving here on the West Coast. Bloomberg had a fascinating breakdown of one container ship that's carrying $564 million worth of products from China that will cost the Americans who bought them $417 million in tariff payments. I'm not a great business guy, but that seems like it's going to be difficult to turn a profit. Yeah.
Well, unless you raise prices. That's true. The port of Los Angeles is expecting a 35% drop in volume this week. And that's just one port. Trump was asked about all this at the Oval event on Thursday with his big UK deal. Let's listen. Ports here in the U.S., the traffic has really slowed and now thousands of dock workers and truck drivers are worried about their jobs. That means we lose less money, you know?
When I see that, that means we lose less money. So when you say it's slowed down, that's a good thing, not a bad thing. It's a good thing, Dan. It's a good thing to have the shipping of goods in global trade slow down so that people can't get the goods they need and have to pay more for the ones that are left. And that the people who work at the docks and drive the trucks and the stores to sell goods lose their jobs.
That's a good thing. I mean, he really is a walking, talking argument for making econ a required course in American high school. It's like he just, the fundamentals of it, he does not, like if he had gone to and paid attention to the first three weeks of econ 101 at any university in America, we would not be in this problem. Well, that's his excuse. What's the excuse of all the fucking people that work in his administration? Because they do what he wants.
I mean, like there are people like Scott fucking best. He is trying to work. Of course, he wrote a thousand things before the election trying to rationalize terrorists. But, you know, whatever his queered quote was about how the tariff gun always stays in the drawer.
So he is trying to work around the insanity and ignorance of his boss and other people. So many have before. Yes. I mean, he's, he's going to end up working somewhere with Gary Cohn one day, but like that's, I mean, that's where, and the rest of these people are, they do, they do like, they view their job as to serve, as to do what Trump wants, regardless of how stupid that is. Apparently Besant is meeting in Switzerland with the Chinese this weekend. Yeah.
To maybe talk about, I don't know, first steps on a deal, first steps on negotiations about a deal. I don't know how this ends with China because I don't, you know, it seems like Trump doesn't want to have it seem at all like he is giving into China. But he needs to give into China. So this is what I feel like this is what this whole Switzerland thing is about. Yeah, I mean.
The Chinese are suffering economically from the tariffs. There are projections that 60 million Chinese will lose their jobs. The forecasts on economic growth are being revised down. We buy their stuff more than anyone else in the world if they can't sell it to us. Those ships...
Those empty ships are bad for them. But the problem with the trade war with China is they face no political pressure. She's not sitting around checking Dave Wasserman's Twitter feed to see how things are looking in the 2026 midterms. And he doesn't have to worry about Congress. He can just, as they are doing, just enact a stimulus plan to offset the short-term economic damage of the tariffs. So-
Like Trump, Trump will face political pressure in this country and adverse effects that she will never face, even if his economy, even if their economy ends up suffering more in the short term than ours does.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. Look, maintaining your mental health is incredibly important, and our society's really changed in how we think about therapy over the years. I remember when people called it a shrink. It was just for people that were... It was like, oh, that's just for...
What was that gesture you just made? Cuckoo. I was thinking about Chief throwing the turkey down through the wall. Yeah, he's thinking about One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, which I think actually becomes more relevant every day as a film. It's a very good movie, actually. Great movie. Great book, too. Great performance by Danny DeVito, actually. I wonder if it stands up. I wonder if people have criticisms of it. I don't care. It's good.
Mental health awareness is growing, but there's still progress to be made. 26% of Americans who participated in a recent survey said they have a void seeking mental health support due to fear of judgment. When people hesitate to get help, it doesn't just affect them. It impacts families, workplaces, and entire communities. I've been in therapy. Tommy's been in therapy. John's been in therapy. We're the therapy boys. Same right. Therapy can be helpful for learning positive coping skills, how to set boundaries. It empowers you to be the best version of yourself. It isn't just for those who've experienced major trauma. I found that it's a
Like, as you may think you're self-aware, maybe to a fault, but it's hard to see patterns without the help of a professional. BetterHelp is over 10 years of experience matching people with the right therapist from their diverse network of more than 30,000 licensed therapists with a wide range of specialties. BetterHelp is fully online, making therapy affordable and convenient, serving over 5 million people worldwide. Easily switch therapists anytime at no extra cost.
We're all better with help. Visit BetterHelp.com to get 10% off your first month. That's BetterHelp.com.
Truth number two, Visa and MasterCard's record high profits are driven by hidden fees they charge every time you swipe your credit card, costing the average household about $1,100 each year. They're called swipe fees, and Visa and MasterCard have nearly quadrupled them since 2010 alone. Sadly, that's all true. Now, how about the lie? That's if your member of Congress tells you there's nothing they can do to stop it.
In fact, there's a bipartisan bill in Congress called the Credit Card Competition Act. It would break up the credit card duopoly and make them compete for your business by lowering fees. Call your member of Congress and tell them it's time to pass the Credit Card Competition Act. Paid for by the Merchants Payments Coalition.
Let's check in on the other part of Trump's economic plan. A big, beautiful bill filled with tax cuts and maybe cuts to Medicaid and other programs, but we still don't know for sure because Republicans can't seem to agree on anything. The latest is that they're now looking at $4 trillion in tax cuts and $1.5 trillion in spending cuts. It was originally $4.5 and $2. And the spending cuts are theoretically supposed to include $880 billion in cuts to Medicaid.
but House Republicans who will face competitive races in 2026 are nervous about gutting Medicaid, as they should be. Reportedly, so is the White House. So now they're trying to find ways to cut Medicaid costs
Without really cutting Medicaid, which is quite a trick to pull off, one idea that's still floating around, capping the amount the federal government spends on each Medicaid recipient, which would lead to a lot of people losing their health insurance because the cap wouldn't account for rising health care costs. And so when health care costs go up, people would just not be able to afford them or the states wouldn't be able to pay more.
The more moderate Republicans don't like this either, but the hardline Republicans refuse to vote for a bill that doesn't find $1.5 trillion in cuts somewhere. So here we are.
What do you think? Can you think of a solution here that gets all the House Republicans on board? If you were to take these people at their word, and you probably shouldn't, frankly, most of them are liars and have no understanding at all of how governmental fiscal policy works. But if you took them at their word, if you just did that as a thought exercise, nothing can pass.
Because you have a group of people who say they will not pass a bill that cuts Medicaid above a certain level. You have a bunch of different people who say they will not pass a bill unless it cuts Medicaid below a certain level. Like the red lines are crossing left and right. So if you took them at their word, they cannot get it done. Will they find some way to get it done? Maybe. I mean, they have done everything Trump's asked them to do thus far. Like we've Democrats have been quite skeptical that they would pass this budget resolution. And they did.
I mentioned this on the show recently, last week, two weeks, six months ago, who knows. But one thing they could do is just they could punt. They could extend the tax cuts for a year or two.
with unpaid for or with some non-Medicaid spending cuts where you're just sort of paying a toll and say, because of the economic uncertainty of the tariffs, the last thing we want to do is risk raising taxes on every American. So we're going to do this and come back. Now, the downside to them is they could very much lose the house in the interim.
And then they're forced into a negotiation. Trump is forced into a negotiation with Democrats, but they can't let taxes go up on every American. Like that is just something they absolutely cannot do. And if they cannot figure the cuts out in the interim, then I'm not sure what other option there is.
I'm trying to think of how Trump would explain that one because he's not going to be like, oh, we lost. I guess he'd just be like, he'd just say, well, I wanted all this. But you know what? Democrats are going to if we don't pass something, Democrats are going to let the taxes go up and Democrats want your taxes to go up. So we're going to save the day and make sure the taxes don't.
go up. He's already started... We don't have to have this conversation today, but there's a longer conversation about Democratic strategy here and what they should be doing that they may not yet be doing. But he's already started the Democrats want your taxes to go up because we're all opposing this bill. And so...
Like it's not it's an inelegant solution for the Republicans for sure. But it is one if they cannot square the circle on these cuts, someone has to give the moderates have to give the conservatives have to give. And then you have a whole set of different problems with the Senate getting to your 50 votes there. If they can't do that, they're going to have to do something. And that could be that could be a punt.
Reuters reported on Thursday that Trump is privately pushing Johnson to create a new higher tax bracket for people making over $2.5 million and closing the so-called carried interest loophole as ways of paying for tax cuts to everyone else. This was like...
you know, higher taxes for the rich were on the table, then they were off the table. Steve Bannon wanted them and some of the MAGA populist types and then the more establishment MAGA types were like, no, that's crazy. We love tax cuts for rich people. That's why we came to Congress. Do you think this flies? Do you think they can do a $2.5 million tax bracket? I also don't know how much
It's $2.5 million in income. So it's like, you know, really rich people, like multimillionaires and billionaires, they probably have a lot of money that they're not getting an income. So I don't even know how much that saves them. But yeah, the devil's in the details here for sure. They would, it would certainly get them some savings with reduced pressure on the cut side of it, but it's impossible. It's almost impossible to imagine this passing.
Every time – this keeps getting floated and Republicans keep shooting this down from – like Republicans who rarely disagree with Trump shoot this idea down because the idea of taxing rich people is impossible in the fathom. And just even if you're being generous about this, they're –
long-held doctrinaire Republican view that you never raise taxes, right? That's the Reagan rule, the one that George H.W. Bush violated and lost, you know, was primaried because of it and lost re-election. So,
So I can't imagine doing that. Now, carried interest loophole, you could probably find some more support for. But once Trump's new VC buddies hear about this, they're going to blow up the White House and it's going to come to an end. Like, I just don't think either of these are happening. Well, someone asked, a reporter asked Trump about this last week or whenever. And he was like, oh, we can't let taxes go up, even on the rich. It's not, we're not going to do that. That's too much. And then now he's, you know, Jake Sherman's like, oh, he called Mike Johnson, was like, let's do it.
And now Mike Johnson's entertaining it, but that probably doesn't matter. But he shot it... Mike Johnson shot it down the last time, too. So I just... He shot it down last time. Now he's concerned. I don't know. Who knows? But this... I think it just goes to show that the math is so hard here for them. One thing that's important is...
We know in the past almost every single time, maybe every time that I can remember, when there is sort of a battle between the hardline Republicans and the more moderate Republicans who are in competitive races, the moderate Republicans always fold.
The hardliners win the day. And so I think that if people and I know people have been going to town halls, holding town halls of their own. Democratic members have been going to Republican districts who refuse to hold town halls and hold them there. Continue putting pressure on the Republicans in districts that are going to face competitive races in 2026 because that pressure needs to be sustained. And we need to be loud because they need to fear that.
what might happen to their job if they cut Medicaid. And so you can go to votesaveamerica.com to look for places to take action. But I do think in these next couple of weeks, who knows, it could be months, but they're going to, you know, these things come together fast. And then suddenly we're looking at a whole bunch of Medicaid cuts on the table that we didn't think were going to happen. So I think it's really important for people to keep up the pressure. This is a fight we can win.
That's not guaranteed. We don't have the votes to stop it. But cutting Medicaid is way more unpopular than attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act or Trump's first term.
You have 80% of Americans opposing Medicaid cuts, more than 50% of Republicans, 75% of independents. This is incredibly popular. It is ingrained in people's lives. It is how many, many Americans get healthcare. Something like 40% of births in America are paid for by Medicaid. And so yes, Republicans are craven. Yes, they do terrible things.
We may not win this fight, but it's one we can win. There are a lot of fights that just they're going to do with like the confirmations. They're just going to do what Trump wants and it's not really going to matter. This is one where the politics are such that if we put sufficient political pressure on, we could actually stop this.
Yeah, because, I mean, you laid out the scenario where this is a win and they still get by, which is they just give up on the cuts and they extend the tax cuts and they punt for a year or something. That would be a huge win. All right. Trump administration is still trying very hard to disappear immigrants to foreign gulags. And the courts, including Trump judges, are still trying very hard to stop them. The federal government has a new gulag in mind that's somehow even worse than El Salvador's sea cot.
Detention centers in eastern Libya, which is controlled by an African warlord. Our own State Department calls the conditions in those prisons life-threatening and warns against traveling to Libya because of terrorism, kidnapping, and armed conflict. A federal judge almost immediately blocked the Trump administration from doing this. We'll see if they listen. The lawyers that brought the case said that
This was the plan. ICE rounded up six Asian nationals who were detained in Texas and ordered them to sign paperwork agreeing to be sent to Libya. When they refused, they were handcuffed and thrown in solitary confinement. Wild shit.
There was also another lawyer said that they were trying to potentially send Mexican immigrants, detainees to Libya, which is even more insane because Mexico is taking deportees. If there are Mexican nationals, you can send them back to Mexico and the Mexican government will take them. So they're literally just wanting to send people to Libya to this fucking hellhole.
I don't know. Just because. To send a message. To send a message. To send a message. Meanwhile, in a D.C. courtroom, Judge Boasberg challenged the DOJ's position that they have no authority to bring back the people they disappear to foreign gulags by pointing out that Trump himself said on national TV that
to Terry Moran, that he could just pick up the phone and ask Bukele to release Kilmer Obrego-Garcia. Needless to say, the DOJ didn't have a good answer to that. Neither did Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem or FBI Director Kash Patel when they were grilled about due process and deportations during their testimony on Capitol Hill this week. Let's listen.
Do you believe that you have the right to detain or deport a legal permanent resident for expressing their political opinion? I don't make decisions on legal status here in the United States. The Department of State does that. Your position is that every one of those individuals is by constitutional right afforded due process. I don't know the answer to that. I'm telling you. You haven't read the Constitution?
It says all persons. I've got it right here, but what you're saying is that every single one of the illegals that was sent down to El Salvador is supposed to be given due process pursuant. That's what the Constitution says. It doesn't say that. It does say no person. I'll encourage you to read it.
I would also encourage the FBI director to read the Constitution. Leah and I will get into some of this in the interview. I interviewed her before this hearing. What did you make of Noam and Patel's answers and the DOJ's answer in court that the president, he just says things. He just says things. I mean, the sum total of...
What these guys said in their testimony, what Caroline Leavitt says at the press conferences, how Trump answered questions with Kirsten Welker, the court filings is – what they're doing is indefensible. It's indefensible morally. It's indefensible legally. It's indefensible politically. You can't answer the questions because basically the FBI director has to pretend to not understand the Constitution to be able to answer this question because the Constitution is crystal clear on it. And even if you want to debate –
The use of the word person in there, the courts have ruled on this, as you pointed out on Tuesday's spot, as recently as like three weeks ago. Yeah, all nine justices, even the ones we don't like, even Alito and Thomas. And the reason they ruled on it that way is because they said it is the government's own position that due process is afforded to all these people. Yeah, and has been for ever. I mean, it's embarrassing. If it wasn't so horrifying, it'd be embarrassing, frankly.
Also, remember this crew? They love the unitary executive theory, which is, you know, all power is vested in the president of the United States and the executive branch and the president is all powerful. But then we were like, OK, well, he just said he could pick up the phone and bring people back from El Salvador. So was he lying? Oh, no, no, no. He's talking about the influence he might have, not his authority. That was what the DOJ said in response.
He's all powerful, except when you ask him to do what the courts have ordered him to do. And then, eh, I don't know. And they're all like, it's just wild that they're all pointing fingers at everyone else. Kristi Noem's like, DHS, we don't detain people. That's Marco Rubio. And then Cashfield's like, I don't know. I was the Constitution. And Trump's like, I don't know. I listen to my lawyers. I mean, the I listen to my lawyers is such a pitiful.
pitiful. He's a real stickler. Yeah. He's a real stickler. It's just someone known for seeking legal advice before he does anything. Cause you know, the one thing I say about Trump is dot the I's and cross the T's legally.
I do find it just horrifying that – because I don't think Libya is the last example of a new country they're going to want to send people to. And this one, like you said, it seemed designed to send a message because the – so there's one Libyan government that the world recognizes in Tripoli. And then there's the warlord in eastern Libya whose son I guess met with the Trump administration a couple weeks ago.
where they must have cooked up this deal. And it wasn't just a rumor because there was a fucking flight plan that was filed for a C-17, a military plane in Texas that was going to Libya.
And so like this, this shit was going to happen. And they were going to send just a couple of, a couple of Asian nationals that they found in a detention center in Texas. What? Why? Do we know if these people, do we even know if these people are undocumented? Do we know that they're legal residents? Do they know, we know that they're citizen? We don't. What crimes have they committed? We don't know. What authority do they have to send them to another prison? We don't know. Well, no, we know they have none. You know, it is almost certainly,
illegal to send people to Libya. Is the Filipino guy Trend de Aragua, right? Is that what I thought we were? I thought this was the Alien Enemies Act. Is he MS-13? Because I don't think those gangs are in the Philippines. What about the Cambodian? And why can't these people be sent to their home countries?
It's unconscionable. It's unconscionable. And I just don't like they are not going to stop here. They are going to keep going. And they're key and they're losing and they're losing to Trump judges. The second the second Trump judge was like there was another Abrego Garcia case where they were. The guy had legal protection. They sent him anyway. And she's like, hello, you got to bring him back. I'm sure they got right on that. Really fucking bad.
Pod Save America is brought to you by Aura Frames. The number one thing your mom wants from you is to call her this Mother's Day, give her a call, and give her an Aura digital picture frame. Every frame comes packaged in a premium gift box with no price tag. It only takes about two minutes to set up a frame using the Aura app. Add unlimited photos and videos and invite as many people as you want to a frame. There are absolutely no hidden fees or subscriptions required.
Upload videos up to 30 seconds long and your favorite live iPhone photos will play right on the frame. The embedded speaker can play audio on demand. You have complete control over who has access to your frame and the Aura app lets you share photos more securely than with email, which many other digital frames require. Got one of these for my parents for Christmas. So easy. I have the app on my phone. We take a lot of pictures of our kids. We've got little kids and, you know, I just have to remember when we take a picture, you just go to the app.
You select the picture you want. Boom. It's on their Aura frame in their living room, which looks like it's just a regular frame. It doesn't even look like an Aura frame. Very high quality. They love it. We love it. Go get one. Aura Frames was named the best digital photo frame by Wirecutter and featured in 495 gift guides last year. So the next time you need to call your mom, you can also send her a new pic of you from that trip you're telling her all about right from your phone. Aura has a great deal for Mother's Day. For a limited time, listeners can save on the perfect gift.
by visiting AuraFrames.com to get $35 off plus free shipping on their best-selling Carver matte frame. That's A-U-R-A-Frames.com, promo code CROOKED. Support the show by mentioning us at checkout. Terms and conditions apply.
You shouldn't have to wonder how to make Mother's Day special or how to show her the feelings you can't put into words. That's why we created the Amazing Mom Bouquet from 1-800-Flowers.com, crafted to show mom just how special she is. After almost 50 years of Mother's Days at 1-800-Flowers.com, we've learned the most beautiful, thoughtful gifts come from the simplest intention. Your mother.
All right, let's play good news, bad news. Oh, is this a new segment?
Well, just this one week normally. Yeah, normally it's bad news, bad news, but this week we'll do good news, bad news. Or maybe bad news, bad news, good news. I was going to say, just wait for it. The good news. It appears that one of Trump's worst appointees won't be confirmed, Ed Martin, the Stop the Steal activist serving as the interim U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C. North Carolina Senator Tom Tillis said on Tuesday that he would vote against Martin's nomination to the position. And on Thursday, Trump said he would replace Martin. Yay!
Bad news. Trump announced he's replacing Martin with Judge Jeanine Pirro. And thus the five became the four. Maybe. Who knows? Maybe Ed Martin. Oh, good point. Your thoughts, Dan? Your thoughts on Ed Martin going down? Thank God. That guy was fucking nuts.
This is very Matt Gaetz, Pam Bondi, which is like, be careful what you wish for. The idea that Judge Jeanine Pirro would have a high-level appointment with the Trump administration has been a running joke for nearly a decade. And thus, it has become true. We're not laughing now. We're not laughing anymore.
Because the U.S. attorney is a very important job. The U.S. attorney of D.C. is a very important job. You are not just a U.S. attorney for federal crimes. You're also the local prosecutor because D.C. is not a state. You end up taking a lot of governmental and political cases because the government's there in D.C. So this is not – I mean, it is bad that Trump's OAN spokesperson is the acting U.S. attorney in Washington.
New Jersey, but it is even worse to have someone in D.C. They can do much, much more damage, as Ed Martin was doing as he was threatening Chuck Schumer and doing all the other crazy stuff. Yeah, just tweeting legal threats at Chuck Schumer, Georgetown University, anyone he could think of. This is, it's one of those, it's funny, but it's not funny, from the New York Times explaining Ed Martin going down. It was a revelation about Mr. Martin's association with a well-known January 6th defendant that turned many fence-sitters against him.
A man who has dressed up like Adolf Hitler, sketched cartoons depicting Jewish people as pigs, and once declared that he would kill all the Jews and eat them for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, according to court filings. That's the guy who Ed Martin had on his podcast, praised him, and then lied about praising him and really knowing him. That's Ed Martin. And now we got Janine Pirro. Do your best. Do your best, Judge Janine. It is like how...
It the only like you said, it's not really funny, but it like Tom Tillis is like, I am going to make a bold move. I'm going to do the right thing. And now he's going to be fucking forced to vote for Judge Jeanine Pirro. Not only that, Tom Tillis was like, but, you know, if they want to put Ed Martin somewhere else in DOJ, that's OK. I just don't think he should be in D.C. because of January 6th. Thanks, Tom Tillis. Just real profound courage. So Trump's also having trouble filling the slot for Surgeon General.
His initial pick for the job, a Fox News contributor named Jeanette Nishwat, who's also ex-National Security Advisor Mike Waltz's sister-in-law, turned out to have misrepresented her medical credentials. Shocker. Trump announced on Wednesday that he's replacing her with Maha's own Casey Means, who never even finished her medical residency. Here's what Trump had to say when asked about the nomination in the Oval Office on Thursday.
- You just announced a new nominee for the US Surgeon General who never finished her residency and is not a practicing physician. So can you explain why you picked her to be America's top doctor? - Because Bobbi thought she was fantastic. She's highly, she's a brilliant woman who Bobbi really thought she was great. I don't know her. I listened to the recommendation of Bobbi. I met her yesterday and once before. She's a very outstanding person, a great academic actually.
He's a real details guy. He really gets in the personnel decisions and really focused on the hiring process. Islamophobe conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer had been leading the charge against Neshawat. Does anyone know how to say this? Neshawat? Neshawat? Anyway. Anyway, at this point, we don't need to know anymore. That's the point. In part for being too vaccine friendly. That's why she was loomered. But now Loomer is attacking means for being too, quote, woo woo and new agey.
So she's trying to loomer her too.
What do we know about Casey Means, Dan? You hit in your intro two key points. One, she never finished her surgical residency and she does not have an active medical license or a medical license expired in 2024. She has been up until she stopped having a medical license, but a sort of preventive holistic medicine doctor in Oregon. But she's best known as a very big figure in the wellness community.
She's a big supporter of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for a long time. She's quite controversial for a number of reasons. She has a lot of positions on- You don't say. I don't say, but there are two reasons she's controversial. One is she has a lot of non-scientific backed positions on disease prevention and other things.
But the other thing is that she's essentially a wellness influencer. She is constantly promoting supplements, vitamins, other things with very limited scientific backing. But she does it by publishing affiliate links on her social media pages for which she makes money. And even more controversially, she's often promoting products from a company called TruMed, which just happens to be run by her brother, Callie Means, who is also an employee of the Department of Health and Human Services.
And so this is, she has none of the credentials. Even if you put aside her positions and, and the grift on the wellness side with the supplements and the whatnot, she doesn't have any of the credentials that a surgeon general normally has. Not the clinical experience, not the medical experience, not the. Like, like, like America's top doctor, like being a doctor. Yes. Being a practice. Technically not a doctor, which is, does seem to be a challenge.
One of the chapter titles in her book is Trust Yourself, Not Your Doctor. She said that the birth control pill disrespects life because it's, quote, shutting down the hormones in the female body that create this cyclical life-giving nature of women. She likes full moon ceremonies. And she has said that talking to trees helped her find true love.
Well, that was that that was out there. The tree thing. Let's let's not let's not kink shame her on that. Like, however, she is not for me to judge how she found true. I think she talked to the tree. She didn't. Anyway, what do we think about Laura Loomer, head of presidential personnel now? She's very effective.
I mean, has anyone survived the loomer ring yet? I mean, Casey Means would be the first. Yeah. Because she got her man with Mike Waltz and Alex Wong. And a whole bunch of people deep in the CIA also went down. Large portions of the NSA. She is one of the most influential people in the world right now. Watch out, Pope Leo. That's what I'm saying. Like, let's...
You know, we've seen the white smoke. He gave a speech, but can he survive the loomer ring? One final piece of good news with no bad news to follow. Oh, exciting. The final uncalled race of the 2024 election is now over. North Carolina Supreme Court Justice Alison Riggs, who won her race by 734 votes out of more than 5 million, will be sworn in for a new term after her Republican challenger finally gave up his efforts to have various ballots thrown out.
but only because a Trump-appointed federal judge said Griffin was trying to change the rules of the game after it had been played. I guess the not-silver lining of bad news, the dark lining of bad news, is that the fact that it took a federal court to step in because the North Carolina Supreme Court was going to let this fucking charade continue. But all's well that ends well for now, I guess. Yeah, it's a very important victory.
Very important victory. It's a very important victory. Also, that also highlights the importance of everyone getting out to vote and every single vote counting because she won by 734 votes out of more than 5 million. Elections fucking matter. Voting matters. Pay attention.
Speaking of the 2024 election, Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson's book Original Sin about the White House cover up of Joe Biden's decline is coming out in two weeks. In what seems to be an attempt to pre-butt the book, Politico reports that Biden has hired new staff to defend his reputation. He's also back out there doing what he does best, speaking in front of cameras.
He sat for an interview with the BBC that aired on Wednesday. And on Thursday, he and Dr. Jill Biden went on The View. Here are some of the highlights. Knowing what you know now, do you think you would have beat him? Yeah, he still got 7 million fewer votes. Yes. A lot of people didn't show up. Number one, number one. Number two, they're very close in those toss-up states.
It was... It wasn't a slam dunk. There have been a number of books that have come out, deeply sourced from Democratic sources, that claim in your final year there was a dramatic decline in your cognitive abilities. In the final year of your presidency. What is your response to these allegations? Are these sources wrong? They are wrong. There's nothing to sustain that. You know, one of the things that...
Well, I'm talking too long. Well, and Alyssa, you know, one of the things I think is that the people who wrote those books were not in the White House with us. And they didn't see how hard Joe worked every single day. I wasn't surprised, not because I didn't think the vice president was the most qualified person to be president. She is. She's qualified to be president of the United States of America. Right.
But I was surprised. I wasn't surprised because they went the route of the sexist route. How do you think Biden did? Is this helping? Is this helping? What is this? What is going on here? I am so exhausted by this conversation because I don't even know what we're supposed to judge Biden by here. Like, was he better than debate? Yes, he was better than he was on the debate stage. Compared to...
typical average politician anywhere in America delivering a message. Was he good? No. There were some good parts. He had some funny lines. Most of it was kind of hard to follow. Dr. Biden had to step in on a couple of occasions. He survived it, I guess. But to what end? Who are we trying to convince here? What's the audience for this?
The American people are pretty decided on the question of was Joe Biden too old, and they were decided long before the debate. And I don't know that one interview or two interviews or a thousand interviews is going to... Nothing's going to change that perspective. Yeah. First of all, were you surprised that Kamala Harris lost? No, he wasn't surprised. And then he starts talking about because they really did the sexist thing hard. They went the sexist route, let's say. They went the sexist route pretty hard. It's like you can...
You can posit that there is sexism in the electorate, but they didn't do the sexist route hard. The Republicans didn't. And there's like a mixed race woman. Like, it's just like, I don't know if you paid attention to the campaign or not. But anyway, whatever Joe Biden says aside, I actually think you're right. Like he is, he is a former president now and that's it. Right. And, and if he wants to go out there and talk and defend himself, whatever. We got to think about the party and think about other democratic officials and
and other Democratic politicians who are going to be asked these questions, particularly when these books come out. And, you know, I've heard some of them. Some people try to like, you know, they don't want to answer the question. They're worried about, you know, they try to elide the question. And you've got Democratic strategists out there still saying like, oh, good for the Bidens for being out there. And they're hiring people to help them. And it's like, no, no, no. The answer is he shouldn't have run for a second term.
And when he did run for second term, he should have stepped down much earlier after the debate. And his close advisors shouldn't have told him to run again and they shouldn't have told him he was going to win. And like I think that every Democratic politician, particularly those who want to lead the party and want to run in 2028, have to just rip the fucking bandaid off.
Yeah, you need an answer to the question. Like we I don't think we didn't talk about it on this podcast. We talked about it on Troubled Online. But Elizabeth Warren had a brutal answer when she was pushed on this on a podcast. Yeah. And that's the first of many. Right. And you can see some of these people when they start running for president in a couple of years, particularly those people maybe like Pete Buttigieg, who I'm sure will have a good answer to it, but who served in the Biden administration or if Kamala Harris were to run again, she's going to have to answer these questions. She's going to have to answer them when she does her first interview.
but she still has not done since the election ended. To me, on one hand, I am sympathetic to Biden's desire to defend his legacy in the face of these books coming out. I'm sympathetic to the people who work for Biden trying to defend a president that they have great affection and loyalty to and the work they did. I've thought about this. If Barack Obama had lost
Mitt Romney in 2012, I would have been an absolute fucking lunatic trying to do everything I could to reshape. It's not his fault, his legacy, look at all the great things we did. So I understand that impulse. But there is an element here of reading the room, and there is so much bad shit happening in the country. The threats are so dire, and the threats are so dire to the things that Joe Biden dearly and sincerely cares about.
That this media tour is about Joe Biden. It's not about Donald Trump. It's about Joe Biden defending himself and his legacy. It's not about, which I wouldn't recommend this, but it's not about using the platform a former president may have to criticize a sitting president, to try to shift the public debate in some way or the other. It's about, he's made it about himself. And that I think was someone that is- Yeah, which he made the last fucking year of his presidency about, which is one of the reasons we're all here. Yeah.
And so that to me is frustrating. You know, there's been this like, is it really bad that Biden's back out there again politically? I don't think anyone cares is the truth. Just no one is no one's paying attention. It is just we this was the problem. The election is the American people decided how they felt about Joe Biden. Nothing he said or they did.
Could change was going to change their mind about it because it was right before the rise. It was like an obvious thing that he should not run for reelection. And so they made up their mind and went. And so I don't, it's just, it's not going to change anything.
anything at all i don't think yeah no my my the reason i care about this is in a world where reporters just all decided never to ask democratic politicians about joe biden and the 2024 campaign again then like let's none of us talk about it um but that's not the world that we live in they're all going to be asked and they're all going to get the question and we don't know
that he is suffering from any kind of cognitive decline or condition, right? We just, we don't know that. We all know what we saw, what we've seen for the last year. The man,
can't communicate coherently on a consistent basis and that's the job of president that's the job of candidate that's how you sell your agenda that's how you run for office and he couldn't do it so he shouldn't have run and like the people who were closest to him failed him in that regard not the whole staff like you said not all the people doing the work but the inner circle
And his family failed him in that regard. And he failed too. And so like there's no – I just think there's no reason and there's no purpose to trying to fuzz that up. Especially because we have a credibility problem as a party, right? I mean both parties have a credibility problem. All politicians have a credibility problem. But I do think that could be a threshold question for a lot of these candidates where it's like if people think that Democrats or politicians in general are just bullshitting them when they talk –
then this is going to be a prime example of Democratic politicians, of people thinking that they just got bullshitted again. Someone bullshitted them because they gave some answer where they were like, no, I think he was fine and he did a lot of good things and the party lost their mind after the debate and the polls actually showed this and all the bullshit that they were saying.
I think, yeah, I think that's true. I think the press is going to, like, this is going to be a hurdle that attests the press is going to get in the, and I use the press in the broadest thing. I mean, Kristen Walker, I'll meet the press to the podcaster who is doing the interview. Like, like Elizabeth Warren got taken down on a podcast, not on, you know, the situation room or whatever. Right. The, I think there's just two more things. I know I said, I didn't really talk about this, but now I have a lot to say about it. So I apologize for that, but no, fine. The one thing that I found very frustrating is Biden can't,
can't, I mean, I know this is the, like, we know him, this is the pride in him, but it is, I find it very aggravating and infuriating, frankly infuriating when he says that he thinks he would have won, because I feel like that's so, it's politically insane, right? It's just, it's like detached from reality. But even that, even if you truly believe that, to verbalize that in such a direct way repeatedly is to me so disrespectful of Kamala Harris, who he put it in an impossible position.
In a gazillion ways, right? From some of the things she had to take on as vice president to the three weeks in whatever it was between the debate and when he actually got out, the month, I guess 30 days or whatever it was. He took that time. Answer that question better in a more respectful way to your vice president, who in a different world would have lost his vice president. If he had stayed in the race, she would have lost his vice president, and she would be the front runner for the Democratic nomination.
She may still be that right now, but it's different because she was the nominee who lost. And so it's just like, so that angers me. And the second piece is there is just like, it is deeply naive for Biden and his team to think that he can really change the conversation around his legacy right now with interviews.
I think there's a real chance that decades from now, Biden's legacy will greatly improve people's minds because people will look back at some of the really important things he did. He beat Trump, the pandemic, maybe some of the long-term investments he made really bear fruit. And he can end up like someone like Harry Truman, who was a one-term president who was left very weak and then ended up as being seen as one of our greater presidents.
But that happens over time. It's not something you're going to solve on The View. And so it's like step back, like putting your reminding people of why they didn't want you to run in the first place is not going to help that conversation. So it's just like you have to if you really, truly believe that the work you did was good, then you have to trust history to judge it correctly. All right. When we come back from the break, you'll hear my conversation with strict scrutinies, Leah Lippman. But before we do that, brand new episode of Polar Coaster just dropped. Dan, what'd you guys talk about this week? We
We talked about Donald Trump's ill-fated efforts to blame the economy on Joe Biden and why that was a strategy doomed to fail miserably. And we took a bunch of really interesting questions from the listeners.
It was a great episode. Caroline was amazing as always. Really fun. Check it out. To ask Dan questions or listen to Polar Coaster and to get ad-free episodes of all your favorite shows and access to our Discord community, subscribe to Friends of the Pod at cricket.com slash friends or on Apple Podcasts. Pod Save America is brought to you by ZipRecruiter. According to a recent ZipRecruiter survey, 76% of employers plan to expand headcount for 2025.
That's a lot of time spent hiring. If you're one of those employers who's ramping up hiring this year, God bless you if you are, don't miss out on this advice. Add ZipRecruiter's latest feature, Zip Intro, to your hiring plan. It lets you post jobs today and talk to qualified candidates tomorrow. Best of all, it does most of the work for you, so you save time. And right now, you can try Zip Intro for free at ZipRecruiter.com.
Zip Intro gives you the power to quickly assess excellent candidates for your job via back-to-back video calls. You simply pick a time and Zip Intro does all the work of finding and scheduling qualified candidates for you. Then you can choose who you want to talk to and meet with great people as soon as the next day. So easy. We love Zip Recruiter. We've used it here at Cricket to hire people for years. It makes the process much easier as
Those of you who've hired know it's a tricky process that is very time consuming. ZipRecruiter makes it simple. Save time hiring for 2025 with new Zip Intro. Just go to ZipRecruiter.com slash Crooked right now to try Zip Intro for free. Again, that's ZipRecruiter.com slash Crooked. Zip Intro. Post jobs today. Talk to qualified candidates tomorrow.
You shouldn't have to wonder how to make Mother's Day special or how to show her the feelings you can't put into words. That's why we created the Amazing Mom Bouquet from 1-800-Flowers.com, crafted to show mom just how special she is. After almost 50 years of Mother's Days at 1-800-Flowers.com, we've learned the most beautiful, thoughtful gifts come from the simplest intention.
Yours. Give beautifully this Mother's Day with 1-800-Flowers.com-slash-SXM. That's 1-800-Flowers.com-slash-SXM.
Leah, welcome back to the show. Thanks for having me. Congrats on your new book that's out next week, May 13th. It's called Lawless, How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories and Bad Vibes. Here it is right in front of me, displayed. I want to talk about the book a little bit later. First, I want to pick your brain on
Some of the – a lot of the legal news that's out there because there's plenty. It has now been several weeks since the Supreme Court upheld the district court's order that the Trump administration must take steps to facilitate the release of Kilmer Obrego-Garcia.
Trump administration has refused to do so. Trump basically said he could, but that his lawyers don't want to. That was sort of the essence of the answer he gave Terry Moran of ABC. What happens now? And what can you do if you're a kill him or a break or Garcia's lawyers?
So I think what is going to happen is the district court proceedings are going to continue to play out. It's likely that Kilmar Abrago-Garcia's lawyers might file a motion to show cause as to why the government isn't in contempt of the lower court ruling directing the administration to facilitate Abrago-Garcia's return. There's always some discomfort with using out-of-court statements in...
in court to actually prove them. And so there is going to be some tension with, well, do you actually take Trump at his word when he wasn't signing a sworn declaration or hadn't been administered an oath and take that at face value and use it against him? But I think it's not just that. It's the fact that, as you say, so much time has passed. They have done diddly squat. And everybody knows that there is an agreement that obviously they have some leverage on.
I saw the New York Times report that the State Department sent a diplomatic note to Bukele, basically asking him to facilitate the release. And then he said, no, obviously, this is like a cover your ass move. Do you think the courts buy that? Is that enough for the courts? Does that qualify as trying to facilitate? You know, this is some of the difficulty that the Supreme Court, I think,
put the lower court in because they told the lower court you cannot actually effectuate the return. That is, you can't specifically order the president to do X, Y, or Z. And so that gives the administration some cover to do these antics where they ping Bukele and say, wink, wink.
nudge, nudge, won't you return him? And then Bukele says, no, I will not. And then everyone around us knows what's going on. But it's going to be difficult for courts to say, we all know what's going on here, right? Like they want some direct evidence to kind of prove that. I think there is enough for them to say the administration isn't facilitating the return, but it's going to be a fight.
Do you think this ends up back at the Supreme Court at some point? Yes, unless the Trump administration actually gets Mr. Obrego Garcia, as well as the other individuals that other courts have now concluded were wrongfully deported back. There's no reason why their lawyers aren't going to ask the Supreme Court and other appellate courts to get the administration to actually do something.
Speaking of things that may end up back at the Supreme Court, you know, they chose not to rule on the legality of Trump invoking the Alien Enemies Act in this way. But now we have two judges, one a Trump-appointed judge, who have ruled that the invocation is unlawful.
We also have now a declassified intelligence report that they don't, you know, that the intelligence agencies, with the partial exception of the FBI, don't don't really think that the Maduro government is coordinating with Trend de Aragua and telling them to go invade the United States.
I feel like that's going to be headed back to the Supreme Court as well, ideally before another few hundred people are shipped off to Seacott. Like what's taking so long there? That would be ideal. You know, what's taking so long is the Supreme Court created this situation where they forced everyone to use this other procedural mechanism to challenge the Alien Enemies Act. And that was always going to take some additional time to delay the Supreme Court actually having to say, OK,
Obviously, you can't use the Alien Enemies Act here. You know, it's not just the declassified intelligence reports and whatnot. We can all read and the statute says it applies to foreign nations when there's been a predatory incursion or invasion. None of these things are true here. So...
Stephen Miller, who's not a lawyer, and the president, also not a lawyer, J.D. Vance, who is a lawyer. He went to Yale. It doesn't really count. They keep arguing that due process only applies to citizens. Or J.D. Vance tries to say, well, we can't be expected to offer a hearing for every immigrant and asylum seeker before we deport them.
Do you think there's any court that takes that legal argument seriously?
I hesitate to say no court will because I am well aware of some of the individuals that Donald Trump has appointed to the lower courts. You know, there was the classic let me order a nationwide ban on medication abortion, you know, doozy from Matthew Kaczmierak. There's the Eileen Cannon specials of basically single-handedly preventing any trial on the obstruction and wrongful retention of classified material charges against Donald Trump. So I'm not going to say no court, but-
That doesn't mean the arguments aren't utter bullshit, right? Like, again, we can all read the Constitution says no person shall be denied life, liberty, property without due process. It's not limited to citizens. Also, no one is asking for full-blown trials for every individual who is part of immigration proceedings or
All they're asking for is some sort of hearing before, by the way, an executive branch official, like an asylum officer or immigration judge or board of immigration appeals. And it's not my fault that Donald Trump has fired a bunch of people, made civil service intolerable, and is terrorizing bureaucrats. They could offer these hearings if they wanted to. Instead, they have opted for effectively concentration camps.
Also, in that initial Alien Enemies Act ruling, that was the 5-4 ruling, even there, the majority was basically like, well, the government acknowledges that everyone deserves due process. And that is something that we've we all believe as well. And that would seemingly include all nine of them. Yeah.
So I don't even know what they're doing there. Just because the Supreme Court says something does not make it true, John. And this is one of the big lessons of my book Lawless, because while the Supreme Court said the government acknowledged that people were entitled to notice and the opportunity to challenge their detention. In fact, the actual papers that the government filed said they were under no obligation to modify when an individual was deported or expelled in order to give them time.
to challenge their deportation. The government took the outlandish position that basically everyone walks around with habeas petitions in their pockets and boots. And so whenever they are arrested or removed, they have an opportunity to challenge their detention because they can just whip out that ready-made habeas petition that they all have...
you know, in their wallets and handy. So, you know, yes, the government kind of acknowledged that everyone is entitled to due process, but they just defined that to basically mean nothing. And the Supreme Court knew that. It seems like that would be a profitable business in this era, just to just make sure that everyone, you can sell habeas petitions so that people just have them at the ready. Should we get abducted by the government? I don't know. You know, I think part of the difficulty is the government is
Trotting out so many different bases for deporting and expelling people that even if you were carrying around a handicavious petition challenging one possible basis on which the government might send you to a foreign mega prison, no guarantee that that's the actual ground they would invoke. It's a bit of a whack-a-mole there. So it seems like Trump.
keeps losing in court when it comes to his most overtly authoritarian actions, banning law firms from practicing in federal court, was struck down by a federal judge last week, freezing federal funding, tried to do that to Maine. That was struck down. His attempt to regulate federal elections. It seems like the DOJ has said they're not even going to bring that back after that got struck down to court. Are you surprised, relieved,
Mildly heartened? What do you think? You know, I might use all of the adjectives, but I'm not breathing easy just yet, in part because these cases have not made their way up through the appellate courts. And I don't think it's an accident that lower courts are more uniformly ruling against the Trump administration than the appellate courts or Supreme Court is.
So, you know, lower courts, they tend to be a little bit less ideological. They're oftentimes appointed with the consent of the home state senators. And so even people appointed by Trump in states with Democratic senators, they're not going to be as cray cray as the people he's putting on the Supreme Court or the appellate courts. Right.
I do find it. I mean, again, who knows what the with the court, the judges we have out there right now. But I do find that the the EO on the law firms. Yeah. Seems pretty obviously unconstitutional. I'm no legal scholar. I'm no lawyer. But like, I don't know how that one gets upheld anywhere. I hesitate.
just to say it's unconstitutional because it manages to pack in like at least five different constitutional violations to a pretty short executive order. So yeah, that one's really wild.
Really wild. So all this brings us to your book, Lawless, which is about how we came to have a Supreme Court majority that essentially tries to disguise increasingly extreme right wing political views as carefully reasoned legal doctrine that comes straight from the Constitution. Why did you want to write this book?
So I started thinking about writing the book after the court overruled Roe versus Wade. And it seemed like a moment when more people were paying attention to the court and understanding just how broken the Supreme Court was. You know, from my own perspective, I was pretty nervous and scared about the Supreme Court back in 2011 when I was clerking for the court. And they came within one vote of dismantling the entire Affordable Care Act.
and health insurance for so many people based on some cockamamie theory that the government might force us to eat broccoli one day. And so...
I thought people should be more worried about the Supreme Court back then. Almost 10 years later, when people were more concerned, I thought I actually want to talk to people about just how bad things have gotten, because there will inevitably be a moment when people come to believe maybe the Supreme Court isn't actually so bad. And I want them to understand like how the court got us to this moment we are in and just how messed up the court has become.
You sort of trace the history of how this all started. Can you talk about the origin of the court's politicization, at least in the modern era, and maybe explain the greenhouse effect, which I thought was a great example?
Yeah. So Origins, it's really an amalgamation of different grievance stews that they kind of threw in together and then decided to base a political movement around. Because when the political parties were going through this bigger alignment after the civil rights movement, you know, you had the Republican Party decide, well, we want to cater to white Southerners and Blacks.
And so they kind of leaned into minority rule and having minority rule required them to be a minority.
requires them to control the Supreme Court. So they recognize we kind of need the Supreme Court in order to impose our wildly unpopular weirdo views on the rest of the country. And so they went about trying to control the Supreme Court, and they successfully took it
over through different factors I'm happy to talk about. But that's kind of the high level story. And one of those factors relates to this greenhouse effect that you just alluded to. So the greenhouse effect refers to this idea that once Republican presidents appointed Republican justices to the Supreme Court, they drifted left because they would read news coverage about them.
And again, because the median person in the country doesn't think women should be stripped of rights, doesn't actually think the mega rich should control politics, when the Republican justices would write those things and opinions, they would be criticized. And they didn't like that. And so they would drift left. And the greenhouse effect was named for former New York Times Supreme Court reporter Linda Greenhouse.
So they created their own ecosystem, like the Federalist Society, that would provide the justices with affirmation for doing Republican things. So they got some validation and affirmation, and they basically had built-in fans, for lack of a better word.
So basically they realized they had to keep feeding them a steady stream of crazy in their media diet just to kind of keep them part of the plan. They built this echo chamber and that's part of it. Do you get the sense that a lot of elected officials and legal experts and law professors are still reluctant to view the court's actions and decisions as legal?
nakedly partisan or political? Or do you think that shifted over time, especially with this court? I still think there is considerable reluctance to do so. I think people tend to gravitate toward focusing on the differences between the Republican appointees. So we are fed a constant stream of stories about, oh my gosh, Amy Coney Barrett has not voted with the other Republican appointees in every single case. Doesn't this
prove that she is, in fact, a big secret liberal and the court is super moderate. No, in fact, it does not. And I think people also who are part of the legal profession want to believe that the Supreme Court, the law, the legal profession is different than politics. It's something special. It requires some specialized training. And it does in some respects. But the reality is how the court is operating now is
can be explained with reference to politics and ideology. And trying to report on Supreme Court decisions and litigation without doing so is borderline malpractice at this point. Where do you think that reluctance comes from? Because I remember I sort of first came in contact with it when we started doing the show and it was 2017 and Gorsuch was nominated and the Gorsuch confirmation happened.
And there were people who, you know, in the legal profession had worked in democratic politics, more liberal leaning, were like, I don't agree with Gorsuch. But, you know, he's still a good guy and he's got some solid legal, you know, background and he's really smart. Actually, the first time I heard it a little around the Roberts.
confirmation way back in 2005 when I was working for then-Senator Obama. People started saying that too, but you know, it feels like it's dissipated a bit since then, but it always surprised me. I'm like, where does this come from? Why do you feel the need to do this? You know,
I don't know where to start with that. I could remind you or ask you to remind all of the people that were saying that about Neil Gorsuch that in the last few weeks, Neil Gorsuch looked at the book called Pride Puppy and insisted it had bondage workers and sex workers when in fact all it had was a woman in a leather jacket at a pride parade. So maybe not such a legal super genius or maybe he can't read. I don't know. But as to why people...
want to continue to insist that no, this isn't just political. You know, doing the podcast and studying the court has given me insight into the minds of Sam Alito and Neil Gorsuch. And those are really dark, bleak places. I don't
I don't know that I have as firm a grasp on why the legal commentariat or legal profession sticks to this idea that we shouldn't explain the court and its decisions and its reasoning in terms of politics or ideology. Some of it comes from, for people in the media, a desire to appear political.
unbiased and to do both sides. I think some of it comes from people in the legal profession. Again, a desire to lean on this idea that there is a specialized training and expertise, which again, I can see there is, but they want that to matter more than politics when we need to acknowledge that
Both. And part of why I wanted to write the book is when you put out the actual reasoning in the decisions and you situate that in terms of here were the political talking points that were happening 20 years before, 10 years before, the language is just totally ripped from it. I mean, John Roberts, again, that super genius guy who was just calling balls and strikes, who's super modern institutionalist, literally struck down a key provision that
of the Voting Rights Act Section 5 in Shelby County by saying it illegally discriminated against
Who? The former Confederacy, the poor former Confederate states who were victimized for being called out for their history of racial discrimination. And guess whose objection that was to the Voting Rights Act all along? Segregationist Strom Thurmond, who literally called it, right, like political vendettas and retribution and a campaign against a certain part of the country. So, yeah, he whitewashed it, sanewashed it a little, but it's still the same stuff.
Yeah, it does. It seems like it mirrors a bit what we've seen in electoral politics as well on the left or at least the center left, which is, you know, we believe deeply in institutions, democratic institutions and want to defend those institutions or at least make those institutions work and make sure that they're trusted.
And you get caught between wanting to have faith in the institutions and believing that the institutions operate based on a certain set of objective rules and principles, whereas the right has decided that they just want to tear down those institutions. And you're like, well – and I wonder just like what you think the best strategy –
for liberals is here or people in the legal profession who just want to take the court back from sort of the extreme right. Like, is mirroring what the right has done the best strategy? Should there be a liberal version of the Federalist Society? Or what are your thoughts on that? Yeah. So, you know,
In addition to tearing down the institutions, I mean, I think we should understand what the Republican Party has done with the Supreme Court as effectively weaponizing it and like capturing the machinery of the state because through the Supreme Court, they basically made it so Joe Biden couldn't govern, right? They took one of his most popular policies, student debt relief, and blew it up. And then you had people blaming Biden and the Democrats for not doing student debt relief when no, no, no, no, that was the Supreme Court.
So as to this institutionalism, institutionalist thing, I agree that is just a big challenge for people on the left, Democrats, center left. You know, I believe there have to be institutions. I believe in the rule of law. It just...
Also is the case that I look at the institution we currently have, the Supreme Court, and it is not functioning as an institution that is part of a constitutional liberal democracy should function. And so it needs to be changed. I don't think that makes me not an institutionalist. I actually think that makes me an institutionalist because I actually want to bolster and make this a legitimate functioning place.
As to how we get there, I'm not a big fan of this federal society of the left, in part because the federal society works in part because it's based on fringe theories. They are a minority, right? It's easier to credential people in that system and have those network effects when you're operating with smaller numbers. I think there are parts of the conservative legal movement the left should replicate, campaigning against the court, making the court part of politics. That should absolutely be part of the strategy. Like identifying, again, a kind of
common punching bag that we can all mock and make fun of and run against. Like that's part of what makes politics fun and it can be effective as well. And so I think there are components of the conservative legal movement strategy that can be replicated, some that can't and some that shouldn't be.
The book is Lawless, How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes. It's out May 13th, but you can pre-order right now wherever books are sold. Go get this book. I have to say, you know, I never went down the legal path because I took a couple of law classes in undergrad, and it was like too dense for me. And you write this book, and it's so funny, and it's so accessible, and still so smart that
that if I had had a book like this in college, who knows? Maybe I would have gone to law school. So everyone, everyone go, go buy Lawless, go pre-order it and then go buy it next week. Well, thank you so much. And if you're on the fence, I just say, try to make Sam Alito even madder than he already is. Yes, that is it. That is it. Leah Lippman, thank you as always for joining. Thank you.
That's our show for today. Thanks so much, Talia, for joining. And we will be back with a new show on Tuesday. Everyone have a great weekend. Bye, everyone.
If you want to listen to Pod Save America ad-free or get access to our subscriber Discord and exclusive podcasts, consider joining our Friends of the Pod community at cricket.com slash friends or subscribe on Apple Podcasts directly from the Pod Save America feed. Also, be sure to follow Pod Save America on TikTok, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube for full episodes, bonus content, and more. And before you hit that next button, you can help boost this episode by leaving us a review and by sharing it with friends and family.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production. Our producers are David Toledo and Saul Rubin. Our associate producer is Farrah Safari. Reid Cherlin is our executive editor, and Adrian Hill is our executive producer. The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick. Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer, with audio support from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis. Madeline Herringer is our head of news and programming. Matt DeGroat is our head of production. Naomi Sengel is our executive assistant.
Thanks to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Ben Heathcote, Mia Kelman, Molly Lobel, Kirill Pelleviv, and David Tolles. Our production staff is proudly unionized with the Writers Guild of America East. Shop in-store at Adidas and find the latest trends and iconic fits for spring. From legendary superstar and samba kicks that go with any outfit to the newest workout gear, shoes, and apparel. Find your nearest Adidas store and shop it all today.
Citizens, since we each upgraded to Xfinity in our homes, the Wi-Fi has been booming. It's fair to say our town has officially become a boomtown. Mayor, will I be able to drop into multiplayer gaming battles with low lag? The lag won't be an issue, but your questionable skills may be. And what if I have hundreds of devices on the Wi-Fi? Purely hypothetical. Seems like a lot, but sure. Hundreds of devices all booming together with the Xfinity Gateway.
Yes, friends and neighbors, with Xfinity, the Wi-Fi is booming. Restrictions apply.