I think it's part of the promise of this administration under President Trump to reform the government in the way that the people voted for. I did my week of training after getting confirmed by the Senate. I was like, "Okay, guys, it's time to get to business. I want everyone to be very clear what the agenda is here." This catalyzed hundreds of lawyers to quit. They had crying sessions in the DOJ. They cried?
Brandon Johnson, mayor of Chicago. Tell us how he appeared on your radar. He said the quiet part out loud, which is I hire mainly black people for the positions of authority. That's the environment that produced Brandon Johnson, where you could just like openly be racist. You know, I don't like Jews. I don't like whites. I don't like blacks. Who talks like that?
200 million dollars in some cases is what it costs a city or a county to comply with a decade-long consent decree so in the end the lawyers get rich and more people get shot to death that is correct wow it's just so evil it makes you think like maybe we just burn the system down and start again thank you army uh it's your assistant attorney general one of the greatest appointments um from my perspective in this administration running the civil rights division
What was it like when you showed up? What did you find when you got there? Well, Tucker, first I'll say thank you for having me here. The Civil Rights Division is the sort of the color revolution wing of the Department of Justice. You know, whether it's a Republican or a Democrat administration, there are career lawyers who are very focused on
a particular agenda there. And so when I showed up or when the president was elected, I should say, there were over 400 attorneys in the Civil Rights Division and about 200 staff, so a total of about 600 people. And, you know, Kristen Clark, my predecessor, anti-police, you know, open racist, you know, got in trouble during her term for
not being candid with the Senate during her confirmation hearings on some issues. And so she had a particular agenda. She got in there and she pursued that agenda aggressively. And she had all the staff to do it. Now, under the first Trump administration, my predecessor in that job pretty much left it untouched. You know, he told me, he kind of like...
Like there were the career people there. If you wanted to get something done, they went to the U.S. attorney's offices. Well, you know, I came in with a different perspective. I think it's part of the promise of this administration under President Trump to fundamentally reform the government in the way that the people voted for. And so that means...
In the Civil Rights Division, we should be standing up for the civil rights of all Americans, not just some Americans. We shouldn't be weaponizing the law in a particular way. We should apply those federal civil rights statutes that many of which were passed by and signed by Republican presidents and Republican administrations evenly. And the government shouldn't be putting its heavy thumb on the scale in most cases. But in egregious instances, we should step forward and right these wrongs. But what I found there was...
A number of lawyers, I mean, hundreds of lawyers who were actively in resistance mode, you
There were memos out there by former government lawyers telling current government lawyers in my department how to resist. If you're given a direct order, ask for clarification, send 20 emails, question it, slow down your response time, say it can't be done. So I was actually looking out for that when I came and I did my week of training after getting confirmed by the Senate. And then the next week I was like, okay, guys, it's time to get to business. I want everyone to be very clear what the agenda is here.
So there are 11 sections in civil rights and I drafted memos for each of those 11 sections for the lawyers and telling them these are the statutes. So for example, Americans with Disabilities Act, this is a statute that we enforce or Title VII, anti-discrimination or some of the other federal civil rights statutes and then
That's the baseline. And then this is the president's agenda. These are his executive orders that he's put out there about anti-discrimination, about anti-DEI, about enforcing our laws equally. And that's the job. You're going to apply these statutes within the framework of anti-discrimination, even-handedly, and without fear or favor.
And this catalyzed hundreds of lawyers to quit the Civil Rights Division. Wait, they quit because you informed them of the law? Yes, and the law and the priorities. Their pet projects had changed. They weren't going to be able to do those the way that they wanted. So they thought that this part of the...
Department of Justice was just immune to democracy? It has been. Elections just had no bearing on this? It has been. I mean, there were career lawyers there who were doing the same thing no matter who's the president. And so suddenly their little fiefdom that had remained untouched like Shangri-La was suddenly having to be responsive to elections. And so... So that's the definition of the deep state, what you just described?
It really is. Elections have no effect. It's like there's no way to control these people. They act totally independently from the democratic system. I mean, that's the problem right there. Well, that's what I found. And so, you know...
In response to my memos, of course, they began leaking to the press. They began having unhappy hours, which they would invite supervisors, political supervisors to, to make their point that they were unhappy. We got the point. And they had crying sessions, struggle sessions, crying sessions in the DOJ. They cried? Oh, there was open crying in the halls. Crying? Crying. Crying, yes. Yes.
And then one of my colleagues described to me, it was the last day a couple of weeks ago for some of them, they lined up in a phalanx and approached the elevator together and then they left the building together, you know, to show their solidarity for one another there as if they were persecuted. How old are these? High school students or adults? These are 30, 40 and 50 year old career attorneys in the Department of Justice. Yeah.
That's pathetic. It's different. You know, I come from the private sector, as you know.
Over 30 years in the private sector, 18 years successfully running my own law firm. And, you know, you get to work and you put things together. And if it's not working out, you change tax and you try something else. But there's no accountability. And so that really has been kind of an eye opener of dealing with that culture. But we're trying to change it. There are people left behind. And I actually don't care what their politics are. They can have their views. I believe in the First Amendment.
The question is, are you willing to do the job under the job description as set out by this administration? After all, the DOJ is part of the executive branch. The president gets to pick the top people running it and he kind of gets to set the agenda. So you, half your lawyers quit. Yeah, that's right. Who did you replace them with?
So we are in a doge period here in the government. And so I haven't replaced the people who've quit as yet. So we're making do with who's left behind, some of whom share the views of the ones who left, but perhaps weren't as able to get jobs outside and some who I think are willing to work with us. So my understanding was doge was going to be applied to like the fat in government. Yeah.
But like DOJ is kind of central, central institution in the country and having lawyers who can equally apply the law and sort of end lawfare, be honest and principled. That,
That's important. Oh, I think it's very important. And, you know, I've spoken to the attorney general about it, and I'm confident that soon we'll be able to hire some lawyers who are down with the program of getting the job done for the American people. So I'm looking forward to that troop coming in. But for now, I have some political appointees who are
extremely dedicated and passionate. I brought in lawyers of my vintage, quite a few experienced trial lawyers and a few younger ones as well, but they're all dedicated to the cause. And so together, just in a few weeks, we have already made a lot of news nationally going after the mayor of Chicago, for example. So, so,
First of all, thank you for that. I was just thinking of you, I should say my former attorney and a great attorney going in to run the Civil Rights Division. I mean, they must have just died when you showed up.
Well, I didn't witness any of that, but the crying, the unhappy hours, the mass resignations, the leaking. There's a support group for former civil rights attorneys. These are all indications. Yeah, these are all leading indicators of, you know, the stages of grief. And so one of the former attorneys goes on MSNBC regularly and, you know, kind of...
events about the storied civil rights division of the DOJ is being destroyed. Someone heckled me at the DMV when I was waiting to get my driver's license. So, you know, it is cutting to the core of the liberal ethos that we're actually trying to apply these civil rights laws, which I believe in, in an even-handed way.
Yeah, equally. Equally. Because we're all American citizens. That's right. Equal protection. It means equal for all. Yeah. Yeah, you would think. Well, you would think. And actually, I'm laughing, but it's terrifying what's been happening there. And I'm truly grateful that you're there. So, Brandon Johnson, mayor of Chicago.
Tell us how he appeared on your radar and what the response is. Well, so first of all, I'm thankful for Elon Musk purchasing Twitter, which I sued a few times before he did that. And now it's where I get a lot of my news. Uh, and so, and so I'm, I get criticized by the main, the lamestream media, if you will, uh,
for being perpetually online, but that's actually where I see a lot of the civil rights violations in our country being exposed because people, elected officials in our country feel very comfortable acting with impunity and stating with impunity that they're going to discriminate. And so he said the quiet part out loud, which is in Chicago, according to his words, I hire mainly black people for the positions of authority.
And, you know, then he listed out he was at a church and he was in... At a church, he said that? At a church. And, you know, I had a media reach out to me... You had to yank their tax exemption, those freaking churches. Well, I had a reporter reach out to me saying, how did this come to your attention? I mean, as if it was some kind of secret. I was like, I responded, well, the three angles of camera, I think, suggests that it wasn't meant to be confidential or anything, but it wasn't like some kind of a sting operation. He
publicly said, I find, you know, people have a certain description to be better and I want to help them build their businesses and so I'm giving them government jobs. It's kind of counterintuitive and what's
What that says and what I've been hearing since I came out and said, oh, really? And then we opened up a federal civil rights investigation the following day into the hiring practices. The following day? The following day, less than 24 hours after I saw that video, my team, you know, stepped up.
And we've opened a federal civil rights investigation into the apparent violations of federal employment law that are occasioned by preferring one race over the other in hiring. His predecessor, Lori Lightfoot, said at a press conference, I'm not talking to white people. I don't like them. I'm not talking to them. I'm not answering any questions from white reporters.
And no one did anything about it. So that's the environment that produced Brandon Johnson, where you could just like openly be racist. You know, I don't like Jews. I don't like whites. I don't like blacks. Who talks like that? Well, Tucker, every university administrator in the United States, even in the face of the Students for Fair Admissions case at Harvard. So that's another project that we're dealing with at the Civil Rights Division is the absolute...
extent of the impunity with which campus administrators are continuing to discriminate and openly defy Supreme Court precedent. So we've opened up numerous investigations into that as well. But it's a pervasive problem in our country that racism has become institutionalized to the point where people just feel comfortable saying, yeah, I'm sorry you're a white man. Thanks for playing. And you...
You don't get admission, you don't get a job, and you don't get to have equal opportunity. Asians as well. This is blatant discrimination and racism in our country. And our job at the Civil Rights Division, for so long as I'm in charge of it, is to eradicate that. Take it on, make examples, and put a stop to it. Everybody wants freedom, but what is freedom exactly?
Well, here's what we know. You can't have freedom if you don't have privacy. 1984, you may recall, is a story about a total lack of privacy and a totally omnipresent government. Totalitarianism begins with no privacy.
The problem is if you use the internet every day and everybody does, then you don't have any privacy because it's all open. Data brokers and big tech are recording and saving everything you do online and then selling it. Talk about invasive. We've got two recommendations for how to restore privacy.
The first is trashing all your technology and going full Luddite. That would definitely work. Abandoning electricity. I actually like that option. Probably pretty hard for most people to do that, including me. The second is to use a VPN. The one we use is called ExpressVPN. ExpressVPN is a new feature called Identity Defender. It's available to all American customers at no extra cost.
Identity Defender scours the files of data brokers, requests to have your information removed from their files, and sends you a notification if anyone uses your social security number, which is obviously the first step to identity theft.
You can get an extra four months for free when you use this show's link. Scan the QR code on the screen right now or go to ExpressVPN.com slash Tucker. Get four extra months free. That's ExpressVPN.com slash Tucker. Did you know you can invest in crypto through your retirement account? That's right. iTrust Capital allows Americans to invest in over 60 of the most popular cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin in a tax-advantaged IRA. Take control of your future.
Get started at itrustcapital.com forward slash Tucker and use the promo code Tucker to get a $100 funding bonus. That's itrustcapital.com forward slash Tucker. Paid ad for informational purposes only. Taxes may apply. Crypto is speculative and carries risk of loss. Itrust Capital does not provide legal investment or tax advice. It's one of the saddest things about this country. The country's getting sicker despite all of our wealth and technology.
Americans aren't doing well overall. Obesity, heart disease, autoimmune conditions, all kinds of horrible chronic illnesses, weird cancers are all on the rise. Probably a lot of reasons for this, but one of them definitely is Americans don't eat very well anymore. They don't eat real food. Instead, they eat industrial substitutes, and it's not good.
It's time for something new. And that's where masa chips come in. Masas decide to revive real food by creating snacks, how they used to be made, how they're supposed to be made. A masa chip has just three simple ingredients, not 117. Three. No seed oils, no artificial additives, just real delicious food. And I know this because we eat a ton of them in my house. And by the way, I feel great.
So you can still continue to snack, but you can do it in a healthy way with chips without feeling guilty about it. Masa chips are delicious. They taste how a tortilla chip is supposed to taste delicious.
But the thing is, you can hit them really, really hard, and I have, and not feel bloated or sluggish after. You feel like you've done something decent for your body. You don't feel like you got a head injury or you don't feel filled with guilt. You feel light and energetic. It's the kind of snack your grandparents ate. Worth bringing back. So you can go to MasaChips.com. Masa's M-A-S-A, by the way. MasaChips.com slash Tucker to start snacking. Get 25% off. We enjoy them. You will too.
Every time I hear someone in the administration talk about this, they frame it around Israel, which I find infuriating. Not because I'm against Israel, but like, what does Israel have to do with it? They're discriminating against American citizens. Why, from a public relations perspective, wouldn't it just be better?
to stick to the principle that in the United States you can't use government money to discriminate against American citizens on the basis of race. Like, why not just say that? Well, I think that there is a certain strain of anti-Semitism that's unique that we are confronting, but it's American citizens who are the victims of it. And so,
religious discrimination is also illegal in our federal civil rights laws. And so where you have students who are wearing yarmulkes and they're being blocked by their professors and their classmates from entering their classes, that's illegal. And we're just calling it that. I know, but let's be real. I mean, that's just silly. Look at the numbers. Are Jewish students, you know, what, 2% of the population? Are there more than 2% at Ivy League schools? Yeah. Yeah.
White Christian students, you know, what percentage of the population are they? 30 something? Are they 30%? Not even close. So, like, we could just reduce it, but it's like you can't even say that for some reason. I mean, the discrimination has been going on for 60 years against white Christians, and the numbers show it. So, like...
Do you know what I mean? But I'm saying that. We are saying that under my leadership and the people who I work with, they are taking it on frontally. It's racism. Yes. It is racist. It is illegal now under the Supreme Court's clear direction. And Harvard is doing it and Princeton is doing it and all of these schools are doing it. I mean, so there's many different kinds of discrimination happening. There's
There's foreign money coming into our campuses. And there was a report recently that Stanford is basically under control of the Chinese Communist Party. And so all of these problems are happening at the same time. And they've been allowed to drift and people have been bullied. And people are... I was explaining to someone the other day that...
to do this job correctly, you have to not care what people think about you at cocktail parties. Well, clearly, but you're way past that. But can I just ask, like, I guess what I worry about, just to put a finer point on what I was attempting to express, I'm, like, identity politics is just bad, kind of, no matter who's getting hurt and no matter who's benefiting. It's just bad. It divides the country.
Is there some way to just like de-racialize the whole thing and just return to colorblind standards in admission, hiring and contracting? There is. I mean, that's what our laws demand. And so that's what the Supreme Court ruled in that one case. But, you know, to take on the mayor of Chicago, we didn't do that.
four years ago. We didn't do that under the Bush administration. We just sort of, you know, people in power just sort of sat there and took it as if there was some need to atone for prior sins by discriminating against American citizens today. And I mean, you know, Asians are discriminated against in hiring in Silicon Valley. I've
taken on many cases of that and universally, what did these recent immigrants do to deserve discrimination other than being successful and then being punished for it? And so you really can't right the wrongs of the past by being racist today. I think we really have to have that level of moral clarity and just say that and operate that way. Well, it's collective punishment is what it really is. You're saying someone who looked like you did something bad, therefore I'm punishing you.
Or someone who looked like you was hurt, therefore you get the benefit now. I mean, the whole thing is just like,
It eliminates the idea of the individual, of the individual, the unique human soul. Right, which is counter to the very principles on which our country was founded. The entire Enlightenment was all about individual rights and responsibility. And we're engaging in Chinese communist level politics.
collective guilt and, you know, collective punishment. It does feel that way. It does feel that way, and it feels that way on campuses. It was, and I think back, I thought it was bad at Dartmouth when I was at Dartmouth more than, you know, 35 years ago, almost 40 years ago now when I went to Dartmouth. And it's so much worse today in most of these campuses. But, like,
Calling it what it is, naming it as racism and discrimination is a start. Now, we will follow through. We will bring cases. I'm proud of our president for...
spearheading, yanking money, our federal tax dollars, away from the institutions that are the worst offenders. And I think you're going to see much more of that happening soon. I completely agree. So back to the mayor of Chicago, what happens next? We've opened up an investigation. We've demanded some data from him. We will be in touch with some very specific authorities
data and we'll be going back years to understand. And what I'm hearing from members of the public already is, well, I applied for this job. I applied for that job. I didn't get it. I'm not the right race. I'm not the right gender, according to his descriptions. And so what the federal government has been doing over the years to
ordinary companies is demand this data and then force them to hire according to a particular pattern. We're going to do the same thing. We're going to demand the data. And then if there's a pattern of discrimination, which I think there is based on what he said, he's told us, we will leave him at his words. Um,
They'll have to take action to correct that. They may have multiple... I'm guessing that plaintiff's lawyers all over the United States are contacting plaintiffs right now in Chicago and preparing cases against the city. So the taxpayers are going to pay...
for this pattern and practice of discrimination that has been described by the mayor. But it's a longstanding pattern. He's just the one who said it out loud. It's been happening for decades in that city. At the same time, there's talk about reparations in multiple cities in the United States. I mean, again, that's just a wealth transfer from people who didn't do anything wrong to people who didn't have anything wrong done to them, really.
And it's counterintuitive to what we believe in our country. Yeah. Do you think that could happen? No, but the talk of it is manna for certain people. I think it is bait for Democrat elections and it's popular in certain communities. And so-
It's crazy to see that. But I do think the pendulum is swinging back in some places because these policies, these wealth transfers, if you will, the episodic rioting that you see in our cities, it is not conducive to a peaceful lifestyle or productive society. And so I think you actually are seeing even in deep blue California, my home state,
my former home state, you're seeing the pendulum swing back in ways. I mean, you know, San Francisco seems to be slowly pulling back from the brink of extremism. San Jose has a mayor who's talking some sense and, you know,
So I'm hopeful, but we can't be passive about it. First, you have to be willing to call it out and stand up and say, no, it is wrong to hire on the basis of race in America. It is wrong to discriminate against people based on what their theoretical ancestors did 200 years ago. This is wrong. It's un-American. When you initiate an investigation into the mayor of Chicago, first of all, thank you for doing that. Thank you for... I think one of the...
The benefits of what you're doing is just noting something that everyone else takes for granted, as you said. People feel free to say this, and you're just reminding everyone this is against federal law and it's immoral. So I think it's huge. But when you order a sister attorney generalist investigation, does the staff, like, obey in your office? Oh, my staff, well, first of all, I am surrounded by a lot of dedicated public servants like me who are... Yes. So there was no, I mean, you know...
You get to have a few political appointees in the front office is what we call it. So, you know, they jumped on it before I even asked. You know, someone was drafting a letter on Sunday afternoon to do this. We also call the acting chairman of the EEOC, Andrea Lucas, who's been working hand in glove with us on other discrimination issues. And she's opened up an investigation as well. So the EEOC has subpoena power.
We've asked for documents. The EEOC can actually subpoena them and do a commissioner's charge. And so eventually, at the end of their parallel investigation, they'll have data that they can share with us as well. So we're working together in the university setting, in this setting, and in other settings with other branches of the executive. So on any given day, I'm talking to the White House executive.
I'm talking to colleagues of the Department of Education, Department of Homeland Security. I had a conversation yesterday and other conversations like that are happening. So, you know, the team is very focused on our common goals. I hate even to say this out loud, but, you know, one of the ways that, you know, someone like you rolls in
You've got, you know, a public career, so everyone knows exactly where you stand. You've been highly ferocious over the years. And so, like, there's no question what you're going to do when you get there. You're a known quantity, and you're a massive threat to the way things operate there. You haven't worked in a federal agency before. There are all kinds of weird customs and laws, especially around classification. And so someone like you, they're like, ah, okay.
you know, let's trap her in something. Are you worried about that? Well, among the... I mean, Mike Flynn is the most famous example of this, but like... It is. We've learned some lessons and there are always new ways and there is a deep state. And, you know, just yesterday I had a conversation with one of my colleagues about the resistance that he was encountering. And I had my feedback, but...
but part of my background is as a employment lawyer. And so, you know, we're not making some mistakes that some people who are, you know, simply defense lawyers might've made. I have a plaintiff's lawyer mentality. And so, you know, I think what would I do if I were the other side? And, you know, so I think about that. So, you know, we're giving people clear direction and opportunities. And if they don't want to take those opportunities and they want to be in resistance mode, this is not the place for them. And so, you know, their career...
career paths elsewhere. And many people have chosen to take that. Some of them regretted it. Some of them tried to come back. I think it is best that people who have passions to do something that's opposite of what the president's current agenda is should do that elsewhere. Not on the taxpayer dollar. Just my personal perspective. So you've uncovered a bunch of stuff already. And one of the things that you uncovered, I think, is
Part of the answer to why our cities have become so dangerous, and it has to do with consent decrees that, you know, have been forced on cities and police departments by the federal government. Can you explain how that has worked? Yeah, absolutely. So the consent decree trend kind of dates back to the Rodney King riots. Okay. And, you know, there's terrible rioting in Los Angeles. 92-ish? Yeah, about 33 years ago. Yeah, I was in law school at the time. And...
You know, the police got blamed for, I think, some fairly rotten cultural trends in our society. The police got blamed trying to control that riot. I mean, you had people like Maxine Waters and...
you know, egging on the crowd and feeding the flames. And somehow the police got left holding the bag. And so what happened was the Department of Justice, of course, California as well, but the Department of Justice opened up investigations into police practices. And so the
trend has been Department of Justice, particularly under Democrat administrations, opens up what's called a pattern and practice investigation. And they basically say that any time one cop does something wrong, it must be because there is a systemic problem with the police department. There's poor training, there's ineffective policies, there's ineffective resources.
Or there's racism. There's always racism that's underlying most of these police consent decrees is racism. And I'll talk about current examples as well. But so cities, by the way, I mean, you've all seen this in prosecutions. When the federal government comes after you with its endless resources and its punitive scope of measures that it can apply, even America's biggest cities worth nothing.
with tens of billions of dollars of budgets, they quake because it can become very expensive and it can become a politically charged football to continue to have these federal court hearings and judges and all of that. So what typically happens is the DOJ says, hi, we are from the government. We think that you're a racist and we'd like you to enter into a consent decree where you, the city, is going to pay
Bob over here, who works at a big white shoe law firm, several million dollars to monitor your compliance with this. I mean, this is a binder. Some of the consent decrees are longer than this. Hundreds of pages long of minutely detailed consent.
of what they're supposed to do to improve their police practices. Who comes up with those guidelines? The lawyers in the civil rights divisions of the United States Department of Justice. Do they have a lot of experience policing big cities? They have no experience policing big cities. Some of them have probably never met a cop in the wild. You know, these are lawyers from good schools and they're very idealistic.
By the way, most of them have never tried a case in their lives. And of all the consent decrees, one of the striking things I learned this week is of all the consent decrees that the United States Department of Justice has imposed, and there are dozens and dozens of them over the years,
maybe hundreds, but certainly in recent decades, dozens per year in some years. And the Biden administration, they opened up a dozen investigations, and those are some of the ones that I've been examining since I got into office. They only took two of those cases to trial. In hundreds of instances of investigations, they lost one.
And they lost the police part of the other one. There was a housing aspect of the second one, which they won. And so in all the years that you've read about Los Angeles and Albuquerque and Seattle and Portland and all of these cities being under consent decrees,
No federal judge ever looked at the evidence and found that the United States Department of Justice actually proved their case that there was systemic racism or systemic improper training. It was lawyers like the ones I described earlier who don't have much trial experience looking at a dry paper record. And by the way, over the last several years, sitting in their living room doing it because they were working from home during COVID,
So in their home, looking at paper and selectively cherry picking evidence from these records that they forced the cities to turn over, reaching conclusions, not reaching conclusions that a jury agreed with or that even a federal judge saw the evidence of, but simply bullying American cities into compliance and then presenting a fait accompli to a judge, right?
And in some cases, most cases, the judges would say, OK, I agree. And what's particularly shocking is in so many of the recent instances of police consent decrees in the United States, woke prosecutors in those cities and woke city councils and woke mayors went along with them. They wanted them because they, too, don't like the police.
And so it has been a sort of perfect storm of the taxpayer having to pay for monitoring. Some fat cat lawyer gets a big contract that goes on for many years and crime skyrockets in cities with consent decrees. This is called the Ferguson effect.
after Ferguson, Missouri. When a city's under a consent decree, cops have to suddenly fill out reams of paperwork every day. Guess what? They don't want to do that. They didn't become cops to sit there and do paperwork. So they quit, they retire, they move to cities where they do want policing to be done effectively. Crime goes up because criminals now know that the policing is not being done.
And so, for example, and I'm not just saying this from a biased perspective, Axios did a review of cities under consent decrees. And I think one of the figures is crime went up by 61% in Los Angeles County as a result after consent decrees were imposed on the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. And so cities are less safe. Cops are... Can I just ask what... I mean, ultimately...
you know, the purpose of a system is its effect. So you could say, well, people don't, no one wants crime. But like over time, if the DOJ is causing more crime in America's cities, they want more crime. Like, what is that? You can just take the words of my predecessor at her own face value, which is, you know, defund the police. And so defund the police has become the mantra of so-called law enforcement in the United States.
You don't want to think something bad is going to happen, but you got to take precautions in case it does. And that's why you insure your car and your phone and, of course, your house. But what about your life? What about your family's future? Do you have life insurance? You might not because it's expensive and it's hard to deal with. It's hard to get. And that's what Policy Genius does. It makes it easy and cheap. And you're able to give your loved ones peace of mind were you to exit unexpectedly.
So you use Policy Genius to find life insurance policies that start for just $276 a year and
in exchange for which your family gets a million dollars in coverage. $276 a year, a million dollars in coverage. So that's a very easy way to protect the people you love and feel good about the future. How does it work? Well, Policy Genius combines digital tools with expertise, actual licensed agents who you speak to directly. You don't waste hours sitting around on hold. You talk to people right away. You get your options clearly, concisely, and then you get along with your life.
So you can check life insurance off your to-do list with PolicyGenius. It's super fast. You head to policygenius.com slash Tucker. Click the link in the description to compare various life insurance quotes for free from top companies and see how much you could save. That's policygenius.com slash Tucker.
Don Jr. here, guys. Are you receiving letters from the IRS claiming you owe back taxes? As penalties and interest fees pile up, the IRS gives you no clear path to resolution. Don't speak to them on your own. They are not your friends. To reach a team of licensed tax professionals that can help you reduce, settle, and resolve your tax matters, go to TNUSA.com and check them out. Solve your tax problems today. Call 1-800-780-8888.
or visit TNUSA.com. That's 1-800-780-8888. Your identity is constantly under attack. And just the last year, Americans lost over $16 billion to scammers online. Anyone can fall victim to this. Your social security number, your bank account, your credit profile can be exposed and you won't even know it. And the second they are exposed, thieves can take out loans in your name, open credit cards, wreck your life financially.
Identity Guard can save you. Identity Guard monitors everything from your credit card to your bank accounts to your social security number, looking for early signs of fraud before damage is done. If something weird happens, you get an instant alert. If someone does steal your identity, Identity Guard's expert team works directly with banks, credit card companies, and lenders to shut it down quickly. End the scam.
Having your identity stolen is a nightmare. Someone in this country becomes a victim of identity theft every six seconds. Identity Guard protects you. 30-day free trial and exclusive discount at identityguard.com slash Tucker. Protect yourself before it's too late. Identityguard.com slash Tucker.
Any idea what the motive is there, other than just to burn down the civilization? I mean, I don't want to speculate about motives, but it has made our cities less safe. It has made us pay for the cities to become less safe. So that's particularly galling. We have to pay some person eating at Morton's on our dime and attending conferences on our dime. And
who are people who put their lives on the line for us every day are made to feel ashamed of their jobs. And America is less safe. And every time you see, there are bad cops. I want to be clear. There are cops who shoot people. And the DOJ also prosecutes those, to be clear. Part of our job in the Civil Rights Division is a criminal section that criminally prosecutes bad cops. I support that. I've signed off on several prosecutions recently.
so far since I've been there. And there's trials going on right now, cops who shoot somebody in the back and they exhibit excessive force. But we also have to all be punished collectively. Back to the point of collective punishment, we all have to suffer because there's one bad cop or two bad cops. That's insane. Can you imagine how many bad cops there are going to be soon? No normal person wants to be a cop. It's too hard. It's not worth it. You get...
I'm imprisoned in Philadelphia. I was talking to a cop in Philadelphia last week. I'm retiring. Everyone's gone. Like you do anything, you go right to jail.
as a cop. If you enforce the law, you go to jail. It's not worth it. I'm one of the few lawyers who's headed the civil rights division who's actually sued the police. And I did it from the opposite perspective of what is expected. So in 2016, I was at a Trump rally and there was a riot in San Jose. And it was an organized, well-funded riot. I'm just a citizen going to support my candidate. I did the
Pledge of Allegiance. I met the future president backstage. And then all of us were subjected to mob violence. And what galled me was the police, 200 plus of them with riot gear, just stood there and watched. And I went and during the course of my lawsuit suing over the fact that American citizens were injured in a violent mob, I asked some of them, like, why?
Why was that? You get to the bottom of that lawsuit and it turns out that because of consent decrees and best practices of policing that are coming down from Washington, D.C. and the DOJ,
The police are taught to basically, in a crowd control situation, stand there and watch and not do anything. It's so dishonorable. It is insane. I was truly shocked by that. And so I have experience suing the police and trying to get them to improve their practices and be more aggressive on behalf of the taxpayers, which is the opposite of what they're usually asked to do in these cases. And so we...
We resolved that case with some agreements that they would do some training and be a little different than what they were. But what we're seeing in the Biden DOJ, which again, I came in and I looked at the books here, is...
It's striking that, first of all, they took the four years to immediately begin changing course, opening investigations that the Trump DOJ had closed and shut down. And then literally after the election, after the election where President Trump won in 2024...
they filed several cases and made public several findings of fact in over 10 cities in the United States. They hastily ran to court in December in Louisville, Kentucky, and in January, January 6th, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to file new cases. Clearly at the tail end, they lost the election. They're not going to be able to carry this through, but they wanted to make public
So they put in front of two federal judges in these two cases in Minneapolis and Louisville, these factual findings. Now, these factual findings are done by lawyers sitting in their living rooms on a dry paper record. And the findings are, you know, we have reason to believe, right?
that these cities engaged in racist policing and also violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act. That's a common theme running through the dozen or so consent decrees that I've, consent decrees and factual findings predating a consent decree that I've reviewed at DOJ. So the idea is that if a drugged out or mentally ill person is the subject of a call to 911, somehow the police dispatcher is supposed to know
just based on a member of the public calling or somebody calling for help themselves, that they should have done what? I don't know, dispatched a social worker instead of a cop to the scene after someone dials 911? Being addicted to illegal narcotics, a disability?
I mean, you might think so, reading some of the factual findings. Are you being serious? I am serious. Based on the factual findings I have seen from DOJ. I thought it was a crime or a failing at very least. Tucker, it's a mental health issue. Actually, so if I'm addicted to meth, I have special protection? Well, apparently the police dispatcher is supposed to know by that 911 call that they shouldn't have sent a cop. They should have sent a social worker. Okay.
I mean, it's an insane standard. And the federal government is doing that? The federal government, DOJ, has been reaching those factual findings and then asking federal judges to impose thick, decade-long laws
minutely detailed consent decrees out of which cities struggle to get out of. The average consent decree, Tucker, when the United States Department of Justice bullies a city into agreeing to it is over a decade. So the problem isn't solved quickly by all the taxpayer dollars, the monitor, the police reform, the community policing councils and groups that are set up in these consent decrees. The judge overseeing it, the problem that was identified isn't solved.
In fact, it turns out that when you fund investigations and you fund monitoring and a monitor decides when you're
good enough and your performance has improved, you get more monitoring. You get more years of that. You get more fees paid to big law firms like Hogan Lovells and some other big law firms in the United States. And the citizens pay the bill. So it's a tax on Americans who live in cities because one cop or maybe no cops in some cases did something wrong. And so it's a totally broken system.
And when we came into office, it was a priority of this administration to review all pending consent decrees, all consent decrees that had yet to be entered by a judge, all pre-consent decree factual findings found by the Department of Justice and announced publicly shaming these cities, and look at the data and see, are these really justified? And our immediate conclusion, by the way, not just our conclusion, in the case of Minneapolis and Louisville,
Federal judges to which these were presented had some tough questions. And in the case of Louisville, the judge asked the DOJ lawyers, these DOJ lawyers I've described from the Civil Rights Division, to explain themselves. How did you reach that conclusion? What are the data supporting your conclusion? How do you account for variables like...
What are the high crime areas? I mean, are the high crime areas racially different than the population of the city? These lawyers did not have answers. It was embarrassing. And so the judge refused to enter the consent decree in Louisville and sent the DOJ back and said, I need your answers. By the way, guess what? This is days before the administration is about to turn over. So we've asked for a couple of continuances. So...
What are the criteria that government lawyers use to reach the conclusion that there's systemic racism that requires a dissent decree? I don't really understand. It's one thing to say in an MSNBC segment, there's systemic racism. But if you're a civil rights division attorney, you have to prove it, correct? You should have to prove it. But as I said, no jury has ever...
But what are the measures, since racism is an attitude that has, you know, can have manifestations, of course, but it's really like a mindset that's
How do you prove that? Well, so we have, of course, being the government, we have statisticians on our staff at the Department of Justice. I was surprised to show up. I was thinking, oh my gosh, let me look at all these lawyers. What is their trial experience? Oh, there's a PhD in statistics here. That's going to be really useful in court. But they could be, by the way. There are cases. So properly deployed, they could be. But if you never have to prove your case...
You never have to use them. You simply beat people over the head with a statistics book. And so that's what's happened here. So I'll give you an example. Memphis, Tennessee is one of the cities that the outgoing Department of Justice issued some pretty lurid-looking factual findings in. And so when you start reading it, you look at, hey, the findings are Memphis is racist and their arrest rates of African-Americans are disproportionate. I'm sorry, let me just say it.
Anyone who's been to Memphis, it's such a wonderful place. I love Memphis. But if you come away thinking, you know, the real problem in Memphis is racism...
then you're a liar. Well, so Memphis is majority black. Yes. The police force is majority black. Yes. And guess what? The homeless population, which is the subject of this consent decree finding, pre-consent decree finding, is majority black. And so the idea that there's disproportionate arrests of people
you know, people who are on the street and, you know, potentially committing crimes as a racist, black cops, black population and black homeless population are,
How do you reach that conclusion that racism, you have to reach that conclusion because you are biased yourself. And the lens that you're looking through is a lens seeking racism. And if that's what you're seeking, that's what you find in each of these cities. And that is what they found in each of these cities. It's like the ANC or something. But, you know, in the end, like Memphis also has not only the country's highest murder rate or one of them,
like the worst schools and like contaminated water and crumbling housing stock and like no businesses. And it's, there's so many problems. And if you just think it's like,
white people are the problem nothing ever gets fixed well that's the problem with these consent decrees and so we examine these and look one of the things people need to understand as a as a lawyer when i go into federal court my name as the assistant attorney general for civil rights is on all of these documents that we file in court sometimes the attorney general's name is on it as well but my name is on all of these documents where we charge somebody and
I have to be able to say to the judge, look the judge in the eye and say, I believe in these findings of my Department of Justice Civil Rights Division. Judge, I stand behind them, and I'm confident that what we're alleging in these papers is true. Well, Tucker, I looked at these findings, and I and the lawyers who report to me in the DOJ...
said we cannot stand behind these conclusions. I can't stand in front of a judge with a straight face and say that Memphis's problems are racist cops. I mean, they're not racist. They simply are dealing with a population that happens to have a particular racial makeup. The conclusions are not correcting for that. The conclusions are not correcting for what neighborhoods have crime. There's cherry picking of statistics. There's imposing Americans with Disabilities Act laws
onto these consent decrees that don't exist in the law. The Americans with Disabilities Act does not impose on police requirements of how they respond to 911 calls. It just doesn't. So wishing it were so does not make it so. And so what's happening is the...
These cities are having to agree to these things because they're afraid of the consequences or they have a woke city council that wants the hands of the police to be tied. That's the most corrupt thing, is the cities were basically begging for these consent decrees to be entered. And, you know, in the case of...
Louisville, we're dismissing the Louisville. That's so weird. You're a city councilman in a city and you want the crime rate to go up? Like, what is that? I think it's the weirdest, most suicidal thing I've ever seen. No one's talking about it until we started looking at these. And so we're dismissing and withdrawing the Minneapolis and the Louisville consent decrees that were put in front of federal judges just a few months ago. We don't have confidence in them. We are telling judges that,
that this is not something that the DOJ can stand behind. Now, in each of these cities, by the way, Louisville has already agreed to hire its own police monitor without the DOJ forcing them to do it. I mean, that's not my business. I wouldn't necessarily...
think that the problem goes to that degree. Someone's friend who's a lawyer is probably going to get paid out of that, and good for them. But in Minneapolis's case, Minneapolis has already entered into a state consent decree. So why are they still going along with this federal one? Well, they thought the federal one would be worse and more onerous.
And so Minneapolis has publicly stated that they're going to oppose the Department of Justice's attempts to dismiss the case against the city, believe that or not. That is like the craziest thing I've ever heard. I mean, you would think as a city leader, your job is first to protect your city and then deal with your problems yourself, which they're already doing in Minneapolis. They're begging to be punished by the feds for crimes that they probably didn't commit. Not even crimes. Just, you know, sort of
reason to believe that the police practices are improper or inadequate. But they want to be punished. Spank me harder, Daddy. I want to put words into their mouths, but their actions are that they would oppose the DOJ letting them sort it out themselves. I mean...
It is what it is. So not every city is like that and not every municipality is like that. There are six other jurisdictions that the DOJ issued findings in that we're withdrawing. I am completely obsessed with ALP and we're totally focused on getting it into the hands of everyone who wants a tin of it.
They're working very hard to do that. We're very proud to announce our newest retail partnership, Niko Kick and Northerner. This is a huge step forward to making ALP more accessible than ever. To celebrate, Niko Kick is offering a limited time 10% off to their customers who are ready to break up with their old pouch and join ALP. Use the code TCFRIENDS at checkout. Learn more by visiting nikokick.com or northerner.com. TCFRIENDS at checkout.
So the people trying to wreck our civilization want you to be passive. They want you weak so they can control you. Weakness is their goal. No thanks. Our friends at Beam, a proud American company, understand that our country can only be great if its people are strong. And that's why they've created a new creatine product to help listeners like you stay mentally sharp and physically fit.
People like to mock creatine. CNN doesn't like creatine at all. But people buy it because it works. Beams creatine can help you improve your strength, your brain health, your longevity. It's completely free of sugar and synthetic garbage that's in almost everything else that you eat. Of course, you don't hear about it too much because, again, a population that is strong, clear-minded, and physically capable is a threat to tyrants. That's why they want you playing video games.
To celebrate American strength, actual American strength, Beam is offering up to 30% off their best-selling creatine for the next 48 hours. Go to shopbeam.com slash Tucker. Use the code Tucker at checkout. That's shopbeam, B-E-A-M dot com slash Tucker. Use the code Tucker for up to 30% off. It's built on core values, integrity, results, no BS, Beam. We strongly recommend it.
Did you know that this was going on? Look, I knew that consent decrees were an abusive process. I did not realize the extent to which there was collusion in this process. I mean, we have perpetual monitors who have made decades of their lives getting paid. Like there's one city that just closed up its consent decree. DOJ dismissed it after a decade. A single man got paid a million dollars a year to monitor- A year? A year.
to monitor a city's compliance with a DOJ consent decree that went on and on and on. And, you know, these consent decree monitors set compliance rates of 95% or 100%. And it's like, it's like Zeno's paradox. You know, you never actually reach 100% because you never reached 94%. You never reached 95%. And the judge is a guy getting paid to determine the outcome.
And it is a broken system. Some of these consent decree monitors have fake companies, shell companies that haven't been registered with any state. Some of them have fake nonprofits that aren't really nonprofits. They sell themselves and there's never any accountability. And so at a minimum, what we're doing for all of these existing consent decrees as well is to look at these monitors and
Are they real? What goals have they accomplished in a decade? Are things better in that city? Are the people safer? What are we getting in exchange? Some of these consent decrees, Tucker, cost cities over the course of this 10 years—just forget the monitor was getting paid $10 million—on average.
$200 million in some cases is what it costs a city or a county to comply with a decade-long consent decree because they have to do all these endless trainings and they have to fill out all these forms. The Department of Justice in the last four years has spent 65,000 hours in the Civil Rights Division, which only had about 60 lawyers. So tens of thousands of hours monitoring these consent decrees. I mean, it is a mind-boggling volume of waste.
So in the end, the lawyers get rich and more people get shot to death. That is correct. That is the average outcome of a consent decree. Wow, it's just so evil. It makes you think like maybe we just burn the system down and start again. Well, what we're doing is one by one looking at every existing consent decree, and I haven't gotten through all of them, but we got to the point where six weeks in, I said, look, we have to put a stop to these. I mean, some of these cities, so Phoenix, Arizona,
we're dismissing the findings, withdrawing the findings in our pre-consent decree efforts there. Mount Vernon, New York, a tiny police department with, you know, what I would say a couple of practices that I wouldn't necessarily agree are the best practices, but, you know, they've also agreed to stop doing them. So why is the federal government getting involved and putting together thick reports? Oklahoma City is another one.
Trenton, New Jersey is another one. The Mississippi Police Department is another one. The Mississippi State Police is another one. And then we have Memphis, which we already discussed. And so...
In some cases, these cities didn't go along with them. They fought the DOJ. So, you know, good for them having some integrity in their city government. I've heard from members of Congress in some of these jurisdictions who said this consent decree is simply, I mean, I'll give you the example of Phoenix. So Phoenix seems to be an attempt by the Department of Justice to go after a sort of purple, reddish jurisdiction that,
and hold them accountable for trying to impose quality of life standards. So, for example, Phoenix has been called to account in the DOJ report that we're withdrawing as part of my investigation for moving the homeless along.
And what law do they cite in this consent decree analysis? They cite the Boise, Idaho case that people are familiar with where the court, the Ninth Circuit held that it was unconstitutional for Boise to try to move homeless people off the street unless you had a nice housing to put them in. Well, the United States Supreme Court reversed that.
And so they reversed it in the Grants Pass case. So we're even today in the DOJ's recent consent decree work, simply ignoring binding Supreme Court precedent that says that what the police were doing in Phoenix is A-OK under the law.
And hoping to simply bully them into compliance. This is not what our federal government should be doing. Because they want more people living on the sidewalk? Like, this is, if you take three steps back, it's like so dark, so diseased. You want more violent crime. You want more drug abuse. You want more people living on the street. Why would you want any of that? Why would any elected official of any party want that in the United States in 2025?
Well, I don't get it. And so in these eight cases, we're getting rid of them and there will be more. I'm confident. It's interesting. I mean, I didn't know any of this. And but it's part of the explanation for why we have more of all of those things. You look around, you're like, I don't recognize this. Like I grew up here. We never had any of this. Why do we have it now? And part of the answer clearly is what you're describing, which is an attempt by elements of the Department of Justice to like
create these outcomes. Well, and on top of that, there's some corrupt rent seeking as well. Let's just call it what it is. You know, there's, there, there, like I said, these white shoe lawyers, one was, one was thrown out of a casino earlier this year, a prominent lawyer at a major law firm, uh,
was thrown out of a casino, was intoxicated. When the police came, he said, I'm with the DOJ. I'm the police monitor. And so you can't touch me. Other cities have reported to us, lawyers, my colleagues in the DOJ, that if you dare complain about my bills...
I'm going to keep you under a consent decree longer. I mean, it's that level of shakedown. My bills as in billing? As in payment to me? My billing. Yeah. When the bills are questioned, the city gets punished harder. So, you know, you would hope judges are looking at these things carefully. Guess what? Judges are busy and judges are not looking at them that carefully. So just to be clear, you...
have half of your staff attorney positions unfilled because you don't have the budget to hire new lawyers, ones who might actually want to follow the law. But we somehow have the money, even post-Doge, to pay monitors a million dollars a year to oversee arrangements that lead to more violent crime. Well, the monitors are not being paid by the DOJ. They're being paid by the cities. So the cities that are under the lens of the DOJ
are having these costs imposed on them. And there's, like I said, no accountability. Their annual conferences of the judges who impose the consent decrees, of the monitors who enjoy the fees and don't solve the problem,
And the city officials who think it's all kind of a game, let's have community policing and let's have a bunch of random people who have no background in dealing with crime tell the police what to do. There's annual junkets.
It's an industry. It's a multi-billion dollar industry making America more unsafe for the most part. Does anyone ever consider the fact that like violent crime causes racism, actually?
I mean, that's just true. When people are afraid, first of all, people are afraid they become much less reasonable. I think everybody does. It's just like a human response, right? Well, people are afraid in America's cities. And we have been made to believe that riots, like after the...
Minneapolis incident with George Floyd, like the regrettable incident where Breonna Taylor was shot. By the way, my department is prosecuting the two cops who lied to get
a no-knock warrant in that case. I mean, that is a serious offense and we're going to hold those individuals accountable, which is different than holding the whole city of Louisville and all the taxpayers in that city accountable for mistakes that were allegedly made by two individuals. So, you know, what a concept, you know, individual responsibility for individual safety.
mistakes. And so, you know, we do that regularly. In each of these jurisdictions, Tucker, where the DOJ has been examining these police departments, there have been police misconduct cases and cops have been punished either at the state level or at the federal level. That's appropriate. They're bad actors in every industry and, you know, media and law and medicine. But
Asking cops, as a matter of a multi-hundred page consent decree, to be doctors and predict Americans with Disabilities Act outcomes, adverse outcomes, is just insane. And it doesn't work. And let's face it, if these lawyers were any good at organic chemistry, they wouldn't be lawyers, right? No, that's right. I mean, you know. So...
The government cannot be the be-all and end-all solution to all social ills, and this is an example. Is there anything you can do about the consent decrees already in place? We are examining them, and we're going to be bringing to the attention of judges inappropriate conduct by monitors. The one I just mentioned is one who is ripe to be mentioned to a judge as someone committing misconduct. Monitors who...
Claim to have nonprofits or corporations, but they don't. We're going to be bringing those to the attention of a judge. I don't understand. I mean, I thought the legal profession was self-policing through the bar. I don't understand why nobody is ever disbarred except for like representing Donald Trump. I don't understand that. Where is the bar, the state bars?
You raise a very good question and a question I've raised myself. And so we have today in 2025 lawyers who have been are under prosecution. I mean, this is happening in Arizona and Nevada and other jurisdictions, California or a bar complaint for who they represented. You're absolutely right. And what arguments they made even privately to their client.
And not even in front of a judge. John Eastman is an example of that and so many others. And yet you have corrupt monitors who are holding cities hostage effectively and all the taxpayers in those cities for their personal benefit. And then you have city councils who are elected to represent the people. And instead, they would like to see the cops handcuffed.
and see the streets burning in their cities. And this is a lack of accountability. It is a broken system. And at least the Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, is not going to be participating in making that broken system worse under President Trump's leadership and under our current Attorney General. Amazing. I know, what a concept, right?
Well, that's an amazing story. I didn't even know that was happening, but it explains a lot. So basically you just got there to run this division. Six weeks ago. It's incredible. So there's probably so many things that you're looking at
that you want to examine that have been going on that most people, including me, didn't know about. What are some of those things? Well, um, there are 11 sections in the civil rights division and some of the things that we're going to be looking at in coming weeks and months include the rampant anti-Christian bias, uh, happening throughout the United States. And so there's anti-Christian bias happening within the government. Um, there are, uh,
There are chaplains in the military who are told to tone down their Christianity under the prior administration, and that's insane. And, you know, in America, we're founded on religious liberty, and specifically in the Protestants who came here to be able to practice their faith freely. And so...
We're bringing back a focus on that. There's a law called... Bless you. Thank you. And it's important. And it's important for all people of faith in America to be able to worship. And so we're bringing a number of cases under what's called the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, which is when jurisdictions are discriminating on the basis of zoning against houses of worship, be they Christian, Jewish, Muslim, or any...
That's right. That's happening throughout the United States. I don't like it when they hassle the Scientologists. I didn't like it when they hassled the Orthodox Jews in Borough Park during COVID. It's not about, I'm not, you know, Jewish or Scientologist, but like, I agree with you. People of faith have an interest in religious freedom, period. And we have a federal law that says
that gives them higher than First Amendment protection, that law that I mentioned. And so we're going after Forestburg, New York, we're going after other jurisdictions that are doing this. And so we are going after discrimination in employment, like the Chicago cases. People have been texting me all in the last 24 hours and 48 hours since we started this investigation.
Giving me other examples of other cities doing the exact same thing. So we have a lot of work cut out for us. The DOJ civil rights generally covers, not exclusively, but generally covers government discrimination. I mean, occasionally it will verge into private discrimination. Colorado is forcing a Christian camp.
to supposedly allow boys to be in the girls' changing rooms. That's a violation of the religious liberty of the kids and the families going to that Christian camp. We're going to be going after schools that try to
take from parents their natural, God-given, and constitutional right to control their children's education, be it with sexualized curricula or transgenderism that's happening in our schools throughout the United States from the most unlikely places.
And, you know, I kind of joke, I'll start the day at 8 o'clock in the morning or earlier sometimes, and throughout the day, one or the other one of my deputies jumps into my office and I'm like, oh, what fresh hell is this? The sheer volume of violations of our civil rights happening by the state and local petty bureaucrats and wrong-minded private people throughout the United States is
is overwhelming sometimes. So if I had 400 lawyers plus at my disposal to go after them, we would keep them busy doing good work for the American people all day long. I think you're a hero, Harmeet. And I will say you're one of the only people in all of Washington, D.C.,
who doesn't really want to be invited to Politico's White House Correspondents Dinner Party. And I wasn't invited. And that's okay, because I'm too busy working and knitting in my spare time. So great. Armeet Dhillon, the Assistant Attorney General of the United States. Thank you. Thank you. We want to thank you for watching us on Spotify, a company that we use every day. We know the people who run it, good people. While you're here, do us a favor, hit follow and tap the bell so you never miss an episode.
We have real conversations, news, things that actually matter. Telling the truth always. You will not miss it if you follow us on Spotify and hit the bell. We appreciate it. Thanks for watching.