Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Attorney for the Southern Districts of New York has resigned.
(00:03):
That's according to a senior news official speak NBC News
senior official speaking to NBC News.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
There is a new letter. We have obtained, the letter
that was sent today by bove after the acting US Attorney,
Miss Sassoon resign. Let me share that with all of you.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
So, this is.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Emil Bovey writing a letter that was hand delivered to
Danielle Sassoon this afternoon. Quote Miss the soon in response
to your refusal to comply with my instruction. That's the
earlier letter Chris and Mimi are talking about to dismiss
the prosecution of Mayor Eric Adams. I write to notify
you of the following. First, your resignation is accepted. This
(00:43):
decision is based on your choice to continue pursuing a
politically motivated prosecution despite an expressed instruction to dismiss the case.
You lost sight of the oath you took when you
started at the department by suggesting that you retained discretion
to interpret the Constitution in a manner inconsistent with the
policies of a democratically elected president and Senate confirmed Attorney General. Second,
(01:06):
you indicated that the prosecution team is aware of your
communications with the Justice Department and is supportive of your approach,
and is unwilling to comply with the order to dismiss
the case. Accordingly, the AUSA is principally responsible for this case.
Are being placed on off duty administrative leave pending investigations
by the Office of the Attorney General and the Office
(01:26):
of Professional Responsibility, both of which will also evaluate your conduct.
At the conclusion of these investigations, the Attorney General will
determine whether termination or some other action is appropriate. Andrewisman,
is that a threat of prosecution.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
Well, it's certainly a threat of firing of potential civil
and I guess potentially criminal cases. You know, when I've
been thinking about what is the sort of upshot, what's
the ramification? This is one where the employees who are
who may suffer these these adverse employment actions. And amil
(02:06):
Bove goes out of his way to say this is
not an am this is not an adverse employment action,
when of course it is. It's another sort of false denial.
This is going to end up in a court.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
This is where I just don't know that.
Speaker 4 (02:21):
They're playing chess and thinking about what's going to happen.
The palpably thin and fallacious letters that we're seeing out
of a male bouve are going to be challenged. The
ones that have been given to the FBI, those are
going to be subject to litigation. The things that he's
doing now with the sd and Y and with the
(02:43):
Public Integrity Section, those are going to be subject to litigation.
This is the kind of thing where it's going to
tie them up because they're going to have to put
meat on the bones on these allegations that are just false.
I mean, it's it's really sort of an interesting thing
that they are not deft in the way that they're
(03:04):
doing this, because there will be litigation, and if it's
not brought by the department, it's going to be brought
by the employees saying what you did here is illegal.
Speaker 3 (03:14):
You know.
Speaker 4 (03:14):
We again, we can go back to Trump one point zero.
We saw Andy McCabe bring his case and win. We
saw Pete Struck bring his case and win. We saw
Lisa Page bring her case and win. And so here,
when you're trying to do these sort of mass terminations
and mass employment actions, you are going to see a
(03:35):
host of litigation where these people in the departments, and
Amil Bovet being the top one, are going to have
to stand up and under oath justify what they're doing.
And I do not think it's going to stand up.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
So this is it's I think you know it's work.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
It's worth thinking about where this is going to go
and how much I think this is going to end
up sort of biting them in the day when courts
get their hands on this and they're not able to
just take a unilateral action because we do.
Speaker 3 (04:08):
You see that the courts are.
Speaker 4 (04:10):
Also standing up to what they have determined to be
illegal and improper activity by the Trump administration.
Speaker 5 (04:22):
This is the primal screen of a dying regien.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
Pray for our enemies because we're going to medieval in
these people. Here's not got a free shot. All these
networks lying about the people, the people have had a
belly full of it. I know you don't like hearing that.
I know you tried to do everything in the world
to stop there, but you're not going to stop it.
It's going to happen.
Speaker 5 (04:43):
And where do people like that go to share the
big line?
Speaker 4 (04:46):
Mega media?
Speaker 1 (04:48):
I wish in my soul, I wish that any of
these people had a conscience.
Speaker 3 (04:53):
Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose?
Speaker 1 (04:57):
If that answer is to save my country, this country
will be saved.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
War Room. Here's your host, Stephen K. Bat It's Thursday,
thirteenth February, Year of Aler, twenty twenty five. So many, many,
many stories, and of course we just don't chase stories.
We try to get you signal, not the noise in
the nation's capital and particularly run President Trump and dropping
(05:26):
throwing the thunderbolts on the days of thunder this one
maybe well, we'll get to the Bobby Kennedy. We get
all of it, plus a judge trying to reverse in
the federal court. Judges are coming in and you know
in this first wave, trying to slow things down, give
temporary stays, local judges trying to give him from the
(05:46):
nation all that. Terry Schilling will join us here. What's
so important? And we're gonna go back and forth. I
think are they starting already in the we have Let's go,
Let's go ahead and go to Trump and Modi right now,
We're gonna cut to the East room of the White House.
Just go and go.
Speaker 6 (06:02):
I believe that every person in India respects your sentiments.
Speaker 7 (06:05):
Thank you, thank you, very thank you.
Speaker 8 (06:07):
Any questions, Yes, you are, you know you are both
many popular leaders in your respected countries.
Speaker 9 (06:14):
You've spoken about a common sense, our deramatic doctrine.
Speaker 8 (06:18):
So what's the Trump movie doctrine that you should expect from.
Speaker 9 (06:25):
Well, I think, more than anything else will be the unity.
We have great unity. We have great friendship, he and
I and our countries, and I think it's only going
to get closer. But it's very important that we remain
united as countries.
Speaker 7 (06:38):
We are, we're friends, and we're going to say that way.
Speaker 5 (06:43):
You're going to fight China.
Speaker 10 (06:45):
If you're going to be tough with Indian trade, how
are you going to beat China?
Speaker 9 (06:49):
Then a very good shape to be anybody we want.
Speaker 7 (06:54):
But we're not looking to beat anybody. We're looking to
do a really good.
Speaker 9 (06:57):
Job where we've done a fantastic job the American people.
We had a great four years and we were interrupted by.
Speaker 7 (07:05):
Terrible administration, absolutely terrible. They didn't know what they were doing.
And now we're putting.
Speaker 9 (07:10):
It back together, and I think it's going to end
up being much stronger than I was before, even much
stronger than I was before.
Speaker 11 (07:22):
Yeah, prison shop offered of all congratulations for the fantastic
twenty four days of your presidency, historic and unprecedented decisions
that you made transformational reforms. But I'm particularly impressed by
the expose on USAID, and I would like you to
(07:44):
share with us if you think USAID had a role
in election interference in the US in twenty twenty and
Indian elections in twenty twenty.
Speaker 9 (07:55):
Four, So it could have had a role. There were
a lot of bad things that happened than twenty twenty.
I think bad things happen in twenty twenty four, but
it was too big to rig.
Speaker 7 (08:06):
We won by a tremendous margin.
Speaker 9 (08:10):
We won every swing state, We won the popular vote
by millions of votes, so.
Speaker 7 (08:16):
It was it was too big to rig. But yeah,
I think they probably tried.
Speaker 9 (08:19):
We're looking to go to a system now much different
where one day voting voter ID and you just we
have to do that and paper ballots. We want paper ballots,
and when they do that, we're going to clean it
up very very well. But we had a great twenty sixteen.
We had a much better twenty twenty election, but bad
(08:42):
things happened, and we had the best of all had
they say, the most consequential in history, one hundred and
twenty nine years most consequential.
Speaker 7 (08:51):
So it was a great election.
Speaker 9 (08:53):
And it gives me a chance to work again with
the Prime Minister and India.
Speaker 7 (08:59):
We're going to be We're gonna have a great relationship together.
Speaker 10 (09:14):
Do you see India playing a role in your plan
to broker a piece in Ukraine?
Speaker 7 (09:18):
And if I could ask you about a.
Speaker 10 (09:20):
Development in your hometown today, the US attorney has resigned
over the d o j's request to drop the case
into Eric Adams. Did you personally request the Justice Department
to drop that case?
Speaker 7 (09:31):
No, I didn't. I know nothing about it. I did not.
I think that.
Speaker 9 (09:37):
Just to answer your other question, we're just gonna get
along well.
Speaker 7 (09:42):
We're gonna get along with all countries. We're gonna do
very well.
Speaker 9 (09:45):
We're gonna be doing I think record business record numbers.
Speaker 7 (09:49):
And we're gonna work with India. Also.
Speaker 9 (09:51):
We have some very big trade deals to announce in
the very near future.
Speaker 8 (10:00):
As you know. The President put in Kia, President jar
President Biden similar a president similar Kika.
Speaker 7 (10:09):
After the thought.
Speaker 8 (10:11):
Hush mat and who's Africa.
Speaker 7 (10:19):
DUSA? President Trump, President.
Speaker 12 (10:21):
Put In.
Speaker 8 (10:25):
And play and mister President, what you would like to
say about the barlad Is issue, because we saw and
it is evidence that how the deep state of the
United States was involved Raisin Chichs during the Bidal administration
and then Mum, you loose made Junior Soros also, So
what is your your cot of you about the brows
and what is the role.
Speaker 7 (10:45):
That the deep tap plated institution. Well, there was no
role for our deep state.
Speaker 9 (10:50):
It was This is something that the Prime Minister has
been working on for a long time and has been
worked on for hundreds of years. Frankly, I've been reading
about it, but I will leave Bangladesh to the Prime Minister.
Speaker 12 (11:04):
Jaa rules or Ukraine a beach car.
Speaker 3 (11:11):
Portion of Russia and.
Speaker 12 (11:16):
Ratat Trumpney shant initiative live things about Doniyaki totally had
the heart of neutral, part of neutral nah heart or
(11:39):
Pasha Shanti am Pale didn't say hey or manager at
the Putinko mojudi media ka ya samai kan nahi or
madi conviction. His Sma Samadam, who tables.
Speaker 7 (12:09):
Train conflict, is concerned.
Speaker 6 (12:10):
I'm very happy that President Trump has taken initiatives to
restore peace and had telephone calls with the President Putin
and President Zelenski. The world had this thinking that India
somehow is a neutral country in this whole process.
Speaker 7 (12:24):
But this is not true. India has a site, and
that site is of peace.
Speaker 6 (12:29):
From the very first day, I have been talking about
the importance of dialogue and diplomacy and a peaceful solution.
And when I met President Botin in the presence of media,
I had told him that this is not the era
of war, and I have firm conviction that problems cannot
be resolved on the battlefield. The two sides will have
to come to the negotiating table.
Speaker 7 (12:48):
Frank Shani.
Speaker 12 (12:52):
Ra Trumpet the initiatively.
Speaker 9 (12:56):
Her. I just want to answer that we had a
very good folk call yesterday with President put It lasted
maybe an hour and a half. It was U excellent
(13:16):
and I think we went a long way toward getting
a solution to the horrible war where so many people
are being killed, especially soldiers in the battlefield. U at
least a million and a half soldiers have been killed
on a ridiculous war that would have never happened if
I were president. But we, uh, we've got a long
way too. I think we've got a long way to
(13:38):
solving it. Tomorrow there's a meeting in Munich, and then
next week there's a meeting in Saudi Arabia, not with
myself for President Putin, but with top officials, and Ukraine
will be a part of it too, and we're going
to see if we can end that war.
Speaker 7 (13:54):
That was a horrible war. It's a vicious, bloody war.
We want to end it.
Speaker 9 (13:58):
Uh to your other question, that US attorney was actually fired,
I don't know he or she resigned, but that US
attorney was fired.
Speaker 13 (14:08):
Okay, go ahead, the US petition that China and your rodvision, Well, I.
Speaker 7 (14:25):
Think we're doing very well in our competition with everybody.
Speaker 9 (14:28):
I think you're going to see a nation that really
is going forward at a very rapid pace. Our economy
is going to be fantastic. We're doing things to make
it that way. And we announced some very big elements
today of success. I call it an element of success.
Reciprocal tariffs, so that somebody charges us, we charge them
(14:49):
the same amount, which has never been done in our
country before. We've always been taken advantage of my other countries,
and we allow that to happen foolishly, but we can
and that we're not going to allow that any longer.
Speaker 7 (15:02):
So I think we're going to do very well.
Speaker 9 (15:04):
We've been doing the last they say the last three
weeks was among the best three weeks ever for a
start at a presidency.
Speaker 7 (15:12):
There's never been anything like it.
Speaker 9 (15:14):
And when you see what we've been able to do
in three weeks, people are really amazed.
Speaker 7 (15:18):
Even the Prime Minister mentioned it. I think other countries
are looking at it. But I just want to thank
everybody for being here. This is a terrific man.
Speaker 9 (15:28):
We're going to make some wonderful trade deals for India
and for the US, and thank you all very much.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
Thank you.
Speaker 14 (15:42):
I don't think.
Speaker 5 (15:49):
I got a stand up.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
Okay right there. That's called a press avail, like we said,
and they're running behind. I gave I told you that
was gonna be in the East Room because I thought
they were closed to be on the schedule the East room,
I believe. Check with Brian Glynn. I think they're doing
a more formal press conference. So here's the evolution of
(16:24):
these events. They're called bilats. That means bilateral meetings. It's
President Trump with a head of state or another dignitary
of you know, state, level. What happens, you see, we've
shown it outside the West Wing entrance. The uh, the
color guard comes out to kind of a guard of
(16:45):
honor for the dignitary given by the President United States.
The detail will roll up, you know, in the in
the uvs, in the the big security cars. President Trump
will greet the individual at that entrance to the West Wing.
They'll take a few photographs. So step inside is a
(17:06):
very small kind of fourier for you. That's right there,
with a couple of couches. They won't sit, they'll talk,
and they'll walk right past the Roosevelt Room, the historic
Roosevelt Room that's right there, and into the Oval Office.
And in the Oval Office they will then spend a
few minutes with each other, catching up talking and then
(17:28):
President Trump always wants to let the present for press aveil.
So the and you saw a lot of journalists and
you heard accents from the disembodied voices ask the questions
many Indian journalists and President Trump always likes to have
the the local journalists and the and the people that
cover in the press pool for the dignitary in this
case Modi of India, to ask questions and be there
(17:52):
for photography. If we have the we've got breaking nine
one one has really an incredible photo from the side
because right there you're seeing the camera pointed towards the fireplace,
pointed towards where the president always sits in his chair,
and then where that the where the dignitary sits. But
(18:15):
nine to one one has this incredible from a side angle,
so you can see how crammed the Oval office is
not that big BC. How many photographers and journalists cram
in there? Now, why is that? And why wasn't in Biden?
The White House has been turned into an action center.
It's essentially the field headquarters of President Trump. Like Washington
(18:37):
had his field headquarters in Cambridge, then he had it
in you know, outside of New York, and then he
had it in uh, you know, south of the river,
Delaware River.
Speaker 9 (18:47):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (18:48):
He always put his you know, field headquarters in Marstown
or other places. That Trump's field headquarters is the White
House as he's on a full on a assault against
the administrative and deep state. Now, during these press avils,
the President will and he normally likes you to kind
of stick on the subject since you're sitting there with
the dignitary. So he likes the questions that come in
and hey, tell me how it's going. What are you
(19:09):
working on? And President Trump right there very you know,
out there, very very aggressive, very very magnanimous. Hey, we're
working a lot of trade deals. Modis my good friend.
Modi's like Abbe Trump and Abe and Mody. These are
nationalists that see the world through the lens of their country.
(19:32):
And although President Trump is not just a global leader,
he is the global leader. He has to take a
bigger field of vision. These men look at the look
at the world through the prism of what is best
for their nation and what is best for their countrymen.
And that's why you can tell President Trump does not
have the raport someone like my Crohn. He doesn't have
(19:53):
that rapport with something like Governor Trudeau, excuse me, Trudeau
of Canada, where he's got it with Bolsonauro. You know,
he doesn't have it with Lula where he has it
with Georgia Maloney. You know, he didn't have it to
even forget the guy's name, the socialist president of France.
(20:14):
When we were there, it was just no chemistry at all. No,
not just chemistry, but not even the same framework. He
likes Mody a lot. I think he likes him as
a person, and what I think he respects about Modi
is Mody's tough. Modi is a tough negotiator. Mody is
tough for his people. And President Trump respects toughness, doesn't
(20:34):
hold against somebody, particularly when they're fighting for their people.
He respects that. He was looking forward to this day. Also,
India is the lynchpin of the Indo Pacific strategy and
the ability to contain the Chinese Communist Party and ultimately
to tee it up so Labaijing can take down the
Chinese Commist Party. You need some big allies since the
(20:55):
elites in this country forced Russia into the hands of
the Chinese Commanist Party and the worst geostrategic move since
the Bolsheviks allowed Nixon to carve off Malse tongue in
the Chinese Communists against them in the early nineteen seventies.
(21:18):
President Trump's very attuned, He's very tuned in the fact
that Modi's important. The mode is the largest representative of democracy.
I think it's what eight hundred million people voting any
some enormous amount of takes them a month. And Modi
is well respected Moti's strong at home. Although he has
lost some regional elections and some interim he's not as
strong as maybe he could have been. Once again, people
(21:40):
will tell us because they eased up, they got some
elements of them, they got a little too rhino, a
little too establishment. Very powerful. We love showing you the
by lads because you see, you get see pure Trump
right there, these things inside the Oval office. You have
to understand how rare this is, how rare this is.
(22:02):
And FDR was so big just to have the fireside
chats and every now and again you have very stage,
very stylized. You know, these was so kind of Kabooki theater.
What the press does President Trump? And it shows you
his confidence and his confidence builds every day. He's now
(22:23):
when he signs the executive order or he has a bylight,
he's always having the media in there. It's full and
he takes every question. They're not curree. He just takes
hard ball questions right there and he answered him. One
of the questions is what we started today the Southern
District District of New York in the situation with Eric Adams,
and this gets to be the warning I gave outside
(22:43):
the State Supreme Court. The other day when I walked
to the mics and I warned President Trump's administration that
in Manhattan, it's a rig game up there. Manhattan, in
elements of Manhattan, and look, I love New York City.
Lived in Brooklyn Heights for years. I lived in Manhattan
(23:05):
for years. I loved it. I loved that city. It's
the financial capital the world. Anybody that's ever had a chance,
not sin it's a visit, but to live there. You
realize the confidence you get when you get to New
York and you're able to kind of figure your way out.
It's New York is incredibly empowering when you kind of
learn you break the code of how you're supposed to
(23:27):
do it, how you can do it, particularly as a
young person. But it's gotten very radicalized. And I have
a rig system up there with a source backed prosecutor
Alvin Bragg, a Attorney General Tish James. You have a
compliant press or left wing media, and you have a
jury pull. You have these corrupt judges, and you have
a jury pool of these radicals who get more radical
(23:51):
and more and they realize that the longer they're out
of power, that's kind of what I call the Upper
West Side crowd that can perform grand juries and juries.
It's dangerous to the Trump administration. These are dangerous people
because they're legal gangsters. It's total lawfare. Also in the
Southern District, and I said, and Terry Shilly is going
to be on there is another injunction or stay today.
(24:13):
But we want a big one on the on President
Trump offering the buyouts. And I've said at the federal level, yes,
they're going to slow you down. Some of these are
going to get tamed up, but buy and large is
going to move forward. You're going to go to Pella Court,
You're going to get expedited hearings, You're going to go
to the emergency docket. Because I think what President Trump's doing,
everything you can see, everything I can tell, and I
(24:33):
think we're pretty close to it. Looks like it's constitutional
separation of powers is what the executive is supposed to do. However,
in the state courts is different. This is why Pam
BONDI I think responding to our at least taking a
consideration and this whole thing about sanctuary cities put a
shot across their bow with telling what they filed against
(24:54):
against Bragg and Tiss James, Big Tiss James that was
at the state level. For that was the just Spartman
coming after him. But it was about sanctuary cities. Eric Adams.
The same thing, Eric Adams. The charges were going to
be dropped by Southern District, and Eric Adams was, uh,
(25:14):
and I don't know. I don't think there's any quid
pro quo. I don't know of any. I'm not in
the loop on that, but I don't know any. But
Eric Adams is going to look like going to work
with people on making sure the sanctuary city element is
not there because New York City is such a mess,
and I believe the Southern District of New York the
the The assistant US Attorney just said, now we're not
(25:36):
gonna do. I'm gonna do what I'm gonna do on
Eric Adams.
Speaker 5 (25:39):
And m L.
Speaker 3 (25:40):
Bovie, who's become a hero on this, fired her said,
you've very tendered your your your your resignation letter because
everybody has to. When president comes in, he says, hey,
it's accepted. You got to clean out your office. And
they're in meltdown right now. Weisman MSNBC. The entire crowd
because they realized Trump's not playing by the old rules. Tartner,
Pam Bondi's not playing by the old rules. This is
(26:03):
smash mouth. We're not gonna this is not a gentleman's
game of cricket. We're fighting for our country and we're
gonna fight. And this goes back to the people that
you know you're partying on a Nagres day. It's fine,
it's great, but hey, the hardest days are ahead of us.
Of all the hard days you've had, and it come back.
(26:23):
You ain't seen nothing yet. They're not going to give
it up. They're not gonna give it up. You're gonna
have to take it from them. They don't care the
President Trump won. They don't care the President Trump's in
the in the White House. They don't care Elon Musk
is the richest guy in the world. They don't care
what Stephen Miller has to say, or Susie Willis has
to say, or Howard Lutnik has to say. They don't care.
(26:46):
They're gonna fight every step of the way. Hey, I
wouldn't have it any other way. I wouldn't have it
any other way. So every day is going to be
a throwdown. Every day is going to be a fight.
And there's different parts of this fight, as you know,
different verticals, the two central you know, I said from
the beginning, let's look at the three big things. Number
(27:08):
one is ending the kinectic part of the Third World War.
Look at the shredding. Pete Hegsath over there. Pete heggsas said,
what is obvious. It's time to get on with it.
We're not going to support NATO, We're not going to
be part of any security guarantee, and the borders are
going to go back to twenty fourteen at the minimum.
Let's move on. This said, Oh, he's given up huge
negotiating leverage, not giving any negotiating leverage. Come on, cut
(27:31):
do it, man, It's time to move on. It's time
to move on. And there's shredding Pete on the ending
the connect part of the Third World War. President trumpets
an ultimated Hamas. I think they kind of blinked. I
think they're giving up some hostage. I'm not sure, sure
so sure that high noon is still the watchword. It's
(27:52):
got to be as on as it was the other day.
But President Trump's trying to stop that. And they're all
over him every second of the day, and he just says, hey, look,
had an hour and a half. He dropped a bomb
right there. Yeah, I had had a call with Putin. Yeah,
an hour and a half. Suck on that hour and
a half with Putin, and they're arranged. I think they're
gonna meet in Riod. I think they're gonna meet in
(28:12):
Russian Moscow. I think Fruit's coming here. Wouldn't that be great?
You think, MSM. You see Rachel Mattow, you think should
be should be catatonic. Putin's coming to Washington and oh yeah,
he called up and said, hey, JD. So he called Zelensk.
JD's over there. Can you sit down with him? Make
(28:34):
sure you meet because he's got more bad news. Zelenski,
the big shot not so big anymore, not when you're
stealing our money on the deportations. This is why Eric
Adams so important. The deportations. Things are slowing down. Why
they're slowing down, local officials are fighting the president. They're
also getting in beds like in the FBI. FBI, a
(28:56):
bunch of good people leaked the big LA radio other day.
That's going to get ramped up. It's going to get
d I need a little more cash to get some
logistics and some organization. But it's you can tell it.
It's a stiff fight from the courts, a stiff fight
from the people that don't want this to happen, not
the NGOs, but the imbts, people inside the system. Then
(29:17):
you've got the mother of all debt problems. You got
the thing in the middle, which is I say, hey,
it's the existential threat. It's the it's the deficit, the debt,
all of it. And today we're kind of having a performative, perfunctuary,
you know, budget meeting to talk take care of a budget.
That's kind of a fantasy that has no meaning when
you talk about cash in or cash out. Money has
(29:37):
to be raised. Birch Gold, go to Bannon right now,
b A N N O N text nine eight nine eight.
Get the free paper on investing in gold in the
age of Trump. Hit another high to day, a generational
move in gold up fifty percent I think in the
last twelve minutes, exactly less money.
Speaker 15 (30:00):
The sovereignsy has now been expedited because the priorities in
the IRA were grain energy subsidies.
Speaker 3 (30:10):
That was the trade with that.
Speaker 15 (30:12):
I asked mister Amo or I give mister Amo the
last minute to close.
Speaker 5 (30:19):
Thank you, mister Chairman.
Speaker 16 (30:22):
You have my word that Congressional Democrats will always fight
for policies that protect Medicare benefits and extend its solvency.
And I am hopeful that the commitment from my colleagues
on the other side is also steadfast. And there's nothing
unnecessary about making that commitment time and time again because
(30:43):
our seniors deserve it. And the Inflation Reduction Act we
saw historic negotiations of prescription drug prices, lowering the costs
for seniors of vital drugs, capping the cost of out
of pocket expenses a year.
Speaker 5 (31:02):
So millions of Americans.
Speaker 3 (31:03):
Okay, what we're cutting into are dipping and out of
is the budget and they want to know that the
budget hearing and Jody Arrington, somebody just gotta explain to
me how this has any real cuts at all, not
out your cuts. Even when they talk programmatically, it doesn't
mean anything because they don't stick to them. I want
to know, just basically, somebody just riddled me this. Just
(31:24):
let's be simple. Technically, we are at the debt cling
because so we can't borrow any more money. What we
are doing is that Scott Bessant is under what's called
emergency measures, is managing cash flow in what we call
the waterfall. So the cash comes in and all the
(31:46):
interest on the securities or securities are rolled or paid
off as they are, and you don't have any issue
of default. And there's clearly a little run way there
because they seem to be managing fine. The second part
of this is on fourteen March. Consider fourteen March, like
(32:07):
thirty September, when this whole fiasco started at midnight, you
don't have the ability, the technical ability, to allow any
more funding of the United States government, the federal government.
It ends. It can only be extended by what's it
called a continued resolution that continues on what had happened
(32:28):
before September thirtieth, because we never got the appropriations. But
remember the single subject appropriations bill. We follow those fights
over and why is single subject appropriations bills fine? Because
that is theoretically where happens what DOJE is doing now.
It allows a full vetting line by line in these
various subcommittees, the committees of jurisdiction on different aspects of
(32:54):
the budget. You know, if it's if it's the Pentagon
on its armed services. If it's UH Section eight housing,
it's HUT. If it's things related to farm programs, it's
the Agriculture Committee. And in these committees, supposedly, as the
(33:15):
budget is put together, UH, this gets argued out and
get and in the appropriation process you get, you get,
you argue it, you go through it, and like us
A I D. The reason these things are not shocking
to us is because Eli Crane and Andy Biggs and
Matt Gates and Marjorie Taylor Green and Lauren Bobert, and
(33:37):
I can go on and on and on. Freedom Caucus
members and non Freedom Caucus members went through this and
fault this at the subcommittee level on the committee level,
and you have arguments and votes. That's what democracy is,
and you expose what you can expose, or if leadership
tells you not to, you don't.
Speaker 5 (33:54):
And so what is this that?
Speaker 3 (33:56):
And what happened is that leadership always voted down telling
the shut up and they got to a little bit
of it, but clearly not to what to what Dozeer's doing.
So to be clear, folks, as I said, now, since
we kicked the kid down the road before Christmas on
fourteenth December, around fifteen December, gave us Jennifer to give
(34:19):
us ninety days ninety days into Trump's administration so President
Trump could have his budget and have his numbers. Because
they've been running around on reconciliation, which is a totally
different process, believe it or not, and this will be
tied to and they're going to do two reconciliations. And look,
they were saying one one one. We said it was
(34:40):
not going to be one. It's never going to be one.
It's too big, too complicated, and it's not going to come.
You wouldn't get one bill out until July or August,
and they're going to try to bleed Trump out by then,
and then it wouldn't be they go and break. They
wouldn't be be debated and negotiation and voted on in
October November. Trump's not going to wait, and the border
(35:01):
and other aspects can't wait that long. But in looking
at the reconciliations and spending time with the reconciliations, they
took their eye off the ball, maybe purposely, I don't know.
I can't get a response on it. The response I
get is all kind is all kind of gobbledygook, right,
all kind of gobbledygook. Okay, have we got Brian Glynn?
(35:25):
Will I will hold this my thoughts on this for
a moment. I'm gonna go to the east room and
Brian Glynn, here's the point right now, we're hurtling down
towards We're hurtling down towards a situation. We're going to
prove a continued resolution. They're going to want to Biden's budget.
Biden's numbers two trained dollar deficit and not one penny
(35:47):
of DOSI and there's gonna be cut. In fact, you're
going to pay for all the waste for our abuse
that they've identified. It's insanity. It can't happen. It's got
to change. Let's go to the east room. Real America's
voice man on the spot in the world, White House,
Brian Glenn, what do you got for his brother? Put
us in the room.
Speaker 1 (36:04):
Hey, good afternoon, Steve. Yes, we are in the east
room and waiting for Mody and President Trump to make
their way in here. I can imagine, Steve that a
lot of the conversation today is based around tariffs. That
seems to be the dominating news headline today. President Trump
signing that Reciprocal Tariff Act early executive or earlier today
(36:30):
and really kind of laying out the groundwork for additional
revenue for this country. And I watched Peter Neavar earlier
on CNN absolutely give an economics class on the purpose
of these tariffs and what this really means to US
revenue and bringing manufacturing back to this country.
Speaker 5 (36:51):
I asked President Trump in the Oval Office up.
Speaker 1 (36:53):
Specifically about the steel tariffs and the aluminum and what
it means to the state of Pennsylvania and uh, and
what it means to them bringing manufacturing back, jobs back,
production backs. And President Trump, Steve was very open and said,
here's the deal. Make your product here in the US,
(37:14):
and you don't pay the tariffs. Steve, It's that simple.
But we'll also see kind of the kick back as
far as the media really scrutinizing these tariffs and actually
you know, putting a lot of fear in the consumer
that essentially that would raise prices consumer price.
Speaker 3 (37:32):
Hang on, We're going to cut that the bar thing.
I want you to go back on something. Here's what
Trump's saying, Okay, Uh, He's saying, look, I look at
this as external revenue to help to help pay for this,
and don't look at as tariffs because this is a
premium market. When we get here, you're gonna have to
pay premium like buying us getting a skybox at a
ballgame or or a front row ticket a concert. However,
(37:56):
if you make it here, you don't pay a terrff.
Repeat that, Brian. This is so basic, this is about
this is how you use well, how do you think
Hamilton came up with the American system? This was Hamilton's logic.
You make it here, you don't have to pay, You
don't have to pay anything. You make it here. Brian,
Repeat how simple is and how the media, particularly the
business media, is on the uproar.
Speaker 5 (38:20):
You're absolutely right.
Speaker 1 (38:21):
It was almost like they could clip that Oval Office
executive order and just play that for high school economics
class and go ahead and throw it in college as well.
It was simple, make your product here and you don't
pay a tariff. If you're a country and you want
to import your goods and you're going to charge us
two percent on our stuff, then we're going to charge
(38:42):
you two percent.
Speaker 5 (38:42):
It's equal equal. He laid out several examples of countries.
Speaker 1 (38:48):
Absolutely charging US eight times as much as we charged them,
specifically in automobiles. And he's going to also lay out
future plans, which he said in regards to automobile manufacturing
here in this country.
Speaker 5 (39:02):
But to Steve to your point, it's as simple as that.
Speaker 1 (39:05):
And I don't know why so many House Democrats, Senate Democrats,
mainstream media doesn't understand this concept. It seems like they
are standing up more for foreign interest than they are
standing up for US interests.
Speaker 3 (39:20):
They yeah, no, Brent, I come to the same place
you do about how can they? I think it's I
think it's politics. I think they feel that Trump is
stolen to march on him and he's the guy by
bringing jobs back, so they even though it's for the
good of the country and quite frankly good for what
used to be the Democratic base which is now all
maga and votes for Trump, that they have to fight it.
(39:41):
And they take these bizarro theories on oh, inflation is
going to come back, It's going to be terrible. They're
not worried about American workers. Trump always puts American citizens first.
Trump always puts the you know, the economic benefit of
our country and our citizens first. Brian.
Speaker 1 (39:58):
Yeah, And also I asked them specifically on the pharmaceutical industry.
If people knew how much pharmaceuticals, how much medicine that
we need every day, is manufactured in China, that becomes
a national security issue. He wants to bring drug manufacturers
back to this country, wants to do transfer the semiconductors.
Speaker 5 (40:19):
You and I have talked about this before, that needs
to be shifted to the US.
Speaker 1 (40:23):
The way you do that is you've got to make
it advantageous for companies to build and manufacture their products
here in this country. Tariffs is a good conversational starter.
That's where it starts, and I think we've saw a
lot of movement today. Obviously, you know, manufacturers in Pennsylvania
love this. They absolutely love the tariffs and what he's
(40:44):
doing to protect US steel. It's good for America, it's
good for business, it's good for consumers. Now wild there'll
be some growing pain, Steve, you and I both know
that you could see some temporarily consumer prices go up.
But in the long run, it's best for this country.
And it just takes a visionary like President Trump to
put that forward.
Speaker 3 (41:04):
Put us in the room there, Brian, this is the
historic East Room, So normally when you have these by lads,
they go into the oval, there's some quiet, there's some
time just with the two of them. Then President Trump
normally wants a press avail and and Biden other people
of the presidents normally just the photographers coming in there.
That take some b roll. President Trump wants the media
in there. He loves having local media, in this case
(41:28):
Indian media. Indian media there to ask questions. They give
some give and take. You saw mody with the interpreter answer.
Then they come over for and then they spend more
time together what you're doing right now? And there may
be a little hot talking, particularly as they talk about
tariffs because the Indy has got a whole tariff structure. Uh.
President Trump signed the recipro the tariffs of reciprocity, they
(41:50):
reciprocal tariffs.
Speaker 1 (41:52):
UH.
Speaker 3 (41:52):
In a little bit of that shots at India, no doubt.
Talking about the eastroom. Then they always break. He spent
a few minutes. Then they come across from the west,
swing through the portico open right next to the rose garden,
back into the residents. Then they come up to the
East room. Describe the East room, Brian, where you are
right now with the camera crew.
Speaker 5 (42:12):
You did okay, Steve, you did a great job setting
that up. Austin. Let's show everybody what he just spoke about.
Speaker 1 (42:20):
There's the podium obviously, let's show the podium where Modi
and President Trump will be standing. Right now, they're kind
of doing an audio check. They're making sure the cameras
are position, the teleprompters are in place. Now, Austin, show
down below. This is where a lot of the international
media will sit. They've got the headphones for the translation
there as well, in each seat, so each member gets
(42:42):
to put the headset on. They obviously can translate both
languages that need be. Let's go ahead and show a shot, Austin.
We could through the double doors right there, actually on
the far door, go over to the left, Austin, where
we've got some individuals just walked out. That's actually where
you're going to see the President and President Modi walk
(43:02):
out there. Now, let's turn the other way. Awesome, Let's
swing back around and we've got a camera right next
to you. But let's see what we can do. There's
a translation booth in the back of this press riser.
That is where officials from India will translate what President
Trump says into their language and then sent to obviously
(43:25):
the ones here in this room and around the world. Steve,
this is an international, obviously type of event, this magnitude,
and of course we have a press riser across on
the other side, so the amount of media in here
is huge. Steve, We'll have continued coverage here in the
east room.
Speaker 5 (43:40):
Back to you.
Speaker 3 (43:41):
Hey, hang on one second, brib We're gonna take a
short commercial break. Real America's Voice in the war room.
President Trump in Modi of India about to enter the
east room. Wevi be back in a month from the
press conference. Confuse your host, Stephen k back before we
(44:03):
go back to the show. We have Chris Cord here. Chris,
what do you got for today? Brother?
Speaker 7 (44:09):
Hi?
Speaker 3 (44:09):
Steve.
Speaker 14 (44:09):
We've got a great deal from you for you guys
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So this unit normally costs six hundred bucks anywhere else.
You get it today for free with activation, you're paying
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And this unit, Steve, will give you Internet wherever you
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Speaker 3 (45:30):
And that's with activation.
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You can even use this unit, Steve, when you're walking
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And then you've also got a couple of solid into
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be used in outdoor situations even with heavy rain.
Speaker 3 (46:01):
One more time, Chris, where do people go to get
these specials?
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Where do they go right now?
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I just got a SAT one two three dot com.
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And this deal is good for as long as we
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the past is any any indicator.
Speaker 3 (46:31):
Thank you, brother, appreciate your satellite phone store, Chris, Horror
another special. These things sell it quick, so get on it, folks,
Gras and movie. You can put that up in the
chat rooms so people can see it all the different
chat rooms. Gold near another all time high?
Speaker 14 (46:46):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (46:46):
KOBEI Kobyasi the Great h puts up these amazing charts,
talked about a generational move in gold. I think it's
up fifty percent over the last year. We're not here
to tell you about the price you're about to buy.
What we're here to do is give you access so
that you understand. I don't know the correlation of forces
that are driving gold. Everything from the deterioration of the
(47:10):
of the purchasing power of the U stra Why be
fought cause of federal spending? Why we focus so much.
We'll go back to the Budget Committee, but you will
go between the East Room and the Budget Committee, the
pageantry of the East Room. As a head of State,
Modi of India is here with President Trump. They're very
close personally. They're also very close in political outlook. Both
(47:31):
men fight for their country. So every now and again
they know they're at loggerheads, as you would anticipate, particularly
among two countries that are as big a trading partner
as the US is with India. India is also a
key strategic partner in the whole situation. Take down the
Chinese companyist Party, the strategic our strategic drive to contain
(47:53):
the Chinese Companies Party on certain aspects of the Eurasian land.
Mass Modi is a key alloy there. You've have a
presser in the East room, in the historic East Room,
and you know both individuals, President Trump and Mody will
make statements. Mody will talk to a translator for most
of it, I imagine. Then President Trump normally opens up
(48:14):
to questions and he likes those questions to be on
the topic at hand, which is the head of state.
But the media being the media, will always wander off it.
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(48:58):
age of Trump. So go check it out. Day. We're
still waiting on the end. I think we're to take
a break at the top of the hour. It looks
like they're run a few minutes. L like what this
means is that Mody and Trump are engaged in a
longer conversation. I think that's appropriate. Mody came a long
way to it, came a long way to see President Trump.
(49:19):
Remember if he came to the Howdie Mody. I think
it's still the biggest event President Trump's ever had outside
some of these massive rallies one hundred thousand people rallies,
and some of the rallies in Pennsylvania somebody's incredible rallies.
But for an indoor location, I think it was fifty
seven thousand people down in Houston and then President Trump,
and this was in the beginning days of the pandemic,
so that really didn't get the coverage that it should
(49:40):
have gotten. And President Trump went to indian the absolutely loving,
absolutely loving. So there'll be more on that today. The
Budget Committee is trying to get to I understand they're
going to vote it out tonight. Hey, here's I want
to know how many cuts in the same with Steve.
They're dealing with the physical twenty twenty six budget. Fine,
show me the trellion dollars in cut. I don't want
two train dollar deficit. I want to see a cut
(50:02):
in half. How'd you do it? What they're talking about
the one point five tree in over ten years? That's
one hundred and fifty billion dollars a year.
Speaker 7 (50:09):
Now.
Speaker 3 (50:09):
I realize it's maybe taken differently, but it's one hundred
and fifty dollars billion dollars not it's not going to work.
And to back it up, if you got the c
R on the fourteenth, we've got to fund the government
going for it or maybe not, but I don't see
him shutting down President Trump's government in his first hundred days.
It's how can we possibly have a two trade dollar deficit?
(50:32):
Where are the doge cuts? We need them all. They've
had enough time to identify at least the waste for
our abuse in these different organizations. It doesn't have to
be perfect because they'll go through a lot more refinement
even after approved. We have to know directionally where we are,
and it galls maybe working off Biden's number, I hope
it galls the president I think when the president's fully
(50:53):
briefed and fully informed, it'll call him big league. They
will say, what the hell are we doing here with
Biden's numbers? It's an interesting question. I think it's generally
confusion and mayhem with capital helout Hey. Maybe I'm wrong,
Maybe there's some logic here, and maybe they're making some
progress on this, but until we see the math, and
(51:15):
I mean hundreds of billions of dollars of cuts, hundreds
of bllions of dollars and cuts, and stop whining about entitlements,
get into that discretionary spending, get into the Pentagon, get
into medicaid. Medicaid. You gotta be careful caause a lot
of magason medicaid. I'm telling you. If you don't think so,
you are dead wrong. Medicaid is gonna be a complicated one.
(51:36):
Just can't take a meetex to it, although I would
love to. Okay, right, stuff takes us out. Brian Glenn's
in the East room, Mody and the President United States
are about to enter. We're going to take a short
commercial break. We're going to return in the war room
in just a moment.