Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Here is your Channel nine first one and weather forecast.
It's gonna be a breezy day to day with isolated's
snowshowers possible thirty three for the high, then a twenty
three overnight with clouds. Tomorrow's sunny and a high of
thirty nine. It's a warmer day overnight low of thirty
three with a rain kicking in around midnight. Maybe you
get a wintery mix depending on where you are. You
got clouds on Saturday with a higher forty It's twenty
eight right now. It's time for a traffic updates.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
From the UC out Traffic Center. Don't let injury slow
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at UCHealth dot com. Latest accident is on the ramp
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(00:48):
seventy five ramp that's affecting traffic coming off of a
highway both east and westbound chuck Ing, Vermont fifty five krs.
The talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Seven thirty here fifty five kr CIT talk station fingers crossed.
Senator Ran Paul will be dollon in here soon. He's
scheduled to be on the program. Talk about well, Christy
Nooam's hearing which for the Department of Homeland Security, which
has been kicked for a day. I guess there was
some paperwork that had to be done. I saw some
reporting on Politico on that and then the Russ Vaught
officer management and budget. And he has interesting perception which
(01:24):
I think is probably an accurate one, although it did
rub some of the Democrats the wrong way. He said
that he does not have to spend or the Trump
does not have to spend money that has been allocated
by Congress, authorized by Congress. He's got no obligation to
do that. Presidents have the ability to spend less than
an appropriation if they can do it for less. And
(01:47):
on that topic, welcome back to the fifty five Cassey
Morning Show, Senator Ran Paul. It's always a pleasure to
have you on my program Sir.
Speaker 3 (01:53):
Glad to be with you. Good morning.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
My understanding is, I know Christy Noams Department of Homeland
Security here is on the agenda for us to talk
about and we can. I just saw that it got
kicked for a day it's supposed to have They're supposed
to have that tomorrow. Is that is that correct?
Speaker 3 (02:09):
Yes, yesterday we had Russ Vote, who will be the
OMB director and he was the previous OMB director under
Trump in the last administration. Nome, we're still waiting on
some paperwork. Everybody goes to an FBI background check and
some ethics paperwork and it wasn't completed. We're hoping it'll
be completed, so we can do that tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (02:28):
Okay, And I get the impression you're probably on board
with Nome as the director of the Department Homeland Security.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
Yeah, I'm gonna sport both Nome and rust Vote. And
really most of Trump's picks have been pretty good. In fact,
some of them so good that I would have picked
him myself. Just met with Marty McCarey yesterday. Marty McCarey's
the doctor from John Hopkins who's going to be head
of FDA. He's going to be probably the best director
of the FDA we've ever had. Jay baticharia doctor from
(02:56):
Stanford who I know well, is going to be in
charge of NIH and hopefully cleaning house over there. Cash
Hotel at the FBI is going to clean house bad
Bondye at Department of Justice. I mean, just a lot of.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Good people, a lot of hysterics and the Democrats during
some of these hearings. But I guess that's to be
expected in terms of russ vote. I saw him that
he said in during the hearings that for two hundred
years presidents had the ability to spend less than an
appropriation if they could do it for less. He was
asked infestitti if he thought Donald Trump didn't have to
spend what had been allocated as it pertains of parameters
(03:32):
of how we would use that. That's something that his
team would have to consider in the confirm That obviously
rubbed Democrats the wrong way, including Richard Blumenthal, who expressed
astonishment that someone would even say that.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
It is a technical question, but it is an important one.
It's called impoundment. So if the Congress allocates a billion
dollars for an aircraft carrier, and let's say Elon mus
gets involved looking at every nut and volt for eight
hundred million, you've saved two hundred million to the president
be able to impound that there is a real question.
(04:07):
I mean, there have been some laws against him doing that.
But there is another possibility of an impoundment that's absolutely
legal and no question on that's called recision. The president
could templarly shift the two hundred billion dollars back to Congress.
It gets an expedited vote, and the expedited vote can
be fifty percent vote, so there's no filibuster, meaning that
(04:28):
Republicans alone could cut that two hundred billion. So I
think it's a tool that has never been fully utilized.
Trump tried it once in the previous administration for only
fifteen billion, and two Republicans deserted and voted with the
Democrats and we lost even a fifteen billion car recision.
I'm hoping they will try again, and it's one of
(04:49):
those things they have to understand. They're going have to
come and lobby, not people like me who are for cutting,
but there are some of the bigger government Republicans. They're
just have to come over and lobby them and try
to convince them to vote for it, and convince some
really that the circumstances of our debt are pretty dire
and growing more dire. Interest rates aren't coming down. And
that's you know, not only is it the debt with
(05:10):
accumulated but with interest rates twice what they were ten
years ago. You know, we're paying off the debt at
two percent. Now we're paying off the debt at four percent. Yeah,
that's a big deal.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
That is a huge deal. Well, that that recision. I
love that concept because it outs the so called rhino is,
the ones that aren't interested in being fiscally responsible. I mean,
they have to vote on that, and that's something I
was having a conversation with Congressman Massy about. He says,
you know, it was the Omnibus Bill and of course
the Reconciliation Bill, And I said, you know, you guys
(05:40):
are in charge now, you can just deliver on cutting
and he just kind of chuckled, and he said, well,
you know, when you're talking about cutting projects in a
Republican's home state, they're a little they're wary to do,
you know, not going to do it because it's their
stuff and it's there, it's their pet project. And even
if it's something ridiculous like the F thirty five, you
know they won't cut. I said, well, why don't you
start naming names. Let'spread the word on who's doing that
(06:04):
kind of thing, so we cannot make the same mistake
next time around. And he said, well, you know, I
got to work with these people. I just got it.
I wasn't comforted by that statement.
Speaker 3 (06:13):
Well, part of the problem is is newspapers and media
used to be better at this. I can remember even
in Bowling Green, when I first came to Bowling Green
and finished my medical training, there would periodically be four
or five votes in the paper of how they voted.
Third party groups do this, like there are libertarian groups
that Republican Liberty Caucus, which is Libertarian Republicans says a
(06:35):
Libertarian leaning index each year. There are business groups that
do it, but it's just not far and wide enough
and it's not out there. And you know, the Internet
has so much information, but you rarely come across, you know,
rating systems that have prominence which show how how your
congressman voted. You know, if you know, I pointed out
in Festivus report this year that there was a four
(06:55):
hundred thousand dollars grant to study whether or not lonely
rats use more cocaine than group social rights and load
ball when you're lonely. You tapped the cocaine button more
And anyway, the thing is is what kind of grief
would the public give if they knew that their congressman
not only voted for this, but voted to double the
(07:17):
amount of money given to this agency. It's called the
National Science Foundation. And we had a bill which was
to subsidize billion dollar chip companies and also double the
size of the National Science Foundation, and every Democrat voted
for it, and half the Republicans voted for it. But
you're right, somebody's got to point it out. Somebody's got
to point out who's voting for these things.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
Well, congratulations, you are, I understand the chair of the
newly seeded chair of the Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee.
Can you talk about what you're going to be doing
on that as well as the remain in Mexico hearing,
which I understand is a guesst Today.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
Yeah, this morning, we're going to have a first hearing.
I thought it would be important to do it before
the inaugurations. I think inauguration day is going to be
busy and Donald Trump's go announced a lot of it
about the border. Our hearings called remain in Mexico. We're
going to have the previous director of Homeland Security under
previous Trump administration, Ken Kuchinelli, talented lawyer, constitutional lawyer from Virginia,
(08:14):
and he's going to talk about does the existing law
already give the president the power to control the border.
And this is the debate we had with the Democrats.
They're like, oh, well, we'd love to control the border,
but we just need to give Biden the power to
do it. We don't think that's true. We think the
power already gives great latitude to how any kind of
asylum program is created. We frankly think that the president
(08:36):
has the power to simply make people who come across
the border illegally ineligible for asylum. Then you wouldn't start
these four year long processes applying people all over the
US waiting for their when they'll be detained. We also
think the president, for the couple million people that came
in last year, unattended young males coming into our country,
(08:57):
I think the president could move their detainment date the
next month and say your detainment trial you're hearing is
next month. This is what the ones that already got
here that buy let in and if you don't show up,
you're a felon. And then when we find you, you'll
kick you out and never come back. And so I
think there's a lot of things that can be done.
They're dramatic. I think Trump's going to use a lot
of these dramatic things that he already has the power for.
(09:18):
We wanted to make sure the public knew that the
law actually supports quite a bit of latitude for the
president well.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
Before we part company. I just have been observing that
I've been expecting some sort of much like the first
Trump administration mass protest along some lines previously was anti
file or Black Lives Matter, I expect this deportation effort
is going to result in masses of illegal immigrants taking
to the streets in protests of being kicked out of
the country. Any concerns along those lines, or concerns from
(09:47):
a homeland security standpoint that terrorist activities might take place.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
Now, I guess if mass protests of illegal aliens happen,
it'll be easier to find them. I love that, you know,
I think. Look, and I don't want to don't get
me wrong, I am very pro immigration, lawful immigration. I
have a lot of good friends who came here. Many
of our best Americans just got here. But we just
(10:13):
can't allow millions to come in without any kind of
scrutiny or screening. Really, there have to be limits we
can't have, and you can't let ten million people in
a year. It sort of overwhelmed the country and overwhelms
all the government systems in the hospital. So not to
mention the risk of that bad people, terrorists, and also
many of these countries that are run by socialists just
(10:34):
empty their jail. Yes, you know, so Venezuela's just led
a bunch of their criminals go. That's what Castro dies you.
But you know with the Mario leto Is back in
the eighties. So we can't do that. But at the
same time, I want to make sure that at least
this Republican isn't perceived as someone who doesn't like immigrants.
I have many good friends who have just gotten this country,
and I'm i'm I'm pleased with our friends.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
Senator Reun Poulsiz, is a pleasure to have you on
the program with you best of luck with the Homeland
Security Government Affairs Committee work and the hearings will kick in.
We'll be watching and wish you luck on the remain
in Mexico policy, among others. Until we talk again. Best
of health, my friend. Thanks God my pressure seven forty
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