Podcast appearances and mentions of Pete Buttigieg

U.S. politician and former 2020 presidential candidate

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The Eric Metaxas Show
#132 - Dave Rubin

The Eric Metaxas Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2026 46:09


Today On The Eric Metaxas Show, Eric talks with Dave Rubin about Trump's lasting impact on the Republican Party, why the old GOP is not coming back, and what the future of MAGA may look like after Trump. They discuss Mike Pence, Bill Maher, Dave's move from classical liberalism into the MAGA coalition, the Democrats' radical turn, Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg, Gavin Newsom, Ron DeSantis, the 2026 midterms, and why normal Americans may keep moving right as the left grows more extreme. Subscribe for clips from The Eric Metaxas Show to hear politics and culture from a Christian perspective.⭐ ORDER TODAY:Revolution: The Birth of the Greatest Nation in the History of the World

Letters from an American

May 24, 2026The people who care about the preservation of democracy and who have worked to expand its values truly represent America, On the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration, we are launching 250 to 250, a series that honors them, It is a series of one-minute videos that emphasize the agency of everyday people to change the country, The videos celebrate community, democracy, innovation, mobility, civil rights, education, conservation, and creativity, Topics range from the Battles of Lexington and Concord and the building of the Erie Canal to the story of the AIDS quilt and the legacy of actress Rita Moreno, Narrators include former Senator Jon Tester, journalist Sylvia Salazar, and former secretary of transportation Pete Buttigieg; Now, as for the past 250 years, “We Are America.”Watch today's recording here: https://www.youtube.com/live/g9TUa1Rwd6U?si=T8_KKcHQZElhpnZ-Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me:Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe

Montana Public Radio News
Campaign Beat: Buttigieg in Butte; Dark money mischief; Who's the spoiler? 

Montana Public Radio News

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2026 13:47


A rising Democratic star and possible presidential candidate gets a warm reception in Montana. Republican "dark money" groups take a keen interest in Montana's Democratic Senate primary, and those Senate candidates make their case at a forum in Missoula.

Campaign Beat
Campaign Beat: Buttigieg in Butte; Dark money mischief; Who's the spoiler? 

Campaign Beat

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2026 13:47


A rising Democratic star and possible presidential candidate gets a warm reception in Montana. Republican "dark money" groups take a keen interest in Montana's Democratic Senate primary, and those Senate candidates make their case at a forum in Missoula.

The Tara Show
Democrats MELTDOWN Over Redistricting Defeat

The Tara Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 11:26


Tara breaks down the political chaos erupting over redistricting battles as Democrats explode in anger after losing long-protected congressional advantages. The show dives into accusations of hypocrisy, debates over the Voting Rights Act, claims of activist court interference, and the growing fight over political power in southern states. PODCAST SUMMARY Today's show focuses on the explosive fallout from ongoing redistricting battles and what Tara describes as a full-scale Democrat “temper tantrum” inside state legislatures. Tara recounts hearing from lawmakers who spent hours trapped in legislative sessions listening to heated protests, accusations of racism, and procedural standoffs as debates over congressional district maps intensified. The conversation centers on whether congressional districts should be drawn strictly by population or whether race-based considerations should continue playing a role in map drawing. The episode examines the history of Voting Rights Act litigation, activist court rulings from the 1980s, and claims that Republicans in southern states were forced for decades to draw districts designed to elect Democrats. Tara argues that Democrats are furious because those legal protections are now being challenged or reversed. Tara and Lee also discuss accusations of hypocrisy involving heavily Democrat-controlled northern states that have few or no Republican congressional districts despite substantial Republican vote totals. The conversation touches on voter ID debates, black voter support trends, and comments from political figures including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Pete Buttigieg. The episode frames the current redistricting fight as part of a broader national battle over representation, election law, race, and political power. KEY TOPICS Redistricting battles in state legislatures Congressional district maps and representation Voting Rights Act debates Claims of activist court overreach Republican vs. Democrat districting strategies Voter ID controversies Black voter trends and party shifts Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez comments on southern states Pete Buttigieg questioned on district maps Political power struggles in Congress

The Rubin Report
Host Can't Stop Laughing at Republican's Perfect Kamala Joke

The Rubin Report

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2026 69:52


Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report" talks about Fox News' Peter Doocy busting out laughing live on-air when Senator John Kennedy gave his hilarious reaction to Kamala Harris advocating for Democrats to try to abolish the electoral college and pack the Supreme Court to give the Democratic Party more political power; CNN's Dana Bash pointing out Pete Buttigieg's hypocrisy live on-air about his outrage over Republican redistricting plans; the New York Times Lulu Garcia-Navarro looking visibly shocked by Graham Platner doubling down on supporting armed political violence to fight what he perceives as fascism; Zohran Mamdani trying to do damage control after Citadel CEO Ken Griffin responded to Mamdani's tax the rich stunt by pulling some of his investment plans for NYC and doubling down on Miami instead; the "Real Time with Bill Maher" crowd going eerily silent while Maher ripped into the Democratic Party for fanning the flames of antisemitism and the hatred of Israel; Elon Musk's viral reaction to the violent chants at the anti-Unite the Kingdom rally that called for Tommy Robinson to be murdered like Charlie Kirk; and much more. Join me for a LIVE Event with Governor Ron DeSantis, plus special appearances by Ben Shapiro, Jillian Michaels, and Adam Carolla on June 11th! Get Tickets Here: https://daverubin.com/events WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ Today's Sponsors: Prolon- Prolon's Fasting Mimicking Diet is a revolutionary, plant-based nutrition program that nourishes the body while keeping it in a fasting state. Prolon is offering 15% off their 5-day nutrition program for your post-holiday glow-up. Go to: http://ProlonLife.com/DAVE VanMan - Ditch the corporate chemicals and support your skin healing, made from ingredients so clean you could literally eat them. Go to http://vanman.shop/rubin and use code RUBIN for 15% off your first order.

State of the Union with Jake Tapper
Political Payback and Party Dynamics: Unpacking Trump's Influence

State of the Union with Jake Tapper

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2026 43:01


From gerrymandering to the future of our political landscape, former candidate Pete Buttigieg joins the conversation on the state of democracy. Tune in for insights on what lies ahead for both parties. Plus, is alien life among us, and are we ready to meet them face to face? Join Neil deGrasse Tyson as he explores the fascinating possibilities in his new book, discussed on State of the Union! Dive into the unknown and get the answers you're seeking. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Newsmax Daily with Rob Carson
Velvet Gloves, Iron Fists

The Newsmax Daily with Rob Carson

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2026 45:45


-Rob compares Donald Trump's China diplomacy style to “an iron fist inside a velvet glove,” proving once again that complimenting world leaders while quietly terrifying them is apparently an art form. -Pete Buttigieg gets caught being coached on how to sound like a normal human being around voters, turning what was supposed to be a relatable campaign stop into an accidental audition tape for “Most Artificial Politician Alive.”  -Georgia Lieutenant Governor Burt Jones joins Rob to discuss his Trump-endorsed campaign for governor, Georgia election integrity battles, and the possibility of Republicans gaining additional congressional seats after redistricting. Today's podcast is sponsored by : CHAPTER - If you're turning 65 or already on Medicare, call Chapter at 27-MEDICARE for the plan that suits you best. RELIEF FACTOR - You don't need to live with aches & pains! Reduce muscle & joint inflammation and live a pain-free life by visiting http://ReliefFactor.com  GHOSTBED - I used to think a mattress was just furniture, until I got my GhostBed! GhostBed is offering my audience their lowest prices of the season, plus an extra 10% off. Go to http://GhostBed.com/CARSON and use promo code CARSON ETHOS - Ethos makes getting life insurance fast and easy. Get your FREE quote today at http://Ethos.com/Carson BIRCH GOLD - Protect and grow your retirement savings with gold. Text ROB to 98 98 98 for your FREE information kit! To call in and speak with Rob Carson live on the show, dial 1-800-922-6680 between the hours of 12 Noon and 3:00 pm Eastern Time Monday through Friday… Musical parodies provided by Jim Gossett (http://patreon.com/JimGossettComedy) You can now WATCH and chat with The Rob Carson Show LIVE on Newsmax's social media channels (Facebook, X/Twitter, YouTube, Rumble) Listen to Newsmax LIVE and see our entire podcast lineup at http://Newsmax.com/Listen Make the switch to NEWSMAX today! Get your 15 day free trial of NEWSMAX+ at http://NewsmaxPlus.com Looking for NEWSMAX caps, tees, mugs & more? Check out the Newsmax merchandise shop at : http://nws.mx/shop Follow NEWSMAX on Social Media:  -Facebook: http://nws.mx/FB  -X/Twitter: http://nws.mx/twitter -Instagram: http://nws.mx/IG -YouTube: https://youtube.com/NewsmaxTV -Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/NewsmaxTV -TRUTH Social: https://truthsocial.com/@NEWSMAX -GETTR: https://gettr.com/user/newsmax -Threads: http://threads.net/@NEWSMAX  -Telegram: http://t.me/newsmax  -BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/newsmax.com -Parler: http://app.parler.com/newsmax Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Tying It Together with Tim Boyum
Can moderate Democrats take control of the party?

Tying It Together with Tim Boyum

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2026 34:04


On this week's episode, Tim talks about a group of center-left Democrats trying to make waves as partisanship continues to dominate the electorate. His guests are Debbie Cox Bultan, CEO of NewDEAL, and Canton Mayor Zeb Smathers. The national group held a conference in Raleigh and stopped by while in town. NewDEAL is a network of center-left elected leaders who are self-described pragmatists focusing on expanding opportunity and spurring growth. Alums of the group include Pete Buttigieg, Josh Shapiro and Stacey Abrams.

Meghan McCain Has Entered The Chat
California Chaos, Political Meltdown, And The Great American Road Trip

Meghan McCain Has Entered The Chat

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2026 75:52


Meghan McCain and Miranda Wilkins are joined by Rachel Campos-Duffy and Mo Kelly for a wide-ranging conversation on California politics, Los Angeles dysfunction, media narratives, and the growing frustration with both political parties. Rachel Campos-Duffy opens up about her family's cross-country road trip project celebrating America's 250th anniversary, her husband Sean Duffy's work as Transportation Secretary, and why she believes Pete Buttigieg left behind a transportation disaster. Plus, Mo Kelly breaks down why Spencer Pratt's surprising mayoral campaign is getting national attention, why Karen Bass is still politically viable despite criticism, and why Los Angeles voters may still stick with familiar leadership even as frustration grows. Also in this episode: • Virginia redistricting drama and gerrymandering fights • AOC and 2028 presidential speculation • California's homelessness crisis • Why national politics are reshaping local races • TMZ targeting politicians on vacation during the TSA mess • Grand Canyon family road trips and American nostalgia • Why Meghan says modern politics feels completely broken Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Trend with Rtlfaith
Did the Supreme Court Just Kill the Voting Rights Act?

The Trend with Rtlfaith

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2026 57:34


The Supreme Court just gutted Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act in Louisiana v. Callais, then broke its own 32-day procedural rule to enforce that ruling mid-election with over 100,000 Louisiana ballots already cast. Justice Jackson called the move "chaos" with "a strong political undercurrent." This episode connects the dots between Callais and the gerrymandering cascade now sweeping Indiana, Tennessee, Virginia, Alabama, and beyond, where MAGA Republicans are redrawing maps to win power they can't earn at the ballot box, and how California and Virginia tried referendums to fight back (only one succeeded). We then break down Trump's "deal or bomb" ultimatum to Iran and the one-page memo he claims is close to signing. The U.S. Navy is interdicting Iranian vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, oil prices have spiked since February, and the Iran war fuel spike is the through-line that just killed Spirit Airlines, which announced an orderly wind-down of operations on May 2 and eliminated 17,000 jobs. We unpack the political blame war (Bessent and Duffy point at Warren, Buttigieg, and the Biden DOJ; Warren and Stoller point at Trump's Iran war) and the actual antitrust question underneath: neo-Brandeisian theory versus the Chicago School consensus. In the Breakdown in the Public segment, we cover AI emotional manipulation and the rise of "AI psychosis," including the case of Soon Hourican, a man in his 50s in Northern Ireland whose Grok chatbot "Ani" convinced him he was being surveilled and led him to arm himself with a knife and a hammer. The BBC documented 14 similar cases across 6 countries. Jonathan Gavalas of Jupiter, Florida died by suicide after his Google Gemini chatbot claimed to be his wife. His family is suing Google. Bipartisan supermajorities (74 to 78 percent in the Human Statement national survey) want AI labels, safety testing, and accountability. Neither party is moving on it. Trump tried to deregulate AI through the One Big Beautiful Bill, then through executive order. Then we dig into the 2026 Ohio U.S. Senate race: Jon Husted versus Sherrod Brown, the cleanest test in the country for whether Ohio is genuinely red now or whether 2024 was a Trump-driven anomaly. We cover Brown's tailwinds (Trump's economic approval at 40 percent, the Callais fallout potentially energizing Democratic turnout), his headwinds (a smaller union-Democrat coalition, Ohio's redrawn map), and the First Energy / HB6 connections that may haunt Husted's campaign. Sherrod Brown, you have an open invite to come on the show. We close with three good news stories the mainstream media isn't covering enough: clean energy passing coal as the world's largest electricity source for the first time since 1919 (per Ember's 2025 review and the IEA's 2026 Global Energy Review), the UCL bowel cancer trial showing zero relapses after 33 months using pembrolizumab pre-surgery, and the North Atlantic right whale baby boom that proves conservation policy works when implemented seriously across borders. Tonight's through-line: the polls keep saying voters want guardrails. The people in power keep finding ways around them. From voting maps to AI rules to who gets prosecuted, this is the pattern we connect tonight. Host: Radell Lewis, Marine veteran, Ohio-based, host of Purple Political Breakdown Contact: thetrendgoldenfeet@gmail.com if you want to come on the show or have a productive conversation about politics Standard Resource Links & Recommendations The following organizations and platforms represent valuable resources for balanced political discourse and democratic participation: PODCAST NETWORK Check Out the Podcast Website: www.purplepoliticalbreakdown.com ALIVE Podcast Network: Check out the ALIVE Network where you can catch a lot of great podcasts like my own, led by amazing Black voices. Link: https://alivepodcastnetwork.com/ CONVERSATION PLATFORMS HeadOn: A platform for contentious yet productive conversations. It's a place for hosted and unguided conversations where you can grow a following and enhance your conversations with AI features. Link: https://app.headon.ai/ Living Room Conversations: Building bridges through meaningful dialogue across political divides. Link: https://livingroomconversations.org/ UNITY MOVEMENTS Us United: A movement for unity that challenges Americans to step out of their bubbles and connect across differences. Take the Unity Pledge, join monthly "30 For US" conversation calls, wear purple (the color of unity), and participate in National Unity Day every second Saturday in December. Their programs include the Sheriff Unity Network and Unity Seats at sports events, proving that shared values are stronger than our differences. Link: https://www.us-united.org/ BALANCED NEWS & INFORMATION OtherWeb: An AI-based platform that filters news without paywalls, clickbait, or junk, helping you access diverse, unbiased content. Link: https://otherweb.com/ VOTING REFORM & DEMOCRACY Equal Vote Coalition & STAR Voting: Advocating for voting methods that ensure every vote counts equally, eliminating wasted votes and strategic voting. Link: https://www.equal.vote/star Future is Now Coalition (FiNC): A grassroots movement working to restore democracy through transparency, accountability, and innovative technology while empowering citizens and transforming American political discourse. Link: https://futureis.org/ POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT Independent Center: Resources for independent political thinking and civic engagement. Link: https://www.independentcenter.org/ GET DAILY NEWS Text 844-406-INFO (844-406-4636) with code "purple" to receive quick, unbiased, factual news delivered to your phone every morning via Informed (https://informed.now) Check Out the Unfuck America Tour & National Ground Game: https://www.nationalgroundgame.com/ Check Out the CIVICS App to Know More About Your Politicians: https://www.civicpolitics.com ALL LINKS https://linktr.ee/purplepoliticalbreakdown The Purple Political Breakdown is committed to fostering productive political dialogue that transcends partisan divides. We believe in the power of conversation, balanced information, and democratic participation to build a stronger society. Our mission: "Political solutions without political bias." Subscribe, rate, and share if you believe in purple politics: where we find common ground in the middle! Also if you want to be a part of the community and the conversation make sure to Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/ptPAsZtHC9

CanadaPoli - Canadian Politics from a Canadian Point of View
2347 More Empty Rhetoric Does Not Solve Problems

CanadaPoli - Canadian Politics from a Canadian Point of View

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2026 21:35


Buttigieg meeting Freeland before Carney?Danielle Smith wants a carbon tax now?Pipeline coming next week says Smith,WHO says that countries have to listen to them,UFO files,Nate Erskin Smith loses liberal nomination,Obama's Logan Act Violations,Sign Up for the Full ShowLocals (daily video)Sample Showshttps://canadapoli2.locals.com/ Spotify https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/canadapoli/subscribePrivate Full podcast audio https://canadapoli.com/feed/canadapoliblue/Buy subscriptions here (daily video and audio podcast):https://canadapoli.cm/canadapoli-subscriptions/Youtubehttps://www.youtube.com/c/CanadaPoli/videosMe on Telegramhttps://t.me/realCanadaPoliMe on Rumblehttps://rumble.com/user/CanadaPoli Me on Odysseyhttps://odysee.com/@CanadaPoli:f Me on Bitchutehttps://www.bitchute.com/channel/l55JBxrgT3Hf/ Podcast RSShttps://anchor.fm/s/e57706d8/podcast/rsshttps://LinkRoll.co Submit a link. Discuss the link. No censorship. (reddit clone without the censorship

Isnt It Queer
2026-05-06 - No Problem? No Solution!

Isnt It Queer

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2026 58:05


Jonny and Heather dive into a series of headaches for the LGBTQ+ community, starting with the DOJ's investigation of 36 school districts in Illinois for teaching gender ideology. Connecting that story to many others in the news lately, they pursue the authoritarian tactic of manufacturing problems so that the supreme leader can provide solutions tat serve to consolidate power. They examine a host of recent stories impacting LGBTQ+ communities that are examples of unnecessary solutions for made up problems. 

Valuetainment
"Elizabeth Warren Is A DUMB Bunny" - Spirit Airlines SHUTS DOWN After Merger BLOCKED

Valuetainment

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 16:23


Patrick Bet-David and the panel torch Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, and Merrick Garland after Spirit Airlines shuts down, arguing Biden's DOJ killed a JetBlue merger that could have saved 15,000 jobs, lowered fares, and kept a real low‑cost competitor in the sky.

Verdict with Ted Cruz
Democrats Kill your Spirit—How Biden, Warren & Buttigieg Destroyed Spirit Air

Verdict with Ted Cruz

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 32:00 Transcription Available


Merger Blocked by Antitrust Action: JetBlue offered $3.8 billion to acquire Spirit in 2022. Shareholders, unions, and both companies supported the merger. The DOJ and Department of Transportation, urged by Elizabeth Warren and supported by Buttigieg and Biden, sued to stop it. A federal judge blocked the merger in January 2024. Consequences Claimed: Spirit declared bankruptcy and shut down, leading to: ~17,000 direct job losses Estimated 40,000+ indirect jobs affected Loss of service to dozens of smaller cities Reduced airline competition and higher fares on former Spirit routes (examples cited include increases of 15–66%). Critique of Antitrust Reasoning: Speakers argue antitrust law should protect consumers, not competitors. They claim the DOJ incorrectly defined the market as “ultra‑low‑cost airlines” instead of the broader airline market, making Spirit and JetBlue appear dominant when they were actually small players. They assert the decision strengthened the Big Four airlines (American, Delta, United, Southwest), which already control ~75–80% of the market. Rebuttal to Alternative Explanations: Democrats are criticized for blaming Spirit’s failure on fuel price increases or Trump-era policies. The speakers argue fuel price volatility affects all airlines and that Spirit would have been better positioned to withstand it with the merger funds. Internal Democratic Dissent: A Biden White House policy official publicly questioned whether blocking the merger was the right decision, though later softened the statement—used as evidence of internal doubts. Government Bailout Rejected: A proposed $500M government bailout (for 90% ownership) was discussed but rejected. The speakers strongly oppose government ownership of airlines, labeling it socialism and economically incompetent. Broader Ideological Argument: The collapse is framed as an example of government overreach, poor understanding of business, and ideological decision-making harming workers and consumers. The episode is used to argue that free‑market competition—not government control—is essential to lower prices and innovation. Please Hit Subscribe to this podcast Right Now. Also Please Subscribe to the 47 Morning Update with Ben Ferguson and The Ben Ferguson Show Podcast Wherever You get You're Podcasts. And don't forget to follow the show on Social Media so you never miss a moment! Thanks for Listening YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@VerdictwithTedCruz/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/verdictwithtedcruz X: https://x.com/tedcruz X: https://x.com/benfergusonshowYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@VerdictwithTedCruzSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Rubin Report
Bill Maher Stunned by Gavin Newsom Blaming Everyone but Himself For Cali's Problems

The Rubin Report

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 71:08


Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report" talks about Gavin Newsom's disastrous interview on "Real Time with Bill Maher" where Bill Maher pointed out all the failings of California including the high cost of living and high gas prices to his face; "60 Minutes" and Bill Maher exposing Gavin Newsom's massive failure and the wasting of billions of taxpayer dollars in trying to complete California's dream of building a high speed rail train; Elizabeth Warren and Pete Buttigieg having one of their most celebrated policy achievements, the blocking of the merger between JetBlue Airlines and Spirit Airlines, blow up in their faces after Spirit Airlines went bankrupt and shut down its operations effectively destroying 17,000 jobs and throwing thousands of customers into chaos; the "Real Time with Bill Maher" audience being shocked as Bill Maher insulted some of them directly for wishing that Donald Trump had died during Cole Allen's failed assassination attempt during the White House Correspondents Dinner; New York Times' Lulu Garcia-Navarro catching Tucker Carlson in a lie about implying that Donald Trump might be the antichrist; a Texas judge allowing a Muslim development to proceed after Texas governor Greg Abbott had told Fox News' "The Ingraham Angle" the real reason behind his shutting down of Epic City, the planned Muslim community in East Plano Texas led by Yasir Qadhi; and much more. Today's Sponsors: Superpower - Unlock your new health intelligence. 100+ biomarkers. Every year. Detect early signs of 1,000+ conditions. Use code RUBIN at checkout for $20 off your membership. Go to http://www.superpower.com #superpowerpod Just Thrive - Take control of their health with science-backed solutions you can trust. Get your health in check and save 20% on your first order. Go to: https://justthrivehealth.com/RUBIN

Pat Gray Unleashed
How Pete Buttigieg & Joe Biden Destroyed Spirit Airlines and 17,000 Jobs | 5/4/26

Pat Gray Unleashed

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 100:47


Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy just went off on the Biden administration and Pete Buttigieg for the shocking collapse of Spirit Airlines. Spirit Airlines officially shut down operations after 34 years, leaving passengers stranded and 17,000 workers without jobs. Duffy made it crystal clear on national TV: “Spirit tried to merge with JetBlue. The Joe Biden-Pete Buttigieg administration and DOJ tanked that deal. Immediately after that, they filed for bankruptcy.” This wasn't just bad luck — it was the predictable result of Biden-era policies that prioritized ideology over American jobs and affordable travel. While the Trump administration tried to step in with support, the damage from the previous four years was already done. We also cover: Senator John Fetterman's approval rating is NOT good. Why are conservatives attacking the LDS Church? NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman on moon base.  When will the SAVE America Act be passed? Gavin Newsom is suing Fox News. Republicans and conservatives have been warning about this for years — big government interference always hurts working Americans the most. Drop a

Red Eye Radio
05-04-26 Part One - A Day at the Races

Red Eye Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 76:06


In part one of Red Eye Radio with Gary McNamara and Eric Harley, ridden by Jose Ortiz, Golden Tempo navigated past 17 other horses around the final turn and made a hard charge down the stretch. With a crowd of more than 100,000 watching and roaring at Churchill Downs, Golden Tempo passed morning-line favorite Renegade -- ridden by Jose's brother Irad -- just before the wire to win by a neck at odds of 23-1. Also Trump scolds conservative media for elevating Bill Maher, 47% of Democrats still believe the Butler, PA assassination attempt was staged, Dems continue to blame California gas gouging on Iranian war, audio from Pete Buttigieg scoffing on taking votes from the electoral college, Dems maintain power by promoting hate, Jerry Seinfeld hates EVs and Spirit Airlines files bankruptcy leaving some 17,000 unemployed. For more talk on the issues that matter to you, listen on radio stations across America Monday-Friday 12am-5am CT (1am-6am ET and 10pm-3am PT), download the RED EYE RADIO SHOW app, asking your smart speaker, or listening at RedEyeRadioShow.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Mark Simone
Hour 1: We lost a broadcasting legend.

Mark Simone

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 36:52 Transcription Available


Former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani is turning the corner slightly after being hospitalized with a serious bout of pneumonia. Sad news for Yankees fans, legendary announcer John Sterling has died at 87. Big shakeup in the skies: Spirit Airlines has completely shut down. Mark believes that Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren were major players in the behind-the-scenes drama that led to Spirit's troubles. Mark takes your calls! Mark interviews Fox News contributor Liz Peek. They talk about how Spirit Airlines might've been saved if the JetBlue merger had gone through, and Liz doesn't hold back on her frustration with Mayor Mamdani; she says he's not doing his homework, especially on the rent freeze affecting thousands of New Yorkers. Tensions are still sky-high in the Strait of Hormuz as the war between the US and Iran drags on. Word is Iran's missile stockpile has only grown since fighting started back in February.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark Simone
FULL SHOW: Rudy Giuliani's health; Spirit Airlines has shut down.

Mark Simone

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 79:31


Former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani is turning the corner slightly after being hospitalized with a serious bout of pneumonia. Sad news for Yankees fans, legendary announcer John Sterling has died at 87. Big shakeup in the skies: Spirit Airlines has completely shut down. Mark believes that Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren were major players in the behind-the-scenes drama that led to Spirit's troubles. Mark interviews Fox News contributor Liz Peek. They talk about how Spirit Airlines might've been saved if the JetBlue merger had gone through, and Liz doesn't hold back on her frustration with Mayor Mamdani; she says he's not doing his homework, especially on the rent freeze affecting thousands of New Yorkers. Tensions are still sky-high in the Strait of Hormuz as the war between the US and Iran drags on. Word is Iran's missile stockpile has only grown since fighting started back in February. Over the weekend, Devil Wears Prada 2 pulled in around $78 million at the box office. No surprise, the buzz for this movie is huge right now! Mark shares some insider scoop on Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, what really goes on behind the scenes, and let's just say, there's some hypocrisy you'll want to hear about. We also get an update on assassin Cole Allen's motives for the White House Correspondents' Dinner shooting. And in breaking news, Iran has reportedly shot down a US ship in the Strait of Hormuz. Mark interviews author Ann Coulter. Mark interviews author Ann Coulter. They dive into Mayor Mamdani's latest plan to add more land on Park Avenue—a move that's got a lot of people worried about even worse traffic, despite the mayor's belief that making the area a bigger hotspot is good for the city. Ann also warns that a wealth tax could be on the horizon and says Mamdani's second year in office will be one to watch. Plus, she makes the case that cutting TSA funding could save the government billions.

Mark Simone
Hour 1: We lost a broadcasting legend.

Mark Simone

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 37:27


Former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani is turning the corner slightly after being hospitalized with a serious bout of pneumonia. Sad news for Yankees fans, legendary announcer John Sterling has died at 87. Big shakeup in the skies: Spirit Airlines has completely shut down. Mark believes that Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren were major players in the behind-the-scenes drama that led to Spirit's troubles. Mark takes your calls! Mark interviews Fox News contributor Liz Peek. They talk about how Spirit Airlines might've been saved if the JetBlue merger had gone through, and Liz doesn't hold back on her frustration with Mayor Mamdani; she says he's not doing his homework, especially on the rent freeze affecting thousands of New Yorkers. Tensions are still sky-high in the Strait of Hormuz as the war between the US and Iran drags on. Word is Iran's missile stockpile has only grown since fighting started back in February.

Mark Simone
FULL SHOW: Rudy Giuliani's health; Spirit Airlines has shut down.

Mark Simone

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 77:55 Transcription Available


Former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani is turning the corner slightly after being hospitalized with a serious bout of pneumonia. Sad news for Yankees fans, legendary announcer John Sterling has died at 87. Big shakeup in the skies: Spirit Airlines has completely shut down. Mark believes that Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren were major players in the behind-the-scenes drama that led to Spirit's troubles. Mark interviews Fox News contributor Liz Peek. They talk about how Spirit Airlines might've been saved if the JetBlue merger had gone through, and Liz doesn't hold back on her frustration with Mayor Mamdani; she says he's not doing his homework, especially on the rent freeze affecting thousands of New Yorkers. Tensions are still sky-high in the Strait of Hormuz as the war between the US and Iran drags on. Word is Iran's missile stockpile has only grown since fighting started back in February. Over the weekend, Devil Wears Prada 2 pulled in around $78 million at the box office. No surprise, the buzz for this movie is huge right now! Mark shares some insider scoop on Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, what really goes on behind the scenes, and let's just say, there's some hypocrisy you'll want to hear about. We also get an update on assassin Cole Allen's motives for the White House Correspondents' Dinner shooting. And in breaking news, Iran has reportedly shot down a US ship in the Strait of Hormuz. Mark interviews author Ann Coulter. Mark interviews author Ann Coulter. They dive into Mayor Mamdani's latest plan to add more land on Park Avenue—a move that's got a lot of people worried about even worse traffic, despite the mayor's belief that making the area a bigger hotspot is good for the city. Ann also warns that a wealth tax could be on the horizon and says Mamdani's second year in office will be one to watch. Plus, she makes the case that cutting TSA funding could save the government billions.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark Simone
Mark's 10am Monologue.

Mark Simone

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 15:19


Former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani is turning the corner slightly after being hospitalized with a serious bout of pneumonia. Sad news for Yankees fans, legendary announcer John Sterling has died at 87. Big shakeup in the skies: Spirit Airlines has completely shut down. Mark believes that Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren were major players in the behind-the-scenes drama that led to Spirit's troubles.

Mark Simone
Mark's 10am Monologue.

Mark Simone

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 15:19 Transcription Available


Former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani is turning the corner slightly after being hospitalized with a serious bout of pneumonia. Sad news for Yankees fans, legendary announcer John Sterling has died at 87. Big shakeup in the skies: Spirit Airlines has completely shut down. Mark believes that Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren were major players in the behind-the-scenes drama that led to Spirit's troubles.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Pete Kaliner Show
Nuked by YouTube; Spirit killed | Hour 1

The Pete Kaliner Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 30:33 Transcription Available


This episode is presented by Create A Video – My YouTube channel was terminated this weekend with no evidence of any violations. It turns out, I am part of a large group of content creators who had their channels nuked. And nobody can explain why. Plus, after the Biden Administration blocked  a merger between Spirit and JetBlue airlines, one of the low-cost carriers went belly-up and closed down this weekend.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-kaliner-show--6946691/support.Subscribe to the podcast All the links to Pete's Prep are free!Get exclusive content here!Media Bias Check: GroundNews promo code!Advertising and Booking inquiries: Pete@ThePeteKalinerShow.com  

Normal World
Ep 17 | Did the Democrats KILL Spirit Airline's Spirit??

Normal World

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 44:51


Stu Burguiere and Dave Landau react to the news that Spirit Airlines is shutting down allegedly over the price of fuel. But what part did leftists like Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Pete Buttigieg play back in the Biden administration days that could have contributed? Then, a look at this weekend's roller-coaster ride of a story with the potentially fraudulent J.P. Morgan sex slave story. And a new dark development in the Palisades Fire saga in California. TODAY'S SPONSORS   FAST GROWING TREES Listeners of this show get 20% off their first purchase when using the code STUANDDAVE at checkout at http://www.fastgrowingtrees.com and right now, Fast Growing Trees has great deals on Spring planting essentials; up to half off on select plants! Offer is valid for a limited time; terms and conditions may apply.   REAL ESTATE AGENTS I TRUST For more information, please visit http://www.realestateagentsitrust.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Morning Xtra
The Morning Xtra Hour 3 (5-4-26)

The Morning Xtra

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 44:04


The Morning Xtra with Tug and Los delivers conservative talk on the biggest political, cultural, and news stories of the day. Smart analysis, unapologetic opinions, and real conversations every weekday morning. Every weekday from 6a to 10a! The 8 o'clock hour is brought to you by Central Heating & Air, your Atlanta Carrier Experts. 770-GET-HEAT, Centralheat.com First thing to know: It’s called Election Day for a reason Storytime with Los: What if we can show you the Left’s BS narrative through history The evidence continues to show the left is a small portion of the US Atlanta's ONLY All Conservative News & Talk Station.: https://www.xtra1063.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Alan Sanders Show
Dem Double Standards, Warren and Buttigieg Killed Spirit Airlines, Project Freedom | Ep. 085

The Alan Sanders Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 88:00


Dem Double Standards on full display with Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren having locked the JetBlue-Spirit merger, effectively killing Spirit Airlines and destroying over 17,000 jobs, the party of the "little guy" and of "kindness" rally behinds Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner despite his Nazi SS-style tattoo and controversial baggage. We also dive into the MN fraud investigation implications, President Trumps Project Freedom to escort ships through the Hormuz Straight and good news for cattle ranchers from the Ag Secretary. Enjoy another packed and loaded episode of The Alan Sanders Show, bringing you the news you won't get from the propaganda wing of the Democrat Party. Please take a moment to rate and review the show and then share the episode on social media. You can find me on Facebook, X, Instagram, GETTR, TRUTH Social, TikTok, YouTube and Rumble by searching for The Alan Sanders Show. And, consider becoming a sponsor of the show by visiting my Patreon page!

Reactionary Minds with Aaron Ross Powell
Mamdani's 100-Plus Days: Abundance Liberal or Democratic Socialist? A Discussion

Reactionary Minds with Aaron Ross Powell

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 64:33


Our latest installment of The UnPopulist Live took place on Friday, April 24, when senior editor Berny Belvedere sat down with Center for New Liberalism co-founder Jeremiah Johnson and New York City New Liberals political director Tibita Kaneene to discuss NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani's first 100-plus days in office.What follows is the full video and transcript (lightly edited for flow and clarity) of the conversation. We hope you enjoy.Berny Belvedere: Thank you so much for joining us. I'm Berny Belvedere, senior editor at The UnPopulist. I'm joined by Jeremiah Johnson of the Center for New Liberalism. Jeremiah, tell us about your newsletter.Jeremiah Johnson: I write a blog called Infinite Scroll where I talk about the politics of the social internet—the ways that social media is changing culture and politics and how we discuss things. It's a little bit unserious nonsense, and a little bit very serious stuff.Belvedere: As all good cultural commentary is, so you're within the acceptable range. Tibita, why don't you introduce yourself a little bit?Tibita Kaneene: Hi, I'm Tibita Kaneene. I'm the political director of the New York City chapter of the Center for New Liberalism. Belvedere: The topic today is New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani. As liberals, we're [naturally] interested in how he's doing as mayor. I was hoping we could start with something that Mamdani himself said at an event marking his 100 days in office, which was about 10 days ago. I have a quote from Mamdani that sets up the first question I want to think about together with you—on this issue of democratic socialism versus other types of liberalism out there today, like an abundance variant or even more mainstream liberalism.So here are Mamdani's own words: “On January 1st, I told New Yorkers that City Hall would hold a singular purpose—to make this city belong to more of its people than it did the day before. For 102 days, we have endeavored to do exactly that.” And he cited achievements that he thinks fulfill that claim, such as the opening of new childcare centers and buses running faster. After he did that, he said: “That is the change that government can deliver.” And this is the critical part: “It's the change that democratic socialism can deliver.” He said: “I was elected as a democratic socialist and I will govern as a democratic socialist.”Sen. Bernie Sanders, whom Mamdani brought in for that 100-day event, said: “I have been on platforms with hundreds and hundreds of mayors and all kinds of public officials. This is the first time I've ever been introduced by someone who talked proudly about democratic socialism.”I want to start on this theme. Thoughts?Kaneene: I think it's interesting that the two accomplishments he highlighted were delivering actual positive change, abundance type change. More schools, more seats in preschool—the whole idea of abundance is that we should have more good things, and that government should be functional and competent. And then the buses operating better: more and better transit is a pretty fundamental abundance issue. Belvedere: Just to follow up on that point: he promised both faster and free busing, and he's been able to deliver on one of the two—on “faster,” but not “free.”Kaneene: Yeah. There's this idea going around: “affordability in the front, abundance in the back.” Affordability is a very popular campaign issue and idea, but it's also an empirical goal. So once that's established, to deliver on it you have to focus on consequences as opposed to ideological or rules-based things. You have to actually make the rent cheaper. [It's not enough] to merely enact policies that can be seen as pro-tenant and anti-landlord—they have to have the effect of making housing better, cheaper, more plentiful. Now that he's in office, he has to do that. Democratic socialism is a broad idea, but when it gets down to brass tacks and you're an executive, then you have to actually do things—appoint competent people and enact policies that actually have results. I think that's what his challenge is, and what he's doing for the most part.Johnson: The grand rhetorical gestures are what they are, and he has a point of view on how he views the world. I am not a socialist, but if you are going to tell me that I'm going to have a socialist mayor, probably the variant that I would want is what has sometimes been called sewer socialism. This comes from Milwaukee. Generations ago, they had a couple of mayors who called themselves socialist, but rather than focusing on revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat, they really focused on civic governance. How do we make the city work better? How do we provide public infrastructure? How do we make the sewers operate without overflowing? And by solving practical problems, they maintained their popularity.That is what I see Mamdani doing, at least in the first 100 days. He's not been all that focused on the big rhetorical flourishes, the big ideological ideas. He'll talk about them if he's asked. He'll mention it in a speech. But if you're in New York and you see what's actually happening and you see the things he's doing on the ground, a lot of it is just more like: “We've got a big sidewalk shed problem and I'm going to tackle it.” Or we had a big multi-week blizzard here in New York and he had a campaign about shoveling the snow faster than it's ever been shoveled before. Just competent, good governance stuff.I think that's what's allowed him to maintain his popularity thus far. The question is, as he moves deeper into his term, past the first 100 days, as he starts to actually focus more and more on the grand ideological projects, the publicly owned grocery stores, the free buses, all these big ideas that he has—are those going to work as well as the more basic stuff has worked? Because no matter what you call it, everybody likes it when city government functions efficiently. What comes after that is not quite as clear.Belvedere: I think a fair assessment of Mamdani would have to include that he is taking a few shots here—not just the kinds of things that might be dismissed as [Band-Aids]. They've attempted to put a plan in place for free childcare, and they're extending that to younger and younger ages—for the first time, two-year-olds are in play for getting free childcare. That's not a small thing. That's not like filling a pothole. But he is including enough of that other stuff that makes me think there's going to be a significant element of incrementalist-style change that he's going to produce, and then there will be a battle about what is driving that—is some kind of democratic socialist vision driving it, or is this mainstream liberalism or abundance liberalism dressed up as something else?“There's this idea going around: ‘affordability in the front, abundance in the back.' Affordability is a very popular campaign issue and idea, but it's also an empirical goal. So once that's established, to deliver on it you have to focus on consequences as opposed to ideological or rules-based things. You have to actually make the rent cheaper. [It's not enough] to merely enact policies that can be seen as pro-tenant and anti-landlord—they have to have the effect of making housing better, cheaper, more plentiful. Now that he's in office, he has to do that. Democratic socialism is a broad idea, but when it gets down to brass tacks and you're an executive, then you have to actually do things—appoint competent people and enact policies that actually have results.” — Tibita KaneeneI think all of us invested in the wider Mamdani discourse have to keep a couple of things in mind at all times. First—and this is the thing from which all other evaluative mistakes about Mamdani flow—you have to know that he is committed to the advancement of democratic socialism. It's not just something he's flirting with, it's not something incidental. Time and again, he brings this up. Now, his actions might be different, but we're just talking about how he's casting his own story and the story of his government.Every politician at this level is capable of downplaying philosophical influences. They know how to make passing nods to their past associations or affiliations while simultaneously creating distance from those views now. They all know how to do that. Mamdani could easily, if he wanted, tell a compelling story about how the ideology was critical to his formation and that he will keep with him the good parts—kind of like Obama after the Reverend Wright situation—but that he owes the people of New York a commitment to their well-being, not a commitment to a political program. Or he could say that what matters are results, not labels. There are a thousand ways for a politician to put a philosophical influence in the passenger seat, the rear seat, or even outside the car entirely. But Mamdani is fully leaning in rhetorically to the advancement of democratic socialism. So the idea that it was empty campaign rhetoric, and that he would, once in office, pivot to a rhetorical downplaying of democratic socialism's influence on his decision-making—that idea should at this point be put to bed.When we think about that, the second thing naturally comes up about Mamdani, especially for those of us who really want to analyze him correctly. There's a lot of people out there who weaponize him as a prop in their broader culture war takes. But for those of us doing our best to give his mayorship a good-faith assessment—we have to focus on the things that he's doing, not on the story he's telling about the things that he's doing. We have to not worry so much about socialism as a term. What he does matters more than what he says. That's not a grand philosophical conclusion, but I think it has particular application to Mamdani in one extra way. Given that he's rhetorically committed to advancing democratic socialism, the invocations of it will continue—those won't go away. But here's the really interesting thing: he'll find ways to frame his actions and policies—even ones that aren't exclusively democratic socialist—as though socialism is the thing driving them.Johnson: Well, yeah, this is what happens when you win an election and you're a young, popular guy and you have a very good social media team—you get to set the terms of the debate. You get to set the framing through which you are viewed. And that's how things operate in the early days. But in the long run, it's hard to hide from the results. Whether you want to or not, four years from now—three and a half, I guess—he's going to be running for reelection. People are going to be asking: “Did my rent actually go down? Did groceries get less expensive? Is the city well run?”The free childcare thing, right now, is just a very limited pilot—it's like 2,000 seats. They have plans to expand it to the whole city, but for now it's very limited. The benefit of popularity is that it gives you a little bit of a leash. It lets you kick your own team to some extent. You can betray the cause a little bit and they'll forgive you. But ultimately, you do have to succeed. You do have to actually make things better. And that's the open question: Is there going to be enough funding to actually make free childcare a thing city-wide? Or is it going to remain a limited pilot?Belvedere: I agree—it's empirically going to be borne out whether he can achieve the things [he's promised]. He'll need to. We'll see in the data whether he's succeeding. But this actually happens more subtly than just, “let's check to see if the rents have gone down.” Think about the term you brought up—”sewer socialism.” That is a subtle way for him to retain the democratic socialist mold even though he's talking about things that mayors from totally different political persuasions would be doing also.Years ago, when Pete Buttigieg was first emerging as a candidate for [national political office], he went on Ezra Klein's podcast. Klein gave him a chance to talk about what he was proud of accomplishing as mayor. Buttigieg said: “filling potholes.” He expressed how it can seem silly and mundane, but that it makes people's lives materially better. He was giving an incrementalist pitch for what he was doing. If Mamdani is doing the same things, but leaning into the frame that instead encompasses all of that under democratic socialism—even when a lot of the policies are the kinds of things that candidates from other persuasions do—that's why I'm saying it's not so much the words or how he labels what he's doing but the actual things he's doing that matters.Johnson: What's interesting about that is this is very different from how democratic socialism normally operates in the United States. Because the median person who is a democratic socialist and is in a position of public power is a member of Congress. We don't have a lot of extremely far-left, explicitly socialist mayors, but we do have a lot of the Squad [in D.C.]—your AOC, your Bernie Sanders, that group of people. And the incentives when you are in Congress are frankly to just simply be as extreme as you'd like. You're in a deep blue district, probably D+70, and so you just need to be as pure and say as many outlandish things as you want to. There's no punishment for any of that.But being an executive is different. We're already seeing this with the budget hole that New York City faces. Mamdani has a budget hole that he constitutionally has to fix. New York City cannot run deficits. So he has to fix that, and there's a limited number of ways he can do it. He can't just pick the policy he wants. There are state laws about which taxes can be raised and which cannot. So he needs the cooperation of the governor and the legislature if he wants to do certain things.When he made a video about, “well, we're going to increase property taxes on second houses,” he made sure to highlight a particular person's $200 million mansion. But now that guy is upset that he got singled out and is saying, “maybe I'm going to cancel my $6 billion planned center in New York and take it somewhere else.” Actions have consequences when you are an executive in a way that they very much do not when you are a legislator. So that's something to watch—he's going to face a lot more constraints than are typical for his kind of politician.Kaneene: Yeah, that's true. I think we've seen him be very practical on policy [issues]—the biggest example would be the SEQRA reform at the state level that's been proposed by Kathy Hochul. He supported her version. If you look at it relative to other U.S. states, it's one of the best environmental review reform bills—better than California's, for example.Belvedere: What is SEQRA?Kaneene: It's the State Environmental Quality Review Act. It's an environmental review required for any project, be it housing or energy, and it generally slows things down a lot. Its purview extends far beyond things that you and I might describe as environmental, and it's a huge source of red tape. The state legislature was trying to attach a prevailing wage requirement to that bill, which would have made building housing particularly expensive. Mamdani did not support that. Carl Heastie, who's the assembly speaker, is not a DSA person—he's to the right of Mamdani. You could see a world where Mamdani would attach to that proposal in opposition to Gov. Hochul, but he did not. And it worked: just yesterday, the State Assembly removed the prevailing wage, and that battle has been won. So SEQRA will probably go through now with no prevailing wage.“Some of this is messaging strategy. Mamdani comes from a family in the arts. His mom is a professional filmmaker. His videos are very well produced. He understands clipping culture—what really matters is not the event itself, it's the 20-second clip that comes out of it that will get played a million times on social media. Part of it is just the messaging strategy itself. But I also think—look at what Mamdani doesn't do. He doesn't dress weird, he doesn't try to do memes. His accounts never post memes. He's never dressing in funny outfits. He's not cursing. He's well-dressed and presentable and optimistic and he talks like he wants to change things. I think there's an impulse among middle-aged, moderate liberals sometimes to be like, ‘To chase the kids, we've got to do the memes. Someone get me a 20-year-old who knows memes for my internet account.' And it's just very cringe-worthy. It's terrible. What people respond to is when you believe what you're saying.” — Jeremiah JohnsonAnother thing—shortly after the election, a DSA candidate named Chi Ossé announced that he was going to take on Hakeem Jeffries, who's the Democratic leader in the House, in a primary challenge. And Mamdani not only declined to endorse—he publicly said, “You should not run.” He went to a DSA meeting and made a speech saying, “We should not endorse Ossé.” And Ossé actually dropped out. So that is him going to bat, not for a DSA person, but for a centrist Democratic leader. He's done very practical things both on the politics and on the broad policy side that I would say deviate from purely ideological DSA framing.Johnson: I want to give the two possible paths forward if you are Mamdani, speaking in broad generalities. I think what a successful Mamdani mayorship looks like is: he essentially uses his popularity to kick in the teeth of certain special interests. Political popularity lets you do things that piss off your own side, and they'll forgive you for it. If Mamdani wants to take on certain union requirements—New York has hundreds of regulations about when you have to use union labor, and it drives up costs and there's a lot of bureaucracy around it—if he wanted to take some of that on, the left would forgive him because he's so charismatic and popular among his base, and it would lower costs. Whether it's the environmental laws that Tibita is talking about, or unions, or getting rid of the community board veto that makes it so hard to build housing—using his popularity to kill off some progressive sacred cows could let him get a lot accomplished.The other thing that could happen is that he falls into the “everything bagel” paradigm—where, “I want to maintain my popularity, so I'm not going to try to piss off anybody in my coalition. I'll give the environmentalists all the environmental regulations they want, I'll give the unions everything they want, I'll give this group and that group” … until you end up in the same place the Biden administration ended up. They passed a lot of really ambitious legislation without actually being able to accomplish any of it because of this thicket of red tape, this kind of anti-abundance approach. There's a middle ground in between, but those are the two paths I see in terms of how he actually uses and leverages his current popularity. It's an open question. It's still early days.Belvedere: So, Tibita, I wanted to bring up the piece that you wrote for us a while back, where you did a profile of Mamdani.What I thought was brilliant about that piece—and I hadn't seen it anywhere else—was that you took the abundance liberalism frame, assessed his democratic socialist tendencies and some early manifestations of what that could look like, looked at some of his projected hiring, and assessed what his mayorship was trending toward. I wanted to see if you had a follow-up to your own pre-Mamdani-in-office assessment now that he's governing. The title was: “Will Mamdani Govern More as a Democratic Socialist or as an Abundance Liberal?” And the subtitle was: “His policy evolution and the team he's assembling suggests that he could be moving in a market-friendly direction.” What do you think about that now?Kaneene: Sure. So that piece came out three days before the election. On election day, Mamdani came out in support of the pro-housing initiatives on the ballot. Those were very abundance-oriented. We already thought he supported them, but that was good confirmation. Then his first deputy mayor, Fuleihan, is just a very experienced, very competent person to run the city. He's not ideological—he's competent, has experience under a variety of past administrations; he's older, senior, knows a lot of people, and just helps get things done. Would be a good deputy mayor for a Democrat of a variety of political stripes. His Deputy Mayor for Housing, Leila Bozorg, is just an amazing person. She was Deputy Commissioner of HPD. Everyone there who I know thinks she's amazing. The most prominent DSA person would be Cea Weaver—she's a longtime tenant advocate. But there's really not a super ideological DSA person in the senior executive team.Then I mentioned some of the things he's done from a policy standpoint. On the rent freeze—since that piece came out, he's reconciled somewhat with the guidelines board. They're voting on May 7. They're probably going to freeze it for a year. But he has had to come up with ways to offset the rent freeze by lowering costs for landlords. He looked at the math, he has good advisors around him, and so for the first year he's going to provide some relief on insurance costs. Affordability in the front, but abundance in the back in the sense that he has to make the math work. He can't actually force landlords to lose money because many of these buildings are already underwater. What would happen is we'd just lose supply because these buildings would fail to operate.Belvedere: Let me ask you about that, because “abundance in the back”—abundance is very far in the back there. I don't know many YIMBY advocates who on this point would say the answer is to freeze rent.Kaneene: Yeah, I mean—among his housing policies, it's the most problematic. That's why I focused on it in the piece. It's a price control, which reduces supply, which is counterproductive for trying to increase housing supply and thereby reduce the price of housing. Now, he has done some other positive supply-side things. For example, the ELURP—the Expedited Land Use Review Procedure—he's actually used that process to approve a housing development in the Bronx that was previously blocked by Vicky Paladino, the only MAGA city council member who, prior to the ballot initiatives, was able through member deference to unilaterally block development in her district. She even made a speech saying, “before, I blocked it; now because of this expedited process, I'm not able to block it.” So she's letting it happen. So that's a victory. He was able to green-light new housing supply within the first few months based on a new law that he has shown no shyness in using.There are a bunch of other projects. There's one in my community board district, the Bloomingdale Library, where they put out an RFP for a private developer to come in, build a new library and build a bunch of housing—mainly market rate with some affordable housing built in—at no cost to the city. He also has the Sunnyside Yards, a project in Queens above a rail yard that should produce over 12,000 homes. He famously went to see Trump at the White House and convinced him to sign on.Belvedere: I want to get to his relationship with Trump in a second. But first, you've given us good information about how Mamdani is doing on the housing front, and you've mentioned some things you wish he'd do differently. Let's move on to some of his food policies for a second. He had the food vendor reforms, and then the grocery store stuff. He wants essentially a publicly run store—one per borough?Kaneene: Yeah, one per borough.Belvedere: Maybe that's an incremental approach where he wants more over time, but the plan is for one per borough for now. Some essential goods would be at a significant discount, and not necessarily all products. The rest would be at normal price. Thoughts?Johnson: Yeah, I think this has the potential to quietly undermine … and none of this has broken ground yet, none of this is happening as of right now, but there's a plan, and the details of the plan do not fill me with confidence. What you need to know is that grocery stores, by their nature, are a very competitive, very low-margin business. This is already a fiercely competitive field. It's very hard to make money in it. And so anybody with any sort of rational expectation here should expect the publicly owned grocery stores to lose a lot of money, because they're going to be poorly run relative to traditional private grocery stores. And maybe you just don't care—maybe you're like, “I don't care if they lose money because I just value having a public grocery store.” But this is one of those things where it really easily could turn into that second scenario I talked about: he makes sure to give unions a lot of giveaways when he's building this type of grocery store, the actual building of the thing takes twice as long as we thought and twice as much money because of all the rules we had to follow.“I think there is moral clarity. I don't think there's been any moral compromise. I think that [Mamdani] can say, ‘Trump, I want you to pay for this housing development in Queens,' and morally there's been no compromise at all. … he still says Trump is a fascist. He still speaks out against a lot of his policies. I don't think there's been any moral compromise. I think he's like a moral beacon in a time where we don't really have any kind of moral leadership in the executive branch in Washington.” — Tibita KaneeneHe's already talking about the one they want for Manhattan. They've picked out a site. It's going to be something like three years and an obscene amount of money—far more money than it should take. Thirty million dollars to build one grocery store, which is far above what it would cost a private actor. And on top of that, the original justification for this whole thing was that there are food deserts in the city. Where he's chosen to build it is not a food desert. There's like five grocery stores within a 10-minute walk of this place.Belvedere: He talks about people being priced out of essential goods. And so he would need to substantiate that in a way that justifies this kind of cost and disruption.Johnson: We have tools to address that. If people can't afford food, that's why SNAP exists, that's why food stamps exist. Giving people money is such an easier solution than trying to build an entire public-sector grocery store that is going to be terribly run. Every time anything happens at that grocery store, the media is going to pounce on it. There's going to be shoplifting. If Mamdani lets them shoplift, it turns into a national story. If he has them arrested, also a story—that pisses off the left. There are landmines all over this, and it seems to me like he's going to end up stepping on some of them. There's going to be needless scandals about how they were built, which contractors got cushy deals. If you have a limited amount of political capital, one grocery store per borough is meaningless. It doesn't do anything. Why would you waste your time on this?Belvedere: And what you were saying, when you called food assistance just the easier option—not only is it the easier option, but it's the option where there is the least amount of state intervention required to achieve the eventual goal of getting people these goods. You don't have to have a state-run market—you can give people the tool that they use to then exchange at that market. It's a more back-end kind of assistance. But it also, as you were saying, allows you to focus on a whole lot of other things you said that you wanted to do for the city, rather than engaging in something where, yes, you're connecting a campaign promise to an actual thing that you're doing—there's consistency there, you can win from that—but the potential pitfalls you noted could really be an albatross. And as a different kind of objection to just “easier”: as liberals, we want to do the least government-involved version that we can whenever we can.Kaneene: I'm a little more sanguine about it. I'm agnostic about whether we should have a state grocery store or not. The main thing for me is I don't think it's going to provide any savings, for the reasons Jeremiah said—they're low-margin businesses. This one is a 17-minute walk from a Costco. You're not going to beat the ability to use your SNAP card and order from Amazon. All that being said, this was a campaign promise he focused on. I think during the campaign he realized that these stores are not going to actually be able to provide cheaper food without the city simply taking a big loss—and that's why he kept repeating that it's going to be one per borough, it's going to be a pilot. So I think it's something that he needs to do. He'll struggle to break even, he'll do his five, and the positive side is it will actually prove that these grocery store chains, whatever you might think about them, are operating pretty efficiently. And we might have reasons to hate Amazon, rightly or wrongly, but that's actually the cheapest food you can get. So I don't think it's as terrible as maybe Jeremiah thinks.But I do share the concern of it becoming a bigger issue, where he says now we're going to have publicly owned gas stations. I don't think there's any risk of that. I would bet money there's not going to be more than five. There might not even be five.Johnson: And my thing is more just—look, this is not going to sink the city, the fact that we try this experiment with five grocery stores. This city of nine million people will be fine. But it's one of those things that if I were him, if I put myself in his shoes trying to accomplish his goals, I would not want to waste my time on this, because there are just landmines everywhere. You're going to get caught up in some extremely stupid controversy—some worker at the store is going to complain that their boss mistreated them. And all of a sudden, it becomes DEFCON 5 because you're a socialist and how can you not side with the workers? There are so many things like that that have the potential to sap away your political capital. Why would you want to spend your political capital on something that frankly does not matter? It will not make food more affordable for nine million New Yorkers. It will be a cute little thing for like a couple hundred people who live near it. Why are you wasting your time on it?Kaneene: The base wants it. So he has to—while he's doing all the efficient and effective things that we want him to do, he does have to maintain his base. There are a lot of people who, if you ask them—casual people who don't follow politics—“name three things that Mamdani says he's going to do,” they would say: freeze the rent, fast and free buses, and grocery stores. They might not know anything else about him.Belvedere: And there's a listener who just chimed in and said: “I thought the idea was to bring fresh food to food deserts, not replace grocery stores.” That tees off a question about Mamdani that we'll find out as his mayorship continues: is this incrementalist approach—this sewer socialism, now recast in a positive light as something worth doing, this more bite-sized approach to reform—is it a beginning point to a far broader vision for how things need to be organized and done? Or is it the terminal point, where he's okay with one per borough?I think that question goes to how we interpret these actions. Are they a kind of red carpet for a farther-reaching democratic socialist reconfiguration? Or something you're just sprinkling in? Some people fear that it's the prelude to a far greater push. The way they're doing childcare is in that kind of phased, gradual way—by this year we're going to hit this amount of two-year-olds, then eventually we're going to cover down to six-week-old children, etc. So are we fine with the grocery stores because of their limited nature? If they were a prelude to a greater push, would people worry about them a little more?Johnson: Well, I'm sure there are some people out there who have that view, that Mamdani is doing this and we're going to build on it, it's going to be more and more of this kind of thing until we finally reach utopia. But reality has a way of smacking you in the face. The grocery stores are not going to be very successful, and therefore you won't get many more of them. The childcare is nice right now as a pilot for just 2,000 kids, but it's also very expensive even for just 2,000 kids—the price tag is well over a billion dollars. Somebody's going to have to pay for that, and it's not going to be the city. The city absolutely does not have that money. So it has to be the state.Belvedere: Can I tell you what he said? You evaluate it—you and Tibita. What do you think about this promise? He said: if you make less than a million dollars, you don't have to worry about any further taxes. And if the tax burden doesn't increase on people making fewer than a million dollars per year, that's something that many New Yorkers will find palatable.Johnson: Well, but it's also nonsense. Like—reality will slap you upside the head. This is the thing that Democrats have been doing that pisses me off, frankly. Mamdani says it's up to a million dollars. Cory Booker is trying to introduce some bill in Congress: if you make less than $120,000, you shouldn't have to pay income taxes. Everybody's saying no tax on tips, no tax on pet products, no tax on Social Security, no tax for the elderly, no tax on property. Everybody wants to be the anti-tax party, and say only millionaires and billionaires should ever have to pay a tax of any kind.Look, I'm not on the far left, but if you want to have a welfare state, if that's a thing you desire out of your government, the middle class has to pay taxes. There is no way to make the math work, that you can just tax billionaires exclusively and have this rich, lush, Scandinavian-style social democracy. It does not work. Reality will kick you in the face. You're going to eventually have to break your promises or deal with the reality that you can't deliver. Some of this stuff is fantasy land, and that's where it ultimately will come down.Kaneene: Yeah, I mean—that's the main bulwark against any expectation or fear of him really bringing on real European-style socialism, is that he's not willing to tax the middle class. And that's the real reason we don't have to expect—or worry, to put it neutrally—that we'll have any such program in the United States, because a middle-class tax increase is just politically untenable.“This is what happens when you win an election and you're a young, popular guy and you have a very good social media team—you get to set the terms of the debate. You get to set the framing through which you are viewed. And that's how things operate in the early days. But in the long run, it's hard to hide from the results. Whether you want to or not, four years from now—three and a half, I guess—he's going to be running for reelection. People are going to be asking: ‘Did my rent actually go down? Did groceries get less expensive? Is the city well run?'” — Jeremiah JohnsonBut to go back to the idea of the childcare pilot—actually, if you look at it, already the numbers of new seats are behind the ramp-up he had said he was going to do. And if you look at the budget, he's not budgeting for more money for pre-K seats. There's no more money. He's not increased the money coming from the state. And other examples—like the city FHEPS, which are basically housing vouchers—during the campaign he said he would support a lawsuit to increase housing vouchers, a classic demand subsidy which, as we know, is not good for increasing housing supply or lowering prices. But he came into office and now he's not going to increase housing subsidies. Again, the reality presented itself and he's made a choice. There are things he has to continue with as pilot programs, as ideological statements, that he's not going to bust the budget for or increase taxes on the middle class for. He's at least being advised correctly that even on taxing the wealthy, there's a maximum point of revenue—there's a point beyond which if you increase the marginal tax rate, you actually bring in less money. Taxing the rich has an actual objective limit, which he has to take into account because he cannot run a budget deficit at the city level.Belvedere: I want to ask about his relationship with Trump, but in the form of a thought experiment, to put the point provocatively.Imagine we're all sitting around 30 years from now talking about this era in politics, and we're talking to people who didn't live through it, telling them about the world-historical awfulness of Trump, and threat that he was—the would-be authoritarian who did more than any other president in our annals to degrade our institutions and veer us off a liberal democratic path, even in a fascist direction. Biden famously said “semi-fascist,” some people have moved beyond that [and have dropped the qualifier]. This is the kind of figure we're talking about. The man who defied federal judges to deport hundreds of people to foreign gulags. And they're now flipping through images and footage from this era and they see Mamdani in photos with Trump. They see and hear him in interviews, maybe downplaying his awfulness. He's had a recent interview where he said he has a “productive relationship” with Trump. Trump threatened to deport Mamdani—a U.S. citizen. What do you think about his stance toward Trump? Is there any worry there? Is it refreshing that he's able to just work with him despite his awfulness? I have some issues with the way he's approached the Trump relationship. What do you guys think?Johnson: Yeah—again, this is something I've said several times here, but the purpose of popularity is that it lets you kind of stab your own team in the back, at least a little bit. If a moderate Democrat went down to the White House and shook hands with Donald Trump and took a smiling picture with him and said, “I have a productive relationship with him and we're going to work together on important things,” the left would howl in outrage about how this is an unbelievable betrayal, that this person is a Republican in disguise enabling fascism, and so on. If Mamdani does it—he's popular. He's their guy. He's so charismatic and popular among his base that they're like, “oh cool, it's a strategic play, he's doing this for us.” It lets you get away with things that you otherwise couldn't get away with. From the perspective that Mamdani's got a strategic streak to him, it makes sense that he would rather the president not be persecuting the city, and so he's going to try to make that happen.Kaneene: I'm a consequentialist. He went to the White House with a goal of getting funding for the Sunnyside Yards project. He thought making that a Daily News cover would be a means to that end. He was correct. He went down there, took a picture, came back. During this time he was asked if he still thinks Trump is a fascist. He said yes. Trump has since lashed out at him on social media saying he's terrible. I don't think that privately he's saying nice things to Trump, or that Trump has any illusion that Mamdani likes him. I think Trump is actually impressed with Mamdani and kind of respects what he did—something that Trump could never do, which is get elected mayor of New York City, winning over the kind of elite Manhattan class that never liked Trump. He realizes Mamdani has a very powerful political base that he has to reckon with.So I don't have any issue with what he's done with Trump. He's constantly opining on issues—whether it's the Iran war or tariffs—on which he disagrees with Trump, doing so eloquently and powerfully on social media.Belvedere: Take the Iran war, for example. He told a story in an interview of a woman who was being harassed because she maybe looked Iranian or Middle Eastern, and it's a powerful story about how the war is creating divisions at home. He told it through a vivid narrative. You hear it and you start to gravitate toward his side because he's telling something that matters to human beings. He's a really capable politician. I'll give him that, and I want to see how he continues to navigate what is an extremely thorny proposition, but I'm a little worried. He's been able to keep ICE off New York City streets based on whatever overtures he's made to Trump—that is a real gain, for sure. He's essentially told Trump, “You can be the FDR to my LaGuardia.” He's casting Trump as someone who is actually going to make a positive contribution to New York. It's just too glowing, for me, about a guy who's undoing a lot of what we think of as important in America.In the most prominent interviews he's given [recently], he's backed off from that strong language about Trump. That's something to think about moving forward, how he handles that relationship. I would like a little more moral clarity from him when it comes to Trump, [even given that he has to have a working relationship with him].Kaneene: I think there is moral clarity. I don't think there's been any moral compromise. I think that he can say, “Trump, I want you to pay for this housing development in Queens,” and morally there's been no compromise at all. I think that in a time where we have …Belvedere: … He was asked directly, “Is Trump trustworthy?” And he said, “I'm going to keep talking to him.” To me, it's like—are we at a point where we can't say he's not been trustworthy? He absolutely has not been trustworthy. Declining to say he's untrustworthy … it's just a small warning to me that he's not willing to interact with Trump in the way Trump deserves.Kaneene: Yeah, but—it might be the case that he feels he can trust what Trump says to him in a personal meeting. That might genuinely be true. And he still says Trump is a fascist. He still speaks out against a lot of his policies. I don't think there's been any moral compromise. I think he's like a moral beacon in a time where we don't really have any kind of moral leadership in the executive branch in Washington.Johnson: It's just, what are you trying to accomplish? Is anyone's life better off because he called Trump a fat pig who deserves to die? What are we talking about here? It would be one thing if he was being like, “Well, Trump is going to help us fund this housing project, so we're going to help him with ICE in the city.” But he's not doing that. He's just being less than maximally mean.Belvedere: We're almost out of time, so let's get from you guys your broadest possible assessment of his mayorship so far. A hundred days in, a little more than that now, what do we think? What's your assessment?Johnson: Given what I expected out of him, seven out of ten so far.Belvedere: Tibita?Kaneene: I'd give him a B so far. A big reason—we'll see what happens with the city budget and with the rent freeze. Those are, I think, the two things for the first year. He has a chance to move to a B-minus/C-plus or up to a B-plus in the next 60 days based on those two things.Belvedere: What would it look like for him to crush the next part of the year, from your perspective?Kaneene: On the budget, on the merits, I think the city council is correct. If he came around to that, that would be a big deal. If he followed through on proposing substantive property tax reform—which I think he will do eventually—but if he did that, that would be a big deal.Johnson: That's the white whale of New York politics, actually reforming our property tax system.Kaneene: In particular, if he got rid of the tax disadvantage for multifamily homes, I think that part is doable. That would be a big deal.Johnson: If you're outside New York City, you should just know our property tax system is a mess. We have high property taxes, but beyond the fact that they're high—maybe that's fair, New York does a lot of things—the system itself is just a confusing maze. The valuations are all over the place. There's just weird stuff all over the place with our property tax system. Every mayor would love to regularize it, normalize it. And there's enough special exceptions that it's really hard to do without people getting furiously angry who benefit from the special exceptions. So if he could get that done—holy crap, yeah.Kaneene: Yeah. Speaking of pissing off some supporters—I think he has the political capital to piss off some homeowners in order to reduce the costs for apartment dwellers. I think he can do that, especially if he's seen as someone who is freezing the rent and doing the grocery stores and what have you.Belvedere: Jeremiah, one last question for you. You're a culture watcher. You spot trends and memes and people's reactions to politics. What do you think it is about Mamdani—and some of the others in his cohort—that they seem to do really well with younger people? What can liberal politicians learn from this cohort? They have vastly different characteristics—Bernie Sanders is an old white dude, Mamdani is very different—and yet they have the same kind of buzz and ability on that front. What can liberal politicians do better to match that?Johnson: Yeah, I mean, some of this is messaging strategy. Mamdani comes from a family in the arts. His mom is a professional filmmaker. His videos are very well produced. He understands clipping culture—what really matters is not the event itself, it's the 20-second clip that comes out of it that will get played a million times on social media. Part of it is just the messaging strategy itself.But I also think—look at what Mamdani doesn't do. He doesn't dress weird, he doesn't try to do memes. His accounts never post memes. He's never dressing in funny outfits. He's not cursing. He's well-dressed and presentable and optimistic and he talks like he wants to change things. I think there's an impulse among middle-aged, moderate liberals sometimes to be like, “To chase the kids, we've got to do the memes. Someone get me a 20-year-old who knows memes for my internet account.” And it's just very cringe-worthy. It's terrible. What people respond to is when you believe what you're saying.Belvedere: That wraps up our time together today. Thank you guys for joining me. I'm Berny, senior editor at The UnPopulist. Tibita is the political director of the New York City chapter of the Center for New Liberalism. And Jeremiah Johnson is co-founder of the Center for New Liberalism, and his newsletter is excellent. Thanks for joining. See you next time.Thanks for reading The UnPopulist! Subscribe to support our project.© The UnPopulist, 2026Follow us on Bluesky, Threads, YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, and X.We welcome your reactions and replies. Please adhere to our comments policy. Get full access to The UnPopulist at www.theunpopulist.net/subscribe

Montana Public Radio News
Pete Buttigieg plans Butte town hall to back campaign spending initiative

Montana Public Radio News

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 1:21


Prominent Democrat Pete Buttigieg will stump for a Montana ballot initiative in Butte next month. The proposal aims to rein in corporate campaign spending. Buttigieg, a former presidential candidate, will hold a town hall in support of the "Montana Plan" on May 17. He says it could become a blueprint for other states.

TheThinkingAtheist
Dinner Theater?

TheThinkingAtheist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2026 59:01 Transcription Available


This show was written, produced, and queued BEFORE the chaos at Saturday's White House Correspondents Dinner, but it was about the dinner, the press, and a recent series of appearances by Pete Buttigieg.I've revised the first segment with updated commentary, but the rest of the show is airing as scheduled, with the caveat that all comments after the 14-minute mark were made pre-incident.I appreciate your patience, and I hope the show remains relevant for you.The Pete Buttigieg town hall event in TulsaThe open letterBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/thethinkingatheist--3270347/support.

The Late Show Pod Show with Stephen Colbert
Pete Buttigieg, Jon Stewart | Open Seizin'

The Late Show Pod Show with Stephen Colbert

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 33:31


President Trump lashed out after Iran boasted that America is “the losing side” in the war, the war is causing price hikes in everyday goods like condoms, Finnish pilots are so immature, and FBI Director Kash Patel denies drinking on the job. Stephen Colbert is joined by his longtime friend and “The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart to announce a HUGE drop of memorabilia for The Late Show's charity auction. Visit http://colbertlateshow.com/ebay to bid on these one-of-a-kind items and grab a “The Last Show” t-shirt while you're at it! All profits go directly to World Central Kitchen. Former Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg returns to The Late Show to share what he's been doing to help Democratic candidates across the country, and to issue a warning to his party ahead of the midterm elections. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Tony Katz Today
Tony Katz Today Full Show - 04/23/26

Tony Katz Today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 107:29 Transcription Available


Hour 1 Segment 1 Tony starts the first hour of the show talking about the left running on defunding ICE. Hour 1 Segment 2 Tony talks about Navy Secretary John Phelan fired from the administration amidst the Iranian war. Hour 1 Segment 3 Tony is joined with William Jacobson of the Cornell Law School & Legal Insurrection to talk about the corruption of the SPLC. Hour 1 Segment 4 Tony wraps up the first hour of the show talking about Florida Governor Ron DeSantis calling out Hakeem Jeffries to ‘FAFO’ on Florida redistricting. Hour 2 Segment 1 Tony starts the second hour of the show talking about Russell Brand admitting that he slept with a 16-year-old when he was 30. Tony also talks about how California Governor subsidized the illegal immigrant invasion. Hour 2 Segment 2 Tony talks about two Israeli soldiers who damaged a Jesus statue in Lebanon. Tony also talks about Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian calling for unification on social media within the country. Hour 2 Segment 3 Tony gets into three more things: Pete Buttigieg talking presidency with Stephen Colbert, clearing mines in the Strait of Hormuz could take months, and an Indianapolis postal worker charged with stabbing a co-worker after a fight. Hour 2 Segment 4 Tony wraps up the second hour of the show talking about Ilhan Omar acting like she’s above it all and untouchable. Hour 3 Segment 1 Tony starts the final hour of the show joined with Ed Morrissey of HotAir.com to talk about Virginia redistricting. Hour 3 Segment 2 Tony talks about Markwayne Mullin and demoralization. Hour 3 Segment 3 Tony continues his conversation with Ed Morrissey to talk about the corruption of the SPLC. Hour 3 Segment 4 Tony wraps up another edition of the show talking more about being two months into the Iranian war. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tony Katz Today
Episode 4539: Tony Katz Today Hour 2 - 04/23/26

Tony Katz Today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 35:35 Transcription Available


Hour 2 Segment 1 Tony starts the second hour of the show talking about Russell Brand admitting that he slept with a 16-year-old when he was 30. Tony also talks about how California Governor subsidized the illegal immigrant invasion. Hour 2 Segment 2 Tony talks about two Israeli soldiers who damaged a Jesus statue in Lebanon. Tony also talks about Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian calling for unification on social media within the country. Hour 2 Segment 3 Tony gets into three more things: Pete Buttigieg talking presidency with Stephen Colbert, clearing mines in the Strait of Hormuz could take months, and an Indianapolis postal worker charged with stabbing a co-worker after a fight. Hour 2 Segment 4 Tony wraps up the second hour of the show talking about Ilhan Omar acting like she’s above it all and untouchable. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tony Katz Today
Tony Katz on Buttigieg, Clearing Mines in Strait of Hormuz, & Postal Stabbing

Tony Katz Today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 12:22 Transcription Available


Tony gets into three more things: Pete Buttigieg talking presidency with Stephen Colbert, clearing mines in the Strait of Hormuz could take months, and an Indianapolis postal worker charged with stabbing a co-worker after a fight. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Political Playlist Happy Hour
The Politician On Our Playlist: Candidate George Hornedo

Political Playlist Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 49:08


On this Happy Hour, Michael and Anna sit down with Candidate George Hornedo, who's running for Congress in Indiana's 7th district, which is Indianapolis and the greater area. Surprisingly, it's a very un-gerrymandered district. Not surprisingly, the current guy has been in there for a while, and George is looking to shake things up. We had a great conversation with this lawyer turned Obama Administration worker turned Buttigieg 2020 campaign staffer turned...Congressman?! The primary is May 5th, so you bet we're tuning in! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Pod Save America
J. Edgar Boozer

Pod Save America

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2026 95:01


FBI Director Kash Patel sues The Atlantic for defamation after they publish a well-sourced article alleging he's frequently drunk on the job. Donald Trump celebrates the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz — only to watch Iran close the strait and fire on two ships. The administration tries to win back Joe Rogan and his audience by fast-tracking a series of psychedelics for FDA approval. Potential 2028 contenders, including Jon Ossoff, Pete Buttigieg, and Kamala Harris, make high-profile appearances on the campaigns trail. Plus: J Street's Ilan Goldenberg talks to Tommy about what progressive, pro-Israel policy should look like.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.

The Judge Jeanine Tunnel to Towers Foundation Sunday Morning Show

Welcome to the Joe Concha Show, where the war on woke is front and center. In this episode, Joe dives deep into the Democrats' reflexive opposition to President Trump's Iran strategy, exposing how the left has turned the impeachment process into a purely political performance. Joe also calls out the blatant hypocrisy of late-night television, taking Jimmy Kimmel to task for ignoring the bombshell sexual abuse allegations against Eric Swalwell. Plus, tune in for sharp commentary on Pete Buttigieg's misplaced priorities, Kamala Harris's bizarre speeches, the absurd realities of Mayor Zohran Mamdani's New York City, and Ilhan Omar's suspicious million-dollar net worth "rounding errors". If you want unfiltered, conservative straight talk that cuts through the liberal spin, this is the episode for you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Ron Show
Ossoff flashes sharpened rhetoric & Tanya Miller reminds us who an AG is supposed to serve (it's us)

The Ron Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2026 88:57


Plus: Clay Fuller tries out 'satire' for a side hustle and fails.We haven't even crossed the 2026 finish line yet, and already the Democratic party's 2028 field is starting to not only reveal itself but flex its rhetorical might. First up, though, concerns about election integrity have Democrats in Congress wondering (aloud) if the National Guard is going to adhere to Trump or the US Constitution. We (sort of) got that answer under oath last week.Okay, so with polls showing Kamala Harris still pacing ahead of "the boys," Pete Buttigieg is among those guys out there hitting "flyover states" to sharpen their rhetoric. More on that later this week, but a sample towards the end of today's show.- - - The newly-minted part-time Congressman - Clay "sup brah" Fuller - took to the X platform to try his hand at satire, except it didn't stick. I mean, if this is some new "alter ego" shtick he's trying out, okay; it's just brand new, and when you recall his "word salad" moment on a televised debate recently, it's just hard to know when he's being satirical vs. when he's just ... aloof.- - - Georgia Democratic House causcus chair Rep. Tanya Miller has set her sights on being Georgia's next attorney general. She joined me for a prolonged conversation about her legal background, both as defensive attorney and prosecutor, coupled with her lawmaking background, making her an ideal candidate. She also reminded the audience who an attorney general is supposed to serve. Turns out it's us!- - - Senator Jon Ossoff (speaking of aspirations for 2028?) is working hard focusing on retaining his seat in the U.S. Senate, and coined the label "Mar a Lago mafia," in an eloquent rally speech in my hometown of Augusta.

The Howie Carr Radio Network
Tom Shattuck: These Aren't Your Grandfathers Dems | 4.20.26 - The Howie Carr Show Hour 4

The Howie Carr Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2026 37:25


Jon Fetherson of the Maine Wire joins the show to discuss Elizabeth Warren stumping for Graham Platner, then Tom discusses a Pete Buttigieg voter who's afraid gay and trans people will be thrown in camps.  Visit the Howie Carr Radio Network website to access columns, podcasts, and other exclusive content.

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed
Erick Erickson Show: S15 EP73: Hour 2 – It All Matters More Now

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2026 37:18


Everything matters now as we head into the midterms, and both sides seem hell-bent on putting their worst foot forward. Plus, Transportation Secretary Duffy tries to clean up the mess left of the agency by his predecessor, Mayor Pete.

Hawk Droppings
Obama and Pope Leo Conspiring Against Trump - MAGA's Latest Conspiracy

Hawk Droppings

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2026 36:39


The Cook Political Report has shifted four Senate races toward Democrats, making a Democratic Senate majority a real possibility this fall. With seats in Maine, Ohio, Alaska, North Carolina, and Iowa now in play, the math is moving in Democrats' favor, and the stakes could not be higher when it comes to blocking Supreme Court picks and shutting down Trump's judicial appointments. Eric Swalwell is done. His accusers sat down with Nora O'Donnell on CBS Mornings in their first on-camera interview, detailing a years-long pattern of grooming, manipulation, and coercion targeting young staffers. Swalwell denied sexual assault but left nearly every other allegation unanswered, and he is now under criminal investigation in New York. Attorney Cheyenne Hunt helped these women connect and come forward, and more accusers continue to emerge. Viktor Orban lost his grip on Hungary, replaced by Peter Magyar, who is already signaling that Orban's use of Hungarian state funds to support CPAC may have been criminal. With Putin losing allies including Orban, Khamenei, and the Venezuelan government, the global authoritarian network is fracturing. On CNBC, Joe Kernan invited Rand Paul to discuss ICE's use of administrative warrants in place of judicial warrants to enter homes without a judge's signature, a direct violation of Fourth Amendment protections that apply to everyone on U.S. soil regardless of immigration status. The conversation went just as badly for Kernan as his earlier interview with Pete Buttigieg. SUPPORT & CONNECT WITH HAWK- Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mdg650hawk - Hawk's Merch Store: https://hawkmerchstore.com - Connect on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mdg650hawk7thacct - Connect on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@hawkeyewhackamole - Connect on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/mdg650hawk.bsky.social - Connect on Substack: https://mdg650hawk.substack.com - Connect on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hawkpodcasts - Connect on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mdg650hawk - Connect on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/mdg650hawk ALL HAWK PODCASTS INFO- Additional Content Available Here: https://www.hawkpodcasts.comhttps://www.youtube.com/@hawkpodcasts- Listen to Hawk Podcasts On Your Favorite Platform:Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3RWeJfyApple Podcasts: https://apple.co/422GDuLYouTube: https://youtube.com/@hawkpodcastsiHeartRadio: https://ihr.fm/47vVBdPPandora: https://bit.ly/48COaTB

The David Pakman Show
This is a really strange way to "win" a war

The David Pakman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2026 64:06


-- On the Show -- Donald Trump orders a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz immediately after claiming the waterway was already open -- Hungarian voters remove longtime leader Viktor Orbán from power in a landslide electoral defeat, despite JD Vance campaigning for him -- Donald Trump makes a series of unsubstantiated accusations against Pope Leo, claiming he supports crime and nuclear weapons -- Donald Trump engages in a high-volume posting spree on Truth Social during the early morning hours -- Secretary Pete Buttigieg remains calm while Joe Kernen loses his composure during a heated exchange about economic policy -- Donald Trump struggles to maintain a logical flow during a phone interview with Maria Bartiromo about energy prices -- Donald Trump asserts that the outcome of international negotiations is irrelevant because he has already declared victory -- On the Bonus Show: David shares stories from his trip to Argentina, and much more...

The Weekend
First Cattle Call for 2028 Dems Underway

The Weekend

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2026 41:30


April, 11 2026, 8 AM; They're offering a preview of what the '28 campaign season might look like for the Democratic hopefuls while sounding the alarm on President Trump's blatant attempts to interfere in the midterms. For more, follow us on social media: Bluesky: @theweekendmsnow.bsky.social Instagram: @theweekendmsnow TikTok: @theweekendmsnow To listen to this show and other MS podcasts without ads, sign up for MS NOW Premium on Apple Podcasts. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Bo Snerdley / James Golden
Bo Snerdley's Rush Hour | 04-10-26

Bo Snerdley / James Golden

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2026 38:00


James Golden aka Bo Snerdley talks about Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg trying to back the Democratic Party, Inflation rising as it was expected with the Iran war and he talks about Artemis II coming back with Astronomer Gary Swangin. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

POLITICO Playbook Audio Briefing
Harris vs. Buttigieg, again

POLITICO Playbook Audio Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2026 11:52


Today Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg take the stage in New York City, offering an early glimpse at a possible 2028 clash. Meanwhile, a fragile Iran ceasefire is raising fresh questions abroad, and Senate Republicans head to the White House to talk reconciliation. POITICO's Megan Messerly and Adam Wren break down the early 2028 dynamics, the foreign policy tensions and what comes next.

All In with Chris Hayes
Top counterterrorism official resigns over Iran war

All In with Chris Hayes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 42:31


March 17, 2026; 8pm: Tonight, Sen. Chris Murphy on Trump's war chaos, David Miliband on the global confusion, and Pete Buttigieg on the White House disregard for American consumers. And Ali Velshi at the Big Board as polls close in the Illinois primary. Want more of Chris? Download and follow his podcast, “Why Is This Happening? The Chris Hayes podcast” wherever you get your podcasts.To listen to this show and other MS podcasts without ads, sign up for MS NOW Premium on Apple Podcasts. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

The Rubin Report
Host Shocked When Rubio Says What No Other Politician Will Admit

The Rubin Report

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2026 63:05


Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report" talks about Marco Rubio giving a chilling warning to Fox News' Sean Hannity about why the threat from Islamic extremism and radical Islam is such a threat to the U.S.; Carly Fiorina and "The View's" Sunny Hostin trying to convince their audience that Donald Trump was oblivious to the threat of Iran trying to close the Strait of Hormuz; CNN's Jake Tapper confronting Pete Buttigieg about the failures of the Biden administration to stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon; Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth making the mainstream media think twice about trying to make the Iran War look like a failure despite its numerous successes; Elon Musk explaining to Peter H. Diamandis how AI and robots will likely lead to a universal income in the future; "Raging Moderates'" Jessica Tarlov reading James Talarico's insane tweets about white privilege and white people spreading the virus of racism to his face; Zohran Mamdani creating the first ever Department of LGBTQIA+ Affairs as NYC's budget crisis worsens; and much more.

The Rubin Report
The Real Reason Tucker Carlson Is Being Targeted by the CIA

The Rubin Report

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 65:40


Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report" talks about Tucker Carlson revealing that the CIA is targeting him for his communication with Iran in the lead up to the Iran War; the major escalation in the war of words between Ben Shapiro and Megyn Kelly; Adam Carolla explaining the real reason why the mainstream media is suddenly being nice to Joe Rogan; the "Real Time with Bill Maher" crowd being shocked by Bill Maher bluntly confronting Josh Shapiro about the normalization of antisemitism within the Democratic Party; CNN's Jake Tapper accidentally getting Pete Buttigieg to admit that Democrats halted DHS funding and payments to TSA workers conducting airport security despite knowing that the partial government shutdown does nothing to affect the funding of ICE; Tommy Robinson warning viewers about how Tucker Carlson has spread lies about the immigration of radical muslims into the UK; and much more.

The Megyn Kelly Show
Fraud Crockett's Defeat, Michelle Obama's New Racial Complaints, and Trump's Iran "War" Question, with Glenn Greenwald | Ep. 1265

The Megyn Kelly Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2026 101:42


Megyn Kelly discusses Jasmine Crockett's defeat in the Democratic Texas Senate primary, her absurd persona that didn't convince voters, how secretly extreme primary winner James Talarico really is, and more. Then Glenn Greenwald, host of “System Update” on Substack, joins to discuss Jasmine Crockett's fraudulent backstory and political irrelevance, soft-spoken white guy James Talarico's actually very extreme views and woke past comments,  the new Atlantic profile fawning over Pete Buttigieg, talking about his new beard and establishment cred, Michelle Obama's new interview with Conan O'Brien, her latest complaints about race and Donald Trump, the latest messaging from the Trump administration about the strikes in Iran, the questions about whether it's actually a "war," Israel's involvement in driving this decision by the U.S., the bizarre social media effort to falsely label Megyn an “anti-semite,” her long support of Israel and pro-Jewish history, and more.   More from Greenwald- https://greenwald.substack.com/   Birch Gold: Text MK to 989898 and get your free info kit on gold ARMRA: go to https://tryarmra.com/MEGYNto get 30% off your first subscription order DailyLook: https://dailylook.com to take your style quiz and use code MEGYN for 50% off your first order. SimpliSafe: Visit https://simplisafe.com/MEGYN to claim 50% off any new system!     Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKelly Twitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShow Instagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShow Facebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow  Find out more information at:https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.